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Invest The Right Way To Prosper

April 5th, 2010 Jared No comments

Learn how to invest dollars and prosper; or don't learn the way to invest and continue to invest and lose money. It is pleasing to invest cash when you're profitable. Have a financial education and see for yourself. You'll NEVER feel left out once you discover how to invest with a sound investment technique. Let's start that financial education at this moment.

INVESTMENT Basics

You can not put together a complete investment strategy without an understanding of the investments that are included in the package deal. Nor can you assemble your own house without knowledge of the pieces, parts, and tools required. Give full attention to investment principles before you decide on what plan to go with, or you may not be able to finish the job successfully. This means that you must understand the investment factors of stocks and bonds, and how they compare together and to other investment alternatives.

Only then can you discover ways to invest and put together the entire investment strategy. Like I said, it's exciting to invest when you're making dollars; but you've got to begin with the investment basics. Almost all individuals do not know stocks from bonds. Begin by reading articles or other publications that get down to the basics. For example: how to define stocks, what are their disadvantages and potential advantages, and how do they compare to bonds and some other investment alternatives.

Now you are all set to learn about mutual funds, which are the investment of choice for the majority of average investors. For the majority of people they are easy and simple and best way to invest in stocks and bonds, plus various other asset classes. Mutual funds are simply investment products that are professionally managed for you personally. To pick the right funds you'll need to understand the asset class they invest in: stocks, bonds, money market or specialty (other).

HOW TO INVEST

Now you're ready to understand how to invest and put the pieces together with a sound investment strategy. ASSET ALLOCATION is a crucial part of your investing and financial education, because how you allocate your hard earned dollars to the various asset classes will determine your success or failure... more than anything else. Simply put, how much should you invest in stocks vs. bonds vs. other investments? This is also called your asset mix. It really is much more important than what specific investments or funds you pick.

Once you've put a balanced portfolio of investments together you've got a great foundation. But if you want to continue to build and prosper you'll need an ongoing investment strategy to make additions and changes over time as needed. Read articles on investment strategy, asset allocation, and how to invest. It will all come together for you if you start at the beginning and build a step at a time.

Learn to invest like your financial future depends on it. With Uncle Sam in debt up to his eyeballs and employers fighting to survive, it does.
learn forex trading

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Categories: Investment

Mohammed El-Erian versus Robert Barbera

April 2nd, 2010 Brian No comments

The jobs report this morning, April 2, was pleasantly neutral (not too hot and not too cold, but just right) Everyone agreed that the report showed the economy is making progress and the stimulus is working. The markets showed that at the open (bond and futures). There is really nothing to stop the market from moving up another 10%, now. But further out, there is a debate. Today that debate was led between Robert Barbera and Mohammed El-Erian.

Of course, El-Erian was pumping the "New Normal" paradigm of PIMCO. Barbera was maintaining his "Old Normal" posture, for which he has been an outlier the last year (there are a couple others like Mike Darda and Jim Paulsen, our local MN boy). The New Normal states that we are stuck in a stagnant recovery like in the with high unemployment and low economic growth. PIMCO has been whoring this idea for the past year. PIMCO led by Bill Gross, really thinks they have ALL the answers and everyone else is just wrong. But we have caught Bill Gross being wrong on interest rates in the past. No reason to think they are right this time.

Meantime, Barbera, like Paulsen, has been calling for 4-5% GNP growth this year (same as my call, by the way), with enough momentum to achieve "escape velocity". This is another way of saying the economy will not stagnate near no-growth, but will get back on to a normal cyclical track.

I agree with Barbera and my investing posture shows that. I believe we will get back on a positive economic track and for a lot of good reasons. I have maintained the only thing that can screw up the economy is the government making the wrong moves. But for demographic reasons, I think the Feds will be forced to make the right moves, even against the will of Obama.

Obama is an ideologue. He doesn't seem to care much what happens to the economy so long as he can socialize the country. He wants to "lift up the poor" on the backs of the rich. Unfortunately for him, that is NOT what most Americans want. They didn't want more of the Bush Jr. regime. They did want "change", whatever that means. Now they have found they are getting way too much change. The Dems will lose power in November and that will allow our economy to get back to the "Old Normal".

This is my take and for this reason, I am staying long.


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Get Ready for Roth IRA Conversions in 2010

September 3rd, 2009 Brian 1 comment

This news snuck up on me, but it is worth sharing. There was a provision in a 2006 Tax Bill that removes the limits for Roth IRA Conversions in the 2010 tax year. This means, that as early as January, it will be possible for those making more than $100,000 per year (individuals or 'married filing jointly' to convert a Traditional or SEP IRA into a Roth IRA.

The big advantage of a Roth IRA is that all taxes are prepaid. Once funds are in a Roth IRA, there are no more taxes on any future earnings. This is especially fortunate for those of us in our 40s and 50s who are too old and well compensated to have done a conversion already (because of the $100K limit through 2009). And with the recent huge market decline, most equity appreciation, if not all of it (since 1998), has been wiped out. So, it is possible that if you have been making after-tax contributions to your IRA the past 10 years, those savings will never be taxed again if placed within a Roth.

Here is more detail on the tax ruling:

Tax Increase Prevention and Reconciliation Act of 2005
SEC. 512. CONVERSIONS TO ROTH IRAS.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

H.R.4297

Tax Increase Prevention and Reconciliation Act of 2005 (Enrolled as Agreed to or Passed by Both House and Senate)

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

SEC. 512. CONVERSIONS TO ROTH IRAS.

 (1) IN GENERAL- Paragraph (3) of section 408A(c) (relating to limits based on modified adjusted gross income) is amended by striking subparagraph (B) and redesignating subparagraphs (C) and (D) as subparagraphs (B) and (C), respectively.

(2) CONFORMING AMENDMENT- Clause (i) of section 408A(c)(3)(B) (as redesignated by paragraph (1)) is amended by striking `except that--' and all that follows and inserting `except that any amount included in gross income under subsection (d)(3) shall not be taken into account, and'.

(1) IN GENERAL- Clause (iii) of section 408A(d)(3)(A) (relating to rollovers from an IRA other than a Roth IRA) is amended to read as follows:

 (iii) unless the taxpayer elects not to have this clause apply, any amount required to be included in gross income for any taxable year beginning in 2010 by reason of this paragraph shall be so included ratably over the 2-taxable-year period beginning with the first taxable year beginning in 2011.

(2) CONFORMING AMENDMENTS-

(A) Clause (i) of section 408A(d)(3)(E) is amended to read as follows: 

(i) ACCELERATION OF INCLUSION 

(I) IN GENERAL- The amount otherwise required to be included in gross income for any taxable year beginning in 2010 or the first taxable year in the 2-year period under subparagraph (A)(iii) shall be increased by the aggregate distributions from Roth IRAs for such taxable year which are allocable under paragraph (4) to the portion of such qualified rollover contribution required to be included in gross income under subparagraph (A)(i).

(II) LIMITATION ON AGGREGATE AMOUNT INCLUDED- The amount required to be included in gross income for any taxable year under subparagraph (A)(iii) shall not exceed the aggregate amount required to be included in gross income under subparagraph (A)(iii) for all taxable years in the 2-year period (without regard to subclause (I)) reduced by amounts included for all preceding taxable years.

(B) The heading for section 408A(d)(3)(E) is amended by striking `4-YEAR' and inserting `2-YEAR'.

(a) Repeal of Income Limitations-

(b) Rollovers to a Roth IRA From an IRA Other Than a Roth IRA-

(c) Effective Date- The amendments made by this section shall apply to taxable years beginning after December 31, 2009.

Here is another very complete interpretation of the tax code changes.  But check with your accountant before you make any decisions:

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Categories: Investing, Investment, Taxes

Solar Power in America: Feed-In Tarriffs Will Accelerate

September 3rd, 2009 Brian 6 comments

I am involved in the industry through my company.  I sit on the PV Group industry steeering committee for , the semiconductor industry association which sponsors a manufacturing section.  It is with interest that I have observed almost every country in the world promote the use of energy and foster that use through incentive programs to overcome the low cost of established fossil fueled electrical generation.

Feed-in tarriffs in Europe have been the key to widespread and rapid adoption of energy on homes, businesses and utility-scaled projects.  American policy makers have rejected this type of incentive as "anti-free-market".  Until now.  It seems we are on the edge of significant Federal, State and Local programs to implement feed-in tarriffs on a broad scale.  Once that occurs, the fortunes of product companies like First (FSLR), Evergreen (ESLR), and Applied Materials (AMAT) will increase commensurately.  TAN, an ETF,  is maybe the best way to play this coming electrical revolution. 

power manufacturing has traded in direct relation to oil and coal, the alternate fuels. When the global economy broke down in late 2008, so did . As oil has rebounded in 2009, so has . will become more attractive as alternate fuels cost more over the coming years. But it is important for America to get in front of the oil cost wave that is fast approaching. Here is Dan Martin's article first posted on the " Feed" blog:

While significant progress has been made in government funding and support of power in the United States, the most effective renewable energy policy and incentive available—the feed-in tariff—has yet to receive major attention outside of the Europe Union.
Photovoltaic (PV) energy conversion is based on semiconductor technology, and the experience of the last decades has shown that the cost of PV electricity is reduced by 20% with each doubling of the total installed volume. Thus, it is necessary to design market incentives that allow for a rapid increase of the market size in order to quickly reach production volumes with the accompanying cost reductions to first reach parity with household electricity rates, and later with production costs of fossil and nuclear energy.

The feed-in tariff, or FIT, has proven to be a powerful tool to create managed economic incentives that yield meaningful results in system deployments, job creation, cost reduction, and market development--yet many policy makers, especially in the US, continue to rely upon renewable portfolio standards, investment tax credits, low interest loan guarantees, and other mechanisms to reduce fossil fuel dependency. The industry in the US should take pride in achieving recent legislative and funding victories, but also must recognize the powerful role that FITs can bring to rational and responsible energy policy.

Simply speaking, a capless FIT offers any producer of power a pre-determined rate for any kWh of electricity produced, regardless of the own consumption. If this rate is guaranteed for e.g. 20 years, and set in order to allow a decent return on investment for the owner of the system, it mobilizes powerful market forces towards rapid implementation of growing amounts of energy.

The German Miracle

FITs are the highly effective policy engine behind the German miracle. Recognizing that return-on-investment is the principle barrier to wider market penetration for renewable energy alternatives (not lowering up-front costs), German policy makers required utilities to pay a rate of between €0.35/kWh and €0.47/kWh for electricity from newly installed PV systems. The German FIT program authorizes the utilities to pass on this extra cost, spread equally, to all electricity consumers through their electricity bill. In this way, the feed-in program works through market incentives independent of government budgets and subsidies.

In Germany, the monthly extra cost per household due to the feed-in rates for electricity is estimated at less than €1.25 in 2008. The result is that every electricity consumer contributes to the restructuring of the national electricity supply network. Equally important, by assuring a rate of return over a sufficient period of time, the German FIT has proven to be an excellent accelerator for private financing. To encourage cost reduction and the eventual elimination of tariffs, the feed-in rate in Germany is reduced each year by 5% (increased to 8 -10 % starting 2009), but only for newly-installed PV systems. Once a PV system is connected to the grid, the guaranteed feed-in rate remains constant over a 20-year period. This approach allows customers to easily calculate the return on investment in their PV system, while exerting price pressure on the industry to continuously reduce costs to remain in the market.

A remarkable feature of a FIT is the built-in sunset clause: With the annual degression of the feed-in rate offered to new customers this rate will in only a few years dip below the rate of household electricity, and later compete with conventional power. Thus, the financial burden on today’s rate payers remains limited, and it provides the basis for more stable energy prices in the future, based on a larger fraction of secure, domestically produced electricity.

Spain’s FIT

FITs have been implemented throughout the world with enormously successful results. In Spain’s widely-reported experience, nearly 3 GW in 2008 of power projects were deployed last year after generous tariffs were adopted. The result was that Spain briefly became the largest power market on the world, adding more than 45% of the world’s new installations and three times more than analysts expected. Today, in response to the impact on utility rate payers, Spain has capped its FIT at 500 MW, an amount still larger than all newly installed systems the in the US last year. While Spain’s FIT is often cited as what not to do in policy, and this is partly true, the case clearly demonstrates the effectiveness of FITs to quickly establish a viable market.

Part of the confusion and controversy surrounding feed-in tariff is the wide variety of incentive schemes proposed and implemented across the world. In addition to the German example, classic tariffs or premium pricing schemes can be used; FITs can be technology targeted or neutral; capped or uncapped; generation cost based or value based.

FITs Enacted in ROW

FITs have been enacted with varying degrees of success in Australia, Brazil, Greece, Portugal, Korea, Singapore, and in some states in the US. South Korea adopted feed-in tariffs for PV in 2006 that distinguishes between systems >30kWp and systems <30kWp. Feed-in rates are quite generous, but necessary when considering the countries’ low irradiance profile. The result has been that South Korea’s demand now rivals Japan’s as Asia’s largest market (the country has set a goal of installing 1,300MWp by 2012).

By using relatively simple market incentives implemented through regulated utility monopolies, feed-in tariffs have proven effective at overcoming thorny downstream barriers such as financing, market education, distribution and sales, installation support, permitting and zoning fears, and environmental regulations. Energy investors with resources, experience and entrepreneurial zeal can quickly make markets when they understand the risk and have confidence in reasonable rates of return. Policy makers can target residential, commercial and power generation markets for development and choose tariff rates or caps to achieve the level of penetration desired. Successful fossil fuel reduction--with ancillary beneFITs of job creation, peak management, stable fuel supplies, and more—can be achieved more efficiently, more accurately and more cost effectively than any other policy instrument. In addition, the considerable cost of red tape that is necessary to administrate complicated support schemes like the ones we got used to in the US to prevent fraud can almost be completely eliminated, as the PV system operator will take care to have the system run in the optimum way in order to ensure its profitability.

Reliance on Subsidies

So, why the reliance on tax credits, loans, subsidies and energy standards in the US and China, to name two countries, to achieve desired policy outcomes? For one, tax credits have been the traditional incentive instruments in the United States for a variety of worthy goals such as home ownership, R&D, education, and more. It is an instrument that is familiar and politically expedient.

Confusion over the term “feed-in tariff” has also been cited as a barrier. In fact, a FIT scheme is not a tax, it just offers a certain rate to be paid for the production of power. Therefore, some advocates prefer the term “feed-in rates”, “performance-based incentives,” “advanced renewable incentives” or “clean energy buy back” mechanisms.

Most policies today rely upon hard or soft mandates on utilities and electrical power providers to establish renewable energy production targets. The American Clean Energy and Security Act of 2009, as passed by the U.S. House of Representatives in June, relies upon the Renewable Portfolio Standards (RPS) to place an obligation on electricity supply companies to produce a specified fraction of their electricity from renewable energy sources. A majority of US states also use RPS policies to achieve favorable renewable energy outcomes. Advocates of RPS mechanisms claim they will result in competition, efficiency and innovation that will deliver renewable energy at the lowest possible cost.

Barriers to FITs

The barriers to FITs in the United States are also related to the state and local control over electric utilities and the widely decentralized structure of the electrical generation and distribution system. The US is a labyrinth of 3,100 public utilities, 2,100 non-utility power producers and a not-so-smart transmission system. Despite the complexity, movement is underway to use FITs as an instrument of state, local and national energy policy. In May, Vermont joined California as the only states to pass feed-in tariffs for renewable energy. Several other states, including Michigan, Minnesota, New York, Indiana, and Wisconsin are considering FITs.

"The feed-in tariff has proven to be the best way to get quick movement in renewable energy development and create a lot of jobs," said state Rep. Matt Pierce (D), who has introduced a feed-in tariff proposal in Indiana. (New York Times)

In Florida, the Gainesville Regional Utilities adopted a feed-in tariff with a rate of $0.32 per kilowatt-hour guaranteed for the next 20 years. The program is modeled closely after European systems and reached its self imposed cap of 4 MW in minutes after accepting applications. In comparison, the US Department of Energy took over three years to award the first loan guarantee for after the Energy Policy Act passage in 2005.

Perhaps similar to the problems in using European benchmarks in the current US health care debate, FITs are still seen by some as some strange, exotic policy not applicable to the US market. Some observers have even claimed that that the type of incentives does not matter, just the amount. One lobbyist even said about Germany, "They've been handing out bags of money and calling it a feed-in tariff. People think that they want a feed-in tariff, but what they really want is those bags of money.”

“A lot of the charm of the feed-in tariff is solid, take-it-to-the-bank security and confidence for the investing community," said U.S. Representative Jay Inslee (D-Wash), a sponsor of legislation that would establish a nationwide FIT. His bill was introduced in Congress last year and would use FITs to incent small projects up to 20 MW and help streamline grid interconnections.

An analysis by the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) also confirmed that countries with feed-in tariffs have cheaper renewable electricity than those with renewable energy credits, the mechanism behind RPS. The tariff system is less risky, and investors are willing to accept lower profits for long-term stability, according to the report.

"We deal with data and the evidence is very clear," said Toby Couture, a researcher with the NREL in a report by the Sarasota Herald-Tribune (March 22, 2009). "Feed-in tariffs have consistently proven to be cheaper for consumers. That's the bottom line."

Increasingly, FITs are seen as complimentary to well-crafted RPS policies. One report concluded, “RPS policies appear to be converging with some of the design characteristics typically associated with feed-in tariffs. As a result, it could become increasingly possible to incorporate elements of feed-in tariffs into RPS policy making,” (Feed-in Tariffs and Renewable Energy in the USA –a Policy Update, May 2008). A similar conclusion was made in a March, 2009 report by the NREL that concluded: “FIT policies…can be used in parallel and wholly separate from RPS policies, they can replace a part of the current mechanism (perhaps to support a carve-out, or distributed generation), or they can be used to entirely replace RPS mechanisms. Of course, they can also be used by states with voluntary renewable energy goals to advance renewable energy development (Technical Report, NREL/TP-6A2 45549 March 2009).

Despite their proven effectiveness and ability to work in conjunction with RPS policies, national, state and regional FIT legislation has been a grass roots affair, not supported by national environmental or renewable energy associations. Rhone Resch of the Energy Industries Association said in January, “What you are also going to see is a focus by industry to create feed-in tariffs at the state level. Creating these programs at the state level will provide a laboratory that shows the federal government how this kind of incentive program stimulates the market. So we are probably a couple years away from a major push on feed-in tariffs at the federal level.”

Call them what you will, but feed-in tariffs or performance-based incentives need be seriously considered by every country and every policy maker in the world looking to expand the contribution of energy .They will be required to reach meaningful national climate goals and achieve significant job creation and economic stimulus. Elimination or marginalization of FITs by many policy makers in the US cannot be a healthy sign for optimal legislation in the future. While near-term legislative action needs to focus on winnable, achievable victories, long-term success will require effective instruments grounded in solid economics.

By Dan Martin, Executive Vice President, PV Group

 

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Just How Bullish is this Market?

August 8th, 2009 Brian 4 comments

I see many of the bearish market commentators proclaiming that market participants are now wildly bullish, or in the words of Kass: "there is a bull market in complacency". Who is still bearish among strategists you might ask? Only all of those that ever were, including: Doug Kass, David Rosenberg, Mort Zuckerman, Joe Battapaglia, David Tice, , Alan Abelson, et al). So, this bandied about notion that there has been a big move in sentiment from bear to bull, is absolutely false.

All the major market sentiment surveys (AAII, Market Vane, Consensus, Inc., First Coverage) indicate that the market sentiment is overall "neutral" right now. It is no longer Bearish, as it was in the first quarter of the year. Neither is it as positive as it was in May, as many are looking for a correction or a resumption of the Bear market and believe this is the time of the year that is most likely.

Citigroup publishes a proprietary chart that shows sentiment to be somewhat negative, if anything. Because the market climbs a "wall of worry", this is a positive for further gains in the stock market.

CitiGroup's Market Sentiment - August 8, 2009

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