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Stocks use a Ticker or an abbreviation to allow you to quickly find them. Facebook (Ticker: FB), Apple (Ticker: AAPL), Netflix (Ticker: NFLX), Alphabet (we know it as Google, Ticker: GOOG), Microsoft (Ticker: MSFT). Ticker Tape Provided by Macroaxis

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Showing posts with label Apple. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Apple. Show all posts

Saturday, March 30, 2024

How to Find Value? -- Start with Stocks Down Quarter 1 2024

   

Investing In Yourself – Using Pillars to Build Your Core
Setting Budgets + Saving for Black Swans


How to Open My First Brokerage Account

Diversify your Life (Mind, Body, Soul, + Investments)

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How to Find Value? -- Start with Stocks Down Quarter 1 2024

Sometimes I like to find value in stocks that are a bit down and out. They all have their own stories for why their stock prices are down. It can be a good starting point, if you like to do a bit of research to see if there is some value there. Take a look at this list and tell me, are you a buyer?

Here is a quick list of stocks down in Q1 2024:
Stock NameTickerQuarter to Date
% Decline
TESLATSLA-28%
BOEINGBA-26%
MARKETAXESSMKTX-25%
CHARTER COMMCHTR-24%
NIKENKE-13%
INTELINTL-13%
APPLEAAPL-10%

Monday, February 07, 2022

Peloton (PTON) - Is it Going Down in the DM?

 


Investing In Yourself – Using Pillars to Build Your Core
Setting Budgets + Saving for Black Swans


How to Open My First Brokerage Account

Diversify your Life (Mind, Body, Soul, + Investments)

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Also Coming Soon - a series on #HowtoInvest. People have been reaching especially after the spikes in Gamestop, AMC, and other stock to learn the basics. I self-taught myself how to invest beginning at the age of roughly 18 and have never stopped. To be a good investor and ensure you are not gambling (speculating), I'll cover (hardest parts of investing in RED):

Budgeting 101 - How to Fund Ur Investments?
Why Stocks as an Investment?
What is Ur Investment Profile + Personality?
How to Pick Stocks?
When to Buy Stocks?
How to Enter My Trade?
How Many Stocks Should I Own?
When to Sell Stocks?
Am I Speculating (Gambling)?

Peloton Interactive Inc (PTON)

I get many readers ask me the question: "What do you mean when you say Value Stocks"? Then I refer them back to my favorite analogy. I have stuck in my head, from my youth, that candy bars should be $50c. When I travel the country and have to stop at a gas station, I WILL NOT buy candy unless it's $50c. I'm stubborn like that. I'll get the king size bar only if it's $1 dollar. A value stock is when you've done your homework and know what you think it should sell for like my Reese's cups. A value investor like myself tries (key word) to only buy when I see my Reese's cups (or a stock) AT or BELOW this level. Yes, go ahead and make fun of me but I'm principled in that way. I apply the same standard to stocks. I prefer to buy when I see it on sale and have a price in mind. 

Don't believe me just watch moment: Go back and search for one of my best investments ever, Sprint. Sprint got "beat down" like they stole something, and I swooped in. When T-Mobile came calling, they offered a higher price to merge (as we say here "date" or "hook up" with) Sprint. It was truly a beautiful trade and we made lots of money. 

I think Peloton is starting to shape up the same way my Sprint trade did. This stock was once as high as $150 just a year ago. To me, Peloton is just a bike but the stock skyrocketed once it came public. It has fallen from grace to a low of $22 dollars. Like the winter olympics, you don't want a stock chart that is sloping downhill...not good.

Rumor has it companies may be sliding into their DM trying to hookup. I bought some Peloton today because it reminds me of whenever I find Reese's cups for $50c. Usually, it's a time to load up because I just don't see if often. With Peloton, I still struggle with the need for an overpriced exercise bike. I will probably need to interview some actual users to fully understand all the benefits, but I said the same thing about the Apple iPhone and many people are happy with paying for an overpriced phone. I think there is definitely a market for the "connected" use of the bike but clearly, I didn't agree with the price of the stock. I finally feel somewhat vindicated, now that the stock has cratered but it took a while to get here. Long story short, is I can see clearly now the rain is gone. And I think Pelton is worth some risk if Amazon, Apple or other suitors wanna hookup.





Saturday, April 03, 2021

Subscriber Update: W.R. Grace (GRA) Going Up | Prism - Colorful Leadership | Know Your Worth

 

Investing In Yourself – Using Pillars to Build Your Core
Setting Budgets + Saving for Black Swans


How to Open My First Brokerage Account

Diversify your Life (Mind, Body, Soul, + Investments)

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Coming soon is a post on Health -- The Body. You have to invest in and know the data about your body. Like many people of color, I get nervous about hospitals and doctors. Thanks to my corporate job, I was exposed to annual exams and blood tests. Unfortunately, when I made the shift to being an entrepreneur I didn't keep up with my annual exams. And it may be costing me...stay tuned for a future post on Health and how that impacts your Wealth. 

Also Coming Soon - a series on #HowtoInvest. People have been reaching especially after the spikes in Gamestop, AMC, and other stock to learn the basics. I self taught myself how to invest beginning at the age of roughly 18 and have never stopped. To be a good investor and ensure you are not gambling (speculating), I'll cover (hardest parts of investing in RED):

Budgeting 101 - How to Fund Ur Investments?
Why Stocks as an Investment?
What is Ur Investment Profile + Personality?
How to Pick Stocks?
When to Buy Stocks?
How to Enter My Trade?
How Many Stocks Should I Own?
When to Sell Stocks?
Am I Speculating (Gambling)?

Subscriber Alert - W.R. GRACE Update

All the way Up!!! 

Google's data analytics is scary. If I mention, write, research, or track a stock I find news updates every now and then in my Google feed related to stocks I own. Being a cyber guy it gives me the creeps, but when I do get news I can use...I'm less grumpy. This update popped up in my feed:


The price for a company I JUST did a reveal on to my subscribers has gone up. W.R. Grace & Co. has someone trying to slide into the DM and they just won't go away. 40 North Management LLC raised its offer to hook up with W.R. Grace & Co. to $70 per share in cash. When I bought and posted about this company it was in the mid $50s. Please don't hate, participate and sign up.

Here was that article where I "revealed" my W.R. Grace Co trade and even showed you my actual purchase transaction in my stock account: No Hail Mary Needed - WR Grace

We bought in November 2020 and based on this deal price we just made $15 for every share we own. If you're not good in math: 100 shares x 15 = $1500 and I'm sure you get the point if you own 200, 300, shares.

Time to find another stock to trade. 

Prism

1) Are we "Including" Underrepresented Groups 
Why I'm Reading: I am proud to see Corporate America's push towards increasing the numbers and roles of women in Corporate America. They make up 55% of the population, and I'm a firm believer of no taxation without representation. However, I also implore Corporate America to DIVERSIFY this mission and truly expand this all underrepresented classes. Being in a position where I negotiate deals with corporate employers, I chose not to accept a deal because a local company had no (I mean zero) people of color represented on their board. I applauded the fact they had 4 white women on their board but I was shocked when they were touting their board diversity...and I didn't see what diversity meant to me. Let's not get technical here...I shouldn't have to change terms and ask for their board to also be more "inclusive" to have minority and age representation. At some point, corporations and boards will need to have diversity across gender, race, and age to truly represent the values this country is trying to live up to. 

I'm reading this article because it is about Ms. Mellody Hobson the only African-American chairperson to lead a board of directors among S&P 500 companies (a listing of 500 US blue chip companies). It also celebrates Rosalind Brewer who was recently named the chief executive officer of Walgreens Boots Alliance Inc. Congrats to these two and keep doing big things.  Quite simply, my question is why only 1?

Side Hustle 101 - Know Your Worth

1) Paying College Players Their Worth 
Why I'm Reading: I have been a huge advocate of people knowing their worth. Educate yourself, provide a service to the community, and ask for the appropriate compensation for your time...unless your volunteering. People from all backgrounds have rebutted my argument to pay college players over the years. To quiet the crowd, I ask why can teenage tennis players get paid for their play (see player and age in brackets): Martina Hingis (age: 12); Coco Gauff (age: 15) or golf players can get paid as long as they qualify for the respective golf tournament, even baseball players can go professional right after high school. Only FINALLY, is the world rallying around a stance I've taken for over a decade. Pay the damn players and allow them to make money and be compensated off their image. This means if I play college sports and you sell a jersey with my name and number...I get paid. As a former High School Athlete of the Year, I was blessed to have a choice to go to college on a sports or academic scholarship. Being a math guy, I may have miscalculated but I knew that only 3% of all athletes ever go pro. I loved playing football and crashing into each other...but I also loved my health and realized I was going to be successful at whatever I did. I'm reading this article because if further proves that college athletes should be paid, are not treated fairly, need to understand their worth, and are being taken advantage of because they are black and brown in the big money earning sports. THIS IS FREE LABOR...and I don't play that. If a young athlete gets injured their value diminishes immediately and most aren't going to school to focus on academics...they are there to make money for the program. Keep it real and pay them.


2) Negotiate Your Own Deal "Own Your Masters"
I've also big a big fan of "owning your own masters". The second link is a partnership people Apple and UnitedMasters that is trying to help musicians do just that. If you don't understand your contract don't sign it. Cut out the middle man and you'll be surprised how much you bring in. I use this rule when investing and it's treated me well.

Thursday, December 31, 2020

KUUMBA | CREATIVITY - Creativity Comes in All Forms

 Day 6 of Kwanzaa bring us Kuumba, or creativity. Full disclosure: I have tens of cousins and extended family members named Kumba so first I want to send a shout out to all my second born girl cousins who all seem to be creative souls. 

For me I wanted to speak on Creativity in a slightly different matter. When I think of creativity I think of resilience. I'll start with people I find creative:

Stevie Wonder - One of the youngest musical prodigies, Stevie overcame his disabilities to make music that touches the soul and creatively matches the activist mood of the country every step of the way.

LeBron James - As a 20 something, he was a super resilient athlete who knew his legacy would be tied to competing at the highest level and winning championships. Despite an owner and city bad-mouthing him (for leaving Cleveland) and fans burning his jersey he maneuvered the National Basketball Association (which primary is managed and coached by white males) to win championships with the Miami Heat. He returned to Cleveland and "delivered" a championship, and returned the luster and shine to my beloved LA Lakers franchise by winning a 4th title. He creatively did this when no other players did these types of things. He recruited players, now negotiates short-term deals so he can maximize his value (sound familiar), and uses his brand and platform for a school in Akron, his management team are people of color, his agent Rich Paul is black, and he is active politically... when most players previously didn't want to impact their business dealings and brand. Remember: "Shut Up and Dribble"

Streaming Content / Cord Cutters - A whole industry has been built off a simple premise I've written about here of the years. Why do I pay for channels I don't use?? When we cut the cord this year out of frustration with Comcast jacking their prices up (even though we could afford it), my technology boundaries led me to install an HD antennae. This was perfect for the kids as we get PBS, not much of a drop of there. It wasn't bad for the wife as most of her shows are actually non-cable TV shows. But boy, I took a hit, which the industry knew, because I follow sports and a few cable TV shows. Our family has saved easily over $150 a month by cutting the cord and just going to high speed internet and we showed resilience by not crawling back but creativity by treating ourselves to a ROKU streambar. A small investment got me a soundbar (not the best but decent) and introduced us to the creative world of streaming content. I can stream news channels and stock broadcasts and the kids can stream PBS and a few different cartoon options. My wife tapped her social network and now flips through Apple, Netflix, Hulu, HBO, and who knows what else. The most ironic thing is I recommended this stock and didn't fully understand the flexibility its technology was providing for this new generation of streaming and cutting traditional cord options. I now understand why Hulu wants to sell Live Sports and why Fubotv, a sports only streaming channel, skyrocketed 330% this year. 

State's Get Creative - Maybe the most creative thing I do, because of my job as a consultant/auditor is I am forced to listen to both sides. So I am one of the rare people that you will meet that wants to hear all angles before I begin my own investigation. I roll over in laughter as state and federal politicians preach those good ole puritan values. But the data tells me and it should tell you...they are doubling down in vices or supposed sin to fill their budget coffers. I won't go Boardwalk Empire on you...but you don't find it odd that your state:

  • Offer Lottery Tickets
  • Expanded Casinos and now is offering or looking into the growing world of sports gambling
  • Offers Medicinal marijuana and many now make bank off of recreational marijuana (after years jailing minorities for something that magically becomes legal with the stroke of a pen?)
  • Many cities are discussing reducing or removing drug tests because with the saturation of Meth throughout poor and middle-class America, Corporate America now can't find lower income white talent who can pass rigorously screening that often kept minorities out of their ivory towers. In my state, we've even discussed remediation centers, so these persons don't fill the jails and get a different path. Where was this creativity during the crack epidemic? Where were the work release programs for minority dealers selling weed, which we can't seem to control because the people have spoken: they were buying all that weed being sold and don't see the harm?
Front Line Workers - A personal message to the persons on the front lines. To be a part of the richest nation and day after day you had to patch together solutions so that you could try to have effective PPE, because we didn't stockpile or purchase enough is unacceptable. That is creative and God Bless You

My creativity I believe comes from going against the grain. When people turned against Tesla and Elon Musk, I decided to invest. When, I saw COVID-19 ravage China, I spoke out early. When many said the Sprint deal couldn't get done I creatively looked to simple clues like my Billionaire buddy and Sprint Chairman Masa Son selling his mansion (Mission Hills, KS) months before the deal as vindication this deal was gonna get done. Finally, in late Nov/early Dec I landed my 2nd corporate cyber project in as many months. The meetings were very smooth, so smooth our client decided to contact me directly via LinkedIn immediately after our discussion. Due to my company size, I often work through a middleman (because I still have a 9-5 job)...so when I learned I didn't receive the project I was floored. How could everything go so right with my client and this middleman tell me it's not going to happen. So I thought creatively, reached out on LinkedIn and voice my surprise but willingness to help him and his organization now and in the future. Strangely, a week later I get a call, the middleman now needs my help as the client wants me and my organization for the cyber project.

Don't be shy like Black Lives Matter was to be the voice that goes against the grain. The grain sometimes means you have a bunch of people entrenched that don't want to see change. I'm not sure city halls, police unions, and some people in our community want to see change...many love their comfort. Like my contract negotiation, some want to cut you, and maybe offer a lower priced vendor. I represented change a minority partner that was demanding my fair and sizeable share of the revenue for the work my company would be performing.  They didn't account for my subject matter expertise and my subtle comment to my client that we has so much in common there was no way we didn't have common colleagues in our line of work. That sowed a seed that creatively bucked the system wanting to cut me out of what I was entitled to. 

Please be resilient and use your KUUMBA. It's New Year's Eve, I wish you all a Happy and prosperous New Years. Peace and Love

Monday, December 31, 2018

2018 YEAR IN REVIEW – A YEAR OF GROWTH...A YEAR OF OPTIONS


2018 was quite an interesting year for stocks, the economy, and for me.  Before we close the book on this year, it’s also fitting to look back and reflect.  This is bit of my spiritual side speaking but for my financial folks it’s a moment to stop and balance your books. If you’ve read my previous posts, I talk about the importance of goal setting.  Now is the time to reflect on whether you hit those targets across ALL of your Pillars. Did you grow your spirit, mental fortitude, physical well-being, and finances? 

When I take a moment to reflect, I see some small strides I’ve made which I KNOW I will carry on into the New Year. My past year was the year of the FITBIT, where I became physically healthier (even playing basketball one a week) by challenging myself mentally to meet my daily health goals and give up unneeded foods, sugars, etc. I even gave up drinking (with the exception of a HS reunion event) and I was surprised I was up to that challenge (considering Little Jon wrote the Patron song specifically for me).  I concluded my financial challenge of renting, for the last 1.5 years, a house that did not meet most of our needs BUT it allowed us to SAVE and meet our new budget goals (2 paid off vehicles that are over 14 years old).  Again, an exercise in mental toughness for those who struggle with sacrificing today for a bigger picture.  Next, I personally want to thank my family for the changes they made this year to help us meet our family financial budget. This is turning into an effortless exercise (NOTE: IT DID NOT START THAT WAY) of developing a budget at the beginning of the year, then as a family we have to log all of our actual expenses. We use only one joint family account for family planning so there are NO SECRET EXPENSES that crop up (if we didn’t budget for it don’t bring it up and it’s not an item we are buying). In summary, we MET THE BUDGET FOR OUR HOME!!  Another goal met was buying our 2nd Home! This was accomplished by those seeds we sowed a few years back…renting our first home, budgeting and sacrificing for our new home which took a few years to save up for the deposit needed.   

Many will overlook that these activities crisscross through a few of my Pillars; rarely does a challenge involve just one.  Taking on these goals has made me mentally stronger, a decent multi-tasker, better prioritizing and dealing with RISK.  I am equally proud of the last two items which have fueled my growth the most this past year.  # 1 – I took on the project of building out a consulting practice after companies continued to approach me for my skillset.  I still work in Corporate America but on my terms which has made me SIGNIFICANTLY less stressed (Pillar: Spiritual), in better health (Pillar: Physical), make more money (Pillar: Financial), and more technically skilled (Pillar: Mental/Education) then I have ever been.  #2 – I explored options for the first time in portfolio and it was a big reason for my investing success this year.  I have been studying it for months, used a fake portfolio of money to test trading strategies out, and implemented BASIC trades that have complimented my LONG-TERM VALUE oriented approach.  I repeat, I was afraid and had never traded an option contract in my life.  This year I’ve executed over 80+ option contract trades in a way that I believe lowers my investing risk, especially considering I’ve told people to be cautious because we are in the 10th year of a stock market rally.  In summary, always stay balanced, clear minded, and focused. Help others yet use common sense and be prudent. The survivors in "The Walking Dead" did not survive from being lazy...you always have options and choices in life. Stay blessed.

For my reflection, and those of you that come here for the stocks my Financial YE Trading Review:

What Worked?
VALUEBy sticking with my value approach, I barely bought or sold ANY stocks in the last year. I sold 3 stocks this year that I held for more than 1 year because I felt the markets were reaching their tops.

Apple (AAPL)I sold my entire position of Apple @ $200. Remember when we bought under $100. So long old friend until we meet again.
PBF Energy (PBF) – I sold energy which shot up earlier in the year. Now energy is back down to its lows. We’ll have to scrape the bottom of the barrel and see if its value time to pick shares back up.  PBF was in the low $20s and I sold $47. Funny at the time I thought I got out a little early.
Sirius Satellite (SIRI) – I owned this stock because I used to own XM Satellite radio, yes since 2005.  I watched the charts hit highs of $6.62 and decided to part ways after 13 years.  In a strange twist of irony, I recently purchased Pandora…who is being acquired by SIRI. We may be reunited again J

OPTIONS – My experiment in options was helpful this year.  When the market is up 10 years straight, the only thing that is certain is VOLATILITY.
            Volatility Index (VXX) – I traded the VXX over 5 times successfully for big gains. My only reflection was to bet bigger.
                Options – I traded over 80+ options contracts. I needed to test my strategy okay. We traded small amounts for high success. I might be above an 85%  success rate. Time to ramp up

DISRUPTION – I traded options contracts 3 sectors that were ripe for Mergers and had a handful of option contracts that did well when the stocks were acquired by other companies:

KLX Inc. (KLXI)
Dell Technologies Inc. (DVMT)
Cronos Group Inc. (CRON) * I believe the deal is still pending, but my options were sold
Red Hat, Inc. (RHT)                                 
Time Warner Inc. (TWX)

What Kind of Worked?
Radisys Corporation (RSYS) I held RSYS for years. Sold some during the good times and closely followed the quarterly earnings. They were in the process of turning the company around but had the RISK my small consulting practice has. They were reliant on 1 or 2 big vendors. The biggest being Verizon. When VZ abandoned their unlimited data strategy for a while it hurt RSYS earnings. I felt vindicated when the acquisition was announced and I believe Reliance Jio purchased this company early as 5G is now taking off a major strategy for all telecom companies. So I feel vindicated they were purchased and rebought before the acquisition. BUT I did take a loss on this position.

What did Not Work?

I have 3 simple lessons learned that all investors must heed:

1)       If the Government is MAD at another Country, GET OUT of those option contracts: I had two Chinese stocks that got beat up once the Trump Administration decided to impose tariffs on China:
NXP Semiconductors N.V. (NXPI) – I had a profitable position, up huge. Trump Administration began their tariff stance and China retaliated by NOT APPROVING the Qualcomm merger of NXP. Qualcomm needed approval from 9 countries

JD.com, Inc. (JD) Another contract that was positive, and you know the rest.

2)      Don’t trade options contracts into earnings season:
Match Group, Inc. (MTCH) I got busy at work and should have exited this position before earning. Went from being up big, to a small loss. Lesson learned

3)      Don’t hold option contracts when the market begins declining:

Teva Pharmaceutical Industries Limited (TEVA) – I was up by enough points that I was going to simply let the contract expire profitable. I don’t think you understand, Teva was at $23 or higher and I had a contract for $17. During the market downturn, I saw the unbelievable happen in a matter of 2 weeks. Again went from being up to taking a small loss.

Caesars Entertainment Corporation (CZR)

Saturday, August 04, 2018

Apple Proves Value Investors Like Tech

Many people know my personality is similar to my investing style...I tend to go against the grain.  As a techie, I don't love the Apple phones for a technical reason it's a closed source ecosystem. Unlike open source devices, Apple prefers that you use only their software and products. I have to remind people that Apple did not invent putting things in the cloud, sending files/messages should be something you should be able to do to any phone, and chargers are meant to be universal.

But in order to be a good investor your personal preferences should NOT interfere with buying stocks.  While I don't own the phone, I don't dismiss many people around me use the phone. Or the fact that iTunes gift cards are a normal gift around the holidays without even asking me if I am an iPhone owner.  But these aren't the reasons why I decided to stake a claim in the value play a few years ago.  Many forgot back in 2016, Apple was trading under $100 dollars and there was fear they wouldn't be able to break into China and growth had stalled.  But as Apple continued to reinvent itself, I saw value in a company starting to pay a dividend, expanding internationally, and growing a profitable services and payments business. So when there is fear in the water you stake a calculated claim on an old dog that still has a few tricks.  Being in Risk Management, I had fun analyzing this stock and pulling the trigger when everyone was saying I got in too late. At an average of roughly $93 dollars, I was betting on a growing dividend, growth in China (maybe India), apps being the future (including iTunes), and logical determination that Apple phones would become larger as I knew people would share my frugal sensation over phone/tablets or phablets if you prefer (why have one of each when supersized phone does the trick).  I am not placing a big bet on Payments yet because I tend to know a little bit about this space. While people love the technology...I think there needs to be one wallet that can travel with you as you change from an ApplePay, SamsungPay, GooglePay....and merchants are CHEAP so it will be a very long time until every store and gas station pay for upgrade technology that supports these new types of payments.

Many say value is dead but I argue, you have to look in the right places. I just read an article about how Warren Buffet and Berkshire are enjoying the amazing gains of Apple. I laughed because I'm wondering if the pupil is finally learning from the teacher...looking back I bought Apple prior to when Berkshire made their purchase:

Post Mentioning Apple:
https://urbanomics.blogspot.com/2016/10/how-to-invest-in-clinton-trump-election.html 

Wall Street Journal: Buffet Bet Big on Apple


This has also happened with Teva Pharmaceuticals recently so I hope to keep the streak alive and maybe may a few future recommendations...one Oracle to another. :)

Friday, October 28, 2016

How to Invest in a Clinton / Trump Election Year...

First, I'll address where I've been since my posts have dried up for about a year. My answer is: "Still Right Here".  As we all know for the last few years, people continue to have to do more with less and that extends to companies. With unemployment pretty low for most big companies, they have to squeeze more out of every employee.  Good old fashion hustlin', and I got the memo and have been very busy at work and in my personal life.  The other reason, I haven't written much is because as a country and in the stock market things appear to be in a holding pattern.  I had a feeling a little over a year ago that the stock market was reaching its tops and I took my ball and went home.  For my portfolio, that meant I decided to sell some of the stocks that had been big winners. If you need a reminder flash back to this post: http://urbanomics.blogspot.com/2014/08/marketsno-longer-starting-from-bottom.html

I never like selling but if life you can't get too greedy so I parted ways with names like:

  • Allergan - maker of botox (Allergan was acquired Actavis for a nice price) :)
  • Lululemon - athletic wear (bought when it was in the low 40s, after some of their pants were showing too much skin and when the CEO ranted he didn't want bigger sized women wearing the clothes, and waited for them to correct their missteps)
  • Caterpillar - big equipment maker (bought early and they fell, then I acquired more shares over time through patient dividend investments and they rallied above my purchase prices...just sold in the last few months for a small gain)
  • NovaGold - gold miner (bought over 3 years ago and they dropped by over $50 percent; my old mentor reminded me if the fundamentals make sense buy when they are on discount. At roughly $3 I bought more and sold a good portion of it this year at just under $7. 

I felt a little over a year ago we were closing in on the top and I was just a bit early, but by planning then I was starting to set myself up for what's to come. A market near its highs, a Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump election year, and other surprises like the UK leaving the European Union have kept the markets a little uneasy. So I'll tell you what I've been quietly doing as I've sold my winners over the last few months:

Buying Top-Tier Companies (when they reached Low Prices):

  • Apple (bought in the low $90s)
  • Verizon (bought in the low $40s)
  • Manchester United (bought b/w $13-14 range)
  • Gilead (bought b/w $73-74) 
  • Alibaba (low $80s)

These bigger names anchor my portfolio and should grow in good times and fingers crossed, the bad times. They all pay a dividend so they will pay you to wait :)

I then decided to begin thinking about how I wanted to thin my portfolio out to and hold higher quality names. I've been making hard decisions and here are some of the mistakes I think I have made:

  • Gold - NovaGold (I still own a small portion and should have sold it all when it hit its highs)
  • Oil - There is too much oil around the world and oil stocks are NOT going anywhere anytime soon. I own (British Petroleum(BP), Oasis Petroleum, Cheniere Energy) and the only good thing is the latter two, I don't hold big positions. BP pays a nice dividend so I use that to buy more shares and love that this is a long-term cornerstone of my portfolio at these levels.
  • Non-Dividend Stocks, Not Growing - Lastly, I have a few stocks that don't pay a dividend!! I've held them for quite some time and they are just sitting there taking up space. For me names like:  St. Joe's Company (real estate), Nuance Communication (voice services like Siri), Hertz, and a few others just are not bringing much to the table. So I'll likely be parting ways with these names in the future.
I'm reminding you to go Vote, go Cubs, for me...go focus on higher quality names in this crazy election year.

~ Get Ur Urb On

Saturday, March 01, 2014

2014 - Themes Shaping My Investments (pt 1)

I want to capture the themes that I believe are shaping the world in 2014 and for the foreseeable future.  Game changing events shape people first, then entrepreneurs react, and finally investment dollars follow.  This is important for many people to remember in my opinion when looking back and asking why is the world changing right before my eyes and how can I participate. I've heard the phrase when life gives you lemonade...and changed it to when you and the world are buying or using a quality product think about investing in it.  I have a good friend that constantly talks to me about Whatsapp and if anyone close to me knows Apps are not my thing but I find out they were bragging about what would be a 19 Billion Dollar company I was just being introduced to.

Theme 1: E-Commerce

I write about this theme often and the verdict is in, many people prefer the comfort of buying things online. I know I do and a number of entrepreneurs have responded to become mega online retailers for everything imaginable.  Continue to think about the ways our buying patterns change on the Internet and take advantage of the companies that will capitalize on it first OR do it better. This will be a combination of new and old companies changing the way we shop. Remember last year, there was a reason why so many packages were delayed during the Christmas holiday by UPS and that theme is the comfort of buying things online.

- Amazon, Ebay (Paypal), Yahoo, Google, Walmart, Home Depot, UPS, Fedex

Theme 2: Mobile /APPS

The mobile wars are heating up. Finally, most of the world is warming up to a concept I've been using for quite a while: "No Debt/No Contract".  The mobile companies have used contracts to their advantage for quite some time and this has led many people to enter into never ending contracts that change usually on the companies terms. My philosophy is don't sign it until to read it. If you don't like what you read...call the company and see if you can change the terms...or don't sign it. I buy my phones myself and never enter into a contract. Many people have not paid attention to the fine print so AT&T, Verizon, and Sprint have dominated the US market. The public is tired of this model and now enters T-Mobile and their "no contract" and "cheaper packages".  And now the big companies like AT&T must follow suit with lower prices or lose customers.

Then enter the world of Apps...I can't explain the love affair for all things FLAPPY but Apps are the favorite hobby of the world.  I personally don't use very many apps but I can't deny their staying power. 

- Verizon, AT&T, Sprint, T-Mobile, Apple, Samsung, HTC, Nokia, Blackberry, Facebook, Whatsapp, Snapchat, Zynga, Candy Crush

...the remaining themes are to be continued

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Interesting Things the Stock Market Told Me...

Some may call it beginners luck, but I like to say the stock market can teach you a number of pretty interesting things.  I hate to admit, that it makes me a 'Jack of All Trades' and I seem to know a little bit about some of the strangest subjects under the sun.  I can hold a conversation on the buzz around hydraulic fracturing (known as fracking) in the oil and gas industry or debate why the housing market may have bottomed in Phoenix or never really declined in the metro Washington DC area.  Here are some of the non-stock things I've learned from the Mr. Market:

Friday, September 24, 2010

A look back in time...

I've been following the ups and downs of the markets the last few months and what's interesting about my analysis is I don't really feel like much has changed. It has to be the most perplexing thing in the world for me now in my over 10 years of personal investing. It's perplexing because things are changing (slightly) and for the market we've seen its slow ascent higher. But I still think the market sucks. There is a lot of downside risk and I STILL like Commodities, Technology, Wireless.


I am clearing through my papers and I was looking of the habits of investing for success. The purpose of this blog was to capture the main theme of that write up and that was to keep a diary, a virtual diary in my example. The things to try and remember to do are:

~ Review your holdings (probably not daily)
~ Remember you portfolio includes all your accounts: Stocks, 401K, and IRA accounts do matter and they make up your complete portfolio
~ Pick how you want to measure your success: Success can vary from investor to investor so what defines whether you're up...a percentage, a target goal, etc
~ Start keeping track

I hope these tools go a long way into to helping you build your own portfolio. For me I do these things and really don't review my portfolio very frequently. I care about how they are trading but I don't get to concerned on their moves up or down. A great example was when we bought Burlington Northern Santa Fe. If you go back to when this stock was first recommended you will see why I thought it was important and at what prices I thought it was attractive. By taking notes, I still remember I liked this stock in the mid 70s because I believed that one of the positive things to take away from where the economy was at the time was the importance in commodities and the shift in emerging markets needing those commodities. I kept up with things but often didn't watch its swings. Its hard to wait but the odd thing was when Burlington finally got bought out at over $100 a share it was my friend that called me and alerted me of what had happened...I didn't know right away.


Here are a few examples of stocks that we've recommended over time and waited and watched them pay off as the fundamentals developed:


Supertel (SPPR) - I originally bought this in 2005 when it was known at Humphrey Hospitality. In researching my blog this was sold roughly 3 years later for around a 60% increase.

Cytyc (CYTC)- One of my all time favorite stocks, they were one of the first stocks I recommended and one of the first that I owned to get bought out. Bought at $17 and held until they got bought out in the $40s I believe.

Ambassadors International (AMIE) - This one was a stock that didn't move much for a long time I bought in 2004 for $13. I wrote an article 3 years later finally selling after I recall it hitting a peak of $32 and coming back down and settling in the mid 20s.

OIL - My call to buy oil stocks back in 2005 in my inaugural post was fitting. Who would have known the ride this commodity was going to be on going forward. Oil Post

Clayton Williams (CWEI) - Based on my call in oil, this was the a stock bought at $42 and this went all the up into the $100s. This took years to develop but what a ride.

Collectors Universe (CLCT) - Here is the final and prime reason to not let go of a good thing. CLCT is not the best stock I've owned over time, but it was the most stressful one to own. I have owned this stock since 2007. CLCT POST The story behind this stock and why I still own is because of fundamentals. This stock was paying a healthy dividend $.20c a quarter back then and helped me build up my war chest. When the decline of 2008 hit this stock plummeted to $4 when management cut the dividend. The only thing that stopped me from taking a huge loss was reading the financial report that was put out by the company. The newly appointed CEO (because the company booted the last one) outlined that the company could afford to still issue a dividend however it is prudent to hold the cash during tough times. So I waited and waited through the darkest period in the market and true to his word they brought the dividend back when the stock was around $6 a share. So I was essentially buying the stock each quarter with the dividends and lowering the cost of what I had bought the stock in. So today even with the stock standing at mid $13s a share we are seeing a 25% increase.


This is why its important to take notes.



Now it is even more important to remember your blunders and boy have I had a few in my past. The easiest one I can remember is:

Zhone Technologies - I rode this stock from $1.10 to the $1.40s. Then the fundamentals fell and I waited to long. This cost me a bunch as I never sold until this stock hit .70c! Ouch, they didn't get approval to sell in a region in Europe which they thought they had locked down. So this taught me be careful with penny stocks and they are volatile and their business can swing based on contracts.


Not Shorting Housing - This would have made me a legend if I knew about shorting back in the day. This post proves why you should write down your thoughts...my first call on housing and I didn't nothing about it: Housing


Rite Aid (RAD): Just a horrible pick and I'm glad to notice that I wrote about getting out of this position and putting my capital to better use. Ha to bad that cash went to Zhone Tech. LOL


NOT Buying Apple (AAPL) - I wrote a piece on this based on a reader question, and never followed my own advice.

BUYING ETFs - I will write here. Do not buy ETFs as an investment. I would only use these purely as hedges in your portfolio. They are difficult securities to own due to their calculations and just because oil is going up doesn't mean the ETF is going to do up also. Also, anything super levered (Banks x3) is just not smart!!! Repeat do not buy unless you are hedging your portfolio!!!

Tuesday, September 09, 2008

My Dougie

Said she likes My Dougie, I'm Fresh!

If I just lost you then you need to check out this track by artist Lil Wil...in honor of the legendary Dougie Fresh (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TqeGZpHCURo). Down in Dallas, they have given this legend a new life with the younger generation as "My Dougie" is used to describe someone's style...Fresh. I hope the readers here at Urbanomics appreciate our blogging and hopefully you like our Dougie. And the reason why we think our style is fresh is because we hope to bring a difficult subject, INVESTING, and try to explain it to you in a very simple way.

To invest I've learned that you must have a certain style or swagger. The reason I say this is because with so much going on with the markets and in the news, you must remain calm and make informed and logical decisions. As we have written here before, to assist in that process I recommend that you take notes of things that you read and hear. Then perform additional research to assist you in deciding what to do. If you were following the news you would have heard about some of the following stories:

Lehman Brothers - One of the largest investment banks is struggling to raise capital as losses from investments continue to pile up.
Apple/Steve Jobs - Apple is unveiling a new iPOD touch, but all that is on the mind of investors is Steve Jobs and whether he is healthy.
Oil - Oil has dropped to levels of roughly 100$, and will OPEC allow it to drop any lower.
Fannie/Freddie - I love Alan Greenspan's (former Federal Reserve chief) comment that these entities were structurally flawed because they socialize losses and privatize gains! This is so true, when they are struggling the government bails them out, but when they were profitting the only people gaining were the private investors owning the stock.

Lastly, I have often talked about price points and how important they are when investing and getting your stock selections at a great price. My Dougie has helped me patiently wait and here are some of the stocks that I liked but I had to wait for great price points.

Electro Scientific (ESIO) - I have been patiently waiting for levels of 13.80s

Big Lots (BIG) - Big Lots has benefitted from the hard times as more people turn to discount retailers. This stock is not a result of my screening, just a informed decision that makes sense. They hit a 52 week high at 34.88 and I think they will decline from those lofty levels. With stimulus checks running out and higher costs hitting most retailers they appear to be a great short opportunity. I believe Walmart, Target and most recently 99 Cents (http://www.cnbc.com/id/26622876) are being affected by this. Big Lots is a great short above levels of 33.50$.

CSX Corp (CSX) & Fedex (FDX) - I have been saying for awhile I like the transportation sectors as oil prices continue to decline. Now I haven't identified a solid price point but this may need to be done as FDX is already raising their guidance which is causing the stock to rise. I am hoping to see the effect of declining oil prices to benefit these sectors.

I'm out, Get your URB on!