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Posted by Martin March 06, 2013
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Do you pay your fair share?

Do you pay your fair share?

Imagine the following situation. You and your neighbor work hard. You both make let’s say $50,000 a year salary. You both are married, have a new-born child, nice decent house and a car. You happen to be colleagues from the same company which you started working for in about same time. You both take part at company’s 401k plan, you are both young and have a great and bright future in front of you.
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Posted by Martin March 05, 2013
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How to Spot Bad Notes in Lending Club Before They Turn Bad – Part 1


Lending ClubSince a few months ago when I claimed that I had zero In Grace Period, Late, or Defaulted notes in my Lending Club account, I have started receiving emails from other investors whether I would be willing to share my strategy how I avoid the notes before they turn bad.

Originally I was just responding to those emails, but the number of them was growing so much that I made a decision to publish my strategy of managing Lending Club account.
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Posted by Guest March 04, 2013
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Strategies to manage your money and reduce monthly outgoings

Strategies to manage your money and reduce monthly outgoings

This is a guest post by Julie Cheung. Julie is a freelance online marketer with a keen interest in business, investment and finance. She can be contacted via Twitter at @juliecheung or on LinkedIn.


Wouldn’t it be great if you could put a bit of cash aside every month to save for a rainy day? As the end of the financial year approaches, I’m sure you’ll have heard advertisements on the TV or radio telling you to make the most of your tax-free stocks and shares ISA or cash ISA. Somehow though, everyday life gets in the way of all good saving intentions, and rather than having a little bit left over to save, you’ve probably ended up going into your overdraft again or using your credit card a few too many times more than you would have liked to, am I right?
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Posted by Martin March 04, 2013
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Trade adjustment – Lorillard, Inc. (LO) addition

Trade adjustment - Lorillard, Inc.  (LO) addition

Today I added 25 shares of Lorillard to my portfolio. The trade trigger was triggered and the order was executed. It seems that the selling hysteria of this stock over a potential menthol ban calmed down. Of course, it still may happen, but it may not as this issue was on the table a year ago and nothing happened. In my opinion such ban would have quite economical effect, mainly on the already tight federal budget. So banning this industry without prior thinking may have a huge impact. And that thinking can take quite a long time.
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Posted by Martin March 03, 2013
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My inspiration in last week #12

My inspiration in last week #12

I often browse the internet to find ideas about investing, trading stocks, options, investing opportunities and strategies. I like to read about investors and what their investing/trading approach to create income you can live on is.

 

This week I found the following interesting posts:

1 Step Closer To The End Of The Correction In Precious MetalsSeeking Alpha

Gold’s Death Cross May Not Be So BearishWSJ

Video About Finance and Investing Dividend Growth Machine

Why You Should Avoid Mutual FundsThe Dividend Pig

Can I achieve early retirement?Avrex Money

Lump Sum Investing or Dollar Cost Averaging?Money Cone

Freedom Fund Update – March 2013Dividend Mantra

My Investing Pains and How I’ve Solved ThemThe Dividend Guy

Can Christians Become Obsessed with Retirement?Faithful With A Few




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Posted by Martin March 01, 2013
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Joining Yakezie challenge


Proud Member of Yakezie Thanks to my fellow bloggers-friends I have seen and experienced what actively managing your blog and be active in blogosphere can do to your blog. It is time consuming, but it is rewarding. Since I started being active again a few months ago my blog started seeing more traffic. The increase in traffic is motivating me in staying active and be more self-confident in what I am doing.

I am learning a lot from my fellow bloggers, reading their blogs on regular basis and staying amazed what great ideas they post.

That forces me to go further and farther and achieve more.

Therefore I decided to join Yakezie challenge today.

My Alexa rank at this point is 1,798,936.

See you in 6 months!




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Posted by Martin February 28, 2013
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A Year Old Wishful Thinking on Banning Menthol Cigarettes

A Year Old Wishful Thinking on Banning Menthol Cigarettes

This is just a quick thought on what’s happening with Lorillard (LO) recently and why the stock dropped so dramatically in last few days.

About a year ago and many times before FDA came out with an idea to ban menthol flavored cigarettes. Their reasoning was that such a ban would benefit to the public health. They claim that flavored cigarettes make it easier for beginners to start smoking and a lot more difficult to quit. I always thought that it was the nicotine which caused people being addicted to it and prevented them from quitting.

A few days ago Mitchell Zeller was elected a head of FDA. He is known as a great enemy of flavored cigarettes and he wants to go even further and ban any flavoring of cigarettes, so even strawberries flavor and other flavors.

Once again we see an example of a governmental agency telling us what’s good and what’s bad and in my opinion going the wrong direction – again.

I do not smoke and I have never smoked in my life. I hate smoking and whenever I enter a room or restaurant where people smoke, I can smell it right away and leave such place. Although I agree on having zones for smokers and non-smokers so we do not bother each other in public areas, I generally do not care and dare telling smokers what they can do. If they want to damage their body with flavored cigarettes as well as non-flavored ones and even pay for it, it’s their choice and they will deal with inevitable consequences later in their life or after life. It is their choice exactly the same one as I made when I was a lot younger than today. I also attended a college with almost-every-night parties, visited restaurants where everybody smoked, and so on. When I was young, there were no bans or restrictions and everybody smoked like a factory chimney. Even my parents smoked until one day my mom decided to quit and she did it. She didn’t need any ban on any sort of cigarettes.

Let’s take a look on another ban in history of the United States. In 30’s the US government imposed a prohibition on alcohol. Did it help? No. It didn’t. It created alcohol cartels smuggling alcohol into the US. It renewed the so called “wild west” in the streets of Chicago with a lot of blood on the streets.

I am not saying a new era menthol cigarette cartels will be recklessly riding their cars in the streets of major US cities and shooting machineguns killing their competition. I am saying that any sort of prohibition is a utopia and it will not work, but cause more damage than benefit.

If the menthol will be banned the government would probably lose 10 billion in tax revenue from this market. I have read an argument, that all menthol smokers won’t quit smoking the same day as the ban will be imposed, but they move into non-flavored cigarettes. They probably move into a different brand, but what about the whole chain of suppliers and manufacturers benefitting from this market? What about thousands of employees of Lorillard and its subcontractors, will they move too?

Will all the smokers move to non-flavored cigarettes? Those truly addicted to the menthol cigarettes will be buying from smugglers from Mexico and all that revenue will be lost. No prohibition ever in human history prevented or helped anyone. What is banned will be smuggled and the revenue will move elsewhere and it will be the government who would lose.

Last thing I want to add is that this should be a matter of education. First, education within families, second in schools and third in public. If you teach your kids from the very beginning that smoking is bad to their health and cause irreversible damage to their bodies, if you set your own example to them by not smoking (and if you smoke quitting), they will not smoke as adults.

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Posted by Martin February 27, 2013
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Trade Adjustment – Taser Inc. (TASR) covered call

Trade Adjustment - Taser Inc. (TASR) covered call

Today, after some thinking I decided to sell a covered call against the additional 100 shares I bought earlier. See the adjustment here.

 

 

Here are the trade details:

Bought 100 shares TASR: $6.90
Strike: $7.50
Sold 1 Covered Call: $0.45
Total Purchase: $645.00
Commissions: $8.78
Total purchase: $643.78
   
Expected Option Assignment: $750.00
Option Assignment Fee: $19.00
Expected Proceeds: $731.00
   
Expected Net Gain: $77.22
Expected ROI: 11.81%

Happy Trading!




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Posted by Martin February 26, 2013
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New Trade – Corning Inc (GLW) put selling

New Trade - Corning Inc (GLW) put selling

I had Corning in my watch list for some time. It was a featured company in Morningstar as a potential new gainer. I like the company what i have read about it so far.

It is a four star stock and Morningstar estimates the fair value at $15 a share. My own calculation indicates 17 a share with 28% safety margin and annual expected return at 26%.

The stock pays dividend at $0.36 annual rate, which provides 2.91% yield. The 5yr dividend growth rate is currently at 30%, the company pays the dividend since 1990 and increased the dividend for 2 consecutive years.

I decided to sell 1 put contract on this stock and i will be OK if I get assigned to the stock:

02/26/2013 15:10:03 Sold 1 GLW Aug 17 2013 12.0 Put @ 0.78

I’ll keep you posted if I get assigned or keep the premium and repeat the process.




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How to Buy More Shares With Timing Buy Points

How to Buy More Shares With Timing Buy Points

As I wrote yesterday how I enter stock positions, today Lorillard once again shows the example of why I like to time the entry into a stock. It is not necessarily timing the market, just timing the entry point, or buy point. Once I decide to to buy more shares I watch the stock carefully to see when I can enter and increase the profitability of the trade.

Lorillard

As you can see from the chart above the stock fell yet further down today. If you perform automatic investing and invest into stocks on regular basis but without waiting for the right entry point, you could buy your holdings when they price was high and as the stock reverses, you would be sitting on a losing position. For example, if you bought on Thursday last week (February 21, 2013) you would buy at $42.30. At today’s price, you would be down almost 6%.

Sometimes recovering such loss (even unrealized) may take several months.

I wanted to know, what difference entry timing can make to my investment. For that I created a hypotetical situation comparing a regular investing vs. entry timing. Let’s assume an investor A invests regularly every 1st day of a month and every 15th day of a month and buys 100 shares of Lorillard. Investor B, on the other hand is waiting for the price but buys more shares (and I adjusted that to be able to compare the results) but both investors had a plan to buy 800 shares in total. See the table below:

The result is staggering 2% difference. Both investors bought 800 shares, but the investor B spent $714.00 less than investor A. In a long run of 20 years, this difference can grow in a very significant gain on top of your dividend income as well as it may impact your dividends, because savings can be used to buy more shares.

That’s seen in the table below, where I assumed the investor A and investor B decided to invest a same amount of money:

Both investors had $24,000 available to invest and the investor A invested on regular basis 3000 every 1st and every 15th day of a month. Investor A invested all his allowance and was able to buy 609 in total. Investor B didn’t spent all his allowance yet, since the timing method didn’t trigger more buy orders yet, but if we assume, that he would be buying at average price $38.52 a share and realizes the two other missing trades, he would be able to buy 623 shares instead of 609.

In case of Lorillard, 14 more shares would bring the investor B $30.8 more in annual dividend than what the investor A would receive.

And lastly, let’s take a look at my current history of my contingency orders:

On February 22, 2013 I entered the following order:
If the last of LO is greater or equal to 41.77 Buy 24 LO at limit $41.77

On February 25, 2013 I lowered my order down as the price of LO dropped:
If the last of LO is greater or equal to 41.26 Buy 24 LO at limit $41.26

Today, as the price of LO dropped even lower, at the end of the trading session, if the price stays at 40.14 a share, I will adjust to the following:
If the last of LO is greater or equal to 40.65 Buy 24 LO at limit $40.65

The trade executes on Wednesday only if Lorillard recovers and grows above $40.65. What a difference buying at 40.65 instead of 42.30 just few days ago!




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