Showing posts with label investment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label investment. Show all posts

Saturday, February 7, 2009

Investors Guide:Bank of America: Good Investment or Bad Investment?


Stock of the Day

Financial stocks dominated headlines this week as Congress debated the economic stimulus plan. The nation's largest bank, the Bank of America, was of particular interest due to recent events. On Thursday, its share price briefly declined to a low point unseen since 1984 due to concerns that the federal government may nationalize the bank in order to stabilize its losses. Recently, Fitch Ratings also cut the financial institution's preferred stock rating down three levels to "BB" or "junk." However, it still managed to close in positive territory by the end of Thursday's trading day, and analysts still recommend against selling. Given all of the hubbub on Capitol Hill and the recent events that are taking place, should investors take the analysts' advice and go long or hold?

Daily Chart
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Stock Analysis
The answer is probably yes for a variety of reasons. Kenneth Lewis, the current CEO of Bank of America, just purchased 200,000 shares of stock on Wednesday totaling $958,340. This is in addition to the 200,000 shares that he purchased not more than two weeks ago for $1.2 million. Other executives in the company purchased a combined 150,000 shares this week. This helped the stock finish in positive territory on Wednesday and contributed to Thursday's close price of $4.84. Further increases on Friday came from a government report that indicates the US is experiencing its highest unemployment level since 1992. This lifted the markets in general because investors think it will sway Congress's decision in favor of the economic stimulus plan, which will benefit financials tremendously.

Buy Bank of America for just $4

The bank received $20 billion in federal aid on January 1. This is in addition to $25 billion of previous cash infusions from the government. Still, the bank posted its first quarterly loss in 17 years due to its recent acquisition of Merrill Lynch. It also halved its dividend payments at the end of 2008. Other shareholder concerns come from the fact that the government already controls much of the company's lending and recently put a salary cap on executive pay. Analysts and investors are comparing this trend to that of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac before they were nationalized and fear that the largest US bank will follow suit. If it does, investors will see their shares wiped out.

Richard Bove, a banking expert and analyst at Ladenburg Thalmann & Co (LTS: Charts, News, Offers), stated that nationalizing the bank was absurd given its potential to survive. He also praised the financial institution for its positive cash flow and strong government backing. Because this is the case, it is in a strong position to rebound in the future. The low price it is facing right now is due to the company's circumstances; too much money was doled out for Merrill's assets and too many toxic assets are poisoning the balance sheet. Regardless, the company's feat secured a great potential source of future growth.

However, the executives may not have agreed earlier in January. The Wall Street Journal reported Mr. Lewis flew to Washington D.C. to talk to federal regulators about backing out of the Merrill Lynch deal. He cited that there were too many problems. A couple of days later, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke stated on a conference call that the Bank of America had "no justification" for withdrawing from the acquisition and agreed to provide protection against losses up to $118 billion. There was also the concern of how this would reflect on the bank if they needed more government support in the future. In the end, it was decided that they would not withdraw and when an analyst asked him about the deal, he was quoted saying, "We did think we were doing the right thing for the country."

So the depressed stock price is just a sign that they are far from finished with merging Merrill into their business. This is not to say that the Bank of America has a yellow brick road to travel because it continues to encounter more problems. For example, it still needs to find the right people to run its Merrill assets since Greg Fleming and James Gorman departed. Still, with so many analysts suggesting investors should buy the financial giant's stock, it is difficult to believe that so many can be wrong; and while they may have been wrong before in the past, they are probably onto something with their evalution of the Bank of America.

Monday, October 13, 2008

Unit Trust

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Term of the Day - Unit Trust




An SEC-registered investment company which purchases a fixed, unmanaged portfolio of income-producing securities and then sells shares in the trust to investors. The major difference between a Unit Trust and a mutual fund is that a mutual fund is actively managed, while a unit investment trust is not managed at all. Capital gains, interest and dividend payments from the trust are passed on to shareholders at regular periods. If the trust is one that invests only in tax-free securities, then the income from the trust is also tax-free. A unit investment trust is generally considered a low-risk, low-return investment. Some investors prefer Unit Trusts to mutual funds because Unit Trusts typically incur lower annual operating expenses (since they are not buying and selling shares); however, Unit Trusts often have sales charges and entrance/exit fees. also called fixed investment trust or participating trust or Unit Investment Trust (UIT).


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Featured Article from InvestorGuide University
Income and Expenses

Information on necessary steps in any budgeting process. Topics include determining your income, determining your expenses (whether they are fixed committed expenses, variable committed expenses, or discretionary expenses), and comparing the two.


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Quote of the Day
Emotions are your worst enemy in the stock market. -Don Hays, stock market commentator


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Tuesday, April 29, 2008

"Learn the Basics of Investing"


Learn the Basics of Investing at Quality Stocks.net “Market Basics”


At the “Market Basics” portion of our site, we give the answers to basic questions new and experienced investors have regarding micro-caps and due diligence. We’ll also show you how to protect yourself from being ripped off by schemes and unsavory characters.

Listed here are the various topics discussed:

• Key Terms In Investing

• What Are Micro-Caps

• Types Of Micro-Caps

• Research Micro-Caps

• Share Offerings

• Micro-Cap Brokers

• Due Diligence

• Trade Executions

• Monitoring Investments

• Investor Protection

• Stocks To Avoid

We’ve also compiled a list of articles to help you, the investor, protect yourself when investing. Topics include: “Ten Questions To Ask About Any Investment Opportunity”, “Be Alert for Telltale Signs of Online Investment Fraud”, “INVESTigate Before You INVEST!”, and “Tips for Checking Out Newsletters”

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Wednesday, April 23, 2008

Pay per Click advertising tips to get maximized ROIs.

Pay per click is an online advertising service to get instant visibility for any website. It’s all about bidding for keywords on the search engines and also known as sponsored listing or paid listing. Getting instant rankings is easy through Pay per click advertising but it needs care to convert traffic into leads through Pay per Click campaigns.

Pay per click is an instant way for getting rankings on the search engines. It’s based on your bidding amount and the click through rate of your ads, both the factors can you top rank on the search engine result pages.

Getting the traffic converted into successful sales or leads is a tough job, but that is also the root of the whole pay per click advertising campaign. There are a few things that you should always keep in mind if you are going to setup a pay per click campaign for your website.

You Ad: Writing a perfect ad is a necessity to get traffic or attention of users. You can only get a click of your prospective customer when your ad material is attractive or catchy. So writing a perfect ad plays most important role in success of you pay per click campaign.

Landing Page: By writing a perfect you can get click only but converting those clicks into sales is depends upon your landing page. A landing page is that page where your target users will be redirected by clicking your ad. A landing page is most important thing in a website because it always compels a user to make an action. This is the most critical junction of your website. For any pay per click campaign it’s only through this page that the user will either stick to your website or move away from it for ever. For making it more users friendly it is essential to make it attractive by providing as much data the user will want to know.



Easy Interface: After arriving on landing page the user will want to make any further action. Make sure that your process of making any sale or filling any enquiry should not be more time taking or confusing. A user might be irritated by filling useless or repeating fields again and again and it will force them to think on their decision once again. Try to make the process as simple as you can so that the user can enjoy making sales or filling enquiries on your website.