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Happy Thanksgiving Day – buying free with Motif Investing


If you happened to open an account with Motif Investing you probably received an appreciation letter these days from the management offering free trading and Motif rebalancing for your account on Black Friday.

It is a very nice incentive from the company. Although my account is still miniscule I will take advantage of this offer and buy my next Motif on Friday for free.

 

 

Why I like trading with Motif investing?

I wrote this in my previous post that Motif Investing allows you to create a portfolio of your favorite stocks and then buy the entire portfolio as one piece. It is a great idea for all investors who like to be diversified, but dislike investing in mutual funds.

When you invest in mutual funds you have a few discouraging limits or barriers making such investing mediocre.

One limit is a minimum investment. Many funds need several thousands of dollars of minimum first investment to start with. For example Vanguard mutual funds require in average $3,000 on many of their funds. Some even require $5,000 and you will be able to see funds asking for 10, 50 or even 100 thousand dollars.

If you want to invest in such funds you will spend several years saving money for your first purchase. What do you want to do with a pile of cash waiting in a savings account before you save the required amount of money?

 

 

If you can save for example 150 or 200 dollars a month, saving $3,000 initial amount would take you 20 or 15 months respectively. Having your cash sitting idle elsewhere is something I refuse to accept.

The next barrier is commissions. If you invest with a broker you need to look for non-transaction-fee mutual funds otherwise you will get hit by a large commission. In many occasions it will be around $50 per trade. But I have seen brokers charging outrageous 70 or even 100 dollar level fees.

Of course you can invest directly with the mutual fund company such as Vanguard to avoid commissions, but then you will be stuck with one fund family or end up with several accounts with several different fund companies. For me it is hard to manage.

But the biggest issue I have with mutual funds is the cost of the funds itself. This fee is not visible at first so if you own the fund for some time it may appear to you that it doesn’t cost you anything. It is not true. Every year the fund takes away a substantial fee from your earnings. The funds are required to disclose the fee named as Expense Ratio. You want to have the ratio as low as possible. Index funds or ETFs have expense ratio at 0.2. But mutual funds can be as high as 2.5!

So mutual funds are expensive and their results compared to a good mix of individual stocks are worse than mediocre.

What if you are a dividend growth investor?

Let’s say investing into dividend paying stocks is something you really want. But you only have $1000 to start with. You may be able to find some mutual funds which would track dividend paying stocks and allow you to invest $1000 initial amount only. Or you will find an ETF tracking dividend stocks. But their payouts are terrible!

For example a Dividend Appreciation ETF (VIG) by Vanguard will pay you 2.16% yield at 7.06% growth. As a dividend growth investor I would like to get more at the same growth. At least during my initial portfolio building phase I want a lot higher yield.

Motif Investing is a great solution

With motif investing you can create your own ETFs or mutual funds. You can mix your own cocktail of stocks the way you like it. You will be your own manager of your very own mutual fund. And you can compete with others at the Motif pool of investors by publishing your Motif for others to see how great mutual fund manager you are!

I like that idea.

My Motifs

For example, I created a few Motifs of my own. One is a dividend growth stocks Motif. This motif tracks 30 individual stocks I believe are good candidates for dividend growth stocks (not all stocks however are true DGI) and I would like to own. The current yield of the Motif is 5.3%.

But if your account is small, you cannot buy all 30 stocks. You have to start small. Slowly buying more an more shares. If you are starting with $1000 initial investment at the beginning of your career, you will be able to buy a few shares of 1 company (for example 10 shares of McDonald’s (MCD) at $97.06 a share).

That can be very risky and your portfolio may be very volatile. It is also a reason why so many investors start with mutual funds or ETF’s because they cannot afford buying individual stocks outright. Many investors also get discouraged by buying small amount of shares and their portfolio falls into 20 – 30% loss because of commissions.

Not with Motif Investing anymore. All you need is to open an account, deposit your $1000 initial deposit, create a Motif of stocks you like and buy them all. If you have a 401k account with your company, or 529 education account for your kids, you already have an experience how fractional investing works.

With Motif Investing it will work the exact same way. You will buy fractions of all 30 stocks you like. You will be collecting fractions of dividends right away and you will be greatly diversified.

My second Motif I created is a Monthly dividend income. This Motif contains stocks paying monthly dividends. The current yield is 8.0% and it is a Motif I am planning to purchase this Friday for free!

Monthly Dividend Income

You too can be a “mutual fund” manager

It is easy. You can start your own Motif or even trade mine if you like the stock selection or you can take my Motif, modify it the way you want it and then buy it. All you need is a 250 dollars initial investment to start your own investor career.

And on top of all those great benefits you can get up to $150 when you start trading at Motif Investing now. Learn more.

Check the how-to videos on Motif Investing website how to create, share, buy, sell, or rebalance Motifs or individual stocks.

Happy Thanksgiving Day to all of you and shop at Motif Investing!




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How to trade stocks in Germany


BanksThis is a guest post by Michael from Dividenden-Sammler who lives in Germany. When I wrote my post about investing in Australia I thought I might ask other investors around the world if they can share their story and the way of investing in their country. From their stories we can learn what trading opportunities or troubles they have. This is Michael’s story. He diced to start blogging about investing into stocks to show other people in Germany that investing into dividend paying stocks can be as safe as mutual funds or savings accounts but with a lot larger profits. Visit his blog and give him your support.
 
 

Hello, my name is Michael from the dividend-collectors blog (www.dividenden-sammler.de). I am 39 years old and I have been interested in stock investing for over 20 years!

At the age of 16 I bought my first two shares: BASF and BMW. For every purchase I had to pay a commission of about 50-60 DEM (= 25-30 EUR ). Of course, the purchase was absolutely unprofitable, but I had my first two shares.

My bank required an annual fee of 120 DEM (= 60 EUR ) plus additional 25-30 EUR commission per trade. These were large amounts, but at that time, there were no alternatives.

In 1990, the first direct banks launched.

A direct bank is a subsidiary of the “big” brick banks. The difference between these two is that the Direct banks run their business only via a phone or Internet. They do not have any physical branches which need maintenance and overhead to run.

Since I could withdraw my money for free at the local branch from the “big” banks, (editor’s note: In some European countries banks charge a deposit and withdrawal fee) I switched to direct banking. Now, I am saving a lot of money in my trading account.

Here is a comparison:

An annual account maintenance fee: 0 EUR (formerly 60 EUR)
A trade commission: approx. 10-12 EUR (formerly 25-30 EUR)
An annual deposit fee: 0 EUR (previously about 50 EUR)

Here is an example of a current cost comparison as of 11/25/2013 – between Deutsche Bank and Comdirect Bank:

 

Trade size in EUR Deutsche Bank commission in EUR Comdirect Bank commission in EUR
1,000 20.00 9.90
5,000 35.00 17.40
10,000 70.00 29.90

 
An annual deposit fee comparison at a depot with 50 companies:

 

Account value in EUR Deutsche Bank fee EUR Comdirect Bank fee in EUR
10,000 270.00 0.00
50,000 350.00 0.00
100,000 700.00 0.00

 

Here you can find more details about the cost structure of Deutsche Bank. And here is a link to the cost structure of Comdirect Bank.

The change to a direct banking in Germany can be very cost effective and should be done by everyone who lives and trade in Germany. The direct banking can provide a good and cost-saving opportunity.

Later, I invested a lot of my money in equity (mutual) funds and my gains were impressive. They rose larger and larger.

In 2000 I sold all my mutual funds, because my wife and I purchased a house. Since then, I did not invest in stocks much as I focused on paying off the house mortgage as soon as possible.

In Germany you have an option to make additional, irregular mortgage payments. That may, (depending on the mortgage contract), help you shorten the life of the mortgage by another year if you pay additional 10% off, for example – and if you have money for additional payments of course.

I’ve used that option, because at a rate of 6.5% paying off the mortgage faster was more profitable than buying stocks. It was also 100% safer and tax free.

Recently, I tried CFD trading (commodity futures trading) with some spare money. I didn’t lose, but I also didn’t make money. Every day, I sat in front of the computer for 4-5 hours trading contracts. It was very stressful and nerve-wracking. And I was happy if I could make a 1 EUR profit after one hour of trading.

When our house was fully paid off early in 2013, I decided to invest in stocks again.
dividends
While looking for information about dividend investing, I came across a lot of popular blogs. Almost all were from the United States, for example: Hello Suckers, Dividend-Mantra, and so on…

I decided to invest using the DGI (dividend growth investing) strategy.

But German companies declare and pay their dividends differently than those in the USA. For example, Daimler (Automobile) is a very good company. But they declare their dividend according to their annual profit. This is not a pure DGI strategy, because the dividend fluctuates greatly.

Nevertheless I own this company in my portfolio

In Germany there are about 80 million inhabitants. Only 5 million citizens own and invest in stocks! In the UK or US a lot more people own or invest in stocks.
Germans want safety, a safe interest, a life insurance policy, a debt-free house and good state pension benefits. The stock market and stocks are too risky for German people.

That’s why I started my blog “Dividenden-Sammler” in early November 2013 to show other people that stocks can offer a lot better long term return then any other investment and that the dividend stocks with a growing dividend can exceeds those returns even more!

Have fun and I wish everyone a lot of high dividend payments!
 
 




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New trade – Kinder Morgan Partenrship (KMP) – initial position – building my ROTH

New trade - Kinder Morgan Partenrship (KMP) - initial position - building my ROTH

Today, I added a new stock position to my ROTH portfolio. The added company is Kinder Morgan Partnership. I have this stock in my taxable account as well, but I wanted to have this stock in my ROTH too.

Therefore I opened a new position. This trade is the last trade adding a new stock. Since now I will only continue accumulating.

 
(MORE: A Brief Primer on Master Limited Partnerships (MLP) Part 1: What are MLPs, how do they work, and why should you consider investing in them)
 

I have a policy that I will have only a certain number of stocks in my portfolio based on the account size. Here si the rule of how many stocks I can hold in my portfolio based on the size of my account:

 

 

As you can see in above table I can have 10 shares for the portfolio of the 10 k – 20 k size. I do this to keep my account manageable when I am learning managing it and when the account is relatively small. Once I exceed 20 k size I will add 5 more shares. Until then I will only accumulate share in those 10 existing positions.

Since I already maxed out my contributions for 2013 (true I only have one month left) I will reinvest all dividends into RWX commission free ETF as long as my position in this ETF reaches 1000 dollars. Once the position reaches 1000 dollars, I will sell RWX and use the new cash to buy another dividend paying stock or accumulate into existing.

 
(MORE: Kinder Morgan Energy Partners: Should You Still Buy This Distribution Champ At $82 Per Share?)
 

As of this writing I have $714 allocated in RWX. Once I invest another 300 dollars (or contribute) I will have one thousand. Then I can release the cash and buy a dividend growth stock while continuing saving all small proceeds and contributions to RWX for the new cycle. Hope this description makes sense.

11/26/2013 09:30:08 Bought 11 KMP @ 81.98

Stock details

Total shares held as of today: 11
Estimated annual dividend: $59.40
Consecutive Dividend Increase: 16 years
Dividend yield today: 6.59%
Dividend 5yr Growth: 7.43%
Dividend paid since: 1992

 

This trade increases my annual dividend in ROTH IRA account to $1,097.50




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My Lending Club account liquidated


Today I finished liquidation of my Lending Club portfolio. I decided to keep 500 dollars in the account and just reinvest the proceeds. I will keep the account totally passive. I will not be adding more cash and withdrawing any cash until retirement.

At this moment I am playing with other people’s money. I received $2,765.06 in interest over the lifetime of my active management account. I left 500 dollars out of that interest in the Lending Club account to play with.

Lending Club

 
If I lose it, never mind, it was not my money anyway (sort of).

I will not be reporting this account in my reports on this blog regularly but either annually or semi-annually if at all.




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New trade & adjustment – AGNC, PSEC & VNR long stock – building my ROTH

New trade & adjustment - AGNC, PSEC & VNR long stock - building my ROTH

Today I maxed out my contributions to my ROTH IRA account! I am quite excited about it.

Now, I will continue contributing to my regular taxable account until the end of the year. When the new year 2014 starts I will resume contributing to my ROTH IRA as long as I max it out again. That’s the plan.

Will I be able to max my contributions and save $5500 in ROTH? I do not know yet as my priority is to pay off the debt first and then resume rebuilding my emergency account and continue building my retirement accounts.

At the same time as the new money arrived to my ROTH IRA account I bought more shares of my existing positions and some new positions.

I wanted higher yielding stocks to boost my income which can be reinvested. Here are the stocks I decided to buy:

American Capital Agency Corp. (AGNC)
Prospect Capital Corporation (PSEC)
Vanguard Natural Resources, LLC (VNR)

Trade adjustment – American Capital Agency Corp. (AGNC) – stock addition

I have been in this stock for some time. I have been buying since last year and because I was buying when the stock was high, my current yield on cost is 11.46%. I am satisfied with it.

AGNC is a mREIT stock. It means it is a mortgage backed security (MBS) which is out of favor and investors are heavily selling. Many of them are short-sighted looking for results in the next quarter, some maybe in the next year.

I am buying for next 20 years and I consider this mess around mREITs as a buy opportunity. Apparently I am not alone. The managers of the company are at the same boat as they were recently buying the stock of their company.

 
(MORE: Insiders Now Seeing Red With AGNC At New 52-Week Low)
 

As the stock was falling to new 52yr lows, company’s officers were buying. Gary D. Kain, Peter J. Federico, Christopher Kuehl, & Larry K. Harvey were the highest officers who were purchasing stocks at average price $21.66 a share. They were buying since July 2013.

One reason why investors were slashing AGNC because of a fear that FED will taper, which will increase interest rates and that would hurt the company. I believe this is a misunderstanding of how a company makes money. Higher interest rates will not hurt the company as long as the spread between short term loans and long term loans is wide enough for the company to make money on it. And the spread is wide enough.

If you watched my previous posts with Peter Schiff’s videos I am not convinced FED will taper at all. So who knows what the outcome will be at the end of this mess.

 
(MORE: American Capital Agency Corp – When The Dividend Yield is Bigger Than My Understanding of the Company)
 

The second reason is a book value of the company. Due to leveraging the company uses and changes in interest rates the book value was severely hit. But as usually, investors over-reacted and sent the stock even lower. Now it trades at 80% of its book value. I see a nice 20% growth potential in this stock. And on top of that I will be receiving 15.82% dividend on this purchase.

11/25/2013 09:30:03 Bought 49 AGNC @ 20.23

Note, I was buying cheaper than the insiders. This trade is speculative and doesn’t fit to a dividend growth strategy. I understand risks in this stock and this industry and although the stock suffered a few dividend cuts recently I think in a long term this is a good opportunity.

My annual dividend income from AGNC increased to $451.20 by this purchase.

 

Total shares held as of today: 141
Estimated annual dividend: $451.20
Consecutive Dividend Increase: 0 years
Dividend yield today: 15.72%
Dividend 5yr Growth: 0%
Dividend paid since: 2008

 

Trade adjustment – Prospect Capital Corporation (PSEC) – stock addition

Another stock addition to my portfolio. I have been investing into this stock for some time as well and enjoyed nice monthly dividend income. I use the income reinvesting into more shares of dividend growth stocks.

My average yield on cost is 12.07% although to current yield is 11.62%. the stock pays monthly dividend. The dividend growth is miniscule but there is one!

 
(MORE: A Brief Primer on Business Development Companies (BDC) Part 1: What are BDCs and why should you invest in them?)
 

Here is the trade detail:

11/25/2013 09:36:34 Bought 86 PSEC @ 11.45

The stock declared dividends far enough in 2014 already which can give this stock some boost in price or at least eliminate some volatility. This purchase increased my annual dividend income to $126.35

 

Total shares held as of today: 95
Estimated annual dividend: $126.35
Consecutive Dividend Increase: 1 year
Dividend yield today: 11.40%
Dividend 5yr Growth: NA
Dividend paid since: 2004

 

New trade – Vanguard Natural Resources, LLC (VNR) – initial stock purchase

Vanguard Natural Resources, LLC (VNR) is an energy stock. VNR is focused on the acquisition and development of oil and natural gas properties in the United States. Through the Company’s operating subsidiaries, it owns properties and oil and natural gas reserves located in nine operating areas: the Arkoma Basin in Arkansas and Oklahoma; the Permian Basin in West Texas and New Mexico; the Big Horn Basin in Wyoming and Montana; the Piceance Basin in Colorado; South Texas; the Williston Basin in North Dakota and Montana; the Wind River Basin in Wyoming; the Powder River Basin in Wyoming; and Mississippi.

 
(MORE: 3 Ideas If You’re Half a Million Short on Retirement)
 

On December 22, 2011, the Company acquired additional working interest in the certain oil and natural gas properties located in Mississippi. On June 29, 2012, the Company acquired natural gas and liquids assets from Antero Resources. On December 31, 2012, it consummated the previously announced acquisition of natural gas and liquids assets from Bill Barrett Corporation.

 
(MORE: Vanguard Natural Resources: A Solid Choice For Monthly Income)
 

The stock pays nice monthly dividend. Its yield as of this purchase is 8.63%. Its dividend growth rate is 7.99%.

11/25/2013 09:38:17 Bought 34 VNR @ 28.84

By this purchase I will be receiving $84.66 annual dividend.

 

Total shares held as of today: 34
Estimated annual dividend: $84.66
Consecutive Dividend Increase: 4 years
Dividend yield today: 8.63%
Dividend 5yr Growth: 7.99%
Dividend paid since: 2008

 

My total dividend income

I will be purchasing more stocks this week. Next purchase I will be making will be new initial trade buying Kinder Morgan Partnership (KMP) into my ROTH account. I currently have positions of KMP in my taxable account. Now I will be opening a new KMP position in my ROTH as well.

As of today, my total annual dividend income from ROTH is $1,035.41
 




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Posted by Martin November 22, 2013
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While the Fed Talks Taper, China Prepares to Actually Do It!


Yet another great report by Peter Schiff why FED is just smoking about tapering!




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Trade adjustment – Realty Income (O) addition – building my ROTH

Trade adjustment - Realty Income (O) addition - building my ROTH

It almost makes no sense writing about this stock. It is one of my favorite REIT stocks and it will stay my favorite stock as long as it continues paying monthly dividends and raising them regularly.

Realty income makes money by buying properties and renting them. Their income is from rentals unlike mREITs which are involved in MBS and thus dependent on the interest rate spread. Realty Income is not. It doesn’t care what the interest rate spread is. The only way how this company can be affected by higher interest rates is their access to a new financing capital if they decide to take mortgages over secondary public offering (SPO), which I think is quite unlikely.

 
(MORE: Reaching Financial Independence Before Marriage)
 

Thus Realty Income is dragged down with the entire sector and especially by mREITs (and ignorance of investors) which it doesn’t deserve.

This company managed paying and increasing monthly dividend for 15 years, its current yield is 5.40%.

Trade details

Today I added a few shares to my ROTH IRA portfolio.

11/22/2013 11:55:26 Bought 23 O @ 38.7

 
(MORE: Realty Income (O) REIT Analysis)
 

Stock details

Total shares held as of today: 49
Estimated annual dividend: $106.82
Consecutive Dividend Increase: 15 years
Dividend yield today: 5.40%
Dividend 5yr Growth: 2.51%
Dividend paid since: 1994

 

 
(MORE: Stock Bought: O )
 

This trade increases my overall dividend income in ROTH IRA account to $679.57 annually.

 
(MORE: The Difference Between a Correction and a Crash)
 




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Posted by Martin November 21, 2013
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Why FED may never taper


I am a fan of Peter Schiff. I watched almost all his videos and commentaries and his language and style is very close to me. His arguments are very logic and make sense. Peter Schiff predicted the housing bubble and credit crisis since 2006 and everything what he said about what would come to us happened word for word. I remember other “experts” laughing at him when he in his characteristic tone was telling them what would happen when the housing bubble bursts.

Should we listen to Peter’s warnings though? As a dividend investor his predictions are very scary and he is saying that the US economy has two outcomes – we are heading either to another crisis worse than the one in 2008 or a total collapse. Which way will the FED choose? And what should you do as a dividend investor to protect your portfolio?

Here is a transcript of Peter Schiff’s interview in the Canadian broadcasting The Street – business news network from October 2013:

Paul Bagnell: Welcome back, our next guest as we may be stocking a trap of infinite QE, quantitative easing that could end with a currency crisis. Joining us is Peter Shiff, he is a CEO and chief global strategist at Euro Pacific Capital; he is in Toronto on a visit, thanks for being here.

Peter Schiff: Thanks for having me.

Paul: Tell us what your view is on a quantitative easing, as is not a view that’s shared by many people.

Peter: No, and first my view has been consistent since the beginning. I said when the FED first launched QE1 that it was a mistake that they checked in to the equivalent of a monetary Roche Motel that they had no exit strategy that QE would continue indefinitely that we would have increasing doses of this you know monetary heroin and eventually it’s going to come to an end but not because the FED tapers. The Fed’s actually going to do the opposite of tapering. They are going to up the dosage. It’s going to end when there is a currency crisis, when the dollar collapses and that that morphs into a sovereign debt crisis. That’s going to force the FED’s hand. But until then, it’s just going to pretend that there is an exit, it’s going to pretend that there is a tapering. But it can do it because it can’t remove the QE without removing the recovery and putting the economy back into the worst recession then before the FED began this experiment.

Paul: You don’t see even a beginning to a reduction of a bond purchases?

Peter: No, because, you know when they even talked about it last time, when the FED talked about a possibility of maybe reducing QE, interest rates went way up and that threaten to unravel the housing recovery, the bull market in stocks, and so the FED had to back off. The FED is saying that it’s only going to take away the punch bowl if the party keeps going but the party is going to stop if it takes away the punch bowl. That is the predicament that I am seeing you know the economy that lives by a QE dies by QE.

Reporter: Peter, there has been a lot of concern about a currency crisis and that the FED keeps printing money. There is two issues, first we haven’t see the money leaking out of the system and creating inflation yet, so when do you think we start seeing inflationary problems and when the banks start seeing the loan growth, so how’s the FED going to be able to maintain this credibility that it has when the banks will say, “well we actually have a real loan growth opportunities here” …

Peter: First of all, we are seeing inflation, shoppers are seeing it. It’s just that the government doesn’t acknowledge it in the statistics but it’s going to get a lot worse, see, right now in order for the FED to keep the interest rates artificially low which the US economy desperately needs they have to keep printing money. So the FED prints money and buys treasuries. It can only do that as long as foreign central banks buy up those dollars because otherwise the dollar would collapse and then the US prices would skyrocket including interest rates. So the question is: when is the world going to stop buying the dollars that the FED is printing that it’s using to buy up the bonds to keep the interest rates artificially low and that is, you know, the 64 trillion dollar question. But I think the day is soon, if you look what’s happening in China right now, I mean, China is now starting to see a reduction in the amount of US Treasury bonds that they hold and I think more nations around the world are going to stop buying these bonds especially when we told the world that we are going to default on them eventually anyway. If you recall the debt ceiling debate we told our creditors “If we can’t borrow more money, we are going to default”.

Reporter: I don’t think that anybody took it that seriously though, and really are the Chinese going to allow the American dollar to depreciate against their currency and how they going to sell us their products … are we really going to see a competitive currency devaluation situation right now?

Peter: Well, first of all, people didn’t take the default threat seriously because they knew that we would raise the debt limit, but the principle is the same – if we can’t borrow more money, then we will default. And so our creditors know this so why would they want to hold on to these treasuries but when you are talking about “selling us products”, see, that’s a myth because selling means payment, the world really doesn’t sell America products, the world gives America products because we don’t pay for them with exports all we do is give our creditors IOUs. But they can never do anything with those IOUs, they can’t spend the money, all they can do is keep rolling over Treasuries in perpetuity because the minute the world wants to stop rolling over the Treasuries and they want to actually spend some of the money they earned – we default! Either that, we have a massive inflation, but either way the creditors aren’t going to get paid, and eventually they are going to figure it out and I think they’ve already began figuring it out.

Paul: Do you see asset bubbles? What about the big run up in the equity markets that we’ve seen during the period of QE?

Peter: Sure that’s a bubble! I mean, that’s where a lot of the inflation is showing up. It’s showing up in asset prices. The same way it showed up when the housing bubble was inflating between 2002 and 2007. A lot of the inflation that the FED created to artificially stimulate the economy went into the housing market, also into the stock market, so it’s going there again, but rising stock prices, or rising real estate prices do not reflect healthy economic growth. It’s inflation, it’s speculation that’s all it is. It’s our money losing value. But ultimately those bubbles are going to burst if the FED eventually does the right thing and let’s interest rates rise, we will have a worse financial crisis than 2008, if it does the wrong thing and doesn’t let the interest rates rise but keeps printing money instead then we will going to have a runaway inflation and a much bigger financial disaster then what would happen if the FED just let rates rise.

Paul: Interesting stuff, thanks Peter for joining us.

What do you think? Will it pay to prepare your portfolio for the FED’s hangover?




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New trade – Prospect Capital Corporation (PSEC) – building my ROTH

New trade - Prospect Capital Corporation (PSEC) - building my ROTH

Here is my first trade under a new direction or goal (which was supposed to start next year, but due to completing my previous earlier I could start a new one earlier too). I am excited to be able fully focus on my ROTH IRA investments right now as my last year’s goal has been accomplished.
 
 
 

What is my new goal or direction?

If you remember my previous post announcing that my TD Ameritrade taxable account reached $10,000 value (or balance) which was my goal for 2013 (to recover the account from my reckless gambling in previous years) then I could move to my next money management plan.

What is my money management plan?

My next direction or plan will be to save and deposit all savings and available cash to my ROTH IRA account. I will be contributing to ROTH IRA as long as I max the allowable contributions for ROTH accounts, (currently $5,500 a year). Once I max my ROTH IRA, all additional contributions will be contributed back to my taxable TD account.

So my ROTH will be funded first and when fully funded I will continue saving in my regular taxable account.

Of course, on top of this I still have a priority number one eliminating my debt, then contributing to my 401k, and contributing to new 529 education accounts for our two daughters.

The first trade in the new plan

As you may remember I decided to stop investing in Lending Club due to changes LC did in their trading platform. Those changes were unfavorable to me and limited my freedom and choice trading notes the way I wanted.

As I was liquidating the account (it is still under the process) I transferred majority of money to my daughters accounts (all their money since we used Lending Club as a vehicle for saving for their education) and now I am transferring my wife and my money out of the account and moving them to our ROTH IRA account.

As the cash is slowly arriving, I will continue investing in 1000 dollars increments (so I will not invest everything at once) buying equities.

High yielding dividend stocks

I will be buying high yielding, riskier dividend stocks paying dividends monthly to boost my dividend income. I know that the stocks I will be buying will not fit exactly into dividend growth income strategy, but here is my reasoning:

I believe, and I am hoping that the higher dividend yield stocks will help me generating cash which I can use investing into standard dividend growth stocks. For this purpose I am willing to take a higher risk.

The stocks of my attention are:

Realty Income
Full Circle Capital (FULL)
Gladstone Capital
Mesa Royalty Trust
Prospect Capital Corporation (PSEC)
Main Street Capital

PSEC trade

I have been investing into PSEC for more than 2 years in my ROTH IRA account and Scottrade account. It is somewhat lazy company, so do not expect capital gains, but it pays monthly dividends. The current yield is 11.7% and it trades at around 11 dollars a share. It increased dividends only last year, so it is not a true dividend growth stock. Its payout is however steady and it satisfies my money generating machine. All payments received will be immediately reinvested into dividend growth stocks.

PSEC trades at 10.30 P/E which is in line with the sector (Financial) and industry (Asset Management) and in line with its peers. Net margin is 57% and revenue growth is 57%.

Prospect Capital Corporation is a financial services company that primarily lends to and invests in middle market privately-held companies. The Company is a closed-end investment company. It invests primarily in senior and subordinated debt and equity of companies in need of capital for acquisitions, divestitures, growth, development and recapitalization. The Company works with the management teams or financial sponsors to seek investments with historical cash flows, asset collateral or contracted pro-forma cash flows. Its investment objective is to generate both current income and long-term capital appreciation through debt and equity investments. The Company lends in private equity sponsored transactions; lends directly to companies not owned by private equity firms; control investments in corporate operating companies; control investments in financial companies; invests in structured credit, real estate investments, and investments in syndicated debt.

Tomorrow I will open the following trade:

BTO 87 shares of PSEC at limit 11.45 GTC

I will also start adding data and tables about my trades to “My ROTH IRA holdings page” and to “My trades” page so you will be able to see and follow my trades.

What do you think, is it a good trade? Would you take it?
 
 




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Trade adjustment – Demand Media (DMD) – covered call


The last Friday my covered call against Demand Media (DMD) expired worthless. That left me with an uncovered stock.

I reviewed the stock and the entire trade and decided to exit the trade via a covered call trade. Selling covered calls against this stock is almost impossible due to a significant price drop of the stock.

My original stock purchase price was $9.50 a share and it was offset by a covered call buy-write trade. My final cost was $8.90 a share (without commissions).

 
(MORE: Options Expiration – November 2013)
 

Unfortunately the stock dropped to $5.24 a share (as of today). I haven’t responded to this drop properly and I ended up with $366 loss.

Thanks to selling more calls and puts against this stock I was able to offset this loss by 50%.

With this trade I plan to be assigned and sell the stock at $5 a share. I would be selling with a loss, but lesser than if I held a single stock only.

Here are the numbers in a nut shell:


-950.00 stock purchase in December 2012
+ 60.00 sold covered call in December 2012
– 5.00 covered call buy back in January 2013
+ 45.00 sold covered call in January 2013
+120.00 sold covered call in May 2013
+ 50.00 sold put in October 2013
+ 95.00 sold covered call in November 2013
————————————————
=585.00 cost basis

My current cost basis for the stock is $5.85 a share. If I get assigned I will sell the stock for $5.00 a share and my loss will be $85 total. Better than $366, right?

 
(MORE: Covered Call Trading Plan)
 

Not every trade will end up as a winning trade, but the goal would be to offset losses as much as possible. The battle for this trade is not over yet as the latest option contracts will expire next year and during that period of time many things may happen.

Here is the trade I took today:

11/20/2013 09:34:11 Sold 1 DMD May 17 2014 5.0 Call @ 0.95

This trade is planned not to expire but be called. That means I will be forced selling the stock.
 




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