Saturday, April 16, 2011

6 Warning Signs You May Have a Bad Credit Score

Having bad credit can negatively impact many areas of your life such as renting an apartment, buying a car, or even getting a job. That’s why it’s important to keep tabs on your credit score and make sure it stays healthy. Although you can?t always predict what hurts or affects your credit score, here are [...]

6 Warning Signs You May Have a Bad Credit Score is a post from the Money Crashers personal finance blog.

Source: http://www.moneycrashers.com/warning-signs-bad-credit-score/

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Dan Loeb's Third Point Is Up 8.6% And He's Bullish On Equities

danloebnew

It's been a good quarter for Dan Loeb.

Loeb's Third Point now has $6.7 billion AUM, up from $4.8 billion in the past year, according to AR Magazine.

And the fund just gained 8.6% in the past quarter.

There are a couple of reasons why people might be pouring in. 

1 - February was the biggest month ever for hedge fund inflows, so many hedge fund's assets are going up.

2 - Investors in Loeb's fund might agree with his feeling that corporate transactions (one of the "activities" an activist fund like Loeb's bets on) will be huge this year. (Fellow manager Ray Dalio agrees)

Here's the relevant part of his investor letter (the rest is embedded below).

loeb-bullish-equities

The full investor letter:

Third Point Investor Letter 4.8.2011

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First-Time & Repeat Home Buyer Tax Credit ? Rules and Limits

If you were one of the millions of people who became a homeowner between 2008 and 2010, whether it was your first time or your fifth, your purchase will have quite a noticeable effect on your taxes. That’s not only due to the lovely bump you’ll get from deducting your mortgage interest and property taxes, [...]

First-Time & Repeat Home Buyer Tax Credit – Rules and Limits is a post from the Money Crashers personal finance blog.

Source: http://www.moneycrashers.com/first-time-home-buyer-tax-credit-rules/

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Friday, April 15, 2011

Credit Suisse: Three bullish correlations

Credit Suisse: Three bullish correlations

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How to Pay IRS Taxes ? Online, Check or Credit Card

As we head towards the April tax filing deadline in the U.S., hopefully you?re working on your calculations or have everything completed by now. If you’ve gotten your total and see that you owe the IRS some money, don?t fret! There are many ways to get the IRS what you owe them in a timely [...]

How to Pay IRS Taxes – Online, Check or Credit Card is a post from the Money Crashers personal finance blog.

Source: http://www.moneycrashers.com/pay-irs-taxes-online-check-credit-card/

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How To Fill Up for Less And Make Your Gas Tank Last Longer

The price of gas is up nearly a dollar per gallon from a year ago, and expected to rise more as the summer driving season begins. But there are ways to cut down the price you pay at the pump, and meaningful ways to make that tank of gas last longer before you need another fill-up.

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Gold Priced In Silver Edges Ever Closer To The Natural Ratio Found In The Earth's Crust

Gold took another drubbing when priced in silver today. Check out GLD/SLV.

chart

At current prices, the gold is worth about 35x silver.

Apparently the in the earth's crust, there's about 18x more silver than gold, so another doubling of silver relative to gold (halving the current price ratio) would bring it into line with the natural order of things.

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Thursday, April 14, 2011

Even On A Day When The Eurozone Is Going To Hell Again...

True Finns! Cajas nationalization. Greek debt blowout!

Who cares? The euro has erased all its losses, as the dollar spirals lower.

chart

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23 Cheap Wedding Reception Food & Drink Menu Ideas on a Budget

When my husband and I were planning our wedding, we wanted to keep it simple, elegant, and most importantly under budget. So we were a little shocked when our caterer quoted us her lowest price of $35 per person for dinner – not including alcohol.�With 160 guests, we were already at $5,600, and with an [...]

23 Cheap Wedding Reception Food & Drink Menu Ideas on a Budget is a post from the Money Crashers personal finance blog.

Source: http://www.moneycrashers.com/cheap-wedding-reception-food-drink-menu-ideas-budget/

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TC Cribs: Inside The Snuggified Home Of Posterous

It's time for a new episode of TC Cribs, and this week we're showcasing the home of one of the easiest-to-use blogging platforms around: Posterous, the service that lets you turn an email into a blog post (among other things). As you'll see in the tour, the�Posterous office is located in the heart of San Francisco's Mission District so there's always something exciting going on outside the window. The team has also developed a strange affinity for a certain inexpensive beer... and Snuggies. Oh, and don't worry if you're not sure how to actually pronounce "Posterous" ? in this episode, we answer the question once and for all. If you haven't already, make sure to check out the past episode of TC Cribs:

IAB: Internet Advertising Reached $26 Billion In 2010, Display Grew Twice As Fast As Search

The Internet Advertising Bureau released its numbers for 2010. Last year, online advertising in the U.S. grew 15 percent to $26 billion. After a 3 percent dip in 2009, growth resumed in 2010, hitting a record high. Search still made up 46 percent of that total, followed by display ads at 38 percent.But display advertising grew twice as fast as search (24 percent growth versus 12 percent). Search advertising in the U.S. totalled $12 billion, with display closing the gap at $9.9 billion. Here is the breakdown below:

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Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Is Israel The Saudi Arabia Of Shale Oil?

Shale Oil

Last summer, we ran an item about a subject that, while surprising to many at the time, has since become well-known:

that huge deposits of natural gas had been found along Israel's northern coastline.

As with almost everything having to do with that controversial country,

both Israelis and others found this "revelation" a mixed blessing, to say the least.

On the one hand, it certainly eases concerns about Israel's energy viability, with enough not just for its own needs, but sufficient quantities to become a major exporter as well.

At the same time, many Israelis feared the effect such "easy money" would have on the country's already significant elite corruption problem, and its proximity to Lebanese territorial waters raised once again the question of the wisdom of Israel's 2006 invasion, which alienated many previously pro-Israeli elements in Lebanon, and seemed sure to fuel a national consensus to contest any easy access for which Israelis might be hoping.

Hmmmm ... sounds a bit like BP and their Arctic drilling problems in Russia ...

Now, it turns out, even more fuel is being added to Israel's energy fire -- so to speak -- with the equally stunning news that the country may hold the world's third largest quantities of shale oil -- behind the US and China, both of whom would consume almost all of their own production -- meaning Israel could indeed become the world's largest exporter of shale oil -- hence the comparison to Saudi Arabia.

Israel a global super power in energy?

The mind boggles.

But the same sort of technological revolution that has made previously inaccessible on-shore natural gas suddenly available -- via a process of hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, an environmentally destructive process whose impact on the global natural gas scene we discussed last week -- is now apparently transforming the extraction of shale oil as well -- and in so doing, shaking up the energy dynamics of the entire world, including Israel.

How did all this come to be?

The most recent developments in this story start with Dr Harold Vinegar, the former chief scientist of Royal Dutch Shell, who is at the center of an ambitious project to turn Israel into one of the world's leading oil producers.

Israel Energy Initiatives, or IEI, where Vinegar is chief scientist, is working on projects to extract oil and natural gas from oil shale from a 238sq km area of the Shfela Basin, to the south and west of Jerusalem.

Oil shale mining is often frowned upon by environmentalists for many of the same reasons as fracking: it's a dirty process that is both energy and water-intensive.

IEI, which is owned by the American telecom group IDT Corp, believes its technique will be cleaner than that of other operators because the oil will be separated from the shale rock up to 300m beneath the ground. Water will be a by-product of the process, rather than being consumed by it in large volumes. Vinegar says Israel has the third-biggest oil shale deposits in the world, outside the US and China:

We estimate there is the equivalent of 250 billion barrels of oil here. To put that in context, there are proven reserves of 260 billion barrels of oil in Saudi Arabia.

And not to upset too many people, but we also ran an item earlier this year about Arab scientists working for ARAMCO who argue that the Saudis have, in fact, systematically OVER-estimated their proven reserves. IEI estimates the marginal cost of production will be between $US35 - 40 per barrel.

This, Vinegar points out, is cheaper than the $US60 or so per barrel that it costs to extract crude from inhospitable locations such as the Arctic -- wow, if BP CEO Dudley isn't gnashing his teeth when he reads this ;-) -- and compares with $US30 - 40 per barrel in some of the deepwater oilfields off the coast of Brazil.

"These Israeli deposits have been known about, but have never been listed before. It was previously assumed there was not the technology to deal with it."

IEI hopes to begin production on a commercial basis by the end of the decade, with a view to producing 50,000 barrels per day at the outset.

This would be a fraction of the 270,000bpd consumed daily by Israel, but would be a significant step towards making the country energy-independent.

With one barrel of oil comprising 42 gallons, Vinegar estimates each ton of oil shale contains approximately 25 gallons.

The extraction process involves heating the rock underground, using electric heaters, to approximately 325C, the level at which the carbon-carbon bonds in the rock start to "crack."

Wow, this really DOES sound like the shale oil equivalent of "fracking."

The oil produced by the process is light and easily refined to a range of products, including naphtha, jet fuel and diesel.

This is significant, since light oil -- like that produced in Libya -- is considered "sweet" and much less costly to refine than the heavier crude found in Saudi Arabia.

Given the importance of political receptivity to outside investors in the energy business, it's not surprising the project is attracting serious interest from outside investors.

In November, 2010, an 11% stake in Genie Oil & Gas, the division of IDC that is the parent company of IEI, was acquired for $US11m by Jacob Rothschild, the banker, and Rupert Murdoch, chairman of News Corporation and promoter of right-wing lunacy throughout the English-speaking world.

Genie's advisory board includes impressive figures such as Michael Steinhardt, the hedge fund investor, and more frightening ones, like Dick Cheney, former US vice-president, and co-founder of the Shiite Islamic Republic of Iraq, along with his running buddy George W Bush.

An appraisal is now under way that would be followed by an 18-month pilot stage, according to Vinegar.

Among the issues this will address will be concerns raised by environmental groups, including an examination of IEI's claims that the process does not require excessive use of water or energy.

Reassurance will also be sought that a local aquifer, which is several hundred metres below the shale deposits, will not be contaminated by the work.

This is key, because, while the Middle East may have an abundance of fossil-fuel energy, it has a decided shortage of water, so any process that is a major net consumer of water may not be cost-effective from an overall point of view.

Assuming these early stages are completed successfully, a demonstration phase would then take place over three to four years, during which the work completed in the pilot phase would be continued on a larger scale.

Only then would the commercial operations begin.

By that time, up to 1000 people would be employed on the project, many of them specialist engineers from outside Israel, says Vinegar, who adds:

Funding is not needed for the pilot and demonstration, although once we get to 50,000 barrels per day, we would want to have a partner. We have been approached by all the majors.

Not surprisingly, the project still faced a number of significant issues, as Vinegar points out:

"There is a geological risk:

  • Is the resource there?
  • What is the risk to the aquifer?
  • We have no doubts here, in particular that the resource is there and is of good quality,
  • but the pilot can prove these things.

"Then there is the technological risk:

  • Can we drill long horizontal wells?
  • Can the heaters be placed in them? 
  • And can they last?

"And finally there is the economic risk, what the price of oil does.

But I think the price is going to continue rising, to the extent that, by 2030, we will be at around $US200 per barrel."

And while this seems to have escaped Vinegar's attention, which is not a great sign, there is a fourth potential risk for the project: whether it is capable of sufficiently overcoming substantive objections from environmentalists to win popular support -- perhaps the most important challenge facing him and his colleagues.

If they are successful, though, it will probably mean an end to one of the most humorous stories in Jewish culture about fossil-fuel energy: During a crowded Passover service, a rabbi telling the story of the Exodus from Egypt was interrupted by an old man, who kept shouting, "Moses was a schmuck, Moses was a schmuck."

Of course, the congregation was shocked, and the stunned rabbi finally asked the old man why he was criticizing the great hero of Judaism / Christianity / Islam.

The old man replied without hesitation:

He said when they come out of Sinai, turn left.

If he had any brains, he should have told them, 'Turn right.'

With thanks to our constant and energetic reader Jonathan Baral.

This post originally appeared at EconomyWatch.

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China To The Rescue As Government Plans $13 Billion Investment In Spanish Banks

China Communist

China is on the brink of investing $13 billion in Spain and its ailing banking sector, according to Reuters.

The investment would be made by two different parties, one the Chinese sovereign wealth fund, for $9 billion, and the other, from private Chinese investors, worth $4 billion. This capital would help to alleviate the current funding needs of the country's banks, which the government says need €15 billion ($21.7 billion).

A Reuters source claims the money may either be directly invested or used to create a fund.

This would go some way toward alleviating pressure on the Spanish sovereign. If China shows continued willingness to backstop the Spanish banking sector, it will alleviate the Spanish government's need to jump in and provide funds on its own. If the Spanish government does need to jump in, it would then take further risk itself, endangering its stability, and may potentially force it into a bailout scenario with the European Union and IMF.

Whether or not this is just a one-off from China is unknown, but it certainly shows their leadership's intention to prevent the European situation from spiraling further into disarray.

Don't miss: Niall Ferguson's explanation of why the West is in decline >

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9 Ways to Clean, Repair, and Restore Your Old Outdoor Gas Grill

Every time I go to the Home Depot in the summer, I stare longingly at the shiny, manly grills lined up out front like soldiers waiting for orders. They’re so new, and have so many knobs and buttons! They can smoke, grill, or keep baked beans warm! Like most Americans, I had an old grill [...]

9 Ways to Clean, Repair, and Restore Your Old Outdoor Gas Grill is a post from the Money Crashers personal finance blog.

Source: http://www.moneycrashers.com/outdoor-gas-grill-cleaning-repair/

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Here's The Bond Chart That Bill Gross Doesn't Want You To See

Bill Gross' PIMCO is short Treasuries, and he's been very vocal about this idea that interest rates will rise once QE2 ends because, well... who's going to be there to buy the bonds?

There's just one teeny problem.

As this chart from rival bond manager Jeff Gundlach (via ZeroHedge) makes clear the pattern is exactly the opposite of what Gross suggests. When QE is happening, yields rise. When there's no QE, yields fall. It seems illogical, unless you think of it, as we've urged like this: QE raises the appeal of risk assets. When there's no QE, the appeal of risk-less assets (bonds) rises.

Click to enlarge.

QE yields

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Tuesday, April 12, 2011

Three Treasury Bond ETFs To Help You Get Short Like Bill Gross

Bill Gross

As the American equity markets have come back strongly in 2011, many investors are growing increasingly concerned that the Federal Reserve will have to raise rates in the near future in order to combat rising commodity prices in an effort to stop inflation from wrecking havoc on the U.S. economy.

Thanks to this notion, as well as concerns about the debt ceiling and mounting debt burden, some bond managers are becoming increasingly skeptical of the U.S. Treasury market.

While many have voiced concerns, few warnings have commanded more attention that the one voiced recently by legendary fixed income guru Bill Gross of PIMCO. Gross, who runs the world’s largest bond fund, has been a harsh critic of U.S. fiscal and monetary policy in the months past, simultaneously pulling the fund out of a large chunk of its U.S. sovereign debt holdings.

While this move certainty attracted some attention, the King of Bonds’ latest play is sure to turn more than a few heads. According to some sources, Gross has sold off the remaining U.S. Treasury bond holdings in the fund and has now gone short U.S government debt. While the total allocation to short U.S. debt only equals 3% of the market value of the portfolio, it represents a large move in that Treasurys had made up 12% of the fund’s total assets before this latest switch. Even more noteworthy is that this bond fund now has more than 30% of its total assets in cash, suggesting that Gross is extremely bearish on the short and mid term prospects of the United States’ ability to keep interest rates subdued and bond prices elevated [also read Municipal Bond Meltdown: Four ETFs To Watch As The Crisis Unfolds].

The main reasons for this switch are no secret; Gross has expressed concern with the level of unfunded liabilities. In his most recent report, he highlighted the $65 trillion in entitlement liabilities that the country will have to come up with in the near future, a staggering sum compared to the nation’s current GDP and anemic growth levels.  Gross paints a dire picture for the country in the years ahead and what must happen in order to get back to some semblance of normalcy.

“The only way out of the dilemma, absent very large entitlement cuts, is to default in one (or a combination) of four ways: 1) outright via contractual abrogation – surely unthinkable, 2) surreptitiously via accelerating and unexpectedly higher inflation – likely but not significant in its impact, 3) deceptively via a declining dollar– currently taking place right in front of our noses, and 4) stealthily via policy rates and Treasury yields far below historical levels – paying savers less on their money and hoping they won’t complain.”

With comments like this, it isn’t that surprising to hear that Gross has removed all U.S. debt from the company’s flagship product in hopes of finding better values elsewhere [see List of Bond/Fixed Income Indexes].

While investors who agree with this thesis can always buy up shares of the Total Return Fund, there are a number of ETPs that can provide investors similar exposure without the costs of PIMCO’s fund–without the heavy cash exposure. A number of products offer leveraged short exposure to the Treasury market, and there are a handful that offer simple -100% exposure as well. Below, we highlight three possible options that could make for intriguing plays in order to short the U.S. government bond market [see all the ETFs in the Government Bond ETF Category].

ProShares Short 20+ Year Treasury (TBF)

This popular fund, which is quickly closing in on $1 billion in total assets, allows investors to short long-dated U.S. Treasury bonds. This corner of the fixed income market maintains significant duration risk, as bonds with longer time to maturity will generally exhibit greater sensitivity to interest rate changes [also see Emerging Market Bond ETF Investing: Better Option Than Treasurys].

iPath US Treasury 10-Year Bear Fund (DTYS)

For investors seeking -1x exposure to the middle part of the curve, DTYS is one of the few options currently available. The fund doesn’t trade nearly as often as its longer-dated counterpart but the fund does look to be a more stable play on the short side of the market while also allowing for significant gains should the market go as Gross is predicting. Like its counterparts in the space, DTYS has gained so far in 2011, posting a return of close to 4% so far.

iPath US Treasury 2-Year Bear Fund (DTUS)

For investors seeking lower levels of risk but still maintaining exposure to the short market, DTUS could make for an intriguing choice. This ETN may maintain less return potential than the options highlighted above, along with generally exhibiting lower volatility. This note has gained less than 1% so far in 2011 [also try our Head-To-Head ETF Comparison Tool].

[For more ETF ideas, sign up for our free ETF newsletter.]

Disclosure: No positions at time of writing.

Click here to read the original article on ETFdb.com.

 

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Exclusive: The Bleak Financial Numbers From The MySpace Sale Pitch Book

Back in 2008 MySpace was on a roll. They racked up $900 million in revenue and the company was still growing. But a year later top execs started to bail (the smart ones went early). Within two months cofounder and CEO Chris DeWolfe was gone. We've gotten a copy of the confidential MySpace pitch book that parent company News Corp. has distributed to potential buyers. Notably, that pitch book doesn't include any historical financial or user data about MySpace at all. Everything is projected out and forward looking, and even then it's bleak. Revenue for fiscal 2011, ending June 30, 2011, is expected to be just $109 million. Expenses for the year are projected to be $274 million, and the company will lose a whopping $165 million for the 12 month period. That's after massive waves of layoffs, although I expect much of the costs of the layoffs are included up front in 2011 expenses.

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Small Business Optimism Falls While More Businesses Plan Price Hikes

The NFIB small business optimism index fell unexpectedly to 91.9, down 2.6 point, for the month of March.

From the NFIB:

Index was driven by weaker expectations for real sales gains and business conditions and a marked deterioration in profit trends. The decline in the percent of owners expecting higher real sales and better business conditions in six months alone account for 76 percent of the decline in the Index.

ChartWhile this slight fall was unexpected, the rise in prices continues to be the big concern.

In March, a net 9 percent reported raising average selling prices, a gain of 33 percentage points from the low reading in 2009 and 20 points more than last September! Inflation is back on Main Street. In March, 24 percent planned hikes in average selling prices with many by 10 percent or more. A major force behind the price hikes is the elimination of inventory excesses which appeared in 2008 when consumers decided to raise their saving rate from 1 percent to about 6 percent, a reduction in consumption spending of about half a trillion dollars. The “fire sale” is over and profits are badly in need of some price support. Note that these hikes started before higher gas and energy prices became a real issue except for transportation firms and those with delivery services. Plans to raise prices rose 3 points to a net seasonally adjusted 24 percent of owners, the highest reading in 30 months. With an improving economy, more and more of these hikes will “stick”.

But we're still only seeing the beginnings of wage inflation that would influence the FOMC.

Seasonally adjusted, a net 7 percent reported raising worker compensation, down 1 point. But reported gains in the first quarter are the strongest since the fourth quarter of 2008. A seasonally adjusted 9 percent plan to raise compensation, up 2 points and the highest reading since November 2008.

And the NFIB admits the weakness in the small business recovery is not about banks not lending.

Although the rhetoric in Washington continues to suggest that a major reason for the slow recovery has been that banks will not lend to credit- worthy borrowers, the evidence from the NFIB survey of hundreds of thousands of small firms suggests that this is not the case...

Community banks across the country report that they have money to lend, but the pipeline of good applicants collapsed in the recession as the NFIB data show. Only a few firms complain that all their credit needs were not met. More than half do not even want a loan.

The big story, visualized, with prices continuing to climb while the optimism index falls.

Don't miss: The 8 shocks Citi believe are slamming the global economy >

Chart

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