EUR/CAD Revealing Potential Head-and-Shoulders Formation

Source: ForexYard

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One of the less-frequently analyzed pairs is providing us with signs of an impending bearish run.

The EUR/CAD appears to be forming what looks like a head-and-shoulders pattern on the daily chart, suggesting we could see long-term bearishness as we head into 2011.

The pair’s steep decline over the first half of 2010 led to a record low of 1.2466 in early June, but it looks to have been recovering since.

What we see now, however, looks to be signaling that the down-trend was not actually over, but stalling within a larger cycle.

If what is shown on the chart below turns out to be a head-and-shoulders formation, then traders should look to see the pair finding support at the 23.6% Fibonacci line and moving up towards the 1.36-37 range before entering another steep decline with targets near the record low of 1.2466.

EUR/CAD – Daily Chart
EURCAD - Daily Chart

Forex Market Analysis provided by ForexYard.

© 2006 by FxYard Ltd

Disclaimer: Trading Foreign Exchange carries a high level of risk and may not be suitable for all investors. There is a possibility that you could sustain a loss of all of your investment and therefore you should not invest money that you cannot afford to lose. You should be aware of all the risks associated with Foreign Exchange trading.

USD/CAD Awaits Wholesale Sales with Bearish Sentiment

Source: ForexYard

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Ahead of the Canadian monthly wholesale sales report (13:30 GMT), it appears the USD/CAD is building towards a decision point.

On the shorter time-scale, we can see the pair stagnating between the 38.2% and 50% Fibonacci retracement levels, suggesting trader indecision prior to this release.

Expectations are for an increase of 0.8%, up from last month’s reading of 0.4%, which appears to be forecasting a drop in the pair as the loonie gains in value against the USD. The technical indicators below support this downward sentiment.

If Wholesale Sales come as expected, traders should anticipate a downward move towards 1.0100. If the figure disappoints, we could see some upward movement.

USD/CAD – 4-Hour Chart
USDCAD - 4H Chart

Forex Market Analysis provided by ForexYard.

© 2006 by FxYard Ltd

Disclaimer: Trading Foreign Exchange carries a high level of risk and may not be suitable for all investors. There is a possibility that you could sustain a loss of all of your investment and therefore you should not invest money that you cannot afford to lose. You should be aware of all the risks associated with Foreign Exchange trading.

Loonie Weakens on US Economy Concerns

By TraderVox.com

Tradervox (Dublin) -The Canadian dollar dropped against major currencies as commodities declined on concerns the US economic growth is slowing. A report from the US showing that Retail Sales declined in May for the second straight month aggravated the situation. Further, the Canadian currency dropped as Spain was degraded by Moody’s three steps down prior to an election in Spain. This has spur investors to seek safe haven assets hence decline in commodity related currencies. The drop in the Canadian dollar also came as the market prepares to receive a report from the country showing Industrial companies’ production was steady last month.

According to Shane Enright of Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce working as an Executive director of the World Market Department suggested that the loonie is tracking equities where flows have been light hence the decline. In addition, Shane said that the market is also watching for the Greece election hence the slow movement of equities. The US Commerce Department report that the Retail Sales dropped by 0.2 percent last month has affected the demand for the loonie as a similar decline was also reported in April. Investors are speculating that the Fed will make additional stimulus as employment drops and economic growth remain sluggish.

Talking about the US Retail Sales report, Steve Butler, the Director of Foreign-Exchange trading at Bank of Nova Scotia in Toronto said that the numbers were disappointing but added that most people expected such a report. He also added that the main focus of the market is on euro zone as Greece goes to the poll on June 17.

The Canadian dollar dropped after the report, shedding 0.4 percent against the US dollar to trade at C$1.0303 per US dollar at the close of trading in Toronto. George Davis, a Technical Analyst at Royal Bank of Canada said that loonie is appreciating after it strengthened below 1.0355 on June 6.

Disclaimer
Tradervox.com is not giving advice nor is qualified or licensed to provide financial advice. You must seek guidance from your personal advisors before acting on this information. While we try to ensure that all of the information provided on this website is kept up-to-date and accurate we accept no responsibility for any use made of the information provided. Opinions expressed at Tradervox.com are those of the individual authors and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Tradervox.com or its management. 

Article provided by TraderVox.com
Tradervox.com is a Forex News Portal that provides real-time news and analysis relating to the Currency Markets.
News and analysis are produced throughout the day by our in-house staff.
Follow us on twitter: www.twitter.com/tradervox

Brief Technical Analysis For Next Week

By TraderVox.com

Tradervox (Dublin) – This week, the euro zone leaders have decided to act on Spanish debt crisis by agreeing to support the nation with 100 billion Euros. This gave the euro some upward momentum but not for long as investors shifted their focus to the election in Greece. Greeks will vote on Sunday June 17, and this will be the major event that will shape most of trading next week. Here is an analysis of major currency pairs.

EUR/USD: the euro started the week on a range between 1.24 and 1.2540. It moved up but could not break the 1.2624 level as investors trading with fear of Spain and Italy bond auctions. Sentiments from Fitch about the status of some nations in the euro region did not help the pair to move up. Positive reports from the US and safe haven demand is expected to continue to next week. The major event that will affect this cross is the Greek election in June 17. We expect to see and upside trend if pro-austerity parties win the election and a downside trend if they lose.

USD/JPY: sentiments from IMF diminished the demand for the Japanese currency helping the pair to move up for the first time. BOJ meeting which start today and ends tomorrow will have an effect on the currency. BOJ is expected to wait for the Greece election before it can take any decisive measures to curb the strengthening yen. Safe haven demand is expected to increase in the coming week and we might see the cross moving upwards.

GBP/USD: the cross closed the week at 1.5463 and has slightly gone up to mid 1.55. Increasing safe haven demand has forced investors to go for the pound as crisis in euro area continues to escalate. Spain became the fourth country in the region to seek international bailout and focus is now on Italy. The cross is expected to have a weekly gain this week, which is expected to continue next week. 1.5600 is expected to provide major resistance next week. We have a bullish outlook for the cross next week.

USD/CHF: the cross dropped a cent last week as the Swiss franc reversed its downward trend closing the week at 0.9590. This week the cross has been down to 0.9578 as the Swiss Franc continued to gain momentum; however, this was limited as the cross later climbed to 0.9602 and then back to 0.9573. Next week the cross is expected to be neutral.

Disclaimer
Tradervox.com is not giving advice nor is qualified or licensed to provide financial advice. You must seek guidance from your personal advisors before acting on this information. While we try to ensure that all of the information provided on this website is kept up-to-date and accurate we accept no responsibility for any use made of the information provided. Opinions expressed at Tradervox.com are those of the individual authors and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Tradervox.com or its management. 

Article provided by TraderVox.com
Tradervox.com is a Forex News Portal that provides real-time news and analysis relating to the Currency Markets.
News and analysis are produced throughout the day by our in-house staff.
Follow us on twitter: www.twitter.com/tradervox

Market Review 14.6.12

Source: ForexYard

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The euro saw moderate gains in overnight trading, but remained low as investors continue to worry about the outcome of Greek elections scheduled for Sunday. Crude oil reversed its gains from yesterday and is currently trading around $82.55 a barrel. Gold continues to move up, as investors now view it as a safe-haven asset. The precious metal is currently trading at $1618.15 an ounce.

Main News for Today

Italian Bond Auction
• Investors will be closely watching the auction to see if the euro-zone debt crisis has spread beyond Spain and Greece
• Poor demand for Italian bonds could cause the euro to fall during afternoon trading

US Core CPI-12:30 GMT
• The USD fell against the yen during trading yesterday after several US indicators came in below their expected levels
• The same trend could occur today if the Core CPI comes in below the expected 0.2%

US Unemployment Claims-12:30 GMT
• Forecasted to come in at 377K
• Anything above the forecasted level could cause the USD to take losses during afternoon trading

Read more forex news on our forex blog

Forex Market Analysis provided by ForexYard.

© 2006 by FxYard Ltd

Disclaimer: Trading Foreign Exchange carries a high level of risk and may not be suitable for all investors. There is a possibility that you could sustain a loss of all of your investment and therefore you should not invest money that you cannot afford to lose. You should be aware of all the risks associated with Foreign Exchange trading.

Australian Housing – How to Avoid This Pauper’s Retirement Trap

By MoneyMorning.com.au

Our old pal Warren Buffett knows where the money is.

This week Bloomberg News reported:

‘Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway Inc. jumped into the slumping private-jet market again with a record order valued at $9.6 billion, betting on a rebound later this decade with a third plane purchase in less than two years.’

It suggests that Buffett doesn’t think his proposal to tax the rich will have an effect on private-jet travel.


The timing of the deal was appropriate, because it came at the same time as a report from the US Federal Reserve that showed US household wealth is back to 1992 levels. According to the San Francisco Chronicle:

‘Median net worth declined to $77,300 in 2010, the lowest since 1992, from $126,400 in 2007, the Fed said in its Survey of Consumer Finances…Almost every demographic group experienced losses, which may hurt retirement prospects for middle-income families, Fed economists said in the report.’

Worse, after taking a big hit from falling house prices and stock markets, most investors would like to get some of those losses back. Many were too scared to get back into the stock market, and will have missed the US market’s doubling rally.

They went for the safer option of cash, which in the US returns barely more than zero percent.

Australian Housing and Retirement

Aussie investors and future retirees haven’t done much better. And if they’re not careful, as we’ll explain today, they could end up doing a whole lot worse…

In the Daily Reckoning yesterday, our old pal Dan Denning told readers about a news scoop in the Australian newspaper.

The article notes:

‘Subprime-style lending practices were rampant during the last property boom despite claims by lenders that local practices were superior to global standards.’

The author – Anthony Klan – reveals:

‘Fitch Ratings estimates low-doc and no-doc loans now represent 8-10 per cent of the $1.2 trillion national mortgage market. That’s between $96bn and $120bn.’

We were stunned when we saw those figures. We always knew the Australian housing market had a potential subprime ticking time bomb, but how could we prove it?

The suits at the Reserve Bank of Australia and their puppets in the mainstream press insisted Aussie banking standards were far better than those overseas, and that subprime lending was only a small part of the Aussie mortgage market.

As RBA deputy governor Guy Debelle said in a speech in 2008:

‘Non-conforming loans in Australia accounted for only about 1 per cent of outstanding loans in 2007, well below the 13 per cent sub-prime share in the US. The share of new loans in Australia that are non-conforming has also been very low over recent years, at about 1 to 2 per cent, significantly below the 20 per cent sub-prime share that loans reached in the US in 2006.’

The deputy governor even provided a chart to prove it, as you can see below. However, we’ve taken the liberty of adding the real level of sub-prime lending as revealed by the Australian:

size of sub-prime housing markets

That’s right, according to the Australian, there are eight to ten times more Aussie sub-prime loans than most previously believed.

In fact, if the Australian and Fitch Ratings are right, Aussie sub-prime lending was or is only slightly lower than US sub-prime lending levels.

So rather than the banks being more prudent with borrowing standards, they were knee deep in dodgy loan applications.

And arguably the only reason Aussie sub-prime lending didn’t reach US levels is because the Aussie banks joined in later and had some catching up to do.

So it seems the outlook for the Aussie housing market is even worse than we thought…and we thought it was pretty bad. Even a higher home-buyers bribe in New South Wales won’t stop the slow collapse of house prices.

But, that’s not the worst of it. There’s an even bigger problem, which could send hundreds of thousands of Aussie retirees to the poorhouse…

Avoid the Housing Trap

As you get older, you’ll probably realise you don’t really need a three or four bedroom house, with three lounge rooms, a big kitchen and two, three or four toilets.

The kids have moved out, and you just don’t need the space. So what do you do? You sell the house, unlock the equity and then buy something smaller.

Trouble is the relationship between house prices and house sizes isn’t linear. By that we mean a four bedroom house isn’t twice the price of a two bedroom house in the same area.

And a two-bedroom unit isn’t twice the price of a one-bedroom unit.

In other words, when it comes to downsizing you may end up paying more on a per-square-metre basis. But still, at least you get to pocket the cash difference.

But not everyone wants to move. And besides, when you take into account the cost of selling, moving and buying a new place, it soon eats into a big chunk of the proceeds anyway.

That’s why a popular choice for retirees has been reverse mortgages.

In short, a reverse mortgage lets you take out a loan using your mortgage-free home as collateral.

The idea is you can stay in your home after retirement, while still unlocking the equity. You can typically ‘withdraw’ 15-40% of the value of your home. For example, if your home is valued at $400,000 you could borrow up to $160,000.

Sounds fine, right?

Except for one problem: the power of compounding…

How Compounding Works Against You

Compounding is great when you’re saving money. You earn interest on your savings and when you receive the interest you earn interest on the interest.

But when you’re borrowing money with no plans to pay back the loan or the interest, then compounding works against you…and fast.

Let’s say you’re a 65-year-old male and you own a $400,000 house. According to the Association of Superannuation Funds of Australia, a single male needs $21,946 per year for a modest lifestyle.

So, you could take out a lump sum reverse mortgage of $22,000 and then receive monthly payments of $1,833. Again, that sounds fine. But here’s the bad news…

Because compounding works against you, you’ll never receive the full $400,000 value of your home. In fact, if you’re after a modest lifestyle of $21,946 per year, the monthly repayments you receive will only last six years. Not great for a 65-year-old male who, on average, should live to 79.

And what if you outlive the average? According to the Smart Money website, 50% of men aged 60 today will live to 84. And 10% will live to 95.

That’s a whole lot of living left after offloading your home for what is in effect just a fraction of the market value.

So what’s the alternative?

Plan Now Before It’s Too Late

Obviously the best alternative is to plan well in advance, so you don’t have to mortgage yourself in retirement. If you can plan far enough in advance you should be lucky enough to stay in the family home and still have a comfortable lifestyle.

Another idea is to downsize without selling up.

That is, rent somewhere smaller while you rent out the family home to someone else. You won’t make a packet after deducting agent fees and maintenance costs, but you should at least cover the rent for your smaller place while still leaving some cash left over.

That means you won’t have to dip into your other savings so much. Plus you’ve still got the house to sell at a later date if you need to.

Your final option is to sell up, downsize and move to a cheaper suburb. That can be a tough decision if you’re used to living in a certain area. But it’s not so bad…how about getting out of the city and into a nice place in the country?

But, what about falling house prices? Won’t that have an impact on what will happen in retirement?

In a way, yes. That’s why it’s important that you don’t use property and your home as your sole means of funding retirement. On the other hand, remember that if one group of houses fall in price, others will likely fall too.

So while you may get less for the family home, odds are the smaller house you buy will be cheaper too.

The bottom line is, it’s never too late (or too early) to start planning for retirement. If you think it’s OK to blow all your savings because you can just sell your house in retirement and live off the proceeds, think again. It’s not that simple.

Planning for retirement takes more effort than that. It means working out now how much you need in growth assets, how much you need in income assets and how much you need in protection assets.

It’s a strategy we’ve laid out many times over the past year or so.

For a refresher on how to allocate your money so you won’t face a pauper’s retirement, click here…

Cheers,
Kris.

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Australian Housing – How to Avoid This Pauper’s Retirement Trap

Everything You Need to Know About Junior Mining Stocks

By MoneyMorning.com.au

Let’s make something clear up front: junior mining stocks are not for the faint of heart.

Legendary investor Doug Casey calls them “the most volatile stocks on earth.”

They can and do regularly undergo massive swings, both positive and negative.

It’s a really tough business. Many flame out.

But all it takes is just one 10-bagger to make up for all the dogs in the pound.

Thanks to a new discovery, a takeover bid or full-blown investment mania, it’s not uncommon for some of these stocks to return as much as 1,000%, 5,000%, and even 10,000%.

Those are not typos. In fact, there are countless examples.

Aber Resources was a $3 stock in 1993 before it made a big diamond discovery. Four years later, the stock hit $28/share, handing early investors over 900% returns.

Then there’s Diamond Fields Resources. Its shares were $4 before geologists made a massive nickel discovery in 1994. Not long after, the stock hit a pre-split equivalent of $160 for a 4,000% return.

That phenomenal 4,000% return was repeated in 2006, when Aurelian Resources Inc. made a high-grade gold discovery in Ecuador. Shares of the junior miner went from $0.89 to almost $40.

So what makes a stock a “junior miner”?

In a pure sense, junior mining companies have market caps somewhere between $5 million and $100 million.

But here’s the thing the makes them not for the faint of heart.

Usually, junior miners don’t make any money. They just raise money from investors to explore properties for gold, silver, base metals, oil, gas, potash, or uranium, just to name a few.

And even if they make a significant find, junior miners rarely develop it themselves. Instead they sell the project to a major miner, who can more easily raise the required funding and has the experience to build and operate a mine.

OK, so now you’re pumped with the idea that one of these little mining companies could help you retire in two years.

And you’re right, they can. But not so fast.

The truth is you need to approach this mining subsector with a game plan – an investment “toolkit” if you will – to help you to cast aside the dogs and focus on the “diamonds in the rough.”

Essentially, there are four main areas you need to vet in order to decide if a given junior miner is one to add to your portfolio.

Junior Mining Stocks and Geopolitics

When considering a junior miner, geopolitics is always a concern. In this case, stability is what you are looking for.

For instance, it is important to know:

Where the company’s main project is located.

And what the political regime is like in that jurisdiction.

I make no bones about avoiding projects located in places unfriendly to mining, and neither should you.

That includes most of Africa, Russia, and some areas in Asia and Latin America. Places favourable for miners include much of Canada, Australia, parts of Europe and Scandinavia, Latin America, and Asia.

It’s simple. The last thing you want is for some kleptocrat to wait until tens of millions have been spent to discover a massive gold deposit, only to turn around and revoke a key permit or expropriate the land.

What also tends to happen in these “hostile-to-mining” locations is that, after a project is built, the government decides to change the rules, ask for a significant share, and/or up the royalties.

For the most part, the places I like for mining have an established legal framework that allows the miner to know the rules and doesn’t make drastic changes too often.

The second aspect of geopolitics is the surroundings and placement of the property. Many times there can be people living nearby, or the land may have significance to an indigenous population.

Some projects also need to get entire small towns to move, while others need to negotiate with a native group for some sort of compensation.

To avoid these hurdles, a Stakeholder Engagement Program is a great way for the company to gain favor with the locals.

By involving the local community through sponsorships and hiring, and by working with educational institutions for consulting or research, the company can demonstrate how they are able and willing to contribute to the economic benefit of the area.

Obviously, a deposit in the middle of nowhere is less likely to affect people. But that could also mean there is little or no infrastructure like electricity, water, or roads nearby.

Generally, the closer the access to these, the better, as it allows access to the property, facilitates exploration and development, and simplifies eventual mine operation.

The Importance of Management for Junior Mining Stocks

When it comes to junior mining stocks, management is the key.

It is so important that many times a less-than-stellar property can be made viable simply by a great management team that has the ability to prove its deposits are economically attractive, or even potentially very profitable.

Investors need to be sure the guys running the junior miner have a ton of experience, ideally directly related to the same commodity involved in the project at hand.

Even better is when management and/or the company’s geologists have made significant discoveries in the past, and some of those deposits have made it all the way to becoming mines.

Experienced management will also know how to navigate the legal, political, and financial issues sure to arise.

Look for companies where the key people have plenty of “skin in the game,” ensuring their shares and stock options align their interests with those of shareholders.

Don’t Overlook the Balance Sheet of a Junior Mining Company

Balance sheets can be intimidating for some investors, but they don’t need to be. Here are a few things you want to look for.

First, determine the market cap of the company and the number of outstanding shares.

If the share float looks excessively big, it could be that management raised money at really low equity prices when they were desperate. It could be a question of bad luck or timing, or it could be bad planning. You need to figure out which.

Second, you don’t want a junior miner that has debt, or at least significant debt on its balance sheet, if it has no cash flow. As well, their cash balance should be able to take them through to their next significant milestone.

If that’s the case, and the news pointing towards that milestone is positive, it may allow management to raise money at a significantly higher share price, avoiding overly diluting existing shareholders.

Also, take a look at their monthly costs to keep the lights on, employees paid, and exploration moving forward.

In certain cases, a junior may actually earn income from an ongoing related business. I’ve come across one company with significant earnings from mine remediation, which actually helped them gain invaluable information on interesting properties they eventually picked up. Another, a small silver miner, manufactures, sells, and repairs mining equipment for competitors, helping to pay the bills.

Junior Mining Drilling Results are Paramount

An important ingredient that helps separate the wheat from the chaff is the drilling results.

It’s one thing to drill a hole and hit gold. It’s quite another to know where to keep drilling, and to keep finding more.

The best junior miners are the ones that use a process, involving plenty of science, geology, geophysics, and yes, some art.

All the scientific aspects help geologists know where to look. But it’s decades of experience that allow some geologists to interpret the drill results and assays. Only then can they use that info to formulate a concept of what the deposit may actually look like.

Prospective investors will want to look for high grade (concentration) of the resource for every ton of ore. Typically, the higher the concentration, the higher the value, as eventual mining and processing costs will be lower per gram or per pound of final product.

In that vein, investors want to see higher grade, and drill results that consistently hit quality material.

That tells you two things: the geologist is looking in the right place, and the deposit is likely growing in size. This in turn helps boost the value of the asset, while allowing for a more economic extraction of the contained resource in the future.

So there you have it. Now you know what things to look for to significantly increase your odds of investing in a junior resource company that’s going to hit the jackpot.

Remember, even doing all this provides no guarantees.

You need to do plenty of due diligence to narrow down the vast pool of potential candidates to the select few deserving of your hard-earned capital.

You also need to arm yourself with patience and be willing to allow a given investment months and even years to play itself out. Good management needs time to execute, and resource exploration is a tough business.

But there are few other industries where $1 spent drilling in the right place can return $100 dollars to early investors.

Junior miners offer that explosive potential.

Now you just need to decide… do you want a piece of it?

Peter Krauth
Contributing Editor, Money Morning

Publisher’s Note: This article originally appeared in Money Morning USA

From the Archives…

Why You Should Wish For a Falling Market
2012-06-08 – Greg Canavan

Why the U.S. Dollar is Really Rising
2012-06-07 – Keith Fitz-Gerald

How This Bear Market Could Last Another 18 Years… Just Like Japan’s
2012-06-06 – Kris Sayce

The Banking Plan That Could Be A Game-Changer for Gold
2012-06-05 – Dr. Alex Cowie

Best Investment Strategies For the Times Ahead
2012-06-04 – Nick Hubble


Everything You Need to Know About Junior Mining Stocks

Large Cap Value Stocks: A Great Big Value?

Article by Investment U

Large Cap Value Stocks: A Great Big Value?

Even investors with little appetite for stocks should be looking at one dirt-cheap sector: large-cap value.

More than a few investors are feeling a little gun-shy right now. Weak economic indicators – including soft employment and low consumer confidence – and ongoing problems in the Eurozone have put many on the defensive.

That’s not necessarily a bad thing. When the market starts to wobble, there is often more downside ahead.

But there’s a big difference between investing defensively and not investing at all. Successful investing is about managing risk – not running from it.

That’s why even investors with little appetite for stocks should be looking at one dirt-cheap sector: large-cap value.

Brandes Institute recently sliced U.S. stocks into 10 deciles by value characteristics and found that value hasn’t just done better. From 1980 to 2010, the cheapest stocks outperformed the most expensive by 575%.

Why does this happen? As a former money manager, I know that investing in value requires patience. That’s something most retail investors – and many small institutions – simply don’t have. They’ll hold a stock or a stock fund a couple quarters and if nothing is happening – especially if growth stocks are doing well – they’ll grouse that they’re sitting on “dead money” and roll into something else, often at precisely the wrong time.

The great global value investor John Templeton used to hold his stock positions an average of seven and a half years. Yet many investors would describe this approach as “From Here to Eternity.”

That’s why value investing is often referred to as “time arbitrage.” It often takes several months (or years) for value investing to work its magic.

Yet now is likely an excellent time to get started. Credit Suisse data reveals that the cheapest stocks in the S&P 500 index based on five metrics, including the price-to-earnings and price-to-sales ratios, have lagged the most expensive ones by 9% this year. And, according to Russell Investment, the last time a value index ranked on top and a growth index on bottom was the disastrous year of 2008.

Every seasoned investor knows that various asset classes go through cycles of outperformance and underperformance. Value has lagged for a very long time – and now offers plenty of upside potential without the neck-snapping volatility of go-go growth stocks.

How to play it? You can research and buy individual value stocks. Or you can take the simple, diversified approach and just buy a fund or ETF. If you prefer the latter route, a good candidate is the Vanguard Value ETF (NYSE: VTV).

VTV tracks the performance of a large-cap, value benchmark: the MSCI US Prime Market Value Index. The fund remains fully invested and uses a passive management strategy (no active trading), so it is relatively tax efficient. The expense ratio here is the lowest in the industry – just 0.12%. And the fund’s 10 largest holdings – which make up almost a third of the portfolio – are companies you know well: Exxon Mobil (NYSE: XOM), Chevron (NYSE: CVX), General Electric (NYSE: GE), AT&T (NYSE: T), Procter & Gamble (NYSE: PG), Johnson & Johnson (NYSE: JNJ), JP Morgan Chase (NYSE: JPM), Pfizer (NYSE: PFE), Wells Fargo (NYSE: WFC) and Intel (Nasdaq: INTC).

In short, the recent sell-off has made value stocks a bargain right now. It’s a great opportunity… if you have the patience for it.

Good Investing,

Alexander Green

Article by Investment U

How to Profit From Bristol-Myers Squibb’s New Cancer Drugs

Article by Investment U

View the Investment U Video Archive

In focus this week – Bristol-Myers Squibb Company’s (NYSE: BMY) new powerhouse cancer drugs, junk bonds now and the SITFA.

Bristol-Myers Squibb Company (NYSE: BMY)…

How to Profit From Bristol-Myers Squibb's New Cancer Drugs

There are changes coming in the medical world that will be as revolutionary and life changing as anesthesia was in the mid 19th century.

There are changes coming in the medical world that will be as revolutionary and life changing as anesthesia was in the mid 19th century.

Bristol-Myers Squibb announced this week that not one but two of its experimental immunotherapy drugs, not chemotherapy drugs, immunotherapy, have shown amazing results in advanced stages of several types of cancer, and the results are long lasting.

These drugs are turning life expectancies from months to years!

Immunotherapies are a whole new way of treating cancer, and other diseases, by getting the own immune systems to recognize a cancer cell as a foreign body and fighting it. Until now cancer cells have been able to stop our immune systems from responding to them as a threat. That gave cancer carte blanche access to our bodies.

Dr Suzanne Topalian of Johns Hopkins said that these immunotherapy drugs are not like any other drug treatment. Your immune system has a memory so these treatments should work for life just like the vaccinations we received as children.

The market for this type of treatment is so huge there aren’t even any estimates yet on how much this could mean to BMY’s bottom line. This could transform the medical industry.

Other companies that have similar immunotherapy trials in place are; Roche (OTC: RHHBY), Glaxo Smith Kline (NYSE: GSK) and Merck (NYSE: MRK).

Put this one on your back burner and watch for news about BMY’s phase three trial that is to begin this December. Remember, buy on the rumor, sell on the news, but in this case as the news begins to leak before the end of the trials – as it always does – it may be best to keep this one for the long run.

Junk Bonds Now?

William Larkin of Cabot Money Management said in the Journal this week that if you need yield, and who doesn’t, you need high yield, but you have to be comfortable with some volatility. These are not CD’s.

On the plus side of junk bonds, despite a very slow economy, high yield default rates are well below long term averages. The Journal reports the default rate at 3% for the past year and Moody’s expects it to drop to 2.8% next year. That means 97% of all high yield bonds are paying exactly as promised!

Fears of Spanish bank problems and the continuing Greek problems have caused a recent sell off in corporate bonds which according to Jamie Farnham, managing director of credit research at TCW, it’s a buying opportunity.

Farnham said in a Wall Street Journal article that high yields, like all investments, have swings between panic and euphoria but long term high yield looks very good.

The slow growth rate of the U.S. economy of 1.9% is worrisome for stock investors but according to BNP Paribas’s Martin Fridson 1.9% is plenty for companies to cover their interest payments so high yields are in very good shape in this environment.

Payout levels of 5% to 7% are being quoted in Barrons’ and the WSJ but if you follow my articles in the Ultimate Income Letter or here at Investment U you know there are opportunities out there as high as the mid-teens, you just need to know where to look.

For the informed, high-yield bonds are a great way to earn much more than stock market returns with a lot fewer headaches and a lot less volatility.

And last, the SITFA

This week it goes to the CEO’s out there who think losing a billion or so dollars of their share holders money is just part of doing business.

A recent WSJ article recommended the Slurpee Rule be enforced for any CEO who loses a billion or more dollars.

What’s the Slurpee rule? The Slurpee Rule says any CEO who loses a billion or more should be fired immediately. No severance package, no stock options, nothing, just get out, and be made to work at 7-Eleven cleaning the Slurpee machines.

The WSJ writer thinks this should give the fallen CEO’s a renewed perspective on how hard it is to earn a billion dollars.

I have to agree…

Article by Investment U

How to Play the Apple TV Revolution with Options

Article by Investment U

How to Play the Apple TV Revolution with Options

The new Apple TV will provide yet another reason for Apple (AAPL) stock to take off. You can play with trend for cheap with options using a bull call spread.

It wasn’t said outright, but Piper Jaffray analyst Gene Munster thinks Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) CEO Tim Cook was sounding the alarm. Munster and many industry pundits and bloggers have been looking at Cook’s comments from the All Things Digital Conference late last month with great interest.

“The message that I think Tim Cook intended to send was don’t buy a TV, we’re working on something,” Munster says. Munster has been snooping around other avenues and he’s pretty sure we’ll see a new Apple TV relatively soon. What he’s not exactly sure of is the “when.”

“They could announce a new Apple TV as soon as December,” he says.

In the past, Munster has said the new Apple TV – or iTV – will be “the biggest thing in consumer electronics since the smartphone came up.”

Where There’s Smoke, There’s Fire…

Here are three other sources on the manufacturing side that point to a new iTV coming soon:

  • China Business News reports that Foxconn, Apple’s Chinese manufacturing partner, has already started a pilot production of the new Apple HDTV. They say their sources tell them that a Foxconn factory in Shenzhen has received orders for an Apple “smart TV” and is producing them on a trial basis.
  • Another Chinese publication, WantChinaTimes, quotes Lao Cha, an industry observer, who said, “The advent of the mobile internet has paved the way for digital convergence, prompting Apple, Samsung and other international brands to branch out into smart TVs. Smart TVs play a critical role in digital convergence. Cloud computing and equipment linkage will be key to the success of equipment suppliers.”
  • According to Canaccord Genuity analyst Michael Walkley in a note to clients, “Following our supply chain checks, we have increased confidence Apple will launch a 50-plus inch LCD-TV product by [the first fiscal quarter of 2013].”

Much Ado About Content

Many analysts are hung up on the idea that Apple won’t release a television if it can’t do something special with content. Munster thinks this is wrong. Apple television will take off not because it will conquer cable television, but because of the interface that it will give its users.

There’s a growing desire by users to have unbundled content. But we all know that the Comcasts (Nasdaq: CMCSA) of the world aren’t going to let that happen anytime soon. So Apple will need to improvise for the time being. Here’s the rest of Munster’s take on what Apple can do with content:

  • Consumers are willing to pay more for each channel as long as their overall bill goes down (i.e. pay more for fewer channels you actually want). Apple has shown a knack for disrupting industries and will likely try the same here.
  • Unbundled channels and DVR will eventually be in the cloud. However this will take a few years. In the near term it will probably strongly resemble the current Apple TV content offering of streaming options.
  • The interface should allow users a new way to search, interact and record cable content.

Munster thinks it will be released in the first half of 2013, and he believes the prices will be $1,500 to $2,000, and screen sizes will be 42″ to 55″.

How to Play

In my eyes this will provide yet another reason for Apple stock to take off.

A few weeks ago, I wrote about how to play Apple stock for less with options. I suggested using a bull call spread (vertical call spread) where you buy call options at a specific strike price while also selling the same number of calls of the same asset and expiration date but at a higher strike.

If you agree that Apple is poised for a boost with a TV offer in the next six months to a year, you may want to look into this approach… Here’s a closer look at how it works:

A bull call spread is used when you believe a security is going up. The most you can gain is the difference between the strike prices of the long and short options, less the net cost of options. Here’s that example again.

In the March 26 issue of Barron’s, Striking Price columnist Steven M. Sears gives a pretty good example of how this works:

“With Apple at $601.31, investors can buy Apple’s January $600 call that expires in 2013, and sell Apple’s January $700 call that also expires in 2013. The position costs $37.50, and lets investors benefit if Apple’s stock hits $700 by next January.

“If Apple’s stock advances as expected, investors who used the Apple call-spread strategy-buying the January $600 call and selling the January $700 call will make a 168% return on their investment.”

Of course you get limited return if the stock goes above $700 because you don’t own it. But keep in mind that one of the great things about this spread trade is that the expense you incur by purchasing the at-the-money call option is offset by the income you receive from writing the out-of-the-money call option – and this is why your net expense for the trade is much smaller.

And for those who aren’t comfortable with options, consider a small semi-conductor company as play on iPhones and iPads – Cirrus Logic (Nasdaq: CRUS).

Cirrus Logic is the sole supplier for audio codecs in iDevices (iPhones and iPads). It derives 50% of its revenue from Apple. I’ll keep you posted as I hear more…

Good Investing,

Jason Jenkins

Article by Investment U