The Fundemental Guide to Getting Started and Succeeding with Investments
By K.C. Staar
()
About this ebook
An Unconventional and Comprehensive Guide to everything Investing:
This book is the first book in a series of books designed to help those that are looking to either take charge of there finances.
If you are not interested in day trading this book will help all those that are looking to further understand the world of Stocks, bonds and everything in between.
K.C. Staar
35 year old Married Father of Three Disillusioned with stock broker and so called retirement experts.
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The Fundemental Guide to Getting Started and Succeeding with Investments - K.C. Staar
Fundamentals of Investing
by
K.C.Staar
SMASHWORDS EDITION
* * * * *
PUBLISHED BY:
Staar DD Services Ltd.
Fundamentals of Investing
Copyright © 2010 by K.C. Staar
Smashwords Edition License Notes
This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each person you share it with. If you're reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then you should return to Smashwords.com and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the author's work.
Table of Contents
Disclaimers
Introduction
1 Investment Vehicles
1.1 Cash Equivalents
1.2 Stocks
1.3 Bonds
1.4 Commodities & Futures
1.5 Foreign Exchange (FOREX)
2 The Marketplace
2.1 U.S. Stock Exchanges
2.2 Canadian Stock Exchanges
2.3 Foreign Stock Exchanges
2.4 Mercantile Exchanges
2.5 After-Hours Trading
2.6 Stock Indices
3 Brokers & Advisors
3.1 North American Brokers & Brokerages
3.2 Online Brokerages
3.3 Financial Advisors
3.4 Investment Newsletters
4 Regulation & Oversight
4.1 Securities and Exchange Commission
4.2 Canadian Securities Regulation
4.3 State Securities Regulation
4.4 Industry & Professional Organizations
5 Investment Accounts
5.1 Traditional IRA
5.2 Roth IRA
5.3 401(k)
5.4 Registered Retirement Savings Plan
5.5 Brokerage Accounts
6 Building a Portfolio
6.1 Risk Tolerance & Capacity
6.2 Risk Tolerance Quiz
6.3 Inflation
6.4 Investment Returns
6.5 Investment Objectives
6.6 Diversification
6.7 Asset Allocation
6.8 Common Portfolio Types
6.9 Dollar Cost Averaging & Value Averaging
6.10 Rebalancing
7 Mutual Funds
7.1 Overview
7.2 Managed Funds
7.3 Index Funds
7.4 Sector Funds
7.5 Mutual Fund Expenses
8 Exchange-Traded Funds
8.1 Overview
8.2 ETF Features
8.3 Equity ETFs
8.4 Fixed-Income ETFs
8.5 Alternative ETFs
8.6 ETF Strategies
9 Stocks
9.1 Market Capitalization
9.2 Volatility
9.3 Annual Reports & Conference Calls
9.4 SEC Filings
9.5 Analyst Opinions
9.6 Dividends
10 American Depositary Receipts
11 Bonds
11.1 Overview
11.2 Treasuries
11.3 Municipal Bonds
11.4 Corporate Bonds
11.5 Bond Laddering
11.6 Guaranteed Investment Certificates
11.7 Savings Bonds
12 Precious Metals
13 Insurance Products
13.1 Life Insurance
13.2 Annuities
14 Options
14.1 Option Basics
14.2 Option Mechanics
14.3 Option Pricing
14.4 Option Types
14.5 The Greeks
14.6 Reading Options Tables
15 Market Conditions
15.1 The Bull Market
15.2 The Bear Market
15.3 The Neutral Market
16 Basic Fundamental Analysis
16.1 Overview
16.2 Qualitative Analysis
16.3 Quantitative Analysis
17 Basic Technical Analysis
17.1 Trends &Trendlines
17.2 Charts & Chart Patterns
17.3 Moving Averages
17.4 Indicators & Oscillators
Disclaimer
The authors and publishers of the material contained herein have used their best efforts in its preparation. They make no representation or warranties with respect to the accuracy, applicability, fitness, or completeness of the contents of this material. The information contained herein is strictly for educational purposes. Therefore, whether and how you apply it is fully your responsibility.
There is no guarantee that you will earn any money using any of the techniques or ideas presented herein. Examples in this material should not be construed as a promise or guarantee of earnings, or as a recommendation to buy any specific security or investment product. Investing success is dependent upon a wide range of factors, including without limitation the time you devote to the activity, your finances, and your level of knowledge and skill. We cannot guarantee your success or take responsibility for your actions.
The material herein may contain information that includes or is based upon forward-looking statements as defined by the Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Forward-looking statements give expectations or forecasts of future events, and can be identified by the use of such words as anticipate,
expect,
project,
intend,
plan,
believe,
and other words of similar meaning or connotation in connection with a description of potential financial performance.
The authors and publishers disclaim any warranties (express or implied), merchantability, or fitness for any particular purpose, unless such disclaimers are prohibited by state law. THE AUTHOR AND THE PUBLISHER SHALL IN NO EVENT BE HELD LIABLE TO ANY PARTY FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, PUNITIVE, SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL, OR OTHER CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES ARISING DIRECTLY OR INDIRECTLY FROM ANY USE OF THIS MATERIAL, WHICH IS PROVIDED AS IS
AND WITHOUT WARRANTIES.
As always, the advice of a competent legal, tax, accounting, or other professionals should be sought.
INVESTMENT DISCLAIMER
No statement in this material should be construed as a recommendation to buy or sell a security or to provide investment advice. All investors should consult a qualified professional before trading in any security. Stock trading, option trading, and other investment techniques involve risk and are not suitable for all investors. Past performance does not guarantee future results. The authors and publishers make no representation that the information and opinions expressed are accurate, complete, or current. The opinions expressed should not be construed as financial, legal, tax, or other advice and are provided for informational purposes only. This material does not contain a complete discussion of the benefits and risks of different investment methods. All investments are subject to risk, including possible loss of principal.
TAX DISCLAIMER
The material herein is being provided to you as educational material with the express understanding that we are not engaged in rendering legal, accounting, or other professional service(s). The scope of our service is solely educational. If legal advice or other expert assistance is required, the services of a professional should be sought. Nothing herein is any substitute for the services, advice, or counsel of a properly licensed CPA or attorney in the relevant state!
IRS CIRCULAR 230 NOTICE: To the extent that the information herein concerns tax matters, it is not intended to be used and cannot be used by a taxpayer for the purpose of avoiding penalties that may be imposed by law.
Introduction
Congratulations! The fact that you’re reading these words means you have decided to take the first step toward ensuring your financial future. The sad but inescapable fact is that today, as we face economic uncertainty in many forms, the only person you can count on for your future financial well-being is you.
Mounting government debt—the largest percentage of it driven by the Medicare and Social Security entitlement programs—means that something has to give sooner or later. While you may not have much faith in the political will of our elected officials to cut the deficit, at some point the bond market—the source that finances much of U.S. deficit spending—will say Enough!
When that happens, interest rates on U.S. Treasury bonds—the government’s cost of borrowing—will rise until further borrowing is simply impractical. (We’ll talk more about this topic when we discuss taxes later in the book.)
Businesses, too, have for the most part moved away from the guaranteed pension (what is known as a defined-benefit
retirement plan—we’ll talk more about that later, too). As American life expectancy has grown and medical costs have skyrocketed, promises that were made to workers decades ago regarding their pensions and healthcare proved unsustainable. One of the major drivers behind the 2009 General Motors bankruptcy, for example, was the company’s future pension and retiree healthcare obligations—in the case of retiree healthcare alone, an amount estimated at $54 billion during 2007 contract negotiations. (To put this in perspective, at its bankruptcy filing, GM reported total assets of $82.29 billion.)
The bottom line, then, is that when it comes to your financial future, you can’t count on the government, and you can’t count on your employer. Short of a rich uncle passing away or picking the winning Powerball numbers, it falls to you.
This book, along with its two companion volumes, will provide you with the knowledge. What you must provide is the discipline to create an investing plan, fund it, and stick with it for years to come.
Now, with the preliminaries out of the way, let’s get started!
1 Investment Vehicles
When you see the word vehicle,
you probably think first of something that gets you where you want to go—your car, your child’s bike, your neighbor’s midlife-crisis Harley, or the U-Haul you rented to move into your first home or apartment. Frankly, that thought is right on the money (no pun intended), because investment vehicles are what will get you where you want to go financially.
Just as you can choose not only the basic type of vehicle that will fulfill your transportation needs (car, truck, SUV, motorcycle, bike, scooter, skateboard, and so forth) but also one of dozens of brands, makes, or models (Chevy, Ford, Honda, Toyota, Harley-Davidson, Suzuki, Ducati, etc.), you will face a similar range of choices in deciding how to fulfill your financial goals. We’re going to talk first about what those vehicles are. The relative advantages and disadvantages of each, their uses, and how to choose among them are topics we’ll cover a little later when we discuss asset allocation.
1.1 Cash Equivalents
If your grandparents grew up during the Great Depression, it’s possible that many years later they still harbored a lingering suspicion of banks. By 1933, depositors had lost $140 billion from bank failures, and by the end of the 1930’s, roughly 9,000 U.S. banks had failed. Of course, by the time you were old enough to understand (or pay attention to) adult conversations about money, that suspicion had probably faded, since the U.S. banking system has been (generally speaking, at least) stable for decades now.
Government programs that grew out of the Depression such as the FDIC—Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation—were intended to prevent the recurrence of such a disaster. Today the FDIC provides insurance in the amount of $250,000 per depositor, per insured bank, for each account ownership category,
according to the FDIC website. (Note that accounts at different branches of the same bank are not separately insured.) Moreover, as a result of the recent financial crisis, the FDIC has temporarily increased coverage limits:
From December 31, 2010 through December 31, 2012, all noninterest-bearing transaction accounts are fully insured, regardless of the balance of the account and the ownership capacity of the funds. This coverage is available to all depositors, including consumers, businesses, and government entities. The unlimited coverage is separate from, and in addition to, the insurance coverage provided for a depositor’s other accounts held at an FDIC-insured bank.
A noninterest-bearing transaction account is a deposit account where:
interest is neither accrued nor paid;
depositors are permitted to make an unlimited number of transfers and withdrawals; and
the bank does not reserve the right to require advance notice of an intended withdrawal.
Note: Money Market Deposit Accounts (MMDAs) and Negotiable Order of Withdrawal (NOW) accounts are not eligible for this temporary unlimited insurance coverage, regardless of the interest rate, even if no interest is paid.
It is important to remember, however, that this FDIC insurance does not represent some huge pool of money set aside to cover potential depositor losses, or an insurance policy in the sense you’re probably accustomed to. Rather, it is backed by what is commonly known as the full faith and credit of the United States government.
That means, translated into real terms, the government’s ability to borrow money to cover losses should they occur. (Anyone recall the $750 billion TARP bailout package?) Were that full faith and credit
ever to be called into question, it could affect everything that depends on it, and that’s something to always remember.
If you are old enough, you may remember the savings and loan crisis of the 1980’s. (While the FDIC insures bank deposits, a different but essentially identical agency, the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation, insured savings and loan deposits at that time.) A rash of S&L failures made it necessary for the FSLIC to step in, and to date—the mess is still not fully cleaned up—the cost to taxpayers of the FSLIC guarantee has been well over $120 billion and is estimated to eventually cost as much as $160 billion. As a result, the FSLIC was declared insolvent in 1989 and abolished, with its deposit insurance responsibilities transferred to the FDIC.
The upshot of all of this is that cash shouldn’t be kept under your mattress or buried in a jar in the back yard (which, while little more than jokes today, are things some people leery of banks after the Depression quite literally once did). Not only is such money subject to loss from theft or fire, it’s doing no work—not earning any return in the form of interest. Banks offer a variety of vehicles for savings.
Demand Deposit Account (DDA): This is the most familiar form of savings account, in which you money is available to you on demand
with no strings attached. Such accounts typically pay the lowest interest rates, and when interest rates are low (as they have been throughout the decades of the 1990’s and 2000’s), that can be low indeed—as of this writing, well under 1% annually.
Money Market Deposit Account (MMDA): Sometimes simply called a money market account (MMA), these accounts have higher opening and minimum balances (typically at least $1,000 and often $2,500, $5,000, $10,000, or even more). Failing to maintain the minimum balance can result in a lower interest rate, service charges, or both. In the current low interest rate environment, even these accounts don’t pay much more than 1% annually.
Negotiable Order of Withdrawal Account (NOW): The NOW account is essentially a savings account (usually with relatively high minimum balances) that offers limited check-writing, restricted by government regulations to a maximum of six per month. (Transactions above this number, though permitted, will typically incur a fairly stiff fee or other penalty.) As many money market accounts offer limited check-writing as well (especially those offered through brokerage firms), NOW accounts have become less common.
Certificate of Deposit (CD): In return for a (generally) higher rate of return, you agree to leave your money with the bank for a fixed period of time (most commonly one, two, three, or five years, though three-month and six-month products can be found). The primary downside is that should you withdraw your money early, you will lose most or all of the interest accrued to date and might possibly pay an additional penalty. Another is that if you lock in a CD for a relatively long term and then interest rates rise, you are stuck with your lower rate until the CD matures. (Conversely, of course, should rates fall, you are protected.) While most CDs compound interest daily, some may only compound monthly—yielding a small difference in the final return, to be sure, but consider this when comparing competing offerings from different banks. Minimum opening balances for CDs are generally around $1,000, though some may go as low as $500. As of this writing, the national average APY (annual percentage yield) for a one-year CD is 0.46%, with the top products yielding around 1.2%. For a two-year CD, the national average is 0.71% with best yields around 1.5%; for a three-year product, the numbers are 1.04% and 1.8% respectively; and for five years, 1.71% and 2.4%.
It’s worth noting that in the Internet age, banking doesn’t have to