Archive for the ‘real estate’ Category

Resolving the basic debt management problems (2010-5-14)

A classic example of this happened to a client of mine: an appliance manufacturing company. The sales and production departments worked together to ensure that stock was delivered on time to cover sales promotions. Things were going well, customers were buying appliances through the promotions, and back orders almost ceased to exist. Yet, while sales [...]

Meeting your payday loan requirements (2010-4-16)

The subtitle of Harvey Mackay’s book Swim with the Sharks Without Being Eaten Alive (1996) offers this advice: “Do what you love, love what you do, and deliver more than you promise.” There’s no better way to develop a trusting partnership than to do more than the minimum your partner expects. Trust isn’t automatic; it [...]

Credit status will persist as hard evidence (2009-11-21)

Aggregate financial ratios give a reliable picture of the state of the highyield market and should not be neglected irrespective of technical factors. Technical factors driving the high-yield market can change fairly quickly but credit status will persist as hard evidence and change only slowly over time. The most important fundamental measures are: Free cash [...]

Index fund investors and pseudo-index fund investors (2009-10-5)

Index fund investors and pseudo-index fund investors must be prepared for a decade of mediocre returns. Stock investors looking for the fast lane will find it clogged. Frustration and other symptoms of unmanageability will be common. Should indexing lose popularity, returns will turn negative as investors seek alternatives. If the herd abandons the index funds [...]

Picking stocks by the numbers (2009-9-7)

Most managers pick stocks by the numbers: P/E ratios, earning growth rate, EBITDA to enterprise value, and so on. Hundreds of studies have shown that you cannot outperform the market looking solely at numbers. Insight is required. But insight can cost a manager his job and a $500,000 annual salary. Picking stocks by the numbers [...]

College costs (2009-7-7)

I’m not going to bore you with every possible financial goal, but if you plan on putting yourself or someone else through college in the future, it’s imperative that you begin to save for that now. Again, to save adequately, you’ll need to eliminate your monthly debt obligations as soon as possible. Failure to plan [...]

The Magic of Growth Multipliers (2009-6-12)

The magic by which seemingly small income streams get magnified into huge market valuations is intimately tied up with the arcane mathematics of perpetuities. It sounds dull, but it is well worth understanding because it is the mathematical foundation of Wall Street wealth. Aperpetuity is defined as an investment offering a level stream of cash [...]

Competitive Power (2009-5-23)

Competitor reaction to an innovative new development is always uncertain, but it is to be expected. Competitors have the power to obviate the assumptions in a business plan. Ignoring this power can lead to overvaluation of the option. We have seen this factor in the Amazon case. Prior to the innovation, some competitor reaction is [...]