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- X-Last-Updated: 2003/03/17
- From: noreply@invest-faq.com (Christopher Lott)
- Newsgroups: misc.invest.misc,misc.invest.stocks,misc.invest.technical,misc.invest.options,misc.answers,news.answers
- Subject: The Investment FAQ (part 2 of 20)
- Followup-To: misc.invest.misc
- Summary: Answers to frequently asked questions about investments.
- Should be read by anyone who wishes to post to misc.invest.*
- Organization: The Investment FAQ publicity department
- Keywords: invest, finance, stock, bond, fund, broker, exchange, money, FAQ
- URL: http://invest-faq.com/
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- Archive-name: investment-faq/general/part2
- Version: $Id: part02,v 1.61 2003/03/17 02:44:30 lott Exp lott $
- Compiler: Christopher Lott
-
- The Investment FAQ is a collection of frequently asked questions and
- answers about investments and personal finance. This is a plain-text
- version of The Investment FAQ, part 2 of 20. The web site
- always has the latest version, including in-line links. Please browse
- http://invest-faq.com/
-
-
- Terms of Use
-
- The following terms and conditions apply to the plain-text version of
- The Investment FAQ that is posted regularly to various newsgroups.
- Different terms and conditions apply to documents on The Investment
- FAQ web site.
-
- The Investment FAQ is copyright 2003 by Christopher Lott, and is
- protected by copyright as a collective work and/or compilation,
- pursuant to U.S. copyright laws, international conventions, and other
- copyright laws. The contents of The Investment FAQ are intended for
- personal use, not for sale or other commercial redistribution.
- The plain-text version of The Investment FAQ may be copied, stored,
- made available on web sites, or distributed on electronic media
- provided the following conditions are met:
- + The URL of The Investment FAQ home page is displayed prominently.
- + No fees or compensation are charged for this information,
- excluding charges for the media used to distribute it.
- + No advertisements appear on the same web page as this material.
- + Proper attribution is given to the authors of individual articles.
- + This copyright notice is included intact.
-
-
- Disclaimers
-
- Neither the compiler of nor contributors to The Investment FAQ make
- any express or implied warranties (including, without limitation, any
- warranty of merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose or
- use) regarding the information supplied. The Investment FAQ is
- provided to the user "as is". Neither the compiler nor contributors
- warrant that The Investment FAQ will be error free. Neither the
- compiler nor contributors will be liable to any user or anyone else
- for any inaccuracy, error or omission, regardless of cause, in The
- Investment FAQ or for any damages (whether direct or indirect,
- consequential, punitive or exemplary) resulting therefrom.
-
- Rules, regulations, laws, conditions, rates, and such information
- discussed in this FAQ all change quite rapidly. Information given
- here was current at the time of writing but is almost guaranteed to be
- out of date by the time you read it. Mention of a product does not
- constitute an endorsement. Answers to questions sometimes rely on
- information given in other answers. Readers outside the USA can reach
- US-800 telephone numbers, for a charge, using a service such as MCI's
- Call USA. All prices are listed in US dollars unless otherwise
- specified.
-
- Please send comments and new submissions to the compiler.
-
- --------------------Check http://invest-faq.com/ for updates------------------
-
- Subject: Advice - Beginning Investors
-
- Last-Revised: 1 Aug 1998
- Contributed-By: Steven Pearson, E. Green, Chris Lott ( contact me )
-
- Investing is just one aspect of personal finance. People often seem to
- have the itch to try their hand at investing before they get the rest of
- their act together. This is a big mistake. For this reason, it's a
- good idea for "new investors" to hit the library and read maybe three
- different overall guides to personal finance - three for different
- perspectives, and because common themes will emerge (repetition implies
- authority?). Personal finance issues include making a budget, sticking
- to a budget, saving money towards major purchases or retirement,
- managing debt appropriately, insuring your property, etc. Appropriate
- books that focus on personal finance include the following (the links
- point to Amazon.com):
-
- * Janet Bamford et al.
- The Consumer Reports Money Book: How to Get It, Save It, and Spend
- It Wisely (3rd edn)
- * Andrew Tobias
- The Only Investment Guide You'll Ever Need
- * Eric Tyson
- Personal Finance for Dummies
-
- Another great resource for learning about investing, insurance, stocks,
- etc. is the Wall Street Journal's Section C front page. Beginners
- should make a special effort to get the Friday edition of the WSJ
- because a column named "Getting Going" usually appears on that day and
- discusses issues in, well, getting going on investments. If you don't
- want to spend the dollar or so for the WSJ, try your local library.
-
- What I am specifically NOT talking about is most anything that appears
- on a list of investing/stock market books that are posted in
- misc.invest.* from time to time. This includes books like Market Logic,
- One Up on Wall Street, Beating the Dow, Winning on Wall Street, The
- Intelligent Investor, etc. These are not general enough. They are
- investment books, not personal finance books.
-
- Many "beginning investors" have no business investing in stocks. The
- books recommended above give good overall money management, budgeting,
- purchasing, insurance, taxes, estate issues, and investing backgrounds
- from which to build a personal framework. Only after that should one
- explore particular investments. If someone needs to unload some cash in
- the meantime, they should put it in a money market fund, or yes, even a
- bank account, until they complete their basic training.
-
- While I sympathize with those who view this education as a daunting
- task, I don't see any better answer. People who know next to nothing
- and always depend on "professional advisors" to hand-hold them through
- all transactions are simply sheep asking to be fleeced (they may not
- actually be fleeced, but most of them will at least get their tails
- bobbed). In the long run, an individual is the only person ultimately
- responsible for his or her own financial situation.
-
- Beginners may want to look further in The Investment FAQ for the
- articles that discuss the basics of mutual funds , basics of stocks ,
- and basics of bonds . For more in-depth material, browse the Investment
- FAQ bookshelf with its recommended books about personal finance and
- investments.
-
-
- --------------------Check http://invest-faq.com/ for updates------------------
-
- Subject: Advice - Buying a Car at a Reasonable Price
-
- Last-Revised: 1 Aug 2001
- Contributed-By: Kyle Busch (kbusch at velocity.net)
-
- Before making a purchase, especially a large one, most buyers ponder an
- equation that goes something like: What is it going to cost me, and will
- that equal what I am going to get?
-
- Consider that equation when buying your next vehicle. Naturally, you
- want to get the most vehicle for the money you spend. Here are several
- tips that will help you to get more for your money.
-
- First, and foremost, consider eliminating some of the steep depreciation
- cost incurred during the first three years of vehicle ownership by
- purchasing a 2- to 3- year-old used vehicle.
-
- The price can be further reduced by paying cash. However, if you need
- to finance your next vehicle purchase, consider doing the following to
- keep its cost closer to the "as if you were paying cash" figure.
- * Take the time to carefully identify your current and your future
- transportation needs, and choose an appropriate
- vehicle.Transportation represents different things to different
- people. For some drivers, it represents status in society. Other
- drivers place greater emphasis on reliably just getting from point
- A to points B and C. The more closely that you match your driving
- needs with the vehicle you buy, the more driving pleasure you will
- experience and the more likely you will want to hold on to the
- vehicle.
-
- If you can't fully identify your transportation needs or the
- vehicle that can best satisfy them, consult the April issue of
- Consumer Reports at a public library. The publication groups
- vehicles into categories, provides frequency-of-repair information
- for many vehicles, and gives vehicle price information. It is a
- good idea to identify 2 or 3 vehicles in a particular category that
- meet your transportation needs.This enables some latitude when
- shopping for the vehicle. =
-
-
- * Identify how much you can afford to spend per month on
- transportation. A rule of thumb suggests that the cost to rent an
- apartment per month should not be greater than 25 percent of your
- monthly net pay.The cost of an auto loan should not exceed 10 to 12
- percent of your monthly net pay. In some instances, leasing a
- vehicle could be a better option than taking out a loan.
-
-
- * The vehicle down payment should be the largest possible, and the
- amount of money borrowed the lowest possible. In addition,
- borrowing money for the shortest period of time (i.e., a 24-month
- loan rather than a 48-month loan) will reduce the overall cost of
- the loan.
-
-
- * Identify the various loan sources such as banks, savings and loans,
- credit unions, and national lenders (i.e., go online to ask
- jeeves.com and specify "automobile financing sources"). In regard
- to national financing vs. local financing, it can be useful to
- determine what the cost of a loan would be from the national
- sources, but accept a loan from a local source if the loan cost is
- comparable or nearly comparable between the two. Compare the APR
- (annual percentage rate) that each of the sources will charge for
- the loan. The cost of a loan is negotiable. Therefore, be certain
- to inform each source what the others have to offer. In addition
- to the loan's APR, remember to also compare the other costs
- associated with a loan, such as loan insurance and loan processing
- costs.
-
-
- * Be certain to read and understand any fine print contained in the
- loan contract. Insist that the loan contract gives you the option
- of making payments early and that the payments will be applied on
- the loan principle with no penalty or extra cost if you payoff the
- loan early.
-
-
- * Do not settle for a vehicle that does not entirely meet your
- transportation needs because of low dealer or manufacturer
- incentive financing.Sometimes dealers or manufactures offer
- extremely low APR financing on vehicles that the dealer is having a
- hard time selling. That's why it helps to have initially
- identified the correct vehicle before encountering the sales
- pitches and other influences of buying a vehicle. Kyle Busch is
- the author of Drive the Best for the Price: How to Buy a Used
- Automobile, Sport-Utility Vehicle, or Minivan and Save Money . To find
- out more about the author and this book visit:
- http://www.drivethebestbook.com
-
-
- --------------------Check http://invest-faq.com/ for updates------------------
-
- Subject: Advice - Errors in Investing
-
- Last-Revised: 2 Aug 1999
- Contributed-By: Chris Lott ( contact me ), Thomas Price (tprice at
- engr.msstate.edu)
-
- The Wall Street Journal of June 18, 1991 had an article on pages C1/C10
- on Investment Errors and how to avoid them. As summarized from that
- article, the errors are:
- * Not following an investment objective when you build a portfolio.
- * Buying too many mutual funds.
- * Not researching a one-product stock before you buy.
- * Believing that you can pick market highs and lows (time the
- market).
- * Taking profits early.
- * Not cutting your losses.
- * Buying the hottest {stock, mutual fund} from last year.
-
- Here's a recent quote that underscores the last item. When asked
- "What's the biggest mistake individual investors make?" on Wall $treet
- Week, John Bogle, founder and senior chairman of Vanguard mutual funds,
- said "Extrapolating the trend" or buying the hot stock.
-
- On a final note, get this quote on market timing:
-
- In the 1980s if you were out of the market on the ten best
- trading days of the decade you missed one-third of the total
- return.
-
-
-
-
- --------------------Check http://invest-faq.com/ for updates------------------
-
- Subject: Advice - Using a Full-Service Broker
-
- Last-Revised: 23 Mar 1998
- Contributed-By: Bill Rini (bill at moneypages.com), Chris Lott ( contact
- me )
-
- There are several reasons to choose a full-service broker over a
- discount or web broker. People use a full-service broker because they
- may not want to do their own research, because they are only interested
- in long-term investing, because they like to hear the broker's
- investment ideas, etc. But another important reason is that not
- everybody likes to trade. I may want retirement planning services from
- my broker. I may want to buy 3 or 4 mutual funds and have my broker
- worry about them. If my broker is a financial planner, perhaps I want
- tax or estate advice on certain investment options. Maybe I'm saving
- for my newborn child's education but I have no idea or desire to work
- out a plan to make sure the money is there when she or he needs it.
-
- A huge reason to stick with a full-service broker is access to initial
- public offerings (IPOs). These are generally reserved for the very best
- clients, where best is defined as "someone who generates lots of
- revenue," so someone who trades just a few times a year doesn't have a
- chance. But if you can afford to trade frequently at the full-service
- commission rates, you may be favored with access to some great IPOs.
-
- And the real big one for a lot of people is quite simply time . Full
- service brokerage clients also tend to be higher net worth individuals
- as well. If I'm a doctor or lawyer, I can probably make more money by
- focusing on my business than spending it researching stocks. For many
- people today, time is a more valuable commodity than money. In fact, it
- doesn't even have to do with how wealthy you are. Americans, in
- general, work some pretty insane hours. Spending time researching
- stocks or staying up on the market is quality time not spent with
- family, friends, or doing things that they enjoy. On the other hand
- some people enjoy the market and for those people there are discount
- brokers.
-
- The one thing that sort of scares me about the difference between full
- service and discount brokers is that a pretty good chunk of discount
- brokerage firm clients are not that educated about investing. They look
- at a $20 commission (discount broker) and a $50 commission (full service
- broker) and they decide they can't afford to invest with a full service
- broker. Instead they plow their life savings into some wonder stock
- they heard about from a friend (hey, it's only a $20 commission, why
- not?) and lose a few hundred or thousand bucks when the investment goes
- south. Not that a broker is going to pick winners 100% of the time but
- at least the broker can guide or mentor a beginning investor until they
- learn enough to know what to look for and what not to look for in a
- stock. I look at the $30 difference in what the two types of brokerage
- firms charge as the rebate for education and doing my own research. If
- you're not going to educate yourself or do your own research, you don't
- deserve the rebate.
-
-
- --------------------Check http://invest-faq.com/ for updates------------------
-
- Subject: Advice - Mutual-Fund Expenses
-
- Last-Revised: 16 Feb 2003
- Contributed-By: Austin Lemoine
-
- This article discusses stealth erosion of wealth, more specifically how
- mutual-fund expenses erode wealth accumulation.
-
- Mutual fund expense ratios, and similar investment-related fees, can
- seriously erode wealth accumulation over time. Those fees and expenses
- are stealthy, and they go largely unnoticed by investors while steadily
- diminishing the value of their investments in both up and down markets.
-
- What you pay for investing in a mutual fund, exclusive of any sales
- charges, is indicated by the "expense ratio" of the fund. The expense
- ratio is the percentage of mutual fund assets paid for operating
- expenses, management fees, administrative fees, and all other
- asset-based costs incurred by the fund, except brokerage costs. Those
- expenses are reflected in the fund's net asset value (NAV), and they are
- not really visible to the fund investor. The reported net return equals
- the fund's gross return minus its costs. (And expense ratios do not
- account for every cost mutual fund investors bear: additional costs
- include any sales charges, brokerage commissions paid by the fund and
- other significant kinds of indirect trading costs.)
-
- Mutual fund expense ratios range from less than 0.20 percent for
- low-cost index funds to well over 2 percent for actively managed funds.
- The average is 1.40 percent for the more than 14,000 stock and bond
- mutual funds currently available, according to Morningstar. In dollar
- terms, that's $14 a year in fees for each $1,000 of investment value; or
- a net value of $986. That might not seem like a big deal, but over time
- fees compound to erode investment value.
-
- Let's say the gross return in real terms (after inflation) of a broadly
- diversified stock mutual fund will be 7 percent a year, excluding
- expenses. (The 7 percent figure is consistent with returns for the U.S.
- stock market from 1802 through 2001, as reported in Jeremy Siegel's
- book, Stocks for the Long Run, 3rd edition.) Say the fund has an expense
- ratio of 1.25 percent. And say you invest $1,000 in the fund at the
- start of every year. (The figure of $1,000 is arbitrary, and investment
- values below can be extrapolated to any annual contribution amount.)
-
- Compounding at 7 percent, your gross investment value would be $6,153
- after 5 years; $14,783 after 10 years; $43,865 after 20 years; $101,073
- after 30 years; and $213,609 after 40 years. But with a 1.25 percent
- expense ratio, your investment compounds at 7.0 minus 1.25 or 5.75
- percent, not 7 percent. So your investment would actually be worth
- $5,931 after 5 years; $13,776 after 10 years; $37,871 after 20 years;
- $80,015 after 30 years; and $153,727 after 40 years. Fund expenses
- account for the difference in value over time, with greater expenses
- (and/or lower returns) having a greater negative impact on net
- investment value.
-
- That 1.25 percent expense ratio consumes $222 (or 3.6 percent) of the
- $6,153 gross value over 5 years; 6.8 percent of gross value over 10
- years; 13.6 percent over 20 years; and 20.8 percent over 30 years. Over
- 40 years, the $59,882 of fund expenses devour 28.0 percent of the
- $213,609 gross value. In other words, only 72.0 percent of gross
- investment value is left after 40 years, a withering erosion of wealth.
-
- By contrast, let's say there's a broad-based index fund with 7 percent
- real return but a 0.25 percent expense ratio. Putting $1,000 at the
- start of each year into that fund, the 0.25 percent expense ratio would
- consume just 2.9 percent of gross investment value after 20 years. Over
- 40 years, index fund expenses would total $13,759, a modest 6.4 percent
- of gross value; so that the fund would earn 93.6 percent of gross value.
- With expenses included, investment value is 30 percent higher after 40
- years with the lower cost fund. (Even lower expense ratios can be found
- among lowest-cost index funds and broad-based exchange-traded funds.
- And funds with higher expenses do not outperform comparable funds with
- lower expenses.)
-
- Over the next ten to twenty years, expense ratios and similar fees could
- be a huge millstone on wealth accumulation and wealth preservation. To
- see why, let's review what's happened since March 2000.
-
- Like a massive hurricane, the stock market has inflicted damage on
- almost every portfolio in its path. From the peak of March 2000 to the
- lows of early October 2002, it's estimated that falling stock prices
- wiped out over $7 trillion in market value. While the market has moved
- off its lows, we hope the worst is over.
-
- How long will the market take to "heal itself?" It could take a long
- time. A growing consensus holds that stocks just won't deliver the
- returns we grew accustomed to from 1984 to 1999. If history is a guide,
- real stock returns could average 2 to 4 percent a year over the 10 to 20
- years following March 2000.
-
- If lower expectations for stock returns materialize, mutual fund fees
- and expenses will have an even greater adverse impact on wealth
- accumulation, and especially on wealth preservation and income security
- at retirement.
-
- Let's say you'll want $40,000 income from your 401(k) assets without
- drawing down principal. If real investment return is 4 percent you'll
- need $40,000 divided by 0.04 or $1 million principal. But if you're
- paying 1 percent in fees your real return is 3 percent, so you'll need
- $40,000 divided by 0.03 or $1.333 million principal; and if 2 percent,
- $2 million. The arithmetic is brutal!
-
- It's clear that mutual fund costs and similar fees can be detrimental to
- investment values over time. Fund sales charges exacerbate the problem.
- Consider investing in lower-cost funds wherever possible.
-
- For more insights from Austin Lemoine, please visit the web site for
- Austin Lemoine Capital Management:
- http://www.austinlemoine.com/
-
-
- --------------------Check http://invest-faq.com/ for updates------------------
-
- Subject: Advice - One-Line Wisdom
-
- Last-Revised: 22 Aug 1993
- Contributed-By: Maurice Suhre
-
- This is a collection of one-line pieces of investment wisdom, with brief
- explanations. Use and apply at your own risk or discretion. They are
- not in any particular order.
-
- Hang up on cold calls.
- While it is theoretically possible that someone is going to offer
- you the opportunity of a lifetime, it is more likely that it is
- some sort of scam. Even if it is legitimate, the caller cannot
- know your financial position, goals, risk tolerance, or any other
- parameters which should be considered when selecting investments.
- If you can't bear the thought of hanging up, ask for material to be
- sent by mail.
- Don't invest in anything you don't understand.
- There were horror stories of people who had lost fortunes by being
- short puts during the 87 crash. I imagine that they had no idea of
- the risks they were taking. Also, all the complaints about penny
- stocks, whether fraudulent or not, are partially a result of not
- understanding the risks and mechanisms.
- If it sounds too good to be true, it probably is [too good to be true].
- Also stated as ``There ain't no such thing as a free lunch
- (TANSTAAFL).'' Remember, every investment opportunity competes with
- every other investment opportunity. If one seems wildly better
- than the others, there are probably hidden risks or you don't
- understand something.
- If your only tool is a hammer, every problem looks like a nail.
- Someone (possibly a financial planner) with a very limited
- selection of products will naturally try to jam you into those
- which s/he sells. These may be less suitable than other products
- not carried.
- Don't rush into an investment.
- If someone tells you that the opportunity is closing, filling up
- fast, or in any other way suggests a time pressure, be very leery.
- Very low priced stocks require special treatment.
- Risks are substantial, bid/asked spreads are large, prices are
- volatile, and commissions are relatively high. You need a broker
- who knows how to purchase these stocks and dicker for a good price.
-
-
-
- --------------------Check http://invest-faq.com/ for updates------------------
-
- Subject: Advice - Paying for Investment Advice
-
- Last-Revised: 25 Apr 1997
- Contributed-By: Chris Lott ( contact me )
-
- I'm no expert, but there's a simple rule that you should use to evaluate
- all advice that is offered to you, especially advice for which someone
- who doesn't know you is asking significant sums of money. Ask yourself
- why the person is selling or giving it to you. If it sounds like a sure
- ticket to riches, then why is the person wasting their time on YOU when
- they could be out there making piles of dough?
-
- Of course I'm offering advice here in this article, so let's turn the
- tables on me right now. What's in it for me? Well, if you're reading
- this article from my web site, look up at the top of the page. If you
- have images turned on, you'll see a banner ad. I get a tiny payment
- each time a person loads one of my pages with an ad. So my motivation
- is to provide informative articles in order to lure visitors to the
- site. Of course if you're reading this from the plain-text version of
- the FAQ, you won't see any ads, but please do stop by the site sometime!
- ;-)
-
- So if someone promises you advice that will yield 10-20% monthly
- returns, perhaps at a price of some $3,000, you should immediately get
- suspicious. If this were really true - i.e., if you pay for the advice
- you'll immediately start getting these returns - you would be making
- over 300% annually (compounded). Hey, that would sure be great, I
- wouldn't have a day job anymore. And if it were true, wouldn't you
- think that the person trying to sell it to you would forget all about
- selling and just watch his or her money triple every year? But they're
- not doing that, which should give you a pretty good idea about where the
- money's being made, namely from you .
-
- I'm not trying to say that you should never pay for advice, just that
- you should not overpay for advice. Some advice, especially the sort
- that comes from $15 books on personal finance and investments can easily
- be worth ten times that sum. Advice from your CPA or tax advisor will
- probably cost you a 3 or even 4-digit figure, but since it's specialized
- to your case and comes from a professional, that's probably money well
- spent.
-
- It seems appropriate to close this article with a quote that I learned
- from Robert Heinlein books, but it's probably older than that:
-
- TANSTAAFL - there ain't no such thing as a free lunch.
-
-
-
-
- --------------------Check http://invest-faq.com/ for updates------------------
-
- Subject: Advice - Researching a Company
-
- Last-Revised: 3 Jun 1997
- Contributed-By: George Regnery (regnery at yahoo.com)
-
- This article gives a basic idea of some steps that you might take to
- research a company. Many sites on the web will help you in your quest
- for information, and this article gives a few of them. You might look
- for the following.
- 1. What multiple of earnings is the company trading at versus other
- companies in the industry? The site http://www.stocksmart.com does
- this comparison reasonably well, and they base it on forward
- earnings instead of historical earnings, which is also good.
- 2. Is the stock near a high or low, and how has it done recently.
- This is usually considered technical analysis. More sophisticated
- (or at least more complicated) studies can also be performed.
- There are several sites that will give you historical graphs; one
- is Yahoo. http://biz.yahoo.com/r/
- 3. When compared with other companies in the industry, how much times
- the book value or times sales is the company trading? For this
- information, the site http://www.marketguide.com is a good place to
- start.
- 4. Does the company have good products, good management, good future
- prospects? Are they being sued? Do they have patents? What's the
- competition like? Do they have long term contracts established? Is
- their brand name recognized? Depending on the industry, some or all
- of these questions may be relevant. There isn't a simple web site
- for this information, of course. The Hoover's profiles have some
- limited information to at least let you get a feel for the basics
- of the company. And the SEC has lots of information in their Edgar
- databank.
- 5. Management. Does the company have competent people running it? The
- backgrounds of the directors can be found in proxy statements
- (14As) in the Edgar database. Note that proxies are written by the
- companies, though. Another thing I would suggest looking at is the
- compensation structure of the CEO and other top management. Don't
- worry so much about the raw figure of how they are paid -- instead,
- look to see how that compensation is structured. If the management
- gets a big base but bonuses are a small portion, look carefully at
- the company. For some industries, like electric utilities, this is
- OK, because the management isn't going to make a huge difference
- (utilities are highly regulated, and thus the management is
- preventing from making a lot of decisions). However, in a high
- tech industry, or many other industries, watch your step if the
- mgmt. gets a big base and the bonus is insignificant. This means
- that they won't be any better off financially if the company makes
- a lot of profits vs. no profits (unless, of course, they own a lot
- of stock). This information is all in the Proxies at the SEC.
- Also check to see if the company has a shareholder rights plan,
- because if they do, the management likely doesn't give a damn about
- shareholder rights, but rather cares about their own jobs. (These
- plans are commonly used to defend against unfriendly takeovers and
- therefore provide a safety blanket for management.) These
- suggestions should get you started. Also check the article elsewhere in
- this FAQ on free information sources for more resources away from the
- web.
-
-
- --------------------Check http://invest-faq.com/ for updates------------------
-
- Subject: Advice - Target Stock Prices
-
- Last-Revised: 25 Jun 2000
- Contributed-By: Uncle Arnie (blash404 at aol.com)
-
- A target price for a stock is a figure published by a securities
- industry person, usually an analyst. The idea is that the target price
- is a prediction, a guess about where the stock is headed. Target prices
- usually are associated with a date by which the stock is expected to hit
- the target. With that explanation out of the way..
-
- Why do people suddenly think that the term du jour "target price" has
- any meaning?? Consider the sources of these numbers. They're ALWAYS
- issued by someone who has a vested interest in the issue: It could be an
- analyst whose firm was the underwriter, it could be an analyst whose
- firm is brown-nosing the company, it could be a firm with a large
- position in the stock, it could be an individual trying to talk the
- stock up so he can get out even, or it could be the "pump" segment of a
- pump-and-dump operation. There is also a chance that the analyst has no
- agenda and honestly thinks the stock price is really going places. But
- in all too many cases it's nothing more than wishful guesswork (unless
- they have a crystal ball that works), so the advice here: ignore target
- prices, especially ones for internet companies.
-
-
- --------------------Check http://invest-faq.com/ for updates------------------
-
- Subject: Analysis - Amortization Tables
-
- Last-Revised: 16 Feb 2003
- Contributed-By: Hugh Chou
-
- This article presents the formula for computing monthly payments on
- loans. A listing of thed full series of payments (principal and
- interest) that show how a loan is paid off is known as a loan
- amortization table. This article will explain how these tables are
- generated for the U.S. system in which interest is compounded monthly.
-
- First you must define some variables to make it easier to set up:
-
- P = principal, the initial amount of the loan
- I = the annual interest rate (from 1 to 100 percent)
- L = length, the length (in years) of the loan, or at least the length
- over which the loan is amortized.
-
- The following assumes a typical conventional loan where the interest is
- compounded monthly. First I will define two more variables to make the
- calculations easier:
-
- J = monthly interest in decimal form = I / (12 x 100)
- N = number of months over which loan is amortized = L x 12
-
-
- Okay now for the big monthly payment (M) formula, it is:
- J
- M = P x ------------------------
-
- 1 - ( 1 + J ) ^ -N
- where 1 is the number one (it does not appear too clearly on some
- browsers).
-
- So to calculate it, you would first calculate 1 + J then take that to
- the -N (minus N) power, subtract that from the number 1. Now take the
- inverse of that (if you have a 1/X button on your calculator push that).
- Then multiply the result times J and then times P. Sorry for the long
- way of explaining it, but I just wanted to be clear for everybody.
-
- The one-liner for a program would be (adjust for your favorite
- language):
- M = P * ( J / (1 - (1 + J) ** -N))
- So now you should be able to calculate the monthly payment, M. To
- calculate the amortization table you need to do some iteration (i.e. a
- simple loop). I will tell you the simple steps :
-
- 1. Calculate H = P x J, this is your current monthly interest
- 2. Calculate C = M - H, this is your monthly payment minus your
- monthly interest, so it is the amount of principal you pay for that
- month
- 3. Calculate Q = P - C, this is the new balance of your principal of
- your loan.
- 4. Set P equal to Q and go back to Step 1: You thusly loop around
- until the value Q (and hence P) goes to zero. Programmers will see
- how this makes a trivial little loop to code, but I have found that many
- people now surfing on the Internet are NOT programmers and still want to
- calculate their mortgages!
-
- Note that just about every PC or Mac has a spreadsheet of some sort on
- it, and they are very good tools for doing mortgage analysis. Most of
- them have a built-in PMT type function that will calculate your monthly
- payment given a loan balance, interest rate, and the number of terms.
- Check the help text for your spreadsheet.
-
- Please visit Hugh Chou's web site for a calculator that will generate
- amortization tables according to the forumlas discussed here. He also
- offers many other calculators:
- http://www.hughchou.org/calc/
-
-
- --------------------Check http://invest-faq.com/ for updates------------------
-
- Subject: Analysis - Annual Reports
-
- Last-Revised: 31 Oct 1995
- Contributed-By: Jerry Bailey, Chris Lott ( contact me )
-
- The June 1994 Issue of "Better Investing" magazine, page 26 has a
- three-page article about reading and understanding company annual
- reports. I will paraphrase:
-
- 1. Start with the notes and read from back to front since the front is
- management fluff.
- 2. Look for litigation that could obliterate equity, a pension plan in
- sad shape, or accounting changes that inflated earnings.
- 3. Use it to evaluate management. I only read the boring things of
- the companies I am holding for long term growth. If I am planning
- a quick in and out, such as buying depressed stocks like BBA, CML,
- CLE, etc.), I don't waste my time.
- 4. Look for notes to offer relevant details; not "selected" and
- "certain" assets. Revenue and operating profits of operating
- divisions, geographical divisions, etc.
- 5. How the company keeps its books, especially as compared to other
- companies in its industry.
- 6. Inventory. Did it go down because of a different accounting
- method?
- 7. What assets does the company own and what assets are leased?
-
- If you do much of this, I really recommend just reading the article.
-
- The following list of resources may also help.
- * John A. Tracy has written an an easy-to-read and informative book
- named How to Read a Financial Report (4th edn., Wiley, 1993). This
- book should give you a good start. You won't become a graduate
- student in finance by reading it, but it will certainly help you
- grasp the nuts and bolts of annual reports.
- * ABC News offers the following article:
- http://abcnews.go.com/sections/business/Finance/startstocks4.html
- * IBM offers a web site with much information about understanding
- financial reports:
- http://www.ibm.com/FinancialGuide/
-
-
- --------------------Check http://invest-faq.com/ for updates------------------
-
- Subject: Analysis - Beta and Alpha
-
- Last-Revised: 22 Oct 1997
- Contributed-By: Ajay Shah ( www.igidr.ac.in/~ajayshah ), R. Shukla
- (rkshukla at som.syr.edu), Bob Pierce (rbp at investor.pgh.pa.us)
-
- Beta is the sensitivity of a stock's returns to the returns on some
- market index (e.g., S&P 500). Beta values can be roughly characterized
- as follows:
-
- * b less than 0
- Negative beta is possible but not likely. People thought gold
- stocks should have negative betas but that hasn't been true.
- * b equal to 0
- Cash under your mattress, assuming no inflation
- * beta between 0 and 1
- Low-volatility investments (e.g., utility stocks)
- * b equal to 1
- Matching the index (e.g., for the S&P 500, an index fund)
- * b greater than 1
- Anything more volatile than the index (e.g., small cap. funds)
- * b much greater than 1 (tending toward infinity)
- Impossible, because the stock would be expected to go to zero on
- any market decline. 2-3 is probably as high as you will get.
-
- More interesting is the idea that securities MAY have different betas in
- up and down markets. Forbes used to (and may still) rate mutual funds
- for bull and bear market performance.
-
- Alpha is a measure of residual risk (sometimes called "selecting risk")
- of an investment relative to some market index. For all the gory
- details on Alpha, please see a book on technical analysis.
-
- Here is an example showing the inner details of the beta calculation
- process:
-
- Suppose we collected end-of-the-month prices and any dividends for a
- stock and the S&P 500 index for 61 months (0..60). We need n + 1 price
- observations to calculate n holding period returns, so since we would
- like to index the returns as 1..60, the prices are indexed 0..60. Also,
- professional beta services use monthly data over a five year period.
-
- Now, calculate monthly holding period returns using the prices and
- dividends. For example, the return for month 2 will be calculated as:
- r_2 = ( p_2 - p_1 + d_2 ) / p_1
- Here r denotes return, p denotes price, and d denotes dividend. The
- following table of monthly data may help in visualizing the process.
- (Monthly data is preferred in the profession because investors' horizons
- are said to be monthly.)
-
- Nr. Date Price Div.(*) Return
- 0 12/31/86 45.20 0.00 --
- 1 01/31/87 47.00 0.00 0.0398
- 2 02/28/87 46.75 0.30 0.0011
- . ... ... ... ...
- 59 11/30/91 46.75 0.30 0.0011
- 60 12/31/91 48.00 0.00 0.0267
- (*) Dividend refers to the dividend paid during the period. They are
- assumed to be paid on the date. For example, the dividend of 0.30 could
- have been paid between 02/01/87 and 02/28/87, but is assumed to be paid
- on 02/28/87.
-
- So now we'll have a series of 60 returns on the stock and the index
- (1...61). Plot the returns on a graph and fit the best-fit line
- (visually or using some least squares process):
-
- | * /
- stock | * * */ *
- returns| * * / *
- | * / *
- | * /* * *
- | / * *
- | / *
- |
- |
- +------------------------- index returns
-
- The slope of the line is Beta. Merrill Lynch, Wells Fargo, and others
- use a very similar process (they differ in which index they use and in
- some econometric nuances).
-
- Now what does Beta mean? A lot of disservice has been done to Beta in
- the popular press because of trying to simplify the concept. A beta of
- 1.5 does not mean that is the market goes up by 10 points, the stock
- will go up by 15 points. It doesn't even mean that if the market has a
- return (over some period, say a month) of 2%, the stock will have a
- return of 3%. To understand Beta, look at the equation of the line we
- just fitted:
-
- stock return = alpha + beta * index return
-
- Technically speaking, alpha is the intercept in the estimation model.
- It is expected to be equal to risk-free rate times (1 - beta). But it
- is best ignored by most people. In another (very similar equation) the
- intercept, which is also called alpha, is a measure of superior
- performance.
-
- Therefore, by computing the derivative, we can write:
- Change in stock return = beta * change in index return
-
- So, truly and technically speaking, if the market return is 2% above its
- mean, the stock return would be 3% above its mean, if the stock beta is
- 1.5.
-
- One shot at interpreting beta is the following. On a day the (S&P-type)
- market index goes up by 1%, a stock with beta of 1.5 will go up by 1.5%
- + epsilon. Thus it won't go up by exactly 1.5%, but by something
- different.
-
- The good thing is that the epsilon values for different stocks are
- guaranteed to be uncorrelated with each other. Hence in a diversified
- portfolio, you can expect all the epsilons (of different stocks) to
- cancel out. Thus if you hold a diversified portfolio, the beta of a
- stock characterizes that stock's response to fluctuations in the market
- portfolio.
-
- So in a diversified portfolio, the beta of stock X is a good summary of
- its risk properties with respect to the "systematic risk", which is
- fluctuations in the market index. A stock with high beta responds
- strongly to variations in the market, and a stock with low beta is
- relatively insensitive to variations in the market.
-
- E.g. if you had a portfolio of beta 1.2, and decided to add a stock
- with beta 1.5, then you know that you are slightly increasing the
- riskiness (and average return) of your portfolio. This conclusion is
- reached by merely comparing two numbers (1.2 and 1.5). That parsimony
- of computation is the major contribution of the notion of "beta".
- Conversely if you got cold feet about the variability of your beta = 1.2
- portfolio, you could augment it with a few companies with beta less than
- 1.
-
- If you had wished to figure such conclusions without the notion of beta,
- you would have had to deal with large covariance matrices and nontrivial
- computations.
-
- Finally, a reference. See Malkiel, A Random Walk Down Wall Street , for
- more information on beta as an estimate of risk.
-
- Here are a few links that offer information about beta.
- * Barra Inc. offers historical and predicted beta values for stocks
- that make up the major indexes. Visit this URL:
- http://www.Barra.COM/MktIndices/default.asp
- * For a brief discussion of using Beta and Alpha values to pick
- stocks, visit this URL:
- http://sunflower.singnet.com.sg/~midaz/Select1.htm
-
-
- --------------------Check http://invest-faq.com/ for updates------------------
-
- Subject: Analysis - Book-to-Bill Ratio
-
- Last-Revised: 19 Aug 1993
- Contributed-By: Timothy May
-
- The book-to-bill ration is the ratio of business "booked" (orders taken)
- to business "billed" (products shipped and bills sent).
-
- A book-to-bill of 1.0 implies incoming business = outgoing product.
- Often in downturns, the b-t-b drops to 0.9, sometimes even lower. A
- b-t-b of 1.1 or higher is very encouraging.
-
-
- --------------------Check http://invest-faq.com/ for updates------------------
-
- Subject: Analysis - Book Value
-
- Last-Revised: 23 Mar 1998
- Contributed-By: Art Kamlet (artkamlet at aol.com)
-
- In simplest terms, Book Value is Assets less Liabilities.
-
- The problem is Assets includes, as stated, existing land & buildings,
- inventory, cash in the bank, etc. held by the company.
-
- The problem in assuming you can sell off these assets and receive their
- listed value is that such values are accounting numbers, but otherwise
- pretty unrealistic.
-
- Consider a company owning a 40 year old building in downtown Chicago.
- That building might have been depreciated fully and is carried on the
- books for $0, while having a resale value of millions. The book value
- grossly understates the sell-off value of the company.
-
- On the other hand, consider a fast-changing industry with 4-year-old
- computer equipment which has a few more years to go before being fully
- depreciated, but that equipment couldn't be sold for even 10 cents on
- the dollar. Here the book value overstates the sell-off value.
-
- So consider book value to be assets less liabilities, which are just
- numbers, not real items. If you want to know how much a company should
- be sold off for, hire a good investment banker, which is often done on
- take-over bids.
-
-
- --------------------Check http://invest-faq.com/ for updates------------------
-
- Subject: Analysis - Computing Compound Return
-
- Last-Revised: 30 Dec 1995
- Contributed-By: Paul Randolph (paulr22 at juno dot com)
-
- To calculate the compounded return on an investment, just figure out the
- factor by which the original investment multiplied. For example, if
- $1000 became $3200 in 10 years, then the multiplying factor is 3200/1000
- or 3.2. Now take the 10th root of 3.2 (the multiplying factor) and you
- get a compounded return of 1.1233498 (12.3% per year). To see that this
- works, note that 1.1233498 ** 10 = 3.2 (i.e., 1.233498 raised to the
- 10th power equals 3.2).
-
- Here is another way of saying the same thing. This calculation assumes
- that all gains are reinvested, so the following formula applies:
- TR = (1 + AR) ** YR
- where TR is total return (present value/initial value), AR is the
- compound annualized return, and YR is years. The symbol '**' is used to
- denote exponentiation (2 ** 3 = 8).
-
- To calculate annualized return, the following formula applies:
- AR = (TR ** (1/YR)) - 1
- Thus a total return of 950% in 20 years would be equivalent to an
- annualized return of 11.914454%. Note that the 950% includes your
- initial investment of 100% (by definition) plus a gain of 850%.
-
- For those of you using spreadsheets such as Excel, you would use the
- following formula to compute AR for the example discussed above (the
- common computer symbol used to denote exponentiation is the caret or hat
- on top of the 6).
- = TR ^ (1 / YR) - 1
- where TR = 9.5 and YR = 20. If you want to be creative and have AR
- recalculated every time you open your file, you can substitute something
- like the following for YR:
- ( (*cell* - TODAY() ) / 365)
- Of course you will have to replace '*cell*' by the appropriate address
- of the cell that contains the date on which you bought the security.
-
-
- --------------------Check http://invest-faq.com/ for updates------------------
-
- Subject: Analysis - Future and Present Value of Money
-
- Last-Revised: 28 Jan 1994
- Contributed-By: Chris Lott ( contact me )
-
- This note explains briefly two concepts concerning the
- time-value-of-money, namely future and present value. Careful
- application of these concepts will help you evaluate investment
- opportunities such as real estate, life insurance, and many others.
-
-
-
- Future Value
- Future value is simply the sum to which a dollar amount invested today
- will grow given some appreciation rate.
-
- To compute the future value of a sum invested today, the formula for
- interest that is compounded monthly is:
- fv = principal * [ (1 + rrate/12) ** (12 * termy) ]
- where
-
- fv = future value
- principal = dollar value you have now
- termy = term, in years
- rrate = annual rate of return in decimal (i.e., use .05 for
- 5%)
-
- Note that the symbol '**' is used to denote exponentiation (2 ** 3 = 8).
-
- For interest that is compounded annually, use the formula:
- fv = principal * [ (1 + rrate) ** (termy) ]
-
-
- Example:
-
- I invest 1,000 today at 10% for 10 years compounded monthly.
- The future value of this amount is 2707.04.
-
-
-
- Note that the formula for future value is the formula from Case 1 of
- present value (below), but solved for the future-sum rather than the
- present value.
-
-
-
- Present Value
- Present value is the value in today's dollars assigned to an amount of
- money in the future, based on some estimate rate-of-return over the
- long-term. In this analysis, rate-of-return is calculated based on
- monthly compounding.
-
- Two cases of present value are discussed next. Case 1 involves a single
- sum that stays invested over time. Case 2 involves a cash stream that
- is paid regularly over time (e.g., rent payments), and requires that you
- also calculate the effects of inflation.
-
-
-
-
- Case 1a: Present value of money invested over time.
- This tells you what a future sum is worth today, given some rate of
- return over the time between now and the future. Another way to
- read this is that you must invest the present value today at the
- rate-of-return to have some future sum in some years from now (but
- this only considers the raw dollars, not the purchasing power).
-
- To compute the present value of an invested sum, the formula for
- interest that is compounded monthly is:
- future-sum
- pv = ------------------------------
- (1 + rrate/12) ** (12 * termy)
- where
-
- * future-sum = dollar value you want to have in termy
- years
- * termy = term, in years
- * rrate = annual rate of return that you can expect,
- in decimal
-
-
-
- Example:
-
- I need to have 10,000 in 5 years. The present value of
- 10,000 assuming an 8% monthly compounded rate-of-return
- is 6712.10. I.e., 6712 will grow to 10k in 5 years at
- 8%.
-
-
-
-
- Case 1b: Effects of inflation
- This formulation can also be used to estimate the effects of
- inflation; i.e., compute the real purchasing power of present and
- future sums. Simply use an estimated rate of inflation instead of
- a rate of return for the rrate variable in the equation.
-
- Example:
-
- In 30 years I will receive 1,000,000 (a megabuck). What
- is that amount of money worth today (what is the buying
- power), assuming a rate of inflation of 4.5%? The answer
- is 259,895.65
-
-
-
-
- Case 2: Present value of a cash stream.
- This tells you the cost in today's dollars of money that you pay
- over time. Usually the payments that you make increase over the
- term. Basically, the money you pay in 10 years is worth less than
- that which you pay tomorrow, and this equation lets you compute
- just how much less.
-
- In this analysis, inflation is compounded yearly. A reasonable
- estimate for long-term inflation is 4.5%, but inflation has
- historically varied tremendously by country and time period.
-
- To compute the present value of a cash stream, the formula is:
- month=12 * termy paymt * (1 + irate) ** int ((month - 1)/
- 12)
- pv = SUM
- ---------------------------------------------
- month=1 (1 + rrate/12) ** (month - 1)
- where
-
- * pv = present value
- * SUM (a.k.a. sigma) means to sum the terms on the
- right-hand side over the range of the variable
- 'month'; i.e., compute the expression for month=1,
- then for month=2, and so on then add them all up
- * month = month number
- * int() = the integral part of the number; i.e., round
- to the closest whole number; this is used to compute
- the year number from the month number
- * termy = term, in years
- * paymt = monthly payment, in dollars
- * irate = rate of inflation (increase in
- payment/year), in decimal
- * rrate = rate of return on money that you can expect,
- in decimal
-
-
-
- Example:
-
- You pay $500/month in rent over 10 years and estimate
- that inflation is 4.5% over the period (your payment
- increases with inflation.) Present value is 49,530.57
-
-
-
-
- Two small C programs for computing future and present value are
- available. See the article Software - Archive of Investment-Related
- Programs in this FAQ for more information.
-
-
- --------------------Check http://invest-faq.com/ for updates------------------
-
- Subject: Analysis - Goodwill
-
- Last-Revised: 18 Jul 1993
- Contributed-By: John Keefe
-
- Goodwill is an asset that is created when one company acquires another.
- It represents the difference between the price the acquiror pays and the
- "fair market value" of the acquired company's assets. For example, if
- JerryCo bought Ford Motor for $15 billion, and the accountants
- determined that Ford's assets (plant and equipment) were worth $13
- billion, $2 billion of the purchase price would be allocated to goodwill
- on the balance sheet. In theory the goodwill is the value of the
- acquired company over and above the hard assets, and it is usually
- thought to represent the value of the acquired company's "franchise,"
- that is, the loyalty of its customers, the expertise of its employees;
- namely, the intangible factors that make people do business with the
- company.
-
- What is the effect on book value? Well, book value usually tries to
- measure the liquidation value of a company -- what you could sell it for
- in a hurry. The accountants look only at the fair market value of the
- hard assets, thus goodwill is usually deducted from total assets when
- book value is calculated.
-
- For most companies in most industries, book value is next to
- meaningless, because assets like plant and equipment are on the books at
- their old historical costs, rather than current values. But since it's
- an easy number to calculate, and easy to understand, lots of investors
- (both professional and amateur) use it in deciding when to buy and sell
- stocks.
-
-
- --------------------Check http://invest-faq.com/ for updates------------------
-
- Compilation Copyright (c) 2003 by Christopher Lott.
-