FOREX-Euro slides to record low vs franc on Greece fears – Reuters

The Guardian (blog)FOREX-Euro slides to record low vs franc on Greece fears
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NEW YORK, June 13 (Reuters) – The euro fell to a record low against the Swiss franc on Monday, with more losses likely as disagreement among policymakers over how to solve Greece's debt crisis unsettled investors and boosted the …
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One Stock Thriving Off America’s Burgeoning Underclass: Dollar Financial Shoots Up 26%

By David Gibbs

Earnings: Q4 profits, excluding items, of $0.42 versus estimates of $0.38 and $0.39 in Q4 last year.

Revenue: Up 28% YOY to $159 million.

Jeff Weiss, the company’s Chairman and CEO, stated:

I am excited to announce another year of record performance for our Company with consolidated total revenue growing by 15.7% to a record $610.9 million for the fiscal year, while consolidated adjusted EBITDA increased to a record $182.2 million, a 31.6% increase over the prior fiscal year. This record performance was achieved despite a challenging global economy still suffering with high unemployment and a significantly reduced average work week for hourly wage based workers.

Comment: Dollar Financial (DLLR) provides a wide range of consumer financial products and services including check cashing, single-payment consumer loans, longer-term installment loans, pawn lending, debit cards, phone/gift cards, bill payment, money orders, money transfers, foreign exchange, gold buying and legal document processing services.

As of June 30, 2009, DLLR’s global store network consisted of 1,206 locations, and it demonstrated to the Street last Thursday that now may be the time to get behind shares.

Besides the beat on EPS and revenues, operating margins rose to 41.4% from 34.7% and fees from consumer lending, the company’s cash cow, shot up 28% YOY, though check-cashing revs fell marginally. Pawn related revenue nearly doubled, but remains a relatively small piece of the DLLR pie.

DLLR issued positive guidance, forecasting FY11 earnings from operations of $2.05-$2.30 versus estimates of $2.01. Management also announced the acquisition of Folkia Group for approx. $28 million, a deal that is expected to be immediately accretive.

Shares traded up huge off the news, adding more than 26% in a single day. DLLR had seen it’s price fall by more than 40% since mid-April as news relating to a class action suit out of Canada overhung shares. With the Q4 beat and management commentary, the Street seems to have had those concerns at least partially alleviated.

With it’s recent downtrend officially broken, look for shares to test resistance in the $20.24-$20.72 range. If they can push through, a move towards $23-$24 would be the next objective. From a longer-term standpoint, particularly after seeing post-earnings selloffs in companies like J. Crew (JCG), Coach (COH) and Tiffany & Co. (TIF) in just the past week, a move into a company like DLLR may be the way to go. All three of the above and many more have warned of a second half slowdown, and it’s in those environments that a payday loan/check-cashing company is likely to thrive.

As we’ve expounded here at Wall St. Cheat Sheet over and again, an underclass is developing in America. When those afflicted can no longer participate in the conventional economy, companies like DLLR will be the one’s laying in wait, offering them near-usurous short-term financing. As the underclass expands, profit opportunities for DLLR cannot but expand in lock-step.

(Click to enlarge)

Disclosure: No position

Retirees seeking the "retirement trifecta" -- golf, the beach and warm weather -- often flock to pricey places like Palm Beach, Hilton Head or Santa Barbara. But those same sugar-sand beaches, sunshine and some of the best golf in the nation can be had at a much lower price -- in Alabama.

Also See

Retire Here, Not There: State-by-State Forget your parents' retirement destinations. These less-known gems offer lower prices and peppy economies.

"Our beaches are as beautiful as you'll find barring maybe the Caribbean," says Fergus Tuohy, an Ameriprise Financial advisor based in Birmingham. "And it's not like in south Florida where it's sweltering most of the time." The golf can hold its own too: Retirees enjoy the Robert Trent Jones Golf Trail, a collection of 11 different championship courses totaling 468 holes, which The Wall Street Journal said "may be the biggest bargain in the country." And it's not just the golf that's affordable here. The state's overall cost of living is 12% below average, and even living along the coastline is reasonable. Gulf Shores costs 11.2% more than average to live in, compared to 36.4% for Boca Raton and 121.7% for Santa Barbara.

Nicknamed the "Heart of Dixie," Alabama has a distinct southern flair (expect a lot of "yes ma'ams"), a rabid love of college football (Alabama and Auburn games leave the cities awash in red and orange) and a conservative-minded electorate. The state has several top-notch health care facilities, including the University of Alabama Hospital in Birmingham, and the Southeast Alabama Medical Center in Dothan.

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Furthermore, Alabama's assisted living and nursing homes cost significantly less. A private room in a nursing home in Alabama costs $186 per day, compared to $239 for the nation as a whole; and $2,694 per month for assisted living, compared to $3,477 for the rest of the country, according to the MetLife Mature Market Institute. And though residents pay income taxes here, the rate tops out at 5% and Social Security and pension income are exempt. Plus, homeowners over 65 don't pay property taxes and there is no estate tax.

But the state has some significant downsides. For one, 17.1% of residents live in poverty compared to 13.8% for the nation, according to the U.S. Census Bureau; and Alabama has one of the highest obesity rates in the nation. Though there are good health care facilities in the larger cities, many residents in outlying areas don't have a lot of options, as there are just 178 physicians per 100,000 people in Alabama, compared to 221 in the U.S. as a whole, according to Sperling's Best Places. And sales tax averages 7.5% compared to the 6.8% U.S. average.

Still, residents say the soothing Gulf Coast beaches, inexpensive golf courses, and pleasant climate more than make up for those downsides. These four places give retirees the best that Alabama has to offer:

Huntsville Rob Hainer / Shutterstock.com

New York native and part-time consultant and speaker Vincent Boles, 57, says he traveled the world 18 times over during his 33 years of military service. But when he decided to retire in 2009, he settled on Huntsville. Home to NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center and a large aerospace industry, the city attracts a diverse range of residents. "Huntsville also gets so much energy from the tech sector, and there's a can-do spirit," he adds, noting Huntsville was where some of the key technology for the Apollo moon landings was developed.

By the numbers
  • Population: 176,705
  • Median home cost: $142,600
  • Cost of living: 6.7% lower than average
  • Unemployment: 7.4%
  • Source: Sperling's Best Places

A popular spot for military retirees, many of whom visited this community at one point in their careers Huntsville offers an interesting melding of southern hospitality and high-tech culture, explains Charles Winters, the executive vice president of the Huntsville/Madison County Convention & Visitor's Bureau. Although this town has one of the highest concentrations of PhDs in the nation, few would mistake it for Silicon Valley. "You can't expect to go the grocery store and be out in five minutes," explains Boles -- this is the kind of town where people chat over groceries, the morning paper or in line at the bank. But unlike a lot of small cities in the South, thanks to the tech sector its residents hail from all over the world.

While crime in Huntsville is higher than average, residents say it tends to be contained to certain areas. And they add that Huntsville's unique culture, as well as a plethora of outdoor activities, more than compensates. Because of its location in the foothills of the Appalachian Mountains, miles of hiking and biking trails are minutes away; boaters can head a few minutes south of town to the Tennessee River, and golfers can hit up one of Huntsville's seven courses, including the Hampton Cove courses, which are part of the Robert Trent Jones Golf Trail. Retirees also like that Huntsville boasts the state's oldest symphony orchestra, quality medical care, and a lower than average cost of living, says Winters.

Fairhope Wikimedia Commons

Fairhope Municipal Pier Fountain

Dreaming of a place that would give people a "fair hope" of success, Fairhope's 1894 founders made this town a "cooperative," whereby residents jointly owned the town's land and paid annual dues, rather than property taxes, to keep it running smoothly. This bohemian mindset has extended into today: The cooperative community model still exists, volunteerism is widespread and artists abound. "There's barely anyone in this town who doesn't give back in one way or another, whether it's sitting on a community board or helping with one of our arts fests," says Sherry Sullivan, the town's director of community affairs. That mindset is "engrained in our history."

By the numbers
  • Population: 16,463
  • Median home cost: $235,900
  • Cost of living: 8.2% higher than average
  • Unemployment: 8.4%
  • Source: Sperling's Best Places

Partly because of its bohemian beginnings, Fairhope appeals to an "eclectic and creative" group of people, particularly artists. Dozens of galleries, studios and antique shops now line the streets, and on the first Friday of every month, the town has an art walk, where residents peruse the galleries and shops to sample art, hors d'oeurvres and live music. There's also a three-day arts festival that attracts more than 150,000 visitors each year, and a rich literary and music legacy. Artists who have called Fairhope home include Jimmy Buffett, Fannie Flagg, Andy Andrews, and Winston "Forrest Gump" Groom.

Situated on bluffs overlooking the Mobile Bay and lined with Spanish moss-draped trees, Fairhope has an abundance of natural beauty. To preserve those vistas, there's a town ordinance against big box stores (so you won't find any Walmarts in Fairhope) and new buildings must adhere to guidelines designed to preserve the town's look and feel, says Sullivan. But this small town charm comes with its downsides: Although there is a hospital in town, for most big city amenities one must drive 30 minutes to Mobile.

Orange Beach/Gulf Shores Darryl Vest / Shutterstock.com

Gulf Shores is known for its bright, "sugar white" quartz sand.

When retired teacher Mary Wolf first saw Gulf Shores back in 1990, the Michigan native says she realized "the beaches here are a whole new level of beautiful -- it's not just the perfect sand and clear water, it's also the sense of calm you feel when you're near them."

By the numbers
  • Population: 5,889 / 6,661
  • Median home cost: $294,600 / $254,800
  • Cost of living: 17.6% / 11.2% higher than average
  • Unemployment: 8.4%
  • Source: Sperling's Best Places

The beach towns of Orange Beach and its neighbor Gulf Shores offer 32 miles of white sugar-sand and emerald-green waters. But these Alabama beaches are far more affordable than some Florida retiree hotspots just to the south. The cost of living in Gulf Shores is just 11.2% higher than average, compared to 109% higher for Palm Beach and 36.4% higher for Boca Raton. And life here is more laid back than in those places, residents say. "The vibe is casual -- you don't get dressed up to go anywhere," says Joanie Flynn, the vice president of marketing for Gulf Shores & Orange Beach Tourism. (Just beware: The area can feel overrun with tourists in the warmer months.)

There's also a lot to do outdoors in this area, especially for fisherman. The reason: Orange Beach has one of the largest recreational charter boat fleets on the northern Gulf Coast; one of the most expansive artificial reef programs in the country; and the Gulf State Park Pier, one of the longest fishing piers in the area. All of this makes the area popular with fisherman and excellent territory for catching red snapper, Spanish mackerel, grouper and marlin. Plus, there's inland fishing -- as well as kayaking -- in the bays and waterways that crisscross the area. Retirees will also find nine golf courses, including the two Arnold Palmer courses that make up Craft Farms; and Kiva Dunes, which Golf Digest named the best course in Alabama.

Volunteerism is popular here, especially as it relates to nature, says Flynn. Popular initiatives include helping save the area's sea turtles by moving nests that are in danger away from the water and "bird banding," where volunteers work with researchers who put markers on local birds so they can help track the population. Retirees also like that there's a regional medical center in Foley, which is just north of Gulf Shores. There are also plenty of other retirees, especially in the winter, as the area attracts a lot of "snowbirds" who spend part of the winter in the South and summers elsewhere, says Flynn. For Wolf, the areas' snowbird status is a big plus: "We get to see our friends from Wisconsin and Michigan a lot because so many of them are snowbirds," says Wolf. "It helps us stay in touch."

Auburn Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images

The Auburn Tigers celebrate a touchdown against the Alabama Crimson Tide at Jordan-Hare Stadium on November 26, 2011 in Auburn, Alabama.

With an orange tiger paw the size of a full city block and an 86,000-seat, orange-shirt-filled football stadium, Auburn is first and foremost a college town (one that lives for its football team -- the Auburn University Tigers). But residents don't need to be 19-year-old college students to enjoy life here. The presence of the university means that retirees have access to the school's Osher Lifelong Learning Institute, as well as many cultural amenities. There's the Jule Collins Smith Museum of Fine Art at, which hosts a permanent collection of American and European Art. And the city's festivals include Auburn CityFest, an outdoor spring arts festival attracting more than 10,000 visitors, and On the Tracks, a series of mini food festivals in the spring and fall in which the area's restaurateurs offer up their best food and wine.

By the numbers
  • Population: 53,979
  • Median home cost: $164,200
  • Cost of living: 1.1% lower than average
  • Unemployment: 7.8%
  • Source: Sperling's Best Places

But above all, and second only to a Tiger football game, retirees here like to golf, residents say. Auburn was ranked the number one golf city in America by Golf Digest -- for good reason. It's home to the renowned Grand National courses (part of the Robert Trent Jones Golf Trail) -- boasting 54 holes, many surrounding the 600-acre Lake Saugahatchee. There's also Auburn Links, an 18-hole, par 72 course designed by architect Ward Northrup that sits along the picturesque Parkerson Mill Creek; and Indian Pines, an 18-hole, par 71 course, which boasts an island green in the middle of the lake.

While sales tax here is high (8%, compared to a nationwide average of 6.8%), overall, the overall cost of living is still low. The median home costs just $164,200, well below average. Plus, Auburn has a major medical center in town and is just an hour from Montgomery and two from Atlanta.

Boeing: Commercial Growth Outweighs Defense Woes

Boeing (BA) shares rose on Wednesday after the airplane manufacturer beat earnings expectations and raised its full year guidance. The company delivered 150 airplanes, up from 118 a year ago. And the company’s defense business showed growth in a tough environment, as sales rose 6.6%.

Looking ahead, Boeing is already preparing for defense-related sales to fall. It’s bosting employment in its commercial division and reducing it in defense. Investors appear to be okay with that trade-off. As S&P Capital IQ analyst Richard Tortoriello wrote:

“Although defense margins slipped in Q2, revenue grew 7%, and backlog remains strong in our view. Although we see BA as subject to risk of U.S. defense budget sequestration in 2013, we view commercial plane demand as unusually strong, with nearly 4,000 aircraft on order and prospects for further 737 MAX demand.”

Top Stocks For 7/28/2012-16

American Public Education, Inc. (Nasdaq:APEI) announced that President and Chief Executive Officer, Dr. Wallace E. Boston plans to address the financial community at the 13th Annual Credit Suisse Global Services Conference in Scottsdale, Arizona. Dr. Boston will present at 9:00 a.m. Mountain time (12:00 p.m. Eastern time) on Monday, March 14, 2011. A link to the live webcast of the presentation, as well as an audio replay, will be available to listeners who log in through American Public Education’s website, www.AmericanPublicEducation.com. The replay will be available for 30 days after the presentation.

American Public Education, Inc. provides online post secondary education to military and public service communities. It operates through two universities, American Military University and American Public University.

Gold can be purchased in one country and spent in another. It can be kept, as is, in depository banks in faraway places for safekeeping.

Gold is seen in a much more positive light in countries beginning to come to the forefront on the world scene. Prominent developing countries such as China, India and Russia have been accumulating gold. In fact, China with its 1.3 billion people recently established a National Gold Exchange and relaxed control over the asset.

Demand in China is expected to rise sharply and could reach 500 tonnes in the next few years.

Spectral Capital Corporation (FCCN) is pleased to announce that it has engaged UK Based global consultancy Wardell-Armstrong to evaluate is 703 square kilometer gold mining project in the Bayankol River region of Kazakhstan.

Spectral acquired a 65% interest in the 703 Square Kilometer gold mining property in the Bayankol River region of Kazakhstan in January. This region is home to significant current gold production and Spectral anticipates some limited production on the property to begin in 2011.

Spectral Capital is focused on the acquisition of a significant portfolio of properties for mining activities. In September 2010, the Company purchased an interest in mineral properties in the Chita region of the Russian Federation. The Kadara and Kaltagay license is located in the Mogochinsky district of the Chita Region, which has several gold mines in production, in the Russian Federation. Spectral owns 52% of the License for prospecting, exploration and production of gold and all other metals. The length of the License runs to 31 August 2031. The size of the License is 186 square kilometers or 18,200 hectares. Development and exploration activities are currently being undertaken. In January 2011, Spectral acquired a 65% interest in a gold mine in Kazakhstan, in one of the region’s most promising areas for gold extraction. Spectral continues to develop a diversified portfolio of mineral assets in some of the world’s most productive mining regions.

Shanda Interactive Entertainment Ltd. (Nasdaq:SNDA) announced its unaudited consolidated financial results for the fourth quarter and full year ended December 31, 2010. Fourth Quarter 2010 Highlights: Consolidated net revenues increased 11% quarter-over-quarter and increased 2% year-over-year to RMB1,538.3 million (US$232.3 million). Shanda Games’ revenues increased 5% quarter-over-quarter and decreased 14% year-over-year to RMB1,152.5 million (US$174.0 million). Shanda Online’s revenues increased 5% quarter-over-quarter and decreased 9% year-over-year to RMB267.9 million (US$40.5 million). Other revenues increased 29% quarter-over-quarter and increased 103% year-over-year to RMB401.5 million (US$60.6 million). Non-GAAP operating income was RMB182.8 million (US$27.6 million), compared with RMB197.9 million in the third quarter of 2010 and RMB616.5 million in the fourth quarter of 2009.

Shanda Interactive Entertainment Limited, together with its subsidiaries, operates as an entertainment media company in the People�s Republic of China.

Helen of Troy Limited (Nasdaq:HELE) announced that Gerald J. Rubin, the Company’s Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, and President was recently honored as Humanitarian of the Year by the Housewares Charity Foundation, at the 14th Annual Housewares Charity Foundation Gala on March 7, 2011. The Gala is a collaborative effort among housewares industry manufacturers, retailers and allied industry partners that coincides with the International Home + Housewares Show in Chicago. The Housewares Charity Foundation has raised over $20 million for a number of critical causes since its first gala in 1998, and it has contributed $10 million to the Breast Cancer Research Foundation.

Helen of Troy Limited, together with its subsidiaries, engages in the design, development, import, and distribution of brand-name consumer products worldwide. It operates through two segments, Personal Care and Housewares.

Fascinating New Technology Trends Offer a Glimpse into a Wild Future

Call it the "Battle of the Jellyfish Breakthroughs".

You may remember this from an article I wrote two weeks ago. In it, I talked about a Pentagon-funded robotic jellyfish that uses hydrogen as its power source. It's a developmental robofish capable of helping in underwater rescues (or spy missions).

Turns out that wasn't the only big advance inspired by this primitive sea creature...

Just this week, we learned that a crack research team has created something incredible called Medusoid.

That's their nickname for an artificial jellyfish they made from rat heart cells and a silicone polymer. This bioengineered creature swims by squeezing its muscles, the same way a real jellyfish does.

More to the point, Medusoid could become a great model for testing new drugs. It also could lead the way to advances in artificial hearts and other human organs.

As I see it, these two breakthroughs coming so close together proves that the Era of Radical Change is here. Cutting-edge high tech really is moving at warp speed, with new advances coming faster than any one person can track.

Indeed, there was plenty of fodder for my fascinations of the month.

Take a look as these new technology trends...

Spray-On Batteries and Medical TreatmentsIn the near future, just about any old object could become a battery...

Researchers at Rice University recently took apart a battery's components and turned them into liquids. The team then sprayed the surface of bathroom tiles with the material needed to make a lithium-ion battery, used in all sort of electronics. They topped the central tile with a solar cell that turned light from the lab into energy. Once fully charged, the system ran a series LED lights for six hours.

The results bode well for storing energy needed to power all sorts of gadgets.

Not only that, but spray-on tech could help treat disease, too.

A team from Northwestern University recently created a lotion that can change a patient's DNA.

Here's their secret. They used tiny groups of ribonucleic acids. Known as RNA, these acids transfer the body's genetic code and can penetrate skin. Once inside cells, the RNA turned off genes that cause disease.

Tests so far on mice and human skin found no side effects, the team said.

High-Tech Gloves that Improve Mobility and Translate SpeechTraditional gloves protect our hands and keep them warm.

Modern gloves do so much more... like help disabled people join the mainstream.

Take the new wireless "musical" glove that can improve the sense of touch and motor skills for patients with spinal cord injuries. Georgia Tech researchers reported great results in a test of the Mobile Music Touch system. The gloves look like those for exercise, but had a small box on the back.

When users played the piano, the box vibrated to tell them which keys to press. The project required test subjects to practice 30 minutes a day, three times a week. They also wore the gloves at home for two hours each day.

After two months, those who had used the gloves showed better results in tests for grasping and sensation skills. Researchers believe the system renewed brain activity that goes dormant after a severe injury to the spinal cord.

Meanwhile, a team in the Ukraine has made a pair of gloves that can translate sign language for the deaf into speech. Their EnableTalk wireless system connects Bluetooth to a smart phone. It relies on a text-to-speech system and a library of gestures they can tweak to account for dialects and the like.

The new tech could have a wide impact. Roughly 40 million people around the world are deaf, mute, or both. Many use sign language to communicate. But most non-deaf people don't know sign language.

Best of all - they made a prototype for only $75.

Smartphone Apps that Can Find Bombs and Ear InfectionsDealing with bombs and explosives and crowd response requires years of special training. But not every first responder at an emergency is a member of a bomb squad.

Not to worry... the U.S. Dept. of Homeland Security now has an app for that.

Called The FiRST app, it combines Google Inc. (NASDAQ:GOOG) maps, search, email, phone, and road and weather data. Among other things, the system tells those first on the scene where to place roadblocks and which buildings to evacuate.

The app works on Google Android devices and iPhones. And it costs just $12.

Of course, smartphone apps are already taking the world by storm. In fact, the iPhone from Apple Inc. (NASDAQ:AAPL) has given rise to the mobile health (Mhealth) sector, a market that will grow to $23 billion in five years.

I wrote about this field earlier last month. You can click here to read the story.

Turns out mobile-health startup CellScope has created a device that turns a smartphone into an otoscope - the device a doctor uses to check a patient's ear for infections.

CellScope attaches to a phone, giving users a view magnified 10 times inside the ear. It's designed to let users or their parents take photos or video inside the ear to send to the doctor to check for infection.

This could help cut the costs of health care. After all, concerns about ear infections remain a leading reason why parents take their kids to the doctor.

Mhealth is moving so fast, even young scientists are reporting breakthroughs.

A team of students from John Hopkins was just awarded a $250,000 study grant for a project focused on HemoGlobe. It's a $20 device that converts a cell phone into a detector for anemia, a blood disorder.

Anemic mothers face many complications before and during birth, including death from blood loss associated with the delivery. In addition, a baby that survives a birth from an anemic mother may face serious health problems.

This app could save a lot of lives. It will allow health workers around globe will quickly and safely detect this high-risk condition in pregnant women and newborns.

I hope you enjoyed July's Fascinations of the Month. Don't forget to share what's fascinating you this month by leaving a comment below or writing to me at customerservice@eraofradicalchange.com.

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    Breakthrough Tech Lets Users Surf the Web With Just Their Eyes

Surprised by the stock market's strength on the first trading day of May, when many traders were otherwise wondering if they should "sell" and "go away?"

Perhaps we shouldn't have been.

My review of the historical record found that May over the last couple of decades has actually been one of the stronger months of the calendar. Its terrible reputation traces to decades longer ago.

Consider first the period since 1896, when the Dow Jones Industrial Average was created, up through the 1980s. Over that 94-year period, May on average was eclipsed only by September as the worst month of the calendar for the stock market.

Over the next two decades, in contrast, May became one of the best months of the year. When ranked by average returns over those 20 years, it's in 3rd place.

One reason that traders haven't been inclined to give May much respect, I suspect: Memories are still fresh of the so-called "Flash Crash" that occurred in May 2010. On that infamous day two years ago, the Dow lost nearly a thousand points in a just a few minutes' time.

In any case, there clearly is a lot of variability in the monthly rankings. And that in turn should prompt us to step back and assess why this seasonal pattern should exist in the first place.

And when we do that, we find even more reason to give May more respect.

Consider the only explanation I've seen proposed for why the period between May and October should be a below-average one for the market. It emerged from a study a decade ago by Ben Jacobsen, a professor of finance at New Zealand's Massey University, and Sven Bouman, a managing director at Saemor Capital, a Netherlands-based investment firm. (An article summarizing their findings appeared in the December 2002 issue of the American Economic Review.)

After exploring several different hypotheses, the researchers found the most support for the notion that seasonal weakness between May Day and Halloween is caused by the timing of investors' and traders' summer vacations.

But it's not clear how that applies to the month of May in the U.S. I am not aware of any significant exodus from Wall Street to the Hamptons that occurs in May.

The bottom line? Even if you're inclined to follow the Sell In May and Go Away seasonal strategy, there is no reason -- either statistical or theoretical -- to immediately sell once the calendar flips from April to May.

Click here to learn more about the Hulbert Financial Digest.

Fighting Inflation With Pre-1965 Silver Dollar Coins

American consumers have noticed that the price of everything is going up: food, clothing, fuel, and other necessities. Paychecks do not stretch as far as they once did. It is difficult to manage, much less thrive during times like this.

Or is it? In the past year, I have questioned what to do with my stock portfolio. Is it safe, can I retire, will I have money when I need it most? In the midst of the economic turmoil, I found one answer.

The Silver Lining

I found my answer to economic security in junk. Investors and collectors refer to dimes, quarters, half dollars, and dollars minted on or before 1964 as “junk silver coins,” because they have no value to collectors. But this does not mean they don’t have value to investors.

Mercury and Roosevelt dimes, Franklin and Kennedy half dollars, and Washington quarters, among others, issued before 1965 are sought after by silver investors because they contain 90 percent silver. A bag of these coins can net investors from 715 to 720 ounces of refined silver.

Make Rising Prices Work for You

Like the price of almost everything else, the price of precious metals has been increasing. Gold, for instance, has exploded in value and now sells for over $1000 per troy ounce. As of now, though, prices for silver are quite low, especially considering the rising demand and contracting supply.

Trends on precious metals indicate that the silver dollar will increase in value by mid-2009. At the beginning of 2009, silver prices were around $13.00 per ounce. Currently, an ounce of silver is worth $16.65.

If you had invested in one ounce, just 10 pre-1965 coins, at $13.00, you would have seen a substantial profit. Imagine if you had had a whole bag of junk silver. Not really junk, is it?

How far will silver prices rise? It is not out of the realm of possibility for silver to sell for $100.00 per ounce, or even $1000 per ounce. Those junk silver coins may not be collectors’ items, but they will have netted you generous premiums.

Silver’s Benefits

Silver retains value, and even grows in value, during times when inflation runs rampant. It presents investors with a good way to secure their money and ensure that it is still worth something in the future.

Silver is also very easy to being investing in. Unlike complex stock portfolios, you need only to begin purchasing silver coins minted before 1965. They are easy to find and easy to recognize.

You can begin looking on eBay for junk silver coins or visit any number of other sources including, CMI Gold and Silver, Monex Deposit Company, Lynn Coin, and CC Gold. These are excellent sources for inexpensive junk silver coins.

For some other valuable tips and suggestions download our Free Guide and get started today.

Why I Continue To Stay Far, Far Away From Europe

Despite repeated government intervention, we can't seem to prevent the natural market forces from tearing apart PIIGS and the eurozone. After a temporary Spanish bank steroid injection of 100 billion euros announced on Monday, we saw a massive retreat halfway through the day, which will likely be reflected Tuesday when Asia and Europe open. The price action of the S&P 500 - SPDR S&P 500 Trust ETF (SPY) - at the close was especially discouraging.

Investors do have much to be afraid of, because it's getting to the point where even these huge stimulus events can't keep in any lasting sense of optimism. The market still favors the safe havens, and is keeping treasury bill yields stubbornly low.

The US dollar index - PowerShares DB USD Bull ETF (UUP) - continues to gain ground too (it just broke a new 52-week high at $23.01/share), which implies that money managers are carefully holding onto their greenbacks in anticipation of a prolonged state of panic in the financial markets. Another performer has been the popular safe-haven Japanese yen - CurrencyShares Japanese Yen Trust ETF (FXY) - which has rallied alongside the dollar.

The most pressing of issues has to do with the increasing likelihood of sovereign defaults in Europe. Just as it was in 2011, the financial market is pushing itself closer and closer to the edge of the cliff. Indeed, after all the LTRO operations we've seen performed by the ECB, the end result in the bond market has been the same - investors stick to what's safe and the yields on risky bonds skyrocket endlessly!

Spain has been a particularly horrid economy to watch this year. The following is a chart showing a 50% rise in the price of credit default swaps in the last three months:

And here is a chart displaying yields on their 10-year bonds, which have reached crisis levels again:

As you may know, Spain's economic statistics are very ugly. For instance, the country currently has a 24% unemployment rate (which doesn't factor in those who dropped out of the workforce!). No wonder Spain has trouble finding buyers for its debt.

To top it off, the Federal Reserve is becoming more picky about its inflation target (which has been almost perfectly held lately). This reduces the likelihood of any easing efforts that could temporarily placate the markets. The political importance of the second half of this year (due to US presidential elections) may also hurt the likelihood of more dovish monetary policy.

So, other than the ECB, it looks like we may be alone this time in trying to stop the inevitable default from happening. QE3 speculation has led to nothing so far, and surely left many commodity investors disappointed this year as their positions moved into the red. I'm one of them!

Yet another problem to add is the Greek elections, which are about a week away. This may mark the exit of Greece from the eurozone. While I think this is an extremely beneficial move in the long run, confusion and panic may rule for the short term if this occurs. There is also massive uncertainty regarding the outcome of the country's debt situation, and how the string of credit default swaps tied to the country's sovereign debt will effect banks involved.

On the bright side, the major US banks have had ample time to reduce their PIIGS derivative exposure (which is reported to be minimal). It's generally agreed that blows to market sentiment would hurt US banks much, much more than the direct effects of the PIIGS sovereign defaults.

I also want to add that Italy's economy measured by GDP is continuing to shrink according to data. We just had a June 11 economic release that reported a 1.4% decline in Italy's nominal GDP in Q2 2012 relative to last year. If there's one good thing to draw from the release, it's that we were already expecting it.

So while conventional metrics (like the deeply flawed P/E multiples and P/E growth ratios) are telling us that European stocks are a bargain right now, we have to consider that the complexity of the scenario renders many of our old models useless since they generally assume periods of predictable growth. There is massive potential for unpredictable contractions in PIIGS' consumer spending, since cash-strapped governments have every incentive to boost taxes while cutting stimulus spending.

Europe is not simply going through a rough patch here. This is a major economic contraction induced by unsustainable debts. Banks are going to take the first punch to the face if things get worse.

This means heavily debt-exposed megabanks like Barclays PLC (BCS) should be avoided as much as possible. Also, don't be fooled by the likes of Banco Santrader (STD) and its monstrous ~15% yield either - I expect the drop in share price to exceed that number by a significant margin in the future. The dividend may also evaporate, which would certainly discourage any shareholders that are brave enough to catch this falling knife. Honestly, do you really want to purchase shares of a troubled bank that was just issued a downgrade to BBB+ by Fitch? What is preventing further downgrades?

So, if I had to summarize my point in one sentence, it'd be simple. Europe's debt situation looks so hopeless that individual investors should be actively looking to reduce exposure to the European financial sector, if not the entirety of Europe. I'd also advise hedging a long-biased portfolio with some shorts on European assets. Since the eurozone is the root of the problem, major downside in global sentiment should surely be reimbursed (in part) by your hedge. One option is a naked short on the euro, which can be done with ProShares UltraShort Euro ETF (EUO) if you don't have access to forex trading. Naked shorts on the aforementioned banks, or others, is more problematic due to the spontaneity of central bank interventions.

The last point I wanted to make is an exception to the idea that all exposure should be limited. There are some multinationals like Siemens (SI) and Novartis (NVS) that have had strong performance due to their non-exposed industry and their presence outside the Eurozone. If the discrepancy in share performance between companies like this and their US counterparts is too large, I would actually see a bit of potential for value buying. I feel that prices still remain fair though, so buyers may want to hold off until we see more panic.

Other companies like Oracle (ORCL) have abnormally high exposure to Europe, so ceteris paribus, I'd favor more evenly spread companies like IBM (IBM).

It's up to each investor to measure his/her risk and reward with each play, but I am really not seeing many favorable ideas in Europe given the ever-increasing risk side. This could get much, much worse if we don't get major intervention in the near future, so I would also sell any heavily-exposed stocks/assets on rallies, like everyone else seems to be doing.

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

Silver Summit Interview: David Morgan Of Silver-Investor.com (Part 2)

<< Return to Part 1

A few weeks ago I had the fortunate experience of attending the Silver Summit in Spokane, WA. As I was walking down the main hall I recognized Mr. David Morgan from Silver-Investor.com. He was walking straight towards me. I quickly introduced myself and asked him if I could set up an appointment to do an interview with him. I was not prepared for this but I also did not want to miss out on this great chance to interview Mr. Morgan

The following is part 2 of that interview with Mr. David Morgan. It was all improvised and in real time. The most important thing is that I was able to capture his point of view on the current silver market and what the prospects are for the intermediate to long- term silver market price trends.

Patrick MontesDeOca: How does that fit into this eurozone crisis that seems to be brewing and to the left to the right nobody seems to know what to do, which is I believe the current problem that we have right now, which is the lack of confidence in leaderships globally; to be able and take a stand and make some fundamental changes, real changes.

So, how does that affect the current price structure and maybe at the present time or maybe over the next six months to twelve months?

David Morgan: Oh great question, the answer is that there is a competition; there is a competition between safety. And the perception changes overtime, and the perception right now as we are doing this interview, is that the safest place you can be is in the U.S. Dollar, not necessarily in gold. And so that ebbs and flows; now that’s not every vote, there’s people buying gold as we speak and there’s people pouring money into the US Dollar as we speak, the problem with the currency markets is that they’re so fast and so huge and so many dingy dollars out there in the monetary universe, that if you move really large sums it’s really difficult to move those even in the gold market and silver markets, it’s ridiculous because it’s such a smaller/thin market. But nonetheless we see more and more move into that realm; especially we talked about the Asian market.

So, over time you’re going to see, you’re sort of asking to see short term and long term, so with the short term I don’t pay attention to the short term swings, I mean I do, but what I’m saying is that longer terms is what you really want to focus on, the real question is: Has the real trend ended or not? I think the answer is, the trend has not ended. It has subsided and now it’s cooling off and consolidating and it’s going to build a basis to go up and it’s going to go up further. And how much further no one knows, but I think we’re going to see, you know gold could easily double from here or the next three or four years and silver could easily double or triple from here or the next three four years.

And that’s with things going as well as they are right now without getting any worse, and unfortunately there’s a lot of problems in the transatlantic region. Most people aren’t talking about is that for Germany to pump more money into the eurozone, that they’ve got to go to their legislature and get a vote from the people that said we want to increase our debt.

PM: That’s about 16 or 17 parliaments I think that have to be dealt with.

DM: So this is going, this is not an easy solution. The mainstream press is going to throw two trillion euros at the problem and everyone is going to be happy for a while. And everyone’s going to ask well where is it coming from? What value does it really have? Does making more debt solve a debt problem? And lastly but more importantly where you getting the money from, from where are they getting it?

PM: It sounds to me that this economic choice is more of an inflationary or hyper-inflationary choice that they make, which is very similar to the third world debt, Argentina, Mexico, Latin American countries that essentially utilize a depreciation of the currency to wipe out the debt. Are we kind of moving into that same sentiment on a global basis now?

DM: Yes, I like to say it this way but there’s two ways you can really do it, there’s really several but there’s really basically only two ways, there’s a default you know somebody from the Federal reserve can get on there, or from the US government, this is not just the US this is global. And say “We can’t, we’re broke, we can’t pay our debts, you know all those bonds and ten-year notes there, they can’t be paid.”

PM: You’re talking central banks, European defaults or American?

DM: Any of them.

PM: The world's integrated of course

DM: They’re all broke. I mean there are pockets here and there but I’m talking about the major players, the major central banks, they’re broke. Ok, so no one is going to admit that and say we’re broke but that’s a default. That’s an admission of the truth, and you can default partially and say that you know you may get your 50 cents on the dollar.

PM: You might say we’re going through that right now

DM: Because you know that’s all our of the past years, if we’re really truthful about this we can’t pay on 100 cents - on the 100 cents we can pay 60% of it, take it or leave it, or something like that. But I don’t see that happening.

So the other way is to default with the currency, and you default with the currency over time, right now we found that (based on) the federal reserve back in 1913 the dollar is worth 4 cents, so that is, when does it go to 2 cents, when does it go to 1 cent, when does it go to 5 cents? And at some point and there’s already mad co - nations throughout the global economy where you know there’s noise in China and Russia, well what can we have in alternative to the dollar? How about a basket of currencies? The IMF has said “You know, we are looking for an alternative to the reserve currency” and on and on it goes. Because everyone knows that this thing can’t go on forever and there must be some kind of alternative and of course the real alternative through history is silver and gold.

PM: Do you see a shift of demand in terms of this policy is now being changed by some of the central banks where essentially if they are moving in this direction they have to hedge in some way, so do you see possibly a larger amount of demand shifting from some of these banks in order to hedge themselves possibly, or protect themselves against this potentially devastating collapse we have in the fiat currency?

DM: Yeah, absolutely, it’s really the only alternative that they have. Central banks, several months ago, became net buyers of gold and up until that time-frame were net sellers of gold. So that shift has taken place, and it will continue. I mean, you want to see China building its gold reserves. And so it’s good, and interestingly nobody knows really what we want in terms of a gold economy as far as some sense of confidence restored in the system.

Confidence doesn’t necessarily get restored by a gold standard, although in my opinion it will probably do a great deal, I don’t think you are going to see a true gold standard ever again. You might have some sort of gold cover clause or you might have a basket of currencies with gold included in it, you might have a basket of currencies with commodities included in it. There may be other methods.

I really don’t see going back to the gold standard again. It could happen, but it is doubtful. And the other problem with gold only standard; gold money standard is that’s a cash basis really, and there is so much debt in the system, which is the main problem, all this debt needs to be whipped out. It is uneconomic.

PM: You are talking about debt not in the private sector?

DM: Both. Private and business. Absolutely.

PM: There is a lot of talk about how much money these companies are making.

DM: Well, there is a lot of very well off corporations with a ton of cash and they are not deploying it because they don’t know what the financial future is and they don’t want to build out with new infrastructures of new buildings or whatever it is because they don’t know what the regulatory environment is going to be, they don’t know what the currency is going to be, so they are sitting on a lot of cash. On the other side you have all these people who are over extended from the credit mess that have houses they can’t pay for, so there is both sides to it.

PM: Sure, one last question if I may, what do you see here in the U.S. as far as the intervention with the Feds and the eurozone and some kind of a stimulus or concerted effort by central banks or U.S. banks? Do you think the U.S. will participate on a large scale?

DM: Possibly, I mean, it’s slowly leaked out recently about how much money the Feds have given to the eurozone and I think they are willing to do it again. But the problem is the system is broken to this point where they are “pushing on a string.”

So what they are doing is flooding the banks with easy credit; they are letting them borrow as much as they need or want or wish, but none of that is going to the physical economy.

Which you really have to focus on to get a clear picture of what’s happening looking at the amount of dollars or euros that are floating around and how many are injected and how many trillions this, and how much debt we have going on. Yeah it's important, but what you really have to focus on is if we are getting better or worse. Because that is the physical economy.

What you want to look at is how (many) more wheat fields are being grown globally than the year before, how much more oil is coming out of the ground than the year before. And that is a decline. So, what you really want to look in a sound situation is the global physical economy, is it expanding or is it contacting? Well, it is contracting. So, it doesn’t matter, how the stimulus is getting to the banks if it is not creating new wealth, which it isn’t. And so that is the problem. That is the analogy “pushing on a string.” I could give you a lot of cash, but the less there is a demand for it to build something new, or farm more land, or build a new water supply, or whatever it may be, then contraction continues.

People are scared, they don’t know what to do, they don’t have solutions, there aren’t really any strong leaders that are coming up to the front and letting people know. So the people are rebelling, you see it all over. You see it in New York, you see it in Greece for quite some time, you see it in the eurozone, and you’re seeing it basically everywhere. And what this is, is frustration because most people are not leaders, most people are followers and they will follow if they are told what to do and how do we solve a problem. And a lot of people will do it. They’ll pitch in and go “Ok, now I get it, we’ll get on with it and let’s go.” But everyone is fumbling the football and pointing fingers and blaming this, that it’s because of the Greeks that we are having the problems.

PM: People blame others until the roof falls off, then they have to take emergency action. Mr. David Morgan, thank you so much once again, it’s been a pleasure talking to you.

Disclosure: I am long GLD, PSLV, SLV.

Disclaimer: Trading in precious metals involves significant risk and is not suitable for everyone. Past performance is not necessarily indicative of future results.

Top Stocks For 6/26/2012-2

DARA BioSciences, Inc. (DARA)

DARA BioSciences, Inc. is a Raleigh, North Carolina based development-stage Biopharmaceutical Company that acquires promising therapeutic small molecules and develops them through proof of concept in humans for subsequent sale or out-licensing to larger pharmaceutical companies.

Diabetes mellitus is one of the leading causes of irreversible blindness worldwide, and, in the United States, it is the most common cause of blindness in people younger than 65 years of age. In addition to being a leading cause of blindness, diabetic eye disease encompasses a wide range of problems that can affect the eyes.

Diabetes mellitus may cause a reversible, temporary blurring of the vision, or it can cause a severe, permanent loss of vision.

Diabetes mellitus increases the risk of developing cataracts and glaucoma.
The company continues to build a diverse pipeline, including candidates for the treatment of metabolic diseases (diabetes), and pain.

DARA BioSciences, Inc.’s shares are publicly traded on the NASDAQ under the ticker symbol DARA.

DARA BioSciences, Inc. reported that SurgiVision, Inc., a privately held company, and Brainlab AG, announced on April 11 collaboration aimed at integrating SurgiVision’s ClearPoint(R) product line with Brainlab’s iMRI product line, with particular focus on local delivery of drugs and other therapeutic agents to precision targets in the brain under magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) guidance. DARA presently owns over 500,000 shares and warrants of SurgiVision.

For more information about DARA please visit http://www.darabiosciences.com

General Growth Properties Inc. (NYSE:GGP) announced the refinancing of seven shopping malls representing $1.7 billion of new mortgages ($1.4 billion is GGP’s share). These seven new fixed-rate mortgages have a weighted average term of 10.3 years and generated cash proceeds in excess of in-place financing of approximately $400 million to GGP. GGP has also been able to lower the weighted average interest rate of these seven mortgages from 5.65% to 5.33%, while lengthening the term by approximately seven years over that in place.

General Growth Properties, Inc. operates as a real estate investment trust in the United States. It operates in two segments, Retail and Other, and Master Planned Communities.

Kinross Gold Corporation (NYSE:KGC) announced that its 75%-owned subsidiary, Chukotka Mining and Geological Company (”CMGC”), has entered into a Share Purchase Agreement with the State Unitary Enterprise of the Chukotka Autonomous Okrug or “CUE”, to repurchase the 2,292,348 shares of CMGC currently held by CUE, representing 25.01% of CMGC’s outstanding share capital, for an approximate consideration of US$350 million, subject to adjustments equal to the amount of the attributable dividend payments. On completion of the transaction, Kinross will own 100% of CMGC, which in turn, holds both the Kupol mine and the Kupol East-West exploration licences in the Chukotka region of the Russian Federation.

Kinross Gold Corporation, together with its subsidiaries, engages in mining and processing gold ores. It also involves in the exploration and acquisition of gold bearing properties.

Charles Schwab Corp. (NYSE:SCHW) announced that it has scheduled an Interim Business Update for institutional investors on Wednesday, April 20, 2011. This Update, which will be held via webcast, is part of an ongoing series designed to help the investment community keep abreast of recent developments and management’s strategic focus. The program is scheduled to run from 8:00 a.m. - 9:00 a.m. PT, 11:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. ET. Participants will include Walt Bettinger, President & Chief Executive Officer, and Joe Martinetto, Chief Financial Officer.

The Charles Schwab Corporation, through its subsidiaries, provides securities brokerage, banking, and related financial services to individuals and institutional clients.

How to Blow One Billion Dollars in 24 Hours


Think you've had a bad day in the stock market?

On Tuesday, many people had a rough day in the markets as they suffered an extremely heavy fall as Europe's political uncertainty lingers and China's economic health is looking darker than expected. On top of that, JPMorgan's disclosure of blowing $2 billion in trading losses continued to bruise the markets. But can you say you had a worse day trading than Brazil's Eike Fuhrken Batista? I doubt it.

According to Mining.com, Batista is the world of mining's richest man and has made 2012 one of his most impressive financially. According to Bloomberg's data, he has increased his wealth by a third, ranking him within the top ten of the world's richest people.

It is tough to feel too sorry for one of the richest people on the planet, but this was a doozy. His oil and gas firm OGX – which is just one of five public companies under his control-- disappointed with reserve figures of only 110 million barrels at an offshore well named Tubarão-Azul (“Blue Shark” in English), the company plummeted down 7.8%.

And how much did Batista lose because of this drop in collaboration with a very poor day on the world's stock markets? Something to the tune of $1,023,200,000. That's 1.02 billion U.S. dollars that vanished from Batista's personal fortune in just one day.

Batista isn't going to be pan-handling anytime soon after Tuesday's losses, but imagine losing more money in one day than the Republic of The Gambia's annual GDP. Now Batista is down to last $30 billion and is in danger of dropping out of Bloomberg's Top 10 Richest People in the World list if commodity stocks continue to drop. Neighbors to the Brazilian billionaire on the rich list are Wal-Mart's Walton siblings who are climbing up the list and only lost $100 million on Tuesday. Chump change in comparison to Batista.

(courtesy of Bloomberg)

Will the billionaire recover from his financial woes of the week? Maybe not. Even after his coal company, CCX, discovered a 672 million tonnes reserve in San Juan, Columbia, Batista's financial decline hasn't been reversed. This coal discovery is the fifth largest coal deposit in the world but CCX is being spun off and will list separately on the Sao Paulo exchange on May 25, leaving Batista in the dark.

This was an incredibly bad week for the billionaire. So remember, if you're having a rough day on the market, just be grateful you haven't dropped a billion dollars in 24 hours.

 

Gold Price Outlook 2012: Miners Will Shine as Prices Soar

Despite a pullback from its all-time high of about $1,920 an ounce set in September, gold is still trading in the $1,750 range. In fact, the glittering metal has gained 22% in the past 12 months.

What's more is that I believe gold prices will eclipse $2,200 an ounce next year, and shoot beyond even $5,000 an ounce after that.

So there's obviously still time to get in on this once-in-a-lifetime bull-run, if you haven't already.

Of course, every investor should at least have shares of a gold-based exchange-traded fund, but if you really want to profit from the price surge, you ought to look at gold mining companies.

Let me explain.

A Golden OpportunityWhile gold prices have surged 22% over the past year, gold mining stocks have lagged curiously behind over that period.

The Amex Gold Bugs Index, a weighted benchmark made up of 16 of the world's largest gold and silver mining companies, began the year at 540, and after numerous troughs and peaks, we're back near those same levels.

Normally, gold stocks will leverage gold on a 2-for-1 basis, but in this case, we've seen miners move sideways as gold has advanced.

Yet with gold's price powering skyward, the gold miners have seen their margins expand, making them very profitable at current levels. That makes them absolute steals at these prices.

You don't have to take my word for it, either. Just look at what industry insiders are saying.

"A substantial disconnect has developed between the price of gold and the mining companies," said David Einhorn of Greenlight Capital. "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."

Portfolio managers Michael Bowman and Allan Meyer of Wickham Investment Counsel Inc. concur.

"We are now finding a large number of gold stocks are hitting our value screens, something that has been unheard of in the past," said Meyer.

What else are experts noticing?

Well, as gold prices have risen and stayed high, the price/earnings (P/E) ratios of gold miners have been cut in half. That means the sector as a whole is at as compelling a value as it's been in three years. And with the price of gold set to rise still higher on the back of incessant money printing in the United States and Europe, these miners are only going to get more profitable.

How high is gold likely to go?

My own research tells me we should expect gold to easily reach $2,200 in 2012.

A few market mavens have been providing their forecasts too.

Sean Boyd, chief executive officer (CEO) of $7 billion Agnico-Eagle Mines Ltd (NYSE: AEM), recently told King World News "people are looking for hard assets and gold, being one of the primary hard assets, is a major beneficiary. So we don't see any reason to believe this upward trend in gold won't continue. I think it will continue and we will see $2,000 shortly."

Rajan Venkatesh, Managing Director, India Bullion, ScotiaMocatta, said he expects gold prices to touch $2,000 an ounce by March.

And this past June, Standard Chartered PLC (PINK: SCBFF) made what some think is an "outrageous" prediction.

The bank's research team considered the production levels of 345 gold mines and concluded production will rise just 3.6% annually for the next five years, while demand expands much faster.
Their price prediction: $5,000 gold is likely in the near future.

That's a price I'm on record as predicting nearly two years ago.

But now, I've changed my mind - because I think it could go even higher than that.

Top 2012 Profit PlaysSo what should you do now to profit from gold's imminent rise?

Here are a few suggestions to play the gold mining stocks that are primed to play catch up:

  • Alamos Gold Inc. (PINK: AGIGF): Alamos is a $2 billion gold miner, operating the Mulatos mine in Sonora State, Mexico. AGI operates one of the lowest cost heap-leach gold mines in the sector, at $459 per ounce. The company expects to boost Mulatos' production by 50% next year, and is working toward producing 135,000 ounces annually at $314 per ounce from its Turkish gold project by 2014. AGI has $210 million in cash and no debt.
  • Eldorado Gold Corp. (NYSE: EGO): Eldorado is a $9.75 billion gold producer with six operating mines, one under construction, and two in development. EGO currently produces about 650,000 ounces annually at $400/ounce. Currently 56% of gold production is from China and 44% from Turkey. Eldorado could double its gold output by 2015 through new mines coming online in Brazil and Greece, and by expanding the production at some of their current mines.
  • The Tocqueville Gold Fund (MUTF: TGLDX): This is a $2.65 billion fund managed by John Hathaway and has a reasonable expense ratio of 1.35%. Its top ten holdings include large-cap and mid-cap miners, as well as some precious metals royalty companies, and about 6.6% in physical gold. The fund does have some exposure to smaller cap miners that provide additional potential for growth.
Besides the fact that gold stocks are set to charge upward, just based on their need to catch up to gold, there's another factor that makes right now an exceedingly bullish time to participate.

On a seasonal basis, we are entering the strongest time of the year for gold stock advances. Over the past decade, the HUI experienced an average of 20% gains from late October until late February the following year.

Gold stocks typically follow gold, which is driven in part by cultural influences.

Many Asian consumers, particularly in India, buy after their harvest season, which is then followed by its festival and wedding season. Then come end-of-year holidays in the West, from Thanksgiving to New Year's. And finally, that's topped off by the Chinese New Year, which usually lands somewhere between late January and mid-February.

Each of these celebrations impels new gold buying, and that has a positive secondary effect on the gold mining sector.

Not only do I expect this trend to repeat again this year, but it's likely to be amplified as gold stocks finally respond to a long overdue bout of catching up.

Silver Backwardation: Will There Be a Silver Short Squeeze?

Backwardation is a situation where the spot price of a commodity is higher than the forward futures price. Generally, the price of a commodity is more expensive in the future because of storage costs – and that situation is called Contango. Contango is the usual situation, and Backwardation is somewhat unusual, as it means that a premium is being paid to own a commodity now rather than in the future – and it often means there is a shortage of that commodity. For example, buying wheat for delivery in the future does no good if you are hungry today. You will gladly pay a premium to have the food now.

Recently, Silver has gone in to backwardation. That is, the spot price of silver for immediate delivery exceeds the futures price. A common theory being thrown around is that there are shortages, and this is leading to the potential for a short squeeze as futures contract holders may stand for delivery instead of rolling their contracts or settling for cash. The theory is that so many contracts would be stand for delivery during the coming roll that there wouldn’t be enough silver to go around, and the price would explode upwards.

The problem is, there are no silver shortages – only rumors of silver shortages. Kitco.com even published an article detailing a studyby CPM Group debunking the existence of shortages. Additionally, over 340mm ounces of allocated silver is sitting at SLV. If you really wanted or needed silver, you could buy a basket of shares of SLV and redeem them through an authorized participant and take delivery.

So, what is causing backwardation, if there are no shortages?

Roughly half of the annual global silver supply is used for industrial purposes. The other half is used for jewelry, silverware and speculative investment. Because speculative investment demand has been growing, the price has more than doubled in the last year. Recent media reports indicate that the move up is causing large producers to begin hedging their forward production to lock in future profits. Producers hedge their production by selling futures, and this is what is causing the backwardation.

Now, while the hedging may have caused the initial backwardation, it is now causing people to speculate that a short squeeze is coming. Adding even more validity to the short squeeze fears are rumors of physical shortages – but as we’ve shown above, they don’t exist. So, given that the physical shortages appear to be rumors, and there is large availability of silver at SLV, I find it very unlikely that we get a short squeeze rally with this months roll. If that is the case, I think you'll see a lot of the speculative money move out of the Silver. Silver has moved up 20% in the last 3 weeks - partially in anticipation a short squeeze. If it doesn't happen, I believe it may fall even further.

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

Persistent Myths and Misconceptions About the CPI

From the 2008 BLS Study "Addressing Misconceptions About the Consumer Price Index" written by John Greenlees and Robert McClelland, research economists in the BLS Division of Price and Index Number Research:

A number of longstanding myths regarding the Consumer Price Index and its methods of construction continue to circulate; this article attempts to address some of the misconceptions, with an eye toward increasing public understanding of this key economic indicator.

Within the past several years, commentary on the CPI has extended well beyond the circle of economists, statisticians, and public officials. The strongest criticism of BLS methodology has not been concentrated in a single profession, academic discipline, or political group, but comes instead from an array of investment advisers, bloggers, magazine writers, and others in the popular press. Also, whereas in the past the CPI frequently was held to be overstating inflation, recent criticism has focused on supposed downward biases.

Alcatel-Lucent Back in the Black

Shares of French tech company Alcatel-Lucent (NYSE:ALU) were booming Friday morning after the company announced it was profitable for the first time since 2006.

Alcatel-Lucent reported earnings of $1.46 billion for 2011, up from a $440 million loss the year before. Adjusted operating profit margins were particularly strong — at 3.9%, they were almost double last year�s figure, though ALU was aiming to reach margins of 5%. ALU also said it would improve on that number this year through cost-cutting measures.

The news sent Alcatel-Lucent stock up by more than 13% by midday. ALU shares are at their highest point since early November, and their 40% year-to-date return is a reverse course from last year, when they lost almost 75% from April 2011 highs.

Still, Alcatel-Lucent, which produces telecommunications equipment, is suffering from slow sales that were down 2.1% in 2011 and 13% for the fourth quarter, with particular sluggishness coming from North America.

– Kyle Woodley, InvestorPlace.com Assistant Editor

FDIC Looks to Rein In Compensation via Insurance Levy

FDIC Chairperson Sheila Bair has released her own proposal to compete with a recently floated proposal for a tax on bank compensation. Her proposal calls for linking compensation with FDIC insurance levies as a means of aligning incentives in the banking industry going forward. In contrast, the competing initiative calls for a one-off ‘windfall’ tax as a means of recouping bonus money due to be paid out by large financial institutions.

In announcing her competing plan, Bair said:

A broad consensus of academic studies agrees that poorly designed compensation structures can misalign incentives and induce risk taking. I share those concerns. The recent crisis has shown that compensation practices that encourage excessive risk can create significant losses in the financial system and the deposit insurance fund.

What I like about Bair’s proposal is that it is designed both as a longer-term solution and meant to align compensation with the larger systemic risks, which Bair explicitly mentions in the quote above. On the other hand, I see the windfall tax proposal as a gimmick designed to harness the public’s outrage on a serious issue and misdirect it toward a one-off political ploy. Windfall taxes are not going to change systemic issues on risk, compensation and moral hazard, whereas the insurance levy does move in that direction.

The public is right to be angry about excessive compensation in financial services. The real issue in compensation has to do with individuals being compensated in the present for riskier bets which appear to accrue higher payoffs in the near-term but have disastrous consequences longer-term. Imposing a one-off tax does nothing to eliminate this problem. Tying compensation and risk together does.

What angers me personally is that this banker windfall tax appears to be a naked ploy to quell voter anger. The tax offers superficially satisfying populist solutions which fail to address any of the more systemic issues that led to the financial crisis. After the one-off tax, it’s back to business as usual on Wall Street. This seems to be a solution designed to win votes and nothing more. Let’s hope Bair wins the day in the Obama Administration’s internal politics.

Source

FDIC Board Seeks Comment on Incorporating Employee Compensation Structures Into the Risk Assessment System – FDIC: Press Releases – PR-5-2010 1/12/2010

Also see FDIC’s Bair Blasts Other Regulators for Reluctance on Banker Pay Plan from the Wall Street Journal.

4 Must-Buy Chemical Stocks Engineered for Investors

One of the few sectors doing well right now is the specialty chemicals business. That�s because preservatives in foods, fertilizers for farms, compressed gasses for manufacturers and a host of other products have a built-in baseline demand. These are the building blocks for just about every product on the market, so chemical companies with well-run operations and a big reach have managed to find brisk business even in this tough climate.

I watch more than 5,000 publicly traded companies with my Portfolio Grader tool, ranking companies by a number of fundamental and quantitative measures. This week, I’ve got 4 chemical stocks to buy.

Here they are, in alphabetical order. Each one of these stocks gets an �A� or �B� according to my research, meaning it is a �strong buy� or �buy.�

Monsanto Co. (NYSE:MON) provides agricultural products to farmers and is based out of St. Louis. A modest gain of 4% has far outpaced the broader markets, as the Dow Jones is down .6% on the year.

Praxair Inc. (NYSE:PX) is a supplier of industrial gas. PX stock rounds out the list with a gain of 5% year-to-date. That gain is no small feat, especially amidst a volatile economic landscape.

Terra Nitrogen Co. (NYSE:TNH) is involved with the production of nitrogen fertilizer products. Like other stocks in the specialty chemicals sector, TNH stock is pleasing investors with a gain of 44% year-to-date.

W.R. Grace (NYSE:GRA) produces and sells specialty chemicals and specialty materials internationally. GRA stock has had an impressive 2011, jumping 8% year-to-date.

Get more analysis of these picks and other publicly-traded stocks with Louis Navellier�s Portfolio Grader tool, a 100% free stock-rating tool that measures both quantitative buying pressure and eight fundamental factors.

How to save U.S. manufacturing jobs

Howard Wial is a fellow for the Brookings Institution Metropolitan Policy Program.

At first glance, manufacturing jobs would appear to be a dying breed.

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The United States lost 6 million manufacturing jobs between early 2001 and late 2009. And despite small gains during the last two years, the trend in manufacturing employment for the last 30 years has been downward.

That has led some to argue that long-term job loss in the industry is inevitable. But our research shows otherwise.

There are two common versions of the "inevitability" argument. One holds that U.S. manufacturing wages are too high to be internationally competitive. The other maintains that manufacturing job losses are the result of productivity growth. Both arguments are wrong.

High wages can't be the culprit, because wages in U.S. manufacturing are not especially high by international standards. As of 2009, 12 European countries plus Australia had higher average manufacturing wages than the United States. Norway topped the list with an average manufacturing wage of $53.89 per hour, 60 percent above the U.S. average of $33.53.

Manufacturing: Not a magic pill for the economy

Moreover, the United States lost manufacturing jobs at a faster rate since 2000 than several countries that paid manufacturing workers even more. Among the 10 countries for which the Bureau of Labor Statistics tracks manufacturing employment, Australia, France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands and Sweden both had higher manufacturing wages and lost smaller shares of their manufacturing employment than the United States between 2000 and 2010.

Nor is technology to blame. Factories have become more mechanized, so fewer workers are needed to produce the same amount of goods. If that were the end of the story, then technology-driven productivity growth would indeed reduce manufacturing employment.

But it's not the whole story. Technology increases productivity. And when productivity grows, manufactured goods become less expensive and the market for them expands. That creates a demand for more workers, and that extra demand usually outweighs the labor-saving impact of mechanization. The result is more manufacturing jobs, not fewer.

And there is evidence that productivity wasn't killing jobs. Between 2000 and 2007, manufacturing productivity grew at an average annual rate of 3.9 percent, nearly the same as the 4.1 percent average annual rate during the 1990s.

If productivity growth were the cause, then job losses should've been equally bad in the 1990s. But that wasn't the case. The nation lost an average of only 0.2 percent of its manufacturing jobs per year during the 1990s, compared to 3.0 percent per year between 2000 and 2007.

If neither productivity growth nor high wages cost us manufacturing jobs, what did?

One likely reason is there was insufficient productivity growth in U.S. manufacturing. If productivity had grown more rapidly, American manufactured goods would have been more competitive with those of other countries.

Another likely cause was incentives for manufacturers to offshore work to low-wage countries, which accelerated after China joined the World Trade Organization in 2001. After China's accession to the WTO, the U.S. trade deficit with China grew at an accelerating rate - due mainly to offshoring of manufacturing.

Manipulated currencies and artificially low wages of China and some other low-wage countries made them attractive locations for manufacturers looking to save on labor costs.

But there is hope for the future.

Both offshoring and insufficient productivity were the result of public policy choices. The United States could have reduced the incentives for manufacturers to offshore jobs by taking a harder line against China's currency manipulation and wage suppression. It could have improved productivity growth at home by increasing rather than cutting funding the Manufacturing Extension Partnership program, which helps small and medium-sized manufacturers improve performance.

Chinese wages are now growing faster than productivity and manufacturers are beginning to reconsider whether the costs of offshoring outweigh the benefits.

Funding for the Manufacturing Extension Partnership program has increased, and other federal and state efforts to strengthen manufacturers' performance are taking shape.

These trends are the basis for a more robust federal manufacturing policy. If we build that, the United States can stem and even reverse its losses of manufacturing jobs. 

Opinion: An Economy Built to Stall

Well, this week makes it official. The weakest economic recovery since World War II has become weaker still, sinking into a spring slowdown for the third year in a row. Are we finally ready to debate a change in the policies that have led to this pass?

On Thursday the government reported that growth in the first quarter was 1.9%, even weaker than the 2.2% initial estimate. Then Friday delivered the third slower jobs report in a row, which qualifies as a depressing trend. Employers created only 69,000 net new jobs in May, and April's total was revised down to 77,000 jobs. Stocks were crushed in the backwash.

Shocking Verdict In Morgan Keegan Arbitration Against Broker Who Exercised Discretion (Or Not)

It likely happens everyday on Wall Street.  A customer calls a stockbroker with an order.  The order gets entered and executed. Uh oh, the stock crashes.

A dispute about the order arises (either sincere or phony) � the trade resulted in a loss and the client is not happy.  Quite often the disgruntled customer will say that there was no firm order, only a discussion and the broker was never authorized to move forward with the now disputed buy or sell.

On the other side of this dispute, the broker will say that he or she was given a firm order and this is nothing more than buyer�s remorse over a losing trade.

Look up any recent span of arbitrations and lawsuits. You�ll see such allegations and defenses raised in many cases.  And it�s not just an issue of some boilerroom huckster or a quality indie/regional broker-dealer.  This problem plays out at Merrill Lynch, Morgan Stanley, Wells Fargo, JP Morgan, and every firm you can name.  Take a high-flying stock like Facebook or a volatile ETF and you�ll see the footprints.

Where the customer complaint takes on an interesting nuance is when the customer says to the stockbroker something along the lines of yeah, I�d like to make that trade today but I�m not sure when or at what price � I trust you, use your discretion.  That�s the old �Time And Price Discretion� dilemma.

A more complicated issue arises when the conversation ends along the lines of the customer asking the stockbroker to keep an eye on a stock and, you know, if you think it�s time, this week, this month, whenever, get me in or out � maybe $5,000 or so or, hey, up to 10% of my assets but if you sell my XYZ position in the interim, maybe a bit more.

In many such customer disputes, the brokerage firm will settle the claim or pay an arbitration award. Thereafter, depending upon the relationship with the subject stockbroker, things may move along as if nothing happened or we wind up in litigation with the former employer seeking some contribution or indemnification from the former employee.

Case In Point

In a Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (�FINRA�) Arbitration Statement of Claim filed in October 2010, Claimant Morgan Keegan & Company Inc. asserted:

  • refusal to repay sums pursuant to a promissory note;
  • refusal to repay sums pursuant to a professional designation expense reimbursement agreement;
  • breach of contract/contribution and indemnification; and,
  • unauthorized trading.

The causes of action arose in connection with Respondent Rotundo�s alleged unathorized trading in a client�s account and his subsequent termination by Claimant. Claimant Morgan Keegan sought compensatory damages of:

  • $12,389.15 pursuant to a promissory note;
  • $720.00 professional designation expense reimbursement;
  • $489,230.00 alleged unauthorized trading damages;
  •  10% interest: and
  • Attorneys� fees and other costs.

In the Matter of the FINRA Arbitration Between Morgan Keegan & Company, Inc., Claimant, vs. Alejandro Rotund0, Respondent vs. Jose de la Lama and Michel Rittenberg, Third-Party Respondents (FINRA Arbitration 10-04775, June 7, 2012).

Respondent Rotundo generally denied the allegations, asserted various affirmative defenses, and asserted and Counterclaim and Third Party Claim for:

  • defamation;
  • breach of employment contract;
  • declaratory relief;
  • breach of equitable and just principles of trade;
  • tortious interference with advantageous business relationship; and,
  • unjust enrichment.

Respondent Rotundo sought unspecified monetary relief; and the FINRA Arbitration Panel�s Declaration that his conduct from approximately September 1, through September 3, 2010, was consistent with industry standards of conduct, practice and procedure.  Further, Respondent sought an expungemetn of his Form U5 to reflect that the �Reason For Termination� was �Voluntary� and the purpose was to �assume employment elsewhere.�

Polygraph

In addition to a number of dueling motions among the parties, it appears that Respondent Rotundo moved to introduce the results of a polygraph test but was opposed by Claimant and Third-Pary Respondents because:

Respondent Rotundo did not give notice of the polygraph examination; Claimant and Third Party Respondents Rittenberg and Lama had no input into the circumstances of the examination; and, the polygraph report is not admissible into evidence under Florida law. In his Response to the Motion to Bar, Respondent Rotundo asserted, among other things, the following: since neither state nor federal rules are binding in FINRA arbitrations, the Panel can decide whether to admit the examination into evidence; and, a polygraph report is a valuable tool to arbitrators.

During the evidentiary hearing, the Panel granted the Motion to Bar the introduction of the polygraph.

The Nuance of UN-authorized

Partially at issue in this arbitration appears to be a somewhat festering dispute engendered by an apparent customer complaint, which Claimant Morgan Keegan characterized as alleging unauthorized discretionary trading that resulted in about $489,000 in damages � for which Claimant appears to be seeking indemnification/contribution.  Although the issues are not satisfactorily set forth in the Decision, we are able to infer some aspects from this statement in the Decision:

In the Motion to Dismiss, Respondent Rotundo asserted, among other things, that the unauthorized trading claim must be dismissed where predicated upon violation of Rule 2510 as discretionary trading with oral authority is not �unauthorized trading.� During the evidentiary hearing. Claimant opposed the Motion. The Panel denied the Motion.

SIDE BAR: Actually, Respondent Rotundo raises an interesting point.  NASD Conduct Rule 2510: Discretionary Accounts states in relevant part:

 (b) Authorization and Acceptance of Account

No member or registered representative shall exercise any discretionary power in a customer�s account unless such customer has given prior written authorization to a stated individual or individuals and the account has been accepted by the member, as evidenced in writing by the member or the partner, officer or manager, duly designated by the member, in accordance with Rule 3010.

With certain exceptions (most notably an intraday �time and price� order), a broker cannot engage discretionary trading if he or she does not have prior written authorization from the customer that has been accepted in writing by the firm.  If a customer grants oral authorization, however, while the exercise of discretion by the broker would still constitute a violation of Rule 2510, such trading would technically be with the customer�s authorization, albeit �oral� and not sufficient to overcome the proscription of the rule.  While a hyper-technical distinction, the fact remains that a customer could orally authorize a broker to exercise discretion in his or her account, even though such authorization would not comply with the rules and would expose the broker to a violation.

Decision

The FINRA Arbitration Panel  found Respondent Rotundo liable and ordered him to pay to Claimant with statutory interest accruing from the date of the Award until paid in full:

  • $13,370.00 (inclusive of prejudgment interest);
  • $720.00; and,
  • $214,315.00 as contribution/indemnification.

The FINRA Arbitration Panel ruled that Claimant Morgan Keegan had defamed Respondent Rotundo pursuant to inappropriate language placed on his Form U5, and, accordingly, found Claimant liable and ordered it to pay to Respondent $500,000.00 plus statutory interest from the date of the Award until paid in full. Further, the Panel recommended that Respondent�s Form U5 filed on September 23, 2010, continue to reflect that the �Reason for Termination� was a �Discharge,� but that the �Termination Comment� on Respondent�s Form U5 be replaced with:

Exercising discretionary power in a customer�s account without prior written authorization.

Bill Singer�s Comment

Gotta tell ya � didn�t see this one comin�, not at all.

U.S. job growth seen tapering off slightly

MARKETWATCH FRONT PAGE

U.S. employment report for March should help clarify the economic picture after an unusually warm winter helped boost growth early in 2012. See full story.

Stock funds star in blockbuster 2012 opener

U.S. stock investors came out of 2011�s �hunger games� secure that both the U.S. and Europe had survived a treacherous year, and they gave 2012 a powerful, profitable opening to rival any Hollywood blockbuster. But we�ve seen this movie before. See full story.

Fund, ETF investors could see global gains fade

Stock-fund and ETF investors venturing outside of the U.S. waded into calmer waters in the first quarter, but rough currents lie ahead. Positioning portfolios against such uncertainties will dominate investors� attention. See full story.

Bond fund investors ride out market�s bumps

If the first quarter is any indicator, bond market behavior may finally reflect the �new normal� that Pimco�s Bill Gross and others first started talking about a few years back. See full story.

How to boost your investing stamina

Research indicates that for most investors, doing nothing may be their best path to portfolio success, writes Steve Beck of MarketRiders. See full story.

MARKETWATCH COMMENTARY

Instead of acknowledging that banks have become a part of government, we keep pretending they are private institutions, writes David Weidner. See full story.

MARKETWATCH PERSONAL FINANCE

Is the state that you have designs on retiring to tax friendly or not? And the basic questions to answer are these: How does the state tax your income? How does it tax your property and your consumption? And what�s the overall tax burden? See full story.

Retirement Strategy: "Team Alpha" Crushed The S&P (Part 17)

When we began our journey back in late October 2011, the S&P was roughly 1225. As of Friday's close it stood at 1408. An approximate increase of 15% in a relative blink of an eye. A very impressive run thus far, even though we have been waiting for a pullback to pick up some bargains to add to our core portfolio.

Our current portfolio consists of ExxonMobil (XOM), Johnson and Johnson (JNJ), AT&T (T), General Electric (GE), Annaly Capital (NLY), Southern Company (SO), Procter & Gamble (PG), Philip Morris (PM), Intel (INTC), Realty Income (O), Chevron (CVX), E.I. du Pont (DD), Duke Energy (DUK), Coca-Cola (KO), Bank of America (BAC).

Highlights Of Our Strategic Moves

  • We reduced exposure in several stocks

  • We sold several positions and took profits

  • We replaced one utility with another (a GREAT move)

  • We have collected all the dividends and built more cash

  • We have moved a trading play into our core portfolio

  • We stood our ground with a 2% position in NLY and won!

  • We added KO to our core portfolio finally

  • We wrote covered calls that either have expired or will (adding more cash)

  • We have a strong defensive portfolio with a terrific offense, intact, without flinching.

Our Overall Performance To Date

stock#Shares3-31PPS4-1 Value
XOM10087/shr8700
JNJ10066/shr6600
T10031/shr3100
GE10020/shr2000
NLY11016/shr1760
BAC5009/shr4500
PG20067/shr13400
KO5074/shr3750
PM14089/shr12460
INTC30028/shr8400
O10039/shr3900
CVX100107/shr10700
DD10053/shr5300
DUK10021/shr2100
SO30045/shr13700
Cash Rsv0 18027
Totalxx118397

As you can see, based on our current holdings and the strategy that we have implemented, step by step if you have been following this series, we are ahead by 18.4% since inception, and handily beat the S&P by roughly 3.4%, or $3,400. (We began with $100,000.)

For the sake of comparison, we placed all of our dividends into our cash reserves, as well as collected call premiums for cash, and capital gains from sales of shares for cash. An $18,000 cash position could have easily been reinvested in our existing stocks and tweaked another 1.5% gain overall by being 100% invested. That would have reflected a wonderful 20% increase in our portfolio value.

Since this is a retirement portfolio, we have taken the more conservative approach of increasing our cash (which we can use for our expenses, buying other stocks, or just keeping our powder dry for the pullback that never seems to happen, yet.)

Team Alpha Has Done This Itself

I realize that I push a lot of buttons when I remind everyone that we have done this without a professional Financial Planner or Advisor, and with minimal costs. We have not paid a dime to anyone for "advice" or "babysitting" OUR money, and we have learned more and more as each day has gone by. I truly believe in accountability, and Team Alpha has a track record that can be looked at and admired (or bemoaned I guess) by anyone who reads this series.

By following what we set forth here, within your own portfolio, you can easily see how you fared. We had no high flyers like Apple (AAPL) to move our portfolio as it obviously moved the overall S&P and Nasdaq, and we had very few missteps because of our relatively conservative approach. The negative nay-bobs, doom and gloom crowd attacked us in all sorts of ways, but we stood our ground, we crushed the S&P thus far.

While we can all do the "happy dance", anything can happen going forward. And we have a lot of work to do to keep vigilant, make some more strategic moves, as well as continuing to cash our sweet little dividend checks while we do it.

What Is Next

Well, now that we have covered many of the conservative moves thus far, we can repeat them and add some value stocks when the time is right (not yet). Remember, we are still waiting for a pullback, but we are positioned very well for it, in my opinion. In the next segments I will outline a new round of calls to be sold and update everyone on our next round of dividends. So far, so good.

As a special note, not only did Seeking Alpha reach 1 million subscribers this past week, but yours truly, "Regarded Solutions", passed the 1 million reader mark! In a tad over 5 months, I believe that number of readers is a remarkable feat which has been reached ONLY by YOUR efforts and loyalty.

Thank you, one and all!

Disclosure: I am long XOM, JNJ, GE, NLY, O, T, INTC, SO, BAC, KO.

Disclaimer: Please remember to do your own research prior to making any investment decisions. This article is not a recommendation to buy or sell any securities or stocks, and is the opinion of the author.