[Barrons] Teenagers Strike Back! Abercrombie, Wet Seal, Hot Topic Plunge, While AEO, ARO Soar

It was hard enough figuring out what was cool back in high school; retailers that cater to the fickle tastes of that group can only hope that the cool kids wear their clothes, and everyone else follows their lead. Teen retailers in general had a very tough month in October, acording to same-store sales data released today. The group missed sales estimates by 2.2 percentage points, according to Thomson Reuters.

Wet Seal (WTSLA) posted a 9.7% same store sales decline against expectations for a 1% decline; shares dropped 10%. Hot Topic (HOTT) shares fell 11% even after the retailer said that same store sales had fallen 1.6% in the 13 weeks ending Oct. 29.

And Abercrombie & Fitch (ANF), which reported earnings on Thursday morning, said sales were slowing in Europe amid the declining economy in the region. Shares plunged 19%.

But Aeropostale (ARO), which also reported earnings, raised its profit outlook despite posting a 9% decline in same store sales in the quarter; shares jumped 16%. And American Eagle Outfitters (AEO) rose 6.5% after boosting the low end of its earnings guidance range to 26 cents from 22 cents.

[Seeking Alpha] Core Retirement Portfolio For The 56 Year Old

“Where did Lucky Strike Green go? Lucky Strike Green Has Gone To War!”

The above question and answer was all over the radio, when I was a kid. I didn't understand what it meant, but I knew it was important. In times of market volatility, like today, it is important to buy stocks that provide safety for capital and good returns. This requires strong demand for the products the companies produce in times of unusually slack demand and high unemployment. What does the investor need? I want 4% yield + 10% dividend growth rate. This requires stocks with long histories of increasing dividends as well as increasing earnings per share. In a recent article, I spoke of the coming downturn. In last week's article, I recommended 3 stocks for those about to retire. In this article I will recommend 3 additional stocks that have a large moat, good dividends, and provide safety of capital (time is getting shorter for our prospective retiree).

(Data from First Call, Yahoo Finance and David Fish's CCC charts).

  1. General Dynamics (GD) -- Industrial sector. General Dynamics Corporation provides business aviation, combat vehicles, weapons systems and munitions, military and commercial shipbuilding, and communications and information technology products and services worldwide. This Dividend Contender has 20 years of consecutive dividend increases. The current yield is 2.86%*. The 5- year annual average dividend growth rate is 16%. The current p/e is 9.3. The projected earnings per share growth rate for next year is 5.42% and 10.7% for the next 5 years.

  2. Philip Morris International (PM)--Consumer staples sector. Philip Morris International Inc., through its subsidiaries, manufactures and sells cigarettes and other tobacco products. This dividend stock is in the appendix of the CCC charts and is about to become a Dividend Challenger with 5 years of co! nsecutiv e dividend increases. The current yield is 4.5%. The 3 year annual average dividend growth rate is 12%. The current p/e is 15.35. The projected earnings per share growth rate for next year is 7.47% and 11% for the next 5 years.

  3. American Capital Agency Corp. (AGNC)--Financial sector. American Capital Agency Corp. operates as a real estate investment trust (REIT). It invests in residential mortgage pass-through securities and collateralized mortgage obligations for which the principal and interest payments are guaranteed by a U.S. government agency or U.S. government-sponsored entity. This stock has held its dividend constant since September 2009 at $1.40. The current yield is 19.6%. The current p/e is 4.25. The projected earnings per share growth rate for next year is -10.73%. There is no projection for the 5-year earnings per share growth. Being a REIT, it has secondary offerings when it needs capital, due to distribution of most of its earnings to shareholders.

* Yield on GD does not meet my minimum 4% threshold for strategic investment. I would hold out in purchasing this stock until it met my metric.

A chart comparing these three stocks over the last five years shows the cyclical nature of all three stocks, when compared to SPY (S&P500 Index ETF).

We will now look at the dividend income stream for these three stocks. With equal positions of $10k each purchased 1 year ago, these stocks produced a quarterly income stream as shown in the following table:

Stock

Quarterly Dividend Rate

Number of Shares

Quarterly Income

GD

$.42

157.13

$65.99

PM

$.64

170.99

$109.43

AGNC

$1.40

347.82

$486.95

In order to investigate the growth of the portfolio, due to dividend reinvestment, I will once again create a spreadsheet for only the last year (October 2010-October 2011).

159.1 0
Stock Date of reinvest Div Rate # Shares Dividend Drip price # Shares pur
Totals 160.10 $282.45 3.99
GD 06/29/11 $0.47 160.10 $75.25 $73.90 1.02
04/06/11 $0.47 $74.78 $74.74 1.00
01/12/11 $0.42 158.17 $66.43 $71.16 .93
10/06/11 $0.42 157.13 $65.99 $63.64 1.04
Totals 176.25 $467.53 7.39
PM 09/23/11 $0.77 176.25 $135.71 $63.81 2.13
06/21/11 $0.64 174.61 $111.75 $68.05 1.64
03/22/11 $0.64 172.86 $110.63 $63.34 1.75
12/21/10 $0.64 170.99 $109.43 $58.48 1.87
Totals 401.09 $2,094.36 73.97
AGNC 09/21/11 $1.40 401.09 $561.52 $27.12 20.71
06/21/11 $1.40 382.31 $535.23 $28.50 18.78
03/21/11 $1.40 364.76 $510.66 $29.10 17.55
12/29/11 $1.40 347.82 $486.95 $28.75 16.94

At this point, I will add a table to illustrate the growth of dividends received and the steadily growing income over time.

Stock

Q1

Q2

Q3

Q4

GD

$65.99

$66.43

$74.73

$75.25

PM

$109.43

$110.63

$111.75

$135.71

AGNC

$486.95

$510.66

$535.23

$561.52

In addition, I will illustrate the total value of this portfolio by quarter in the following graph:

It can be seen from the table that the income for the year was $662.37 + $687.72 + $721.71+ $772.48=$2844.28. On the initial $30k investment, this was 9.48% yield, which meets my minimum 4% yield for a core dividend growth stock portfolio. In addition, it can be seen from the Total Portfolio Value chart that the ending portfolio value was $33,955.43. This computed out to be a capital gain on the initial $30k of $3955.43 or 13.18%. An important point here is the value of diversification among sectors. A major portion of the income stream and total capital appreciation came from the MREIT AGNC. If the dividends had been spent, rather than reinvested, capital appreciation would have been considerably smaller. High yielding MREIT stocks, like AGNC involve the added risk of the financial and real estate sectors. In addition, REIT dividends are taxed at normal tax rates, not those of qualified dividend stocks and are more tax efficient when held in an IRA.

Conclusion: As one gets closer to retirement, income becomes a more important consideration. Higher yielding stocks become preferable to higher dividend growth rate stocks. Stability of growth, as demonstrated by PM is also important to the growth of capital and safety of principal. In times of global turmoil, especially fina! ncial cr isis and war it is necessary to maintain one's policy of portfolio diversification and minimum yield standards. Four percent yield + ten percent dividend growth rate will provide a window of opportunity for a sound fiscal retirement. It is critical that one does their own due diligence on any investment.

Disclosure: I am long PM. My grandchildren hold AGNC in their college fund accounts.

[WallstCheatSheet] How Long Will Gold Miners Lag Bullion Prices?

As we have previously discussed, the gold miners continue to lag behind bullion prices.? In the past six months, the SPDR Gold Shares ETF has increased by nearly 10%, while the Market Vectors Gold Miners ETF has declined by 5%.? The disconnect continues as traders feel uneasy about equities and elevated gold prices.? When it comes to panic and confusion, cash is still king on Wall Street.? However, another well-known investor is endorsing gold mining companies, a sign that gold miners may finally catch up to bullion prices.

Hedge-fund manager and Greenlight Capital chairman, David Einhorn, believes that the growing disconnect between gold miners and bullion prices will reverse course.? He said, ��A substantial disconnect has developed between the price of gold and the mining companies.? With gold at today��s price, the mining companies have the potential to generate double-digit free cash flow returns and offer attractive risk-adjusted returns even if gold does not advance further.? Since we believe gold will continue to rise, we expect gold stocks to do even better.��

Investing Insights: How Will the Yen Intervention Affect Precious Metals?

Mr. Einhorn, who is also the President of Greenlight Capital, cut his gold commodity holdings in the third quarter and moved those funds into the Market Vectors Gold Miners ETF.? According to Bloomberg, in a regulatory filing on October 31, Greenlight Capital states, ��Given the challenging macroeconomic environment, we intend, for the foreseeable future, to continue holding a significant position in gold and other macro hedges in the form of options on higher interest rates and foreign exchange rates, short positions in sovereign debt and sovereign credit default swaps.��? We also believe that gold should be held as a hedge against the macro headwinds facing the world.? On Monday, MF Global filed for bankruptcy after placing highly leveraged bets on euro zone debt.? What��s troubling, is that th! e compan y had credit default swaps, but since the 50% Greek haircut was classified as voluntary, it did not count as a credit event, so the credit default swap insurance was rendered useless. Gold remains the ultimate insurance.

Several miners are not waiting for the disconnect to end in order to provide shareholders with returns.? Last week, Barrick Gold announced a 25% increase in its dividend payout.? IBTimes reports, ��Over the last five years, Barrick has had a consistent track record of returning more capital to shareholders, increasing its dividend by more than 170% on a quarterly basis.��? Strong earnings and operating cash flows have allowed miners to offer increasing dividends.? Earlier this year, Newmont made a popular move with shareholders by linking its dividend to the price of gold.? After the second quarter, Yamana Gold increased its dividend by 50%.? Along with Mr. Einhorn, gold miners believe that gold prices will rise, and it shows by the dividend policies taking place in the industry.? Furthermore, gold futures traded in New York may rise 12% to $1,950 an ounce by the end of the first quarter, according to the median of estimates collected by Bloomberg.? The predictions are from eight of the top ten analysts tracked by Bloomberg over the past eight quarters. ?Higher or even stable gold prices provide a bullish scenario for the miners. ?A scenario that investors are quickly positioning themselves for, in order to take advantage of the coming correction between miners and bullion prices.

[Street Authority] 4 Dividends You've Never Heard of (but Should)

One mistake novice income investors make is assuming that the best dividend stocks are the ones they're most familiar with, or the ones most talked about on CNBC or in the mainstream financial press.

Sure, well-known dividend stocks such as Dow components Coca-Cola (NYSE: KO), Exxon Mobil (NYSE: XOM) and Procter & Gamble (NYSE: PG) have proven their mettle as dependable dividend payers. Each has multidecade streaks of raising dividends and rewarding shareholders. P&G, for example, touts an uninterrupted string of dividends dating back to the 19th century and a streak of dividend increases for more than 50 years.

 
That's all good, but if the financial crisis taught investors anything, it's that not all dividends are completely safe. Stinging dividend cuts during the crisis from the likes of General Electric (NYSE: GE) and the major banks proved as much. Those companies had one thing in common: They were perceived to be strong dividend stocks by the investing public, in part because they were ''known'' entities.

Remember, income investing isn't a popularity contest. In fact, there are dependable dividends for the taking among plenty of obscure stocks. These four in particular caught my eye...

1. BancFirst Oklahoma (Nasdaq: BANF)

Alright, I know what you're thinking: ''A bank stock on a list of dependable dividend payers?'' Hear me out...

BancFirst Oklahoma should not be lumped in the same heap as the big-money center banks. This is a community bank with less than 90 branches in 50 Oklahoma counties as of late January. Community banks typically don't engage in trading, complex mortgage securities or any of the fare that was so problematic for big banks during the financial crisis.

BancFirst won't win any yield cont! ests wit h a current yield of 2.8%, but consider the following: The bank didn't cut its dividend during the financial crisis. If we say the crisis started in 2007 and lasted until the end of 2009, then BancFirst's dividend jumped almost 28% during that time. From 1996 through today, this dividend has increased nearly seven-fold. With a history of increasing dividends like this, you may be buying a 2.8% yield now, but you could wind up with a much higher yield based on your original cost down the road.

2. North European Royalty Trust (NYSE: NRT)
If you're familiar with oil royalty trusts, then chances are you're familiar with a name like BP Prudhoe Bay Royalty Trust (NYSE: BPT), not North European Royalty Trust. North European Royalty Trust isn't even based in Europe, it's based in New Jersey, and holds oil and gas lease rights for Exxon and Royal Dutch Shell (NYSE: RDS-A) in Germany.

No one is going to confuse Germany with Saudi Arabia or Canada when it comes to oil abundance. But there are oil dividends and then there are oil dividends. NRT's current payout is $2.84 per unit, good for a yield of 8.8%. Add to that, the trust has sharply outperformed Prudhoe Bay, Exxon Mobil and the U.S. Oil Fund (NYSE: USO) year-to-date, and you've got an anonymous, yet compelling investment opportunity.

Be advised: NRT's quarterly payout fluctuates. (For example, it was $0.55 in the first quarter, $0.73 in the second and $0.71 in the third.)

3. National Bankshares (Nasdaq: NKSH)
Like BancFirst, National Bankshares is a community bank operating far away from the spotlight of a big city. That's a good thing. Its 3.6% yield isn't jaw-dropping, but it's certainly better than what you'd get with Treasuries or most major bank stocks. The Virginia-based bank started paying a dividend in May 2000, and the twice-yearly payout has been uninte! rrupted since then -- in fact, it has more than doubled.

The stock has languished year-to-date, tumbling almost 17%, though most of that decline was absorbed during August and September. A payout ratio of roughly 41% shows the bank isn't being strained by its dividend.

4. Collectors Universe (Nasdaq: CLCT)

Simply put, Collectors Universe grades your old baseball cards and comic books so you can figure out how much they're worth. It's not the sexiest business to be in, but it works: the company pays about $0.33 in quarterly dividends and currently yields about 8.8%. Collectors Universe is up more than 10% year-to-date, easily outpacing the flat performances of the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq, the stock's home index. That outperformance has continued in the past month as Collectors Universe is up almost 17% compared with a 12% gain for the Nasdaq. The company paid its first dividend in 2006 and the payout has risen nearly five-fold since then.

[Small Stocks] How My "20% Solution" Could Make You a Millionaire

Do you want to become a millionaire? This is obviously a rhetorical question... the majority of us would love it. But what's your plan for achieving this goal?

If your plan is to make this sort of wealth in the stock market, then what's your strategy? Blue-chip stocks, index funds, or are you an income investor who wants to watch your dividend "paychecks" (as my colleague Amy Calistri would say) roll in by the truck load?

All of these strategies are great. There's nothing wrong with them, besides they'll probably make you money in the long run.

But I doubt they'll make you a millionaire... at least in time for you to enjoy it.

They're not going to give you those "knocked-out-of-the-park" returns you've heard about since you first learned of the stock market.

No, I'm convinced that if your goal is to reach a seven-figure bank account, then you need to follow something I like to call the "20% solution."

The idea behind it is simple. If your goal is to become a millionaire in the market, then you need to dedicate a portion of your portfolio to swing for the fences.

Let me explain...

I'm a father of a daughter who's in private school, will go to college and who will need cars, trips and someday, a wedding.

For her and the rest of my family, I've allocated 80% of my portfolio to safe and reliable assets. The kind I know will allow me to meet my comfort level and feel confident knowing I can adequately provide for my family.

But the ot! her 20%? That's different.

This portion is dedicated to the "game-changers." These are the types of stocks that have the potential to move the needle on not only the balance of my account, but on the life I live.

You see, most investors are stuck in the slow lane, passively accepting the market's returns and failing to use equities as the supercharging force they can be.

While it's important to have the bulk (80%) of your portfolio tied to dependable assets, I think a portion -- the other 20% -- needs to go toward investments with the potential to knock the cover off the ball.

Here's how the 20% solution works...

I'll start this example with a modest amount to show you how it works. Assume you start with a $25,000 portfolio that tracks the broader market. The average annual return from 2001 through 2010 for the S&P 500 was a measly 3.0%. This means $25,000 turned into $33,597.91 during 10 years.

But these numbers can change dramatically when you add in the potential for just a few big winners.

Let's say you invest 80% of your $25,000 portfolio, or $20,000, in the broader market to achieve that 3% return. Then you allocate the remaining 20%, or $5,000, to a collection of "game-changing" picks -- stocks with the potential to snag major gains.

If that part of the portfolio averages 30% a year, then the initial $5,000 would grow into $68,929.25 after 10 years.

Add in the $20,000 and its market return, which would have grown to $26,878.33, and you'd have gotten a pretty nice nest egg of $95,807.58 -- roughly triple the first portfolio, all thanks to where you put just 20% of your money.

(Note: You'll notice this return isn't $1 million, but the results are fully scalable. You can simply start with more capital to reach your goal.)

I' ve made the comparison in the chart to the right. Would you rather have Column A, or would you rather end up with Column B, which uses the 20% solution?

I think the answer is obvious…

Now you may be asking, if the 20% solution seems to work so well, why not dedicate 50% or 100% of your portfolio to it?

Simple answer: It's always important to be diversified, and putting all of one's eggs into a single basket is never a good idea, no matter how spectacular the potential for returns.

I can sleep at night knowing most of my money -- the majority of my equity portfolio -- is invested so as to expose it only to general broad-market risk. Only a small percentage is allocated to game-changing plays with return potential that could move the needle on the overall portfolio.

The fact is, if you pick a few winners over time with a small subset of your portfolio, it can make an enormous difference. And 20% can do the trick nicely: it's enough to make a difference, but not enough to keep you up at night.

Don't get me wrong though, I'm not guaranteeing my system will make you a millionaire. There are no guarantees when it comes to investing.

Tips>> What I'm saying is this: The results of a portfolio with room for big winners can be dramatically different from those that stick to cash, fixed-income or even the returns available in the broad market.

And if your goal is to eventually become a millionaire from the market, then I can't think of any better route.

[Note: All this begs the question -- how can investors find those picks with the potential to move the needle? It's an important topic.

[Barrons] Snap, Crackle, Drop! Kellogg Plunges

Kellogg (K) shares fell 8% in morning trading after it lowered its 2011 outlook and issued disappointing 2012 guidance.

The company reported 80 cents of EPS, missing analysts’ expectations by 9 cents. The company also lowered it 2011 earnings guidance to a range of $3.27 to $3.33, although foreign exchange benefits could add an additional 8 cents. That’s below analysts’ expectations for $3.48. The company also sees earnings rising 2% to 4% next year, a disappointing growth rate.

Kellogg says it is investing more in its brands, which will curb profit growth in the near term. The company has had problems with recalls — eggo waffles and cereal were recalled over the past couple of years because of quality issues — and Kellogg is now investing more in quality-control measures.

“Rebuilding momentum takes time, especially in challenging market environments,” said CEO John Bryant. “We increased the levels of investment in our supply chain in the quarter, a process we will continue. This multi-year program will improve the infrastructure and drive reliability and capability.”

[Small Stocks] 3 Small-Cap Gambling Stocks with Big Potential

Earlier in October, the gambling industry held one of its main conferences of the year in Las Vegas, The Global Gaming Expo, or G2E. The event gives gaming professionals the opportunity to see the new products industry suppliers are selling, as well as talk with the companies and their management teams in person.

As an attendee, I had the opportunity to talk to a few industry executives and was able to get a picture of how this industry really works. Below are the three smaller firms that should stand out to investors because of their appealing businesses and growth potential. In fact, I have closely followed two of these companies for a while now, as I detailed back in January.


I truly believe the gaming industry is still in the early stages of what should be a sustained recovery back closer to levels before the financial crisis. This is why I think right now is the best time to get in on this growing market.

1. Gaming Partners
Business: Casino game chips, tables, equipment
Market Capitalization: $54 million
P/E ratio: 10.3


Gaming Partners (Nasdaq: GPIC)
sells game equipment to casinos across the globe, such as gaming chips used at blackjack, poker and baccarat tables; as well as playing cards, gaming tables and furniture. It also sells roulette wheels and dice. Last year, it reported $60 million in total sales, with just more than half stemming from the United States.

The majority of the company's products are certainly mundane, but its sales are stable and highly profitable. Last year, it generated $7.7 million in free cash flow o! ff the $ 60 million in sales, representing a profit margin of almost 13%. This is much more than it needs to maintain and grow the company. As a result, cash has accumulated on the balance sheet, which, as of the end June, stood at $9.8 million.

Given the current market cap of $54 million, backing out the cash means investors are placing a value on Gaming Partner's operations of only $27 million, or only 3.5 times free cash flow -- an incredibly low multiple for such a consistent business. In addition, there is significant upside with the development of gaming chips with embedded RFID (radio frequency identification device) technology that can help casinos detect counterfeit chips and ensure payouts are accurate.

To boost organic growth even further, management has worked on an acquisition strategy of companies, products and technologies that can help it diversify and grow its products and services. For example, in July, Gaming Partners purchased OMC Industries, a French manufacturer of plastic-injection molds, giving the company greater control over its chip-manufacturing process.

2. TransAct Technologies
Business: Transaction-based printing, receipts, tickets
Market Capitalization: $73 million
P/E: 13.5


TransAct Technologies (Nasdaq: TACT) helps companies print receipts, tickets and related transactions. It serves a number of industries, including the banking and financial segments, but has targeted the gaming industry as its primary growth driver. This is due to its latest Epic 950 printer model, which is intended to print targeted promotions on slot-machine payout tickets. For the most part, casinos have replaced physical coins by paper-ticket receipts that can be exchanged for real money at a casino's cashier.

TransAct seeks to add significant new revenue drivers for casino operators. These include comps, coupons and other specials that will send gamblers into stores,! restaur ants and casino entertainment to supplement gaming revenue. These days, Las Vegas earns about 60% of its sales from nongambling sources. TransAct's latest offering could help boost its fortunes in this sales segment.

TransAct's forward price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio is reasonable, given it's a highly-profitable firm with solid growth potential. Net profit margins came in above 11% in the past year, as management has been able to cut costs and subsequently sell its printers at a higher margin. It is also conservatively managed and has no long-term debt. CEO Bart Shuldman said this gives the company an edge over rivals, because it can offer more lenient payment terms to customers. Growth in the gaming space rose from 30% of 2009 sales of $58.4 million to 41% of 2010 sales of $63.2 million and should continue to push total company sales and profits forward in the future.
 
3. Shuffle Master
Business: Casino supplies, digital games, slot machines
Market Capitalization: $543 million
P/E ratio: 17.8


As its name indicates, Shuffle Master's (Nasdaq: SHFL) roots stem from an array of devices that help casino dealers shuffle cards more efficiently. These include a current product line consisting of the i-Deal and Ace shufflers that mix decks of cards on casino games, including the company's Three Card Poker and Ultimate Texas Hold 'em games. These games form the backbone of Shuffle Master's current growth initiatives, which are to develop and sell its own table games and a growing selection of games that use a virtual dealer to emulate the look and feel of real-life games. The company presented many of its new games at G2E, which looked to be well received by many of the conference attendees.

Table and electronic games now constitute more than 60% of sales, or roughly $123 million of last year's total sales of $201.3 million. This is up from sales of only $7! 5 millio n back in 2006, less than half of the $164 million in sales Shuffle Master reported. Net income is up considerably during this period, and stood at $23.1 million ($0.43 per share), up from $1.9 million ($0.06 per share) in 2006. This has to do with management's other main focus, which is to control costs while boosting gaming capabilities. Analysts project nearly 11% sales growth this year for total sales in excess of $223 million and earnings per share of $0.57, which would spell an impressive profit growth of 32.6%.

Risk to Consider: The Las Vegas gambling market is the largest in the United States and continues to struggle with low levels of tourism and high unemployment. However, many states, including Illinois and New Jersey, continue to look at gambling as a way to increase tax revenue. Additionally, overseas growth, especially in Asia, has been rapid, though this has been uneven and depends on individual approvals from countries such as China, Singapore and Vietnam.

Tips>>
Gaming Partners continues to look like the biggest value play in the gaming supply space. Shuffle Master has arguably the most growth potential, given its aggressive moves into developing and selling its own games.

[Seeking Alpha] Why I'm Avoiding Groupon

Groupon (GRPN), the online group deal site, recently began trading on the NYSE, Friday November 4, amidst much hype and anticipation. Its shares originally priced at $20, shot up 40% to $28 at the start of the trading day, revitalizing the IPO market. But is there a real basis for Groupon’s relatively high stock price or is it all hot air?

We do think it is the later, as Groupon’s fundamentals do not look terribly promising for two reasons:

1. Groupon Is Overvalued

Investors should be extremely skeptical of the price of a stock that lost close to $420 million last year and $117 million in Q1 2011. The 40% up shot of the stock price upon its opening is unfounded and based off hype surrounding Groupon and recent internet IPOs of LinkedIn (LNKD) and Pandora (P), and older IPOs like Amazon.com (AMZN) and Google (GOOG). Groupon’s pre-market valuation of $13 billion is 30-times higher that of Amazon.com back in 1997 ($430 billion), and more than half of that of Google in 2004 ($23 billion).

2. Groupon Is A Fad

Groupon is a glorified coupon company that features online group deals from a variety of different companies. But, ultimately, Groupon is just a middleman connecting potential customers to businesses. This leaves Groupon open to threats on both the costumer and business side of its operation. Many of the bargain hunters using Groupon are doing it out of hype; Groupon is the first to pioneer the online group discount. But, what happens when Groupon is no longer “in” - people grow bored of the group discount fad and move onto the next thing? Groupon will go the way of MySpace.

The business side of Groupon’s operation is perhaps the bigger threat. In addition to the steep discounts these businesses have to give Groupon bargain hunters, Groupon takes another chunk out of the pie. Merchants are making little to no money off these deals, so Groupon becomes more of a form of advertisement t! han a so urce of profits. In this case, what is to prevent businesses from cutting out the middleman and putting out their own deals?

Bottom Line

Groupon’s stock is already overvalued. The company doesn’t have a sustainable business model. This means that its stock valuation is all hype with no fundamental basis for its relatively high stock price. I wouldn’t want to own Groupon when the fad dissolves. I would look to invest in other stocks with less risk and better value.

Disclosure: I have no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours.

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[WallstCheatSheet] 10 Trending Stocks Hitting Our Trading Screens - ADBE, ORCL, GIS, AVT, ALOG, OREX, NUVA, NRG, IHS, TSON

Wall St. Watchdog reveals information about 10 hot stocks that have hit our trading screens here at Wall St. Watchdog in the morning:

  1. Adobe Systems Incorporated (NASDAQ:ADBE): Shares of Adobe Systems Incorporated are trading higher today after reporting solid earnings. Adobe Systems Incorporated develops, markets, and supports computer software products and technologies. The Company’s products allow users to express and use information across all print and electronic media. Adobe offers a line of application software products, type products, and content for creating, distributing, and managing information.
  2. Oracle Corporation (NASDAQ:ORCL): Shares of Oracle Corporation are trading higher today after the software giant announced positive earnings including an 11% increase in revenues. Oracle Corporation supplies software for enterprise information management. The Company offers databases and relational servers, application development and decision support tools, and enterprise business applications. Oracle’s software runs on network computers, personal digital assistants, set-top devices, PCs, workstations, minicomputers, mainframes, and massively parallel computers.
  3. General Mills, Inc. (NYSE:GIS): Shares of General Mills, Inc. are trading higher today as the packaged food company kept the sector rallying on good earnings. General Mills, Inc. manufactures and markets branded and packaged consumer foods worldwide. The Company also supplies branded and unbranded food products to the foodservice and commercial baking industries.
  4. Avnet, Inc. (NYSE:AVT): Shares of Avnet, Inc. are trading higher today after Jim Cramer said to buy the stock on Mad Money. Avnet, Inc. distributes computer products and semiconductors, as well as interconnect, passive, and electromechanical components. The Company markets, inventories, and adds value ! to these products and provides supply-chain integration, engineering design, and technical services. Avnet serves customers in countries around the world.
  5. Analogic Corporation (NASDAQ:ALOG): Shares of Analogic Corporation are trading higher today after reporting an 18% increase in revenue year-over-year. Analogic Corporation designs, manufactures, and sells standard and customized high-precision data acquisition, signal, and imaging processing based medical imaging and industrial systems and subsystems. The Company sells to original equipment manufacturers, and its products are put into systems used in medical, industrial, and scientific applications.
  6. Orexigen Therapeutics, Inc.?(NASDAQ:OREX): Shares of Orexigen Therapeutics, Inc. are trading?higher?today after the FDA allowed them to reinitiate development of its cardiovascular drug Contrave. Orexigen Therapeutics Inc. is a biopharmaceutical company. The Company is focused on the development and commercialization of pharmaceutical products for the treatment of the central nervous system, or CNS, disorders with an initial focus on obesity.
  7. NuVasive, Inc. (NASDAQ:NUVA): Shares of NuVasive, Inc. are trading lower today. NuVasive, Inc. designs, develops, and markets products for the surgical treatment of spine disorders. The Company’s products include Maximum Access Surgery (NYSE:MAS) and Fusion products.
  8. NRG Energy, Inc. (NYSE:NRG): Shares of NRG Energy, Inc. are trading lower today after losing a patent lawsuit to Medtronic (NYSE:MDT). NRG Energy, Inc. owns and operates a diverse portfolio of power-generating facilities, primarily in the United States. The Company’s operations include energy production and cogeneration facilities, thermal energy production, and energy resource recovery facilities.
  9. IHS Inc. (NYSE:IHS): Shares of IHS Inc. are trading lower! today after lowering FY ’11 guidance?as?defense and security markets continue to struggle. IHS Inc. provides provides critical information and insight in the areas of Energy, Product Lifecycle, Security, Environment and Macroeconomics that global businesses use for decision-making and management.
  10. TranS1 Inc. (NASDAQ:TSON): Shares of TranS1 Inc. are trading lower today after pricing a?6.2 million share offering at $3.25 per share. TranS1 Inc. designs, develops, and markets medical devices to treat degenerative disc disease affecting the lower lumbar region of the spine.

[iStockAnalyst] Encouraging Action For Bond Bulls

Back on August 29, I wrote that it was not too late to buy the long bond and I remain relatively comfortable with that position, despite the likely volatility from the FOMC meeting this week.

For several weeks, traders have been frustrated as stocks and bonds appear to be stuck in a volatile news-driven range bound market.

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[Seeking Alpha] Tight Supply Could Send Oil Toward $100

The price of which oil? Considering market dynamics, currency gyrations, and questionable assertions about supply and demand, it could be both West Texas Intermediate – WTI -- and Brent, and then the spread would be back to where it was, or virtually nothing. If that were to happen, the other question would be which oil contract to use as the world benchmark. It's not important.

On October 12, I wrote the article “Oil Demand Forecast Down And Spread Expands Again,” pointing out how the price spread between WTI and Brent had expanded:

Brent November futures were last trading at $111.26, having risen as high as $113.00. West Texas intermediate was going for $85.50, setting the spread at over $25.

Tuesday’s article “Swing in WTI price curve leaves oil traders reeling” published by the Financial Times, added a different angle to the oil market, and I sense that the price is being “talked up" because a “five-year average” is not a common reference point in trading.

The sudden move into backwardation on Monday comes as US crude oil inventories have dropped below the five-year average. Physical oil traders, who have warned for months that global oil supplies were running too low even when considering a weakening demand growth, have got it right. A year ago US crude and oil products stocks were 70m barrels above the five year average – enough to supply for a month a country such as Germany. By last week, the surplus had evaporated. US stocks are now nearly 10 per cent lower than a year ago, in spite of weakening economic growth.

Yet another Financial Times article mentioned inventory tightening, with no balancing note about projections for lower demand, which in itself may address the reason why inventories are low. It’s not as if a merchant will stock the shelves while expecting fewer custome! rs:

< blockquote class="quote">

The oil market tightening that started in Europe and Japan has now spread to the US, with US crude and oil product inventories having fallen at a rate of nearly 1m barrels per day over the past month, and currently standing below the five-year average after three long years,” said Barclays Capital in a research note.

As of late, the dollar’s retreat helped the oil price, although the price of gasoline continues to decline, creating a puzzle out of the demand/supply claim, while the oil price spread shrunk from $25 to $17. The Middle East/North Africa conflicts have faded from memory, especially with Libya’s civil war resolved, and one must notice how the issue indicated is about inventories, not production.

One other item that I highlighted in a previous article, “Oil Price Spread Gets A Good Explanation,” are the impending changes to the Brent contract, setting a positive trend for WTI, while Brent entered a flat zone and is in no mood to follow through to the upside thus far:

Platts, in a notice issued on Friday, said it planned to move with the changes by January 6, 2012, adding that it had “received substantial support for the move”. The changes would impact on the multibillion-dollar Brent market, which consists of layers of physical, forward, swaps, futures and options contracts. According to Houston-based consultants Purvin & Gertz, Brent and its associated derivatives are the benchmarks for as much as 65 per cent of the world’s crude trade.

Which brings us to Wednesday's crude oil inventories release (pdf) by the Energy Information Administration:

At 337.6 million barrels, U.S. crude oil inventories are in the upper limit of the average range for this time of year. Total motor gasoline inventories decreased by 1.4 million barrels last week and are near the upper limit of the average range.

I k! now that some will say that the U.S. is not the barometer of the world, although it still burns the stuff like nobody else. But for the sake of an open mind, and considering that one or two readings not a trend makes, Reuters provided news on October 13 about the Chinese oil story:

China's daily crude oil imports fell 12 percent in September from last year's record high, remaining below 5 million barrels per day for the fourth consecutive month as refiners drew on inventories amid volatile crude markets. A marginal rise in September versus August fell short of estimates that imports would recover more quickly because of rising refinery throughput after maintenance and new plants coming onstream.

And what the statistics show is that inventories are plenty – oil and gasoline alike – even if they are at low levels. Lastly, the inventory levels may say more about future economic times than about the oil market itself.

In keeping up with disruptive technologies, I came across a story by Reuters titled “Turning wood into oil, in two simple steps.”

Efficiency and simplicity have long eluded renewable-fuel researchers, but a Maine scientist has developed a two-step process he says can make oil from the cellulose in wood fiber.

Certainly it’s not an immediate solution, but what I found amusing was that he "accidentally stumbled upon it 11 months ago while trying different reactions with biomass and acids.”

Disclosure: I have no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours.

[WallstCheatSheet] Apple Puts Up Another Walled Garden

Ring a fence around loyal Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) customers. Get them to buy more Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) products. Keep the customer��s content seamlessly inside these devices using the cloud. Then, make it easy for the customer to buy content from Apple and instantly make it available on all his or her devices. That, in a nutshell, is perhaps Apple��s latest ?strategy with iCloud, made available free, effective today on iOS5, the company��s newest mobile operating system.

Check Out:?Apple Cheat Sheet: iPhone Event Recap.

After some not so memorable attempts at providing online services, this move may in fact be successful and do wonders for Apple��s (NASDAQ:AAPL) already gargantuan market cap (upwards of $371B). According to Walter Price, a portfolio manager at RCM Capital Management, iCloud could increase Apple��s market value by $100 billion to $500 billion, due to the new service��s beneficial effect on sales of hardware devices and songs, movies, and other media.

Another plus for the company would be customers finding it harder to switch from Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) products. Bill Whyman, a technology analyst with International Strategy & Investment Group says ��iCloud could raise the switching costs for the customer, and the barriers to entry for the competitor. That��s very powerful.�� And it’s also not great news for fierce cloud competitors Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN), Google (NASDAQ:GOOG), and Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT).

Don��t Miss: Cloud Computing: Your Cheat Sheet to the Cloud Business Landscape.

AAPL is trading at $402.19 today, up 0.47%. Shares are up 34.08% in one year. The stock’s trading range for the year is between $292.49 and $422.86.

[Barrons] QCOM, SWKS, ATML - Setting Up For In-Line Q3 Reports

There are a raft of notes out this morning covering what will be a raft of chip earnings reports this week.

Network processor maker Cavium (CAVM) reports this afternoon. Atmel (ATML) reports tomorrow after the bell. Qualcomm (QCOM) reports Wednesday after the bell, as does ON Semiconductor (ONNN). Wireless chip maker Skyworks Solutions (SWKS) reports on Thursday, as do Microchip (MCHP) and International Rectifier (IRF).

Most of the notes I’ve seen are talking about a more-or-less in-line reporting season, with some top line numbers that may miss consensus.

FBR Capital’s Craig Berger this morning writes that Atmel’s Q4 view will likely miss the consensus $487 million in revenue and 20 cents a share in EPS, but that it will probably be better than many fear, with “robust” shipments of its “maXTouch” products. He thinks the company will report lower average selling prices and lower margins and offer a “conservative” view on 2012, though there’s a prospect for unit upside on chipset shipments as a result of its involvement in Apple’s (AAPL) iPhone 4S.

Berger also sees ON Semi’s Q4 view being “less bad than feared.” Overall, Berger thinks ” a year-end semiconductor rally is likely.”

Berger rates Atmel and Qualcomm and ON Outperform.

Sterne Agee’s Vijay Rakesh, meanwhile, expects Qualcomm to just about meet consensus for Q3, at $3.95 billion and 80 cents, versus the consensus $3.99 billion and 78 cents. The “key,” he thinks, is the 2012 outlook, with perhaps $17.3 billion and $3.62 forecast, about in line with consensus. The company has “solid” traction with Apple and with the newly introduced Nokia (NOK) devices based on Microsoft’s (MSFT) Windows Phone 7, but there’s some risk from an inventory adjustment at Samsung Electronics (SSNLF).

Skyworks’s fiscal Q4 report will probably meet consensus, roughly, at $400.6 million and 53 cents a share, though that top line number is slightly below the average $400.8 million estimate. The company is gaining traction at Nokia, but iPhone shipments were down somewhat in calendar Q3.

“While the presence of 1 PA and a SiGe filter in the new iPhone 4S reveal that SWKS has not been completely replaced in the updated handset, content is down to ~$1.40-1.50, versus ~$3 content in the iPhone 4 with 3PAs. Also, we believe RFMD and AVGO have seen some solid design wins at Samsung and HTC, which could be a headwind,” writes Rakesh.

Rakesh rates Qualcomm a Buy and Skyworks, Neutral.

Susquehanna Financial Group’s Chris Caso, meantime, reiterates a “Positive” view on Qualcomm, although he writes that “tepid” unit growth at smartphone “licensees” in Q3 sets up for a weak Q4 view relative to estimates:

The Street has been worried about 3Q handset units (which affect 4Q QTL [Qualcomm Technology Licensing] revenue) since AAPL printed underwhelming units earlier this month. We expect a strong ramp for iPhone in 4Q, which has positive implications for QTL revenue in 1Q. We also had a weak report from LG, flat smartphone growth at NOK, and weakness at RIMM. Offsetting this were strong results from Samsung, where smartphone units were up over 40% Q/Q, and solid results from Sony Ericsson and HTC. All total, we estimate the top nine suppliers grew smartphone shipments by ~7% Q/ Q in 3Q. Our estimates currently reflect 11% Q/Q unit growth for QCOM’s FY4Q, so based on these reports, QCOM’s 4Q QTL guidance is likely to come in light.

Shares of the chip makers are mostly lower this mornin! g:

QCOM is down $1.13, or 2%, at $52.10; ONNN is off 18 cents, or 2%, at $7.64; MCHP is down 33 cents, or 0.9%, at $36.13; SWKS is off 37 cents, or 1.8%, at $19.92; ATML is down 36 cents, or 3%, at $10.79; CAVM is down 61 cents, or 1.8%, at $33.42; and IRF is

[Investor Place] Gold trading in the $1,720s, silver around $37 early Thursday.

Gold prices fell Thursday morning in the wake of the Federal Reserve’s announcement that it will implement “Operation Twist” to help hold down long-term interest rates and stimulate lending and borrowing. August U.S. leading economic indicators rose 0.3%, pointing to faster growth going into year-end. Weekly jobless claims dropped but remained above 400,000.

Spot gold was bid at $1,726.40 with an ask price of $1,727.40, more than 3% lower, having hit a morning high of $1,731.60 and a low of $1,725.30, according to Kitco market data. The price of an ounce of gold for spot delivery was fixed in the London afternoon at $1,722 by the LBMA.

Spot silver was trading at $36.74 Bid, $36.84 Ask, down more than 7.25%, with a morning high of $37 and a low of $36.58. The spot silver reference price was fixed at $37.85 per ounce in the London a.m.

Gold and silver trusts were sharply lower in exchange trading Thursday morning.

  • The SPDR Gold Trust (NYSE:GLD) was off around 2.9%.
  • The iShares Gold Trust (NYSE:IAU) was down about the same.
  • The iShares Silver Trust (NYSE:SLV) was showing losses of about 6.4%.

Gold and silver mining ETFs were falling sharply as well.

  • The Market Vectors Gold Miners ETF (NYSE:GDX) was around 5.7% lower.
  • The Market Vector Junior Gold Miners ETF (NYSE:GDXJ) was down about 7.7%.
  • The Global X Silver Miners ETF (NYSE:SIL) was off 7.8%.

Shares of gold miners were plunging.

  • Agnico Eagle Mines (USA) (NYSE:AEM) was down 4.9%.
  • Barrick Gold Corp. (NYSE:ABX) was showing losses of more than 7.3%.
  • Goldcorp (NYSE:GG) was more than 6% lower.
  • Newmont Mining Corp. (NYSE:NEM) was down nearly 3.5%.
  • No vaGold Resources (USA) (AMEX:NG) was off more than 8.5%.

Silver miners’ shares were plummeting as well.

  • Coeur D’Alene Mines Corp. (NYSE:CDE) was more than 7.4% lower.
  • Hecla Mining (NYSE:HL) was down more than 5.5%.
  • Pan American Silver Corp. (USA) (NASDAQ:PAAS) was off nearly 8.9%.
  • Silver Wheaton Corp. (USA) (NYSE:SLW) was showing losses of around 8.5%.
  • Silver Standard Resources Inc. (USA) (NASDAQ:SSRI) was down around 8%.

The author does not hold positions in any of the above-mentioned investments.

[iStockAnalyst] Stock Markets ¨C Only Four Countries In Black In 2011

A useful round-up of global stock market performance comes courtesy of Bespoke Investment Group.

"Below we highlight the year-to-date performance for the major equity indices of 78 countries around the world. The most noteworthy data point in this table is the United States' year to date change of -2.63% (S&P 500). While we're still in the red for the year, the US ranks 12th out of 78 in terms of performance, and we're outperforming all of the G7 and BRIC countries as well.

"Just four countries are currently in the black this year �� Venezuela, Botswana, Jamaica and Ecuador. Greece and the Ukraine are the worst performers year-to-date with respective declines of -45.15% and -46.93%. The UK ranks second out of the G7 countries with a decline of 7.35%, followed by Canada (-10.13%) and Germany (-13.70%). Italy is the worst performing G7 country so far in 2011 with a decline of 19.25%. All of the BRICs are down more than 10% year to date."

Click here or on the image below for a larger view.

Source: Bespoke Investment Group, October 17, 2011.

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[WallstCheatSheet] Institutional Traders are Moving These Stocks in the Technology Sector

Wall St. Watchdog reveals information about institutional trading in the Technology sector. The higher the ratio of net trades to total shares outstanding, the greater the influence of institutional trading on a particular company��s stock price.?Institutional investors are trading these Technology stocks now:

  • Apple Inc. (NASDAQ:AAPL): Institutional investors bought 38,359,570 shares and sold 34,813,450 shares, for a net of 3,546,120 shares. This net represents 0.39% of common shares outstanding. The number of shares outstanding is 909,461,000. The shares recently traded at $383.58 and the company��s market capitalization is $355,613,500,000.00. About the company: Apple Inc. designs, manufactures, and markets personal computers and related personal computing and mobile communication devices along with a variety of related software, services, peripherals, and networking solutions. The Company sells its products worldwide through its online stores, its retail stores, its direct sales force, third-party wholesalers, and resellers.
  • Microsoft Corporation (NASDAQ:MSFT): Institutional investors bought 404,779,530 shares and sold 398,415,880 shares, for a net of 6,363,650 shares. This net represents 0.07% of common shares outstanding. The number of shares outstanding is 8,490,000,000. The shares recently traded at $25.25 and the company��s market capitalization is $211,551,200,000.00. About the company: Microsoft Corporation develops, manufactures, licenses, sells, and supports software products. The Company offers operating system software, server application software, business and consumer applications software, software development tools, and Internet and intranet software. Microsoft also develops video game consoles and digital music entertainment devices.
  • International Business Machines Corp. (NYSE:IBM): Institutional investors bought 25,498,250 shares and sold 50,723,770 shares, for a net of -25,225,520 shares. This net repres! ents 1.9 9% of common shares outstanding. The number of shares outstanding is 1,268,789,200. The shares recently traded at $169.14 and the company��s market capitalization is $202,000,200,000.00. About the company: International Business Machines Corporation (NYSE:IBM) provides computer solutions through the use of advanced information technology. The Company��s solutions include technologies, systems, products, services, software, and financing. IBM offers its products through its global sales and distribution organization, as well as through a variety of third party distributors and resellers.
  • Google Inc. (NASDAQ:GOOG): Institutional investors bought 20,337,760 shares and sold 20,911,400 shares, for a net of -573,640 shares. This net represents 0.18% of common shares outstanding. The number of shares outstanding is 318,702,000. The shares recently traded at $526.86 and the company��s market capitalization is $170,116,600,000.00. About the company: Google Inc. is a global technology company that provides a web based search engine through its website. The Company offers a wide range of search options, including web, image, groups, directory, and news searches.
  • Oracle Corporation (NASDAQ:ORCL): Institutional investors bought 205,662,720 shares and sold 179,609,540 shares, for a net of 26,053,180 shares. This net represents 0.52% of common shares outstanding. The number of shares outstanding is 5,048,000,000. The shares recently traded at $26.65 and the company��s market capitalization is $134,996,000,000.00. About the company: Oracle Corporation supplies software for enterprise information management. The Company offers databases and relational servers, application development and decision support tools, and enterprise business applications. Oracle��s software runs on network computers, personal digital assistants, set-top devices, PCs, workstations, minicomputers, mainframes, and massively parallel computers.
  • Intel Corporation (NASDAQ:INTC! ): Insti tutional investors bought 314,942,250 shares and sold 264,082,820 shares, for a net of 50,859,430 shares. This net represents 0.92% of common shares outstanding. The number of shares outstanding is 5,555,000,000. The shares recently traded at $19.77 and the company��s market capitalization is $103,812,300,000.00. About the company: Intel Corporation designs, manufactures, and sells computer components and related products. The Company��s major products include microprocessors, chipsets, embedded processors and microcontrollers, flash memory products, graphics products, network and communications products, systems management software, conferencing products, and digital imaging products.
  • Siemens AG (ADR) (NYSE:SI): Institutional investors bought 2,319,590 shares and sold 3,425,870 shares, for a net of -1,106,280 shares. This net represents 0.13% of common shares outstanding. The number of shares outstanding is 868,244,000. The shares recently traded at $100.63 and the company��s market capitalization is $90,634,385,755.64. About the company: Siemens AG manufactures a wide range of industrial and consumer products. The Company builds locomotives, traffic control systems, automotive electronics, and engineers electrical power plants. Siemens also provides public and private communications networks, computers, building control systems, medical equipment, and electrical components. The Company operates worldwide.
  • Cisco Systems, Inc. (NASDAQ:CSCO): Institutional investors bought 503,519,100 shares and sold 503,326,060 shares, for a net of 193,040 shares. This net represents 0.00% of common shares outstanding. The number of shares outstanding is 5,529,000,000. The shares recently traded at $15.32 and the company��s market capitalization is $84,262,840,000.00. About the company: Cisco Systems, Inc. supplies data networking products for the Internet. The Company��s Internet Protocol-based networking solutions are installed at corporations, public institutions and t! elecommu nication companies worldwide. The Company��s solutions transport data, voice, and video within buildings, across campuses, and around the world.
  • QUALCOMM, Inc. (NASDAQ:QCOM): Institutional investors bought 87,862,080 shares and sold 74,113,900 shares, for a net of 13,748,180 shares. This net represents 0.84% of common shares outstanding. The number of shares outstanding is 1,643,000,000. The shares recently traded at $48.94 and the company��s market capitalization is $82,206,450,000.00. About the company: QUALCOMM, Inc. develops and manufactures digital wireless communications equipment. The Company licenses its Code Division Multiple Access (CDMA) intellectual property to other companies, and produces CDMA-based integrated circuits; equipment and software used to track workers and assets; software for wireless content enablement; and offers services to deliver multimedia content.
  • SAP AG (ADR) (NYSE:SAP): Institutional investors bought 3,703,010 shares and sold 3,031,410 shares, for a net of 671,600 shares. This net represents 0.06% of common shares outstanding. The number of shares outstanding is 1,188,000,000. The shares recently traded at $52.60 and the company��s market capitalization is $64,054,184,317.69. About the company: SAP AG is a multinational software company. The Company develops business software, including e-business and enterprise management software, consults on organizational usage of its applications software, and provides training services. SAP markets its products and services worldwide.

[Kiplinger] Layaway Is Back

I know it seems a little early to start thinking about holiday shopping, but several retailers are offering layaway programs to help customers buy items they want without racking up debt. In fact, Walmart announced September 8 that it will start offering layaway October 17 for toys and electronics "to help families deliver a big Christmas." It's been five years since Walmart last offered layaway, says consumer expert Andrea Woroch.

This installment-payment method was popular before the widespread use of credit cards but made a resurgence in 2008 during the recession. However, marketing experts didn't expect layaway to remain a long-term trend because it's an expensive program for stores to administer. It allows customers to select items they want and pay for them over a period of time. Once final payments are made, items may be picked up.

The difference between using a layaway program and a credit card (which can let you stretch payments out over a period of time) is that interest doesn't accrue on layaway items. However, you must pay a nominal service fee and a deposit at the time of purchase. Plus, stores usually charge a cancellation fee if you decide you don't want the item.

Here's a roundup of retailers offering layaway this year:

Walmart
Layaway period: October 17 to December 16
Down payment: 10%
Pay schedule: Pay in full by December 16
Fees: $5 service fee; $10 cancellation fee
Note: Layaway is available in stores only for toys and electronics. Each item must be $15 or more, and the total purchase must be $50 or more. Layaway is not offered Black Friday, November 25.

Kmart
Layaway period: 8 weeks; 12 weeks for purchases of $300 or more
Down payment: $20 or 10% (whichever is greater)
Pay schedule: Biweekly
Fees: $5 service fee ($10 for the 12-week plan); $15 cancellation fee
Note: You can make payments online or in stores. There is a 7-day grace per! iod for payment. Layaway is not available in all stores. Online purchases available for layaway are identified as such.

Sears
Layaway period: 8 weeks; 12 weeks for in-store purchases of $400 or more
Down payment: $20 or 20% (whichever is greater)
Pay schedule: Biweekly
Fees: $5 service fee ($10 for the 12-week plan); $15 cancellation fee
Note: You can make payments online or in stores. There is a 7-day grace period for payment. Layaway is not available in all stores. Online purchases available for layaway are identified as such.

Toys "R" Us/Babies "R" Us
Layaway period: 3 months
Down payment: 20%
Pay schedule: 50% paid within 45 days; paid in full in 3 months
Fees: $10 service fee; $5 cancellation fee
Note: Layaway is offered in stores only and for select items. See a list of items available for layaway.

T.J. Maxx/Marshalls
Layaway period: 30 days
Down payment: 10%
Pay schedule: Layaways must be picked up and paid in full within 30 days
Fees: $5 cancellation fee
Note: Jewelry and clearance items are not eligible for layaway. Other restrictions may apply -- customers should call their local store for details.

Burlington Coat Factory
Layaway period: 60 days (90 days for Baby Depot items)
Down payment: 20%
Pay schedule: 20% additional payment due in 14 days; paid in full in 60 (or 90) days
Fees: $5 service fee; $10 cancellation fee

Web sites such as eLayaway.com and Lay-Away.com also offer layaway programs for a variety of merchants. Another way to avoid racking up credit card debt to make holiday purchases is to make a list of items you want to buy, set a budget and start saving soon. Look for my Kip Tip in the coming weeks on how to save $1,000 by the holidays.

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Kass: Low Rates Don't Hold the Answer

Lower mortgage/interest rates a la Operation Twist are no longer the answer. The ball is in the politicians' court.

"Economic growth so far this year has been considerably slower than the committee expected. Indicators suggest a deterioration in overall labor market conditions in recent months, and the unemployment rate has moved up. Household spending has flattened out... " -- FOMC

Let's review my thoughts regarding Operation Twist, the U.S. stock market's reaction yesterday and the German and Chinese economic news released last night (that seem to be the proximate cause for the schmeissing in S&P futures over night).

As I expressed in my FOMC Post Mortem, I still don't know why there will be any real benefit to the economy from this strategy, as the shape of the curve and the level of interest rates are not currently growth constraints.

The Bernank does not control fiscal policy and the economic ball is no longer in his court. It is in the hands of our political "leaders."

Upon reflection, I see the FOMC release as a negative to risk assets because it emphasized (for those who live in another bullish economic galaxy, and there remain some) that the current domestic economic challenges (significant downside risk in FedSpeak) will likely continue to be in place absent a pro-growth strategy.There were other factors that led to a post-FOMC decision selloff yesterday and overnight:

  • Reports that French bank BNP might be seeking capital.
  • The European banks continue to be reluctant to recapitalize (which they must).
  • A divided Europe continues to be unwilling to address its fiscal issues.
  • We still have no sense regarding counter party risk when Greek defaults.
  • The tape was already exhibiting deflationary signals going into FOMC announcement -- industrials, transports, etc. breaking down -- so maybe the "downside risk" Fed statement was a tipping point where investors simply gave up.
  • By making the "downside risk" statement, investors might have come t! o the co nclusion that the Fed has a better sense of how bad upcoming economic numbers will be and that poor August sentiment will translate into weak hard economic data in early winter. (One can even argue that the "significant downside risk" pronouncement might have frightened the markets more than Operation Twist helped in reducing interest rates.)
  • Growing recognition that the Fed will not likely entertain QE3 in the face of much opposition within the Fed and in the Republican Party.
  • Growing recognition that the domestic economy (combined with the eurozone uncertainty and structural challenges) is now on its own.

Overnight there were signs that the adverse turn in sentiment in the late summer (caused by the U.S. debt downgrade and growing sovereign debt contagion) are beginning to impact hard economic data as both the Chinese PMI and the German economic data show. In response, Asian and European stock markets have tanked and commodities (copper and gold are down big), across the board, continue to weaken.

This data, coupled with the economic risks to the downside offered in the FOMC comments, raise the legitimate issue of a synchronized worldwide economic slowdown and that consensus corporate profit forecasts for 2012 are too high (a view I have long held).

As I wrote in The Hard Truth About Easy Money, we have a balance-sheet recession and market participants are now finally coming to the conclusion that the cost of borrowing may not be the right remedy in resuscitating growth. Pro-growth fiscal policy is the answer. Without it, at best, we muddle along. At worst, we double dip.

Let's now briefly return to a discussion of home refinancing and mortgage activity, which helps to explain an important reason why I believe that lower interest rates may no longer hold the economic answer.

Based on Wednesday, the Federal Reserve and its chairman appear to still be in favor of more cow! bell. Th ey see lower interest and mortgage rates as fuel for the consumer, as lower-rate refinancings, in theory, aid consumer's cash flows and expenditures. But refinancings have not improved in response to easing rates. In fact, the opposite has occurred.

The logic behind more Fed easing has grown less compelling. That's a blow to the easy money crowd and explains the broken connection between lower interest rates and an improving housing market. Perhaps it also helps to explain the market's recent pasting, as well as help to explain the recent dissents among voting Fed members.

The residential real estate industry is suffering from a structural imbalance between supply and demand. An unprecedented 35% drop in home prices, due in large measure to the egregious use of debt, has resulted in 22% of all U.S. homes with mortgages under water and another 5% at "near negative" equity.As to refinancing trends, the relationship to lower rates and a rise in refinancings has been broken for some time for numerous reasons. The Fed has been remiss in understanding structural issues (vs. cyclical) like this, though they are slowly warming up to the reality.

  • 1. The mortgage-origination business has changed in the last six months. Most mortgage brokers now get paid a salary plus small commission. The people I know that remain in the business are making one quarter, at best, of what they used to make in the last cycle. They no longer want to bother with smaller and more complicated loans, which tend to be the mainstay of the mortgage business.
  • 2. The transformation from low- or no-documented mortgages (like a pendulum) has moved back to the old days, when credit scores, incomes and net worth are actually documented. Many are no longer qualifying for mortgages (as their loans to values are too high and incomes/credit scores too low).
  • 3. As credit gets tighter, the appraisal process is getting much longer. It's more conservative and much more stringent since lenders do not want to make any errors, be sue! d or fac e additional rep and warranty issues.
  • 4. The pool of available refinancing applicants are diminished importantly by the number of homes that are still underwater and the weight of a heavy supply of shadow inventory of unsold homes (which keeps home prices down).
  • 5. The weak jobs market is still keeping homeowners on the sidelines (especially after a 30%-plus drop in prices over the last five years).
  • 6. The tenuous real-estate market is forcing many homeowners that are considering refinancing to raise their equity investments before banks agree to lower mortgage rate terms.
  • Given that shaky situation, the banking industry is not keen to expand its mortgage lending activity, even if Treasury rates move ever lower and real-estate lending provides a better net interest margin. The housing situation remains weak and it will take years to clear despite affordability at multi-decade highs. Lower mortgage (interest) rates a la Operation Twist are no longer the answer.

    The ball is now in Washington's court. While I remain suspicious of a meaningful break in gridlock, the current crisis could potentially serve to reduce the divisiveness and polarization even before the November 2012 elections.

    But should a divided government not change, we are in for an extended period of uneven and lumpy domestic growth and that's hard for investment managers (with limited upside and corporate managers with limited pricing power to navigate.)Nevertheless, all is not lost and getting more bearish with lower share prices could be wrong footed.

    With sentiment and expectations low and finally adjusting to reality, inflation contained, a friendly Federal Reserve and balance-sheet-healthy corporations (operating at a high level of profits), I still expect that we have seen the lows on the S&P for the year.

    At the opening, the S&P cash will stand at around 1130. By my calculation, this level incorporates a 20! 12 S&P e arnings of about $78-$80/share (consensus is well over $100/share) and a near-50% chance of recession.

    Despite the recent news, I remain in the muddle through camp and view a recession with only 30% probability. While 2012 corporate profit projections remain too ambitious, $78-$80/share is too pessimistic.

    My 12-month target for the S&P Index remains at about 1205 (5-6% upside) as expressed in The Kass Model Portfolio.

    Despite the aforementioned economic challenges, the recent drop in stocks has improved the market's risk/reward and, as we move ever closer to the early August levels (providing 9-10% percent upside) I would start to raise my long exposure.We are not too far away!

    Doug Kass is the president of Seabreeze Partners Management Inc. Under no circumstances does this information represent a recommendation to buy, sell or hold any security.

    U.S. Pending Home Sales Fell 4.6% in September

    Contracts to purchase previously owned U.S. homes dropped off in September despite lower prices and borrowing costs. According to a report from the National Association of Realtors released today in Washington, pending home sales were down 4.6% last month in their biggest one-month decline since April, following a 1.2% drop in August.

    ��Sales continue to bump along the bottom,�� said Anika Khan, an economist at Wells Fargo Securities LLC in Charlotte, North Carolina, ahead of the report. ��A meaningful recovery in sales will likely not occur until the mountain of foreclosures and pending foreclosures clears.��

    Pending home sales declined in all four of the NAR’s four regions, led by a 6.2% drop in the Midwest. ��A combination of weak consumer confidence and continuing tight lending criteria held back homebuyers,�� said NAR chief economist Lawrence Yun in a statement today.

    Another NAR report issued October 20 showed that sales of previously owned homes, which account for roughly 95% of the market, fell 3% in September, and 18% of real estate agents reported having at least one pending contract canceled last month. According to the NAR, cancellations often reflect mortgage applications that were refused or cases in which appraised home values came in below the contracted sales price. The NAR’s pending sales report tracks contract signings, while previously owned sales reflect the closings, which come a month or two later.

    Motorola Solutions Gets Probed for Foreign Bribery

    The Justice Department and Securities and Exchange Commission are investigating whether Motorola Solutions(MSI) paid bribes to win business in Europe, people familiar with the matter told The Wall Street Journal.

    U.S. officials have asked Motorola Solutions for information over the past two years about transactions in seven European countries.

    The government is searching for evidence that Motorola Solutions may have violated the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, the people told the newspaper. The law bars American companies and their agents from offering bribes to foreign government officials.

    A spokesman for Motorola Solutions declined to comment for the Journal.

    The investigation began in 2009 after the company opened its own internal probe into possible breaches of anti-bribery laws and alerted U.S. authorities, said people familiar with the matter.

    The internal investigation initially focused on a suspicious transaction in Turkey, but U.S. authorities are concentrating on the company's dealings in Europe, said a person familiar with the matter, the Journal said.

    Motorola Solutions makes two-way radios and systems for law enforcement agencies and public-safety organizations.

    -- Written by Joseph Woelfel

    >To submit a news tip, send an email to: tips@thestreet.com.

    Today In Commodities: Read The Tea Leaves

    Maybe it is the money some clients have lost on their longs or maybe I’m getting a better feel for the market but I expect prices to head south in a number of commodities…trade accordingly. Crude will close virtually unchanged today but the volatility continues as $2,500-4,000 daily ranges are becoming more and more common. We expect prices to trade lower and continue to operate under the influence that Crude is a sale above $88/barrel and a buy below $78. In December futures 3.75-3.80 continues to support natural gas but wait for a move higher to confirm that an interim bottom is in.

    Stocks were surprisingly resilient today holding onto slight gains as of this post. We are incapable of picking a top but a close back below the 9 day MA would signal that we are due for at least a pullback. That pivot point comes in at 1205 in the S&P and 11425 in the Dow. Another flush lower in gold with prices down $25/ounce trading to two week lows. We advised clients to cut losses on their gold longs today. Silver gave up nearly 2.5% today briefly trading back under $30/ounce. Clients were advised to cut loses on their silver longs today as well. The fact that copper lost 5% today and is off 10% this week does not bode well for commodities moving higher in the immediate future. The dollar was unable to hold onto gains reversing mid-day closing under the 34 day MA again. Clients continue to scale into bearish exposure in the Yen anticipating a trade down to 1.2750 in the coming weeks. Cocoa cannot get out of its own way on a rally in the coming sessions move back to the sidelines. Exit all remaining futures longs in November OJ.

    Tomorrow is options expiration and we expect a trade below $1.70 in futures. Use downside into the weekend tomorrow to exit 30-yr bond bearish trades. Corn reversed to our surprise and is on! the ver ge of breaking above the 200 day MA…a feat that we had expedited but we anticipated a trade lower first. A close over $6.60 in March triggers buy signals. January soybeans closed lower again today but were able to pare loses almost fighting back into positive territory. Live cattle were lower again today making their way back to the 20 day MA. We may get a window to offset December shorts for clients on a further break. As for February a 50% Fibonacci retracement drags prices back near 122.50…stay tuned.

    Risk disclosure: The risk of loss in trading commodity futures and options can be substantial. Past performance is no guarantee of future trading results.

    Zynga Faces Questions Over Growth

    While Zynga has cultivated a loyal following for its Facebook games like FarmVille and CityVille, the company may face problems growing its user base, according to a new report.

    Although Zynga converts about 90% of its players from an existing game to the next, only 10% of gamers are new, based on survey data from video game networking site Raptr.

    "Having only 10% of players be new is scary considering the social gaming market as a whole is not growing as quickly as it used to," said Dennis Fong, Raptr's CEO.

    These findings come at a crucial moment for Zynga, as it faces questions about its ability to sustain its growth ahead of its impending initial public offering valuing the company at $20 billion.

    Last week, the social networking game maker revealed in an updated S-1 filing that quarterly profit during the June period fell more than 90% to $1.4 million from $13.9 million during the year ago period. Profit also dropped 92% sequentially from the March quarter.

    Zynga said this decline was because it didn't put out any new games in the first half of 2011, which affected its revenue. The company was also affected by its transition to using Facebook's virtual payment system, Credits.

    Facebook takes 30% of revenue generated by game developers.

    Zynga is also battling new competition in the Facebook gaming arena, where it has dominated as the leading player up until now.

    The Sims Social, a game from Electronic Arts(ERTS), launched on Facebook in August and quickly became the second most popular game on the platform.

    "Up until this point Zynga hasn't felt threatened by anybody but it was just a matter of time," said Wanda Meloni, a senior analyst at M2 Research. "And the success of Sims Social shows there are people that are heading up the leaderboard."

    Zynga joins other buzzy Internet companies who are now! facing skepticism about their sustainability following eyepopping valuations.

    Daily deals king Groupon, which filed for an IPO earlier this year, is now unclear about its timing for going public after cutting its sales figures for 2010 by more than half and announcing the departure of its COO.

    Social media companies which went public recently have also seen a cooling off from investors.

    Online radio company Pandora(P) is down 30% from its June IPO, trading at around $12.11 as of Tuesday afternoon.

    Business social network LinkedIn(LNKD), meanwhile, has fallen 15% from its May debut, trading at around $80 in afternoon action.

    --.

    Big Cap Stocks Scoring 52-Week Price Highs as Dow Jones Climbs 162 Points

    Wall St. Watchdog reveals information about 19 stocks that hit 52-week highs in today��s trading. Note that this list excludes all stocks with a market capitalization less than $10 billion:

    1. Wal-Mart Stores Inc. (NYSE:WMT): Up 1.16% to $57.37. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. operates discount stores, supercenters, and neighborhood markets. The Company’s discount stores and supercenters offer merchandise such as apparel, housewares, small appliances, electronics, and hardware. Walmart’s markets offer a full-line supermarket and a limited assortment of general merchandise. The Company operates nationally and internationally.
    2. GlaxoSmithKline plc (NYSE:GSK): Up 1.86% to $44.83. GlaxoSmithKline plc is a research-based pharmaceutical group that develops, manufactures and markets vaccines, prescription and over-the-counter medicines, as well as health-related consumer products. The Group, which also provides laboratory testing and disease management services, specializes in treatments for respiratory, central nervous system, gastro-intestinal and genetic disorders
    3. Enterprise Products Partners LP (NYSE:EPD): Up 1.86% to $45.36. Enterprise Products Partners L.P. provides processing and transportation services to producers and consumers of natural gas liquids. The Company generally processes products that are ultimately used as feedstocks in petrochemical manufacturing, in the production of motor gasoline, and as fuel for residential and commercial heating.
    4. National Grid plc (NYSE:NGG): Up 1.08% to $51.42. National Grid PLC owns, operates and develops electricity and gas networks. The Group’s electricity transmission and gas distribution networks are located throughout the United Kingdom and in the north-eastern section of the United States. They also own liquefied natural gas storage facilities in Britain and provide infrastructure services to the mobile telecom industry.
    5. Simon Property! Group I nc. (NYSE:SPG): Up 2.05% to $123.59. Simon Property Group, Inc. is a self-administered and self-managed, real estate investment trust. The Company owns, develops, and manages retail real estate properties including regional malls, outlet centers, community/lifestyle centers, and international properties.
    6. Biogen Idec Inc. (NASDAQ:BIIB): Up 9.4% to $116.92. Biogen Idec Inc. develops, manufactures, and commercializes therapies, focusing on neurology, oncology, and immunology. The Company’s products addresses diseases such as multiple sclerosis, non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, rheumatoid arthritis, crohn’s disease, and psoriasis.
    7. Kinder Morgan Energy Partners LP (NYSE:KMP): Up 1.3% to $77.83. Kinder Morgan Energy Partners, L.P., is a pipeline transportation and energy storage company. The Company operates pipelines and terminals. The pipelines transport natural gas, gasoline, crude oil, carbon dioxide and other products; and its terminals store petroleum products and chemicals, and handle bulk materials like coal and petroleum coke.
    8. Precision Castparts Corp. (NYSE:PCP): Up 0.8% to $172.63. Precision Castparts Corp. is a worldwide manufacturer of complex metal components and products. The Company manufactures large, complex structural investment castings and airfoil castings used in jet aircraft engines. Precision has also expanded into the industrial gas turbine, industrial metal working tools and machines, and other metal products markets.
    9. ACE Limited (NYSE:ACE): Up 2.9% to $71.00. ACE Limited is the holding company for the ACE Group of Companies, a property and casualty insurance business. The Group provides a diversified range of products and services to clients through operations in countries around the world. ACE provides specialty insurance and reinsurance products.
    10. Public Storage (NYSE:PSA): Up 1.83% to $124.69. Public Storage is a real estate investment trust! . The tr ust’s principal business activities include the acquisition, development, ownership and operation of self-storage facilities in the United States. Public Storage also own an equity interest in an owner and operator of self-storage facilities in Europe.
    11. El Paso Corp. (NYSE:EP): Down 0.2% to $25.50. El Paso Corporation operates natural gas pipeline and storage facilities, transports natural gas, and imports liquefied natural gas. El Paso also explores for and produces natural gas. The Company has operations in the United States, Brazil, and Egypt.
    12. American Electric Power Co., Inc. (NYSE:AEP): Up 0.39% to $38.80. American Electric Power Company, Inc.(NYSE:AEP)is a public utility holding company. The Company provides electric service, consisting of generation, transmission and distribution, on an integrated basis to their retail customers. AEP serves portions of the states of Arkansas, Indiana, Kentucky, Louisiana, Michigan, Ohio, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia and West Virginia.
    13. Spectra Energy Corp. (NYSE:SE): Up 2.24% to $28.78. Spectra Energy Corporation transmits, stores, distributes, gathers, and processes natural gas. The Company provides transportation and storage of natural gas to customers in various regions of the northeastern and southeastern United States, the Maritime Provinces in Canada and the Pacific Northwest in the United States and Canada, and the province of Ontario, Canada.
    14. Williams Partners L.P. (NYSE:WPZ): Up 1.07% to $57.50. Williams Partners LP is a master limited partnership that owns natural gas gathering, transportation, processing and treating assets.
    15. Dollar General Corporation (NYSE:DG): Down 1.21% to $39.87. Dollar General Corp. operates a chain of discount retail stores located primarily in the southern, southwestern, midwestern and eastern United States. The Company offer a broad selection of merchandise, including consumable products such a! s food, paper and cleaning products, health and beauty products and pet supplies, and non-consumable products such as seasonal merchandise.
    16. iShares iBoxx $ Invest Grade Corp Bond (NYSE:LQD): Down 0.07% to $114.02. iShares iBoxx $ Investment Grade Corporate Bond Fund is an exchange-traded fund incorporated in the USA. The Fund seeks results that correspond to the price and yield performance of a segment of the US investment grade corporate bond market as defined by the iBoxx $ Liquid Investment Grade Index. The Index measures the performance of a fixed number of investment grade corporate bonds.
    17. Edison International (NYSE:EIX): Up 1.14% to $39.98. Edison International, through its subsidiaries, develops, acquires, owns, and operates electric power generation facilities worldwide. The Company also provides capital and financial services for energy and infrastructure projects, as well as manages and sells real estate projects. Additionally, Edison provides integrated energy services, utility outsourcing, and consumer products.
    18. Motorola Mobility Holdings, Inc. (NYSE:MMI): Up 0.23% to $38.90. Motorola Mobility Holdings Inc. provides advanced mobile media solutions and multi-screen technologies. The Company develops products that include consumer mobile phones, business-ready smartphones accessories, cordless phones, and home networking products.
    19. ONEOK Partners, L.P. (NYSE:OKS): Up 1.25% to $50.41. ONEOK Partners, L.P., through a subsidiary limited partnership, owns a general partner interest in a master limited partnership. The partnership owns an interstate pipeline system that transports natural gas primarily in the upper Midwest and Mid Continent regions of the United States.

    2 ETFs To Help Spread the Risk

    Wherever you turn, there’s some doomsday scenario lurking in the shadows…and until that changes, you’re best to use ETFs to diversify the risks that come along with these worries, writes Jack Colombo of the Forbes/ISA Closed-End Fund and ETF Report.

    It seems that most of the world is suffering the uncertainty surrounding the European debt crisis. The US financial system has guaranteed a lot of Greek debt, and would be on the hook for billions if a formal default were declared.

    China is obviously having its own problems with a slowing growth rate. And Japan is still dealing with the after effects of the earthquake, tsunami, and nuclear meltdown.

    Like last month, world markets have been roiled and volatile with shifts between risk-on and risk-off speculations alternating almost on a daily basis.

    One way to avoid some of the rollercoaster effects of this uncertainty is to invest some assets in both the risk-on and risk-off markets.

    This month’s international winners were distributed throughout the globe. The best performer was the Aberdeen Chile Fund (CH), which was up 13.45%.

    Two Turkey funds made the top performers list. The iShares MSCI Turkey Index Fund (TUR) was up 11.48% and the Turkish Investment Fund (TKF) was up 10.07%.

    Vietnam and Peru also made the list, with gains of 7.13% and 6.86% respectively. With the exception of the Spain Fund (SNF), the winners come from the area of the globe least affected by the European economic crisis.

    The losers were easy to categorize. The reported China growth slowdown was all too evident in the top losers group, with losses ranging from 6% to 12%. The worst was the First Trust China AlphaDEX Fund (FCA), down 12.98%, followed by the IQ Hong Kong Small Cap ETF (HKK), down 12.27%

    Two Picks
    The Clough Global Equity Fund! (GLQ) i s currently trading at $11.56, a discount of more than 13% from its net asset value. The fund currently yields 10.3% and pays quarterly.

    It invests in a mix of global securities…mostly equity, but about 20% in income-producing securities. It may also use options and short sales to enhance portfolio returns.

    The fund has flexible investment rules, and is currently 56.97% invested in US securities, followed by a 21.12% investment in foreign stocks. The goal is total investment return plus income.

    Its largest sector investment is in utilities at 18.55%, followed by energy, oil services, and drillers at 13.95%. It uses leverage, and is currently leveraged at 37% of assets. The next ex-dividend date is in mid-October.

    The ING Emerging Markets High Dividend Equity Fund (IHD) was launched in April 2011. The fund invests in dividend-paying stocks of emerging countries and seeks to reduce volatility of total returns by selling call options on emerging-market index ETFs, international, regional, or country indices, and/or equity securities.

    This diversified approach produces a yield of about 13%. The fund currently trades at $12.38, a discount of 10.48% from its net asset value.

    The fund invests 19.79% of its funds in China, followed by Brazil at 17.10% and South Korea at 11.61%. Its largest sectors are financials at 22.39%, followed by energy at 14.81% and information technology at 11.36%. The fund is not leveraged and pays dividends quarterly.

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