Archive for the ‘investing’

A distressed credit is very likely to default11.21.09

143Almost all bonds of companies being upgraded into investment grade show a significant spread tightening long before the actual rating action.  Of course at the time of the upgrade technical factors (new previously restricted buyers emerge) tighten the spreads further.

This is an effort to categorize the evaluation of Fallen Angels. Only the most important points are mentioned. In a first step, the analyst has to decide whether the company falls into the category stressed or distressed. The following points should help in the decision-making process. A distressed credit is very likely to default, and break-up value has to be determined. A stressed credit has a realistic chance for a turnaround and one has to estimate how likely this case is.

Companies that have a successful turnaround will show most of the following characteristics:

  • Successful deleveraging and improvement of the liquidity situation is realistic.
  • Asset Sales can be done in an adequate time and at acceptable levels.
  • Debt maturity profile is improved by refinancing (new bank lines and bond issues).
  • Additional rights issue is feasible.
  • Capital structure option is exercised in favor of bondholders and the equity market rewards these steps as well.
  • Corporate actions (reduction of CAPEX, postponement or cancellation of acquisitions, cost cutting, solid management of working capital).
  • Change of management.

Posted in bonds, business tips, credit, credit cards, economy, finances, investingwith Comments Off

Investors’ Fee Advice10.07.09

For a fee, newsletter writers rate individual stocks and funds. Most newsletter writers are optimistic sorts who like to predict ever-rising stock prices. A few are perennial bears. Newsletters sell from $60 a year to more than $1,000. The higher priced newsletters claim to have better information.

Newsletter writers on a hot streak sell more copy; some become household names for a few years until their streak runs out. Extensive studies of newsletters show less than 20 percent outperform the market. Higher priced newsletters are no more accurate than cheap newsletters. Most newsletters die within a few years of sending out their first batch of predictions.

Investors looking for certainty in an unpredictable market turn to newsletters. Their authors become gurus. Many a fortune has been lost along the way. The gold bug gurus of 1975-1980 continued to recommend half or more of a portfolio in gold throughout the 1980s as gold lost more than 65 percent of its value.

Investors who choose among newsletter recommendations and supplement newsletter research with their own research will benefit. One or two good picks can be worth the price of a subscription. On the other hand, as a newsletter subscriber, you may believe you are in an exclusive club with special knowledge about the market. This sense of grandiosity can be hazardous to your financial and mental health.

Posted in finances, investing, loanswith Comments Off

Complete powerlessness08.05.09

A feeling of complete powerlessness is unusual. We all like to feel that life is moving along in a positive, predictable fashion. For most, a sense of control over his or her own destiny is important. Unfortunately, savings, investing, and speculating are all affected by elements beyond our control.

At times, these elements produce extreme results. When the stock market dropped 90 percent between 1929 and 1933, the sense of powerlessness was so great that a whole generation vowed never to buy a single share again. Those left out of the great tech bubble that ended in March 2000 felt equally powerless as they saw friends or acquaintances become instant millionaires.

Powerlessness is most extreme in stock investing, but it is found in real estate booms and busts, bond defaults, and other investments. Powerlessness is paralyzing for the majority of investors. Market shocks cause a few investors to panic; most sit on the sidelines experiencing a sense of powerlessness as prices gyrate wildly. Anxiety, numbness, and depression are common manifestations of the sense of powerlessness.

Posted in credit cards, economy, finances, investingwith Comments Off

Your financial health and sanity07.21.09

What would you think if I told you study after psychological study ranked financial pressure as the one of the leading causes of stress, anxiety, unhappiness, and relational discord? And what if I also told you a joint study done by the Universities of Virginia and Arizona linked physical health problems to financial stress?

My guess is that most of these problems didn’t come from having too much money, or even just enough money. Instead, it probably came from owing a whole lot of money to other people.

As you clean up your debt situation, I’ll bet that you’ll begin to see noticeable differences in everything from your emotions to your physical health. While it can’t replace a healthier diet, regular exercise, or a trip to the doctor, it can sure help the underlying problems!

Posted in economy, finances, investing, loanswith Comments Off

Paying less interest07.07.09

Okay, I get it. Money is fun to spend, right? Would you be surprised if I told you that I agree and love to spend money? I do.

Ultimately, my beef with debt is that it forces you to send your money to someone else for something you bought in the past. I’d much rather get to spend it on things I truly want now or will need in the future (like a retirement or a college education for my kids). You have to shift your mind-set from “I don’t want to miss out on fun today” to “I want to have even more fun tomorrow.” It’s one of those “is the glass half empty or half full” type of moments.

By scrambling to pay off your debts now, that means interest does not accumulate as fast. That in turn means your debt gets paid off even quicker. This of course means the money you waste on debt each month will now be freed up for you to spend on whatever you like!

Let’s look at someone with $25,000 in combined short-term debts (a payday loan, a few credit cards, and some medical bills), with an average interest rate of 20%. Take a look at their total interest costs based on some different fixed monthly payments. What a difference $250 makes as you raise your payment from $500 per month to $750. It cuts your repayment period by more than half and saves $18,000 in interest! For what you saved in interest by paying off your debt as quickly as possible, you could go out and pay cash for a new car. If that doesn’t make the case for an opportunity cost of using your money for other things besides paying down debt, I don’t know what does!

Posted in finances, investing, loans, real estatewith Comments Off

Control and Communication in Finances06.12.09

Control is exercised by monitoring the company’s performance against agreed targets. Control over the transaction enables momentum to be maintained to complete it both during the restructuring discussions and subsequently within a given time frame. It also gives the participating banks the ability to react to events quickly, and thereby address problems before they are too late. Control plays an important part within the bank as well, so that the transaction team works efficiently and effectively.

Communication

Communication should be present at all levels: within the workout team in a bank so that all members of the team know the exact position and status of the restructuring; within the loan workout unit of a bank so that a consistent approach is adopted by the institution in all its workouts; within the bank to enable knowledge transfer from the workout department to, in particular, the bank’s credit function; with other creditors and the company during the restructuring so that all parties are kept informed of each other’s positions, where appropriate; and communication should be maintained with the company after the restructuring is in place to ensure effective monitoring and control.

Posted in investing, loans, real estate, taxeswith Comments Off

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