Posts Tagged ‘Portfolio’

Managed forex portfolio (accounts)?

Monday, December 26th, 2011

Question by HICHAM Z: Managed forex portfolio (accounts)?
investMe.net an Arabic site offer to clients a professional Portfolio manager, who manage their accounts to make a best service with big profit monthly and small risque strategies.
Now if you don’t have knowledge in forex trading or you don’t have time to do… investMe.net can do that!

http://www.investMe.net

Best answer:

Answer by Mr. X
OK.

Know better? Leave your own answer in the comments!

Forex E-pips FapTurbo

What Bond Or Cd Is Right For Your Portfolio?

Thursday, September 22nd, 2011

What Bond Or Cd Is Right For Your Portfolio?

By Larry Lane for www.Investorzoo.com

Need to know where to invest a portion of your investment portfolio in relative safety? The investment world has a plethora of investment choices. Bonds can be an ideal investment for those seeking safety. As with all investments, the security is only as good as the company or government backing the bond. Below are some fixed income financial instruments that may fit your investment criteria.

Cds                                                  

Are you looking for a safe guaranteed investment? Certificates of deposits from an FDIC bank will provide you with a guaranteed return in the form of an interest payment every three months for the term of the CD purchased. You then get your principal back at maturity. If you have a CD at a FDIC member bank, you are guaranteed the principal and interest by the federal government. These are considered the safest investment and thus usually pay the smallest yield. Cds can start in terms of 6 months and go out to several years. The longer you agree to tie up your money with your chosen bank, the higher the return.

US Government Treasuries   

Unless the US government goes bankrupt, US Treasury are a direct obligation of the United States government and are considered the gold standard as far as safety is concerned.

Treasury bills              

Treasury bills are issued in minimum denominations of ,000 and are short term in nature; maturing in a year or less. They are sold at auction for less than their face value. The common term is “par”. When the bond becomes due, their full value is paid.

Treasury notes     

Notes are issued in minimum amounts of 00 and mature in two to ten years. They carry a stated interest rate which is paid semiannually. Treasury notes are purchased through an auction and can be purchased at or below face value.

TIPS: Treasury Inflation Protected Securities      

Commonly known as “TIPS” are securities whose principal is adjusted by changes in the Consumer Price Index. With inflation rises, the principal increases. Conversly, when there is deflation, the principal payment decreases.

The relationship between TIPS and the Consumer Price Index (CPI) affects both the sum you are paid when your TIPS matures as well as the amount of interest that a TIPS pays you every six months. TIPS pay interest at a fixed rate. Because the rate is applied to the adjusted principal, however, interest payments can vary in amount from one period to the next. At the maturity of a TIPS, you receive the adjusted principal or the original principal, whichever is greater. This provision protects you against deflation.The US Treasury provides TIPS Inflation Index Ratios which will allow those interested to calculate the change to principal resulting from changes in the Consumer Price Index.

How to buy TIPS                                         

TIPS are sold directly through the Treasury, banks, brokers, and dealers. The price of a TIPS can be less than, equal to, or greater than the face value.

You can bid for TIPS in either of two ways:
•With a noncompetitive bid, you agree to accept the yield determined at the time of the auction. With this bid, you are guaranteed to receive the TIPS you want, and in the full dollar amount you wish to invest.
•With a competitive bid, you specify the yield you are willing to accept.

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As a result, your bid may be:
1) Accepted in the full amount you want if your bid is less than the yield determined at auction.
2) Accepted in less than the full amount you want if your bid is equal to the high yield.
3) Rejected if the yield you specify is higher than the yield set at auction.

To place a competitive bid, you must use a bank, broker, or dealer.

Additional TIP information
The interest rate on a TIPS is determined at auction.
TIPS are sold in increments of 0. The minimum purchase is 0.
TIPS are issued in electronic form. You will receive a confirmation, but there is no physical bond issued.
You can hold a TIPS until it matures or sell it in the secondary market before it matures. Should inflation rise after your purchase, you may experience a loss of principal.

Treasury Bonds              

These are exactly like treasury notes except they mature in 10 years or more.Since Treasury securities are issued by the US government many consider treasuries risk free. This is not absolutely true. It is true that if held to maturity, you are guaranteed to receive your principal and stated interest rate. However, if you are forced to sell, you may take a loss. Should interest rates rise, your bond will be worth less than your original purchase.

Zero coupon bonds     

Zero coupon bonds guarantee not only to pay you the specified interest rate on your principal; they also guarantee to pay the same rate of interest on your interest. Zero coupon bonds pay no periodic interest, instead it is automatically reinvested. “Zeros” are the best way to lock in high interest rates far into the future. If rates go up after buying your bond, you are locked into receiving below market interest rates. Again if you have to sell early, you will recognize a loss. Although you’ll receive no annual interest payments, the IRS will tax you as if you were.

Municipal

British Land Q3 Nav Up 18% As Portfolio Value Increases By 8.2% In The Quarter

Saturday, September 10th, 2011

British Land Q3 Nav Up 18% As Portfolio Value Increases By 8.2% In The Quarter

British Land  posted an 18% rise in third-quarter net asset value (NAV) today, providing ballast to a rebounding UK property market still haunted by worries over loan defaults and tenant failures.

The blue chip investor, one of London’s largest office landlords, said its NAV rose to 438 pence a share in the three months to December 31, above the 425 pence analysts were picking, as demand for commercial real estate rallied.

The value of its total investment portfolio grew by 8.2% to £7.9 billion  in the period. It reported a 1.4% rise in like-for-like rental income compared with the corresponding quarter last year.

Chris Grigg, Chief Executive, said in a statement:

“Our third quarter performance saw a continued recovery with strong valuation growth right across the portfolio. The significant increase in our property valuation reflects the quality of the portfolio and focus on asset management. Our retail estate is virtually 100% let and characterised by prime locations and strong customer relationships. Our office portfolio is well positioned as London letting activity picks up. We have over 250,000 sq ft of space under offer, including nearly 220,000 sq ft to Macquarie, and have over 650,000 sq ft of additional new space available from recent development activity.

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“During the quarter we commenced the Broadgate JV with Blackstone, an important part of our long-term plan to re-balance the portfolio. We are investing in high quality opportunities such as Surrey Quays, where we can add considerable value, and we expect further attractive assets to emerge over the next 18 months. We’re well placed: British Land combines a prime portfolio, strong income profile, talented people, and significant financial firepower.”

BL has made £240 million of new investments in the 2009 year to date, buying a 50% stake in Surrey Quays and Clifton Moor (York) shopping centres for £87 million on initial yields of 8.5% and 8.2% respectively and also including £31million to buy a Sainsbury’s superstore in Macclesfield at a 5% net initial yield. The leases in all cases have generous upward only rent reviews which will strengthen yields further.

The improved valuations will encourage lenders Royal Bank of Scotland  and Lloyds Banking Group, which are battling to cut property impairments after a 45% pricing plunge between June 2007 and August 2009.

British Land declared a 6.5 pence Q3 dividend, but British Land and peers Liberty International  and Segro were among the biggest FTSE 100 fallers yesterday as the market digested news of a slower-than-hoped 0.9% rise in average values last month, after a record 3% hike in December.

Fears of a “double-dip” in commercial property values loom large over the market following a rapid 10% turnaround in values in the second half of 2009, against a backdrop of grim economic forecasts and continued pressure on rents.

Data from the Association of Real Estate Funds yesterday showed a record £3.2 billion flooded into unlisted pooled property funds in the final quarter of 2009, but many key investment experts predict a turbulent 2010 for UK real estate.

Looking for commercial property agents, find lettings and investment property in the UK? Visit http://www.ukbusinessproperty.co.uk


Article from articlesbase.com

Navistar International Corporation (NYSE:NAV) reported Q2 EPS of .02 today, falling short of the consensus estimate for .17 per share. Revenues for the quarter grew 22.3% year-over-year to .35 billion, above the consensus estimate for .30 billion. Daniel C. Ustian, Navistar chairman, president and chief executive officer said, “The second quarter results represent good earnings and strong cash flow from operations while building to deliver to our 2011 and beyond objectives. We continue to see increasing customer acceptance of all our engine and vehicle families, confirming we have the right strategy in place and that we will deliver full year results toward the higher side of our previous guidance.” For the full year, the company tightened its guidance, and now sees 2011 EPS of .50 to .00, vs. the consensus estimate for .46 per share.
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Mutual Funds articles

The Gone Fishin’ Portfolio: Get Wise, Get Wealthy… & Get On With Your Life

Sunday, April 3rd, 2011

The Gone Fishin’ Portfolio: Get Wise, Get Wealthy… & Get On With Your Life

Article by Alexander Green

Investment U: Issue #851When I speak about my Gone Fishin’ portfolio at financial conferences around the nation, I often tell investors not to watch MSNBC, CNBC or any of the other investment networks.Members of the audience sometimes find this comical – or even hypocritical – since I’m on these networks occasionally myself. But if you watch these channels regularly, I promise it will make you dumber and poorer.Why? The underlying premise of these networks is that there is constant breaking news that you need to react to immediately.Oil prices are up. What should you be buying? The Fed has cut rates a quarter point. How should you respond? Warren Buffett says the recession will last longer than expected. What should you be selling?The financial media parades one so-called “expert” after another in front of you. Each offers different opinions on the economy and the markets. Is that because you’ll profit by reacting to every government statistic, earnings release or economic forecast?Of course not. The circus of activity is there to attract viewers. That keeps advertisers happy and the networks’ bottom line growing. But as a viewer and investor, it costs you money. Wall Street and the financial press spew out so much analysis and so many opinions each week, most investors lose sight of the big picture. And that’s unfortunate…6 Factors That Determine Your Investment Portfolio ValueIn essence, there are only six factors that determine the long-term value of your investment portfolio.–How much you save.–How long your investments compound.–Your asset allocation. (How you divide your portfolio between stocks, bonds and other investments.)–Those assets’ annual return.–How much you pay in annual expenses.–How much you pay in taxes.That’s it. Whether you’re investing ,000 or million, these six factors will determine your eventual net worth.Of all these factors, the only one you cannot control is the fourth. You cannot know with any certainty what stocks or bonds will return from one year to the next. More sophisticated investors often say, “Well, of course no one knows for certain, but you have to guess.”No, you don’t. And you shouldn’t.Rather than guessing or pretending you have answers to unanswerable questions – like what the stock market will do this year or where interest rates are going – you can use an investment portfolio philosophy that allows you to capitalize on the uncertainty inherent in the markets.The Gone Fishin’ Investment Investment PortfolioFor example, five years ago I created “The Gone Fishin’ Portfolio” for The Oxford Club, the world’s largest financial fellowship, where I serve as Investment Director.The portfolio is breathtakingly simple. All we do is divide our money among different asset classes – like stocks, bonds, precious metals and real estate investment trusts – and then rebalance once a year to bring each class back to our original percentage.It works like a charm. The portfolio has beaten the S&P 500 every year, while taking much less risk than being fully invested in stocks.We also back-tested the system through the bear market of 2000-2002. Again, it beat the market every single year.That’s what you want, an investment portfolio that holds up well when the markets are down – and sprints ahead when the market is moving higher.Since its inception, The Gone Fishin’ Portfolio has compounded at 17.3% a year. And this is an extremely risk-averse approach, making it the perfect home for what I call your “serious money.”The 8 Advantages of The Gone Fishin’ Investment PortfolioThere are eight primary advantages to using The Gone Fishin’ Investment Portfoli–It prevents you from being too conservative or too aggressive, so your investments neither tread water nor blow up due to crazy risk-taking.–It eliminates shortfall risk, the risk that inflation will destroy your purchasing power over the long haul. (It keeps your investment portfolio from kicking the bucket before you do.)–It requires no economic forecasting or market timing.–It eliminates individual security risk. (There is no chance of holding a WorldCom, Enron or any individual stock or bond that causes your investment portfolio to crater.)–It is exceptionally cost effective. You will do a complete end run around Wall Street, paying nothing in brokerage commissions, planning fees, sales loads, or 12b-1 fees.–It is highly tax efficient, allowing you to defer capital gains taxes each year. (That keeps your net returns higher.)–It is based on the only investment strategy ever to win the Nobel Prize in Economics.–And, finally, it is so simple to implement, you can do it yourself in less than 20 minutes a year. (The rest of the time you are encouraged to travel, play golf, or “go fishin’.”)How does one investment system do all these things? I don’t have the space to tell you in this column. But I wrote a book – out this week – that explains exactly how it’s done.It’s called “The Gone Fishin’ Portfolio” – and the subtitle says it all: “Get Wise, Get Wealthy… and Get On With Your Life.”This book is the distillation of the best things I’ve learned in 23 years as a research analyst, portfolio manager and investment advisor. (As I sometimes tell my readers, I’ve made the dumb mistakes so you don’t have to.) I can save you a lot of time – and a boatload of money – by showing you to profit from my hard-earned experience.The Best Reason For Using the Gone Fishin’ Investment PortfolioHowever, I still haven’t told you the best reason to use The Gone Fishin’ Investment Portfolio. The high returns and low risk are only the beginning.You see, money is not your most precious resource. It’s time. Your time is limited, perishable, irreplaceable and unlike money, cannot be saved. The real beauty of the Gone Fishin’ Portfolio is it allows you to redirect your time to high-value

Choosing Mutual Funds for Your Portfolio

Thursday, March 24th, 2011

Choosing Mutual Funds for Your Portfolio

Article by Yulian Isakov







Choosing mutual fund investments from the thousands of fund offerings available can be daunting. With so many different categories of funds and fund families, it may make sense to work with your financial advisor. Here are some steps experts recommend you consider when selecting investments.

There are a vast number of mutual fund offerings available to choose from and the process can be intimidating even for a seasoned professional. With so many decisions to make along the way and so many factors to evaluate such as which categories of funds or fund families are right for you, it may be sensible to work with your financial advisor to guide you along the way. Here are some basic guidelines to adhere to when selecting investments.

Evaluate Your Investment ObjectivesBefore you set out to start picking funds, you first need to step back and design a clear picture of your investment objectives and identify the time frame you have to work with. For example, you may plan to start a business in two years, to invest in your children’s education in 10 years, or to fund your retirement in 30 years.

Generally speaking, the longer out your goals are, the more time you have to save and invest your money and the greater your tolerance for risk might be. If you have an investment time frame of 10 years or more, you may want to take on more risk so that you can position yourself to potentially earn more over time by investing more aggressively in stocks with good growth prospects. However, if you know your investment objectives, say purchasing a house, are less than five years away and you will need funds to cover your purchase, you may want to allocate your portfolio with more conservative, income-producing securities such as dividend paying stocks or short-term fixed income securities.

Try to match your goals with the goals of the fund you chooseAfter you develop and clear understanding of your investment objectives with your financial advisor, the next step is to identify which mutual fund categories and types will most closely match your investment goals, risk tolerance, and time frame. With thousands of mutual funds currently available for investors, there are certainly plenty of options to pick from, whatever your goals are. But don’t be overwhelmed by the endless number of funds and differentiation within those funds that are available in the mutual fund industry, because essentially all the funds can be boiled down to a several large groups. So think about your investment objectives and what you need to fill the void with in order to get you there – is it income? growth? an income-growth combination? – and then match that with the investment objectives of the fund. For instance, stock funds’ objectives typically include “aggressive growth,” “growth,” or ” growth and income” depending on the underlying securities they hold. Furthermore, each of those funds can also be categorized by a risk level such as high risk, average risk, or low risk.

There are a number of resources available to help you boil down your search for mutual fund objectives and risk levels that are aligned with your financial objectives and risk tolerance in an organized and informed way such as Morningstar, Lipper Analytical Services, Standard & Poor’s, and Value Line, along with many other publications. Standard & Poor’s, for example, categorizes stock funds into five major categories from which each fund is then categorized by fund investment style, risk level, performance, and by an overall risk-adjusted rating in relation to other funds in the same category.

Once you have narrowed down yourself to the fund categories that seem appropriate to your investment objectives, you should start looking into the individual funds of each of your categories. Performance over time is an important metric to take a look at first, but certainly should not be the only considerations. Other important factors may include the consistency of the fund manager, the fund’s style, and even the fund’s returns. For instance, do the returns show wild swings from year to year or are they within a certain level over time.

In addition to third-party resources on mutual funds such as Standard & Poor’s, Lipper Analytical Services, personal finance magazines and so on, you may also want to read the material available by the fund company. Most importantly, you will need to carefully look through the mutual fund’s prospectus, which is available free from the fund company. Fund contact information is also available from major financial publication web sites such as the Wall Street Journal, the New York Times, and Yahoo.

A fund’s prospectus outlines the fund’s investment objectives, what type of securities it invests in, and the risks associated with the investments involved. The prospectus can be greatly helpful in helping you understand what you are exactly investing in. For instance, a prospectus from an aggressive growth-oriented fund may tell you that it invests in small-cap stocks that can be volatile, that is uses other products as part of its investing such as derivatives to hedge against downside risk or maximize investment returns, and that the fund involves taking a higher than average risk.

Top PerformersFund prospectuses also let investors know the fund’s performance, fees and expenses, and other information that should be carefully scrutinized when choosing mutual funds for your portfolio. Given your unique time frame and appropriate risk level, performance over the specific time period you need along with the appropriate fund risk level is a good measure of how well the stock fund will fit into your portfolio as part of your overall investment strategy. So when you are doing your due diligence, don’t get caught up in the fund’s latest performance