Monthly Archives: August 2008

Ben Graham Stock Picking

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Filed under Investing, Stocks

1. Industrial firms should have current assets worth at least twice their current liabilities. Long-term debt should not exceed working capital.

2. The stock should have paid dividends for the last 20 years.

3. The company should have a minimum increase of at least one-third in per share earnings in the past ten years using three year averages at the beginning and end

4. The current stock price should not be more than 15 times the last three years’ average earnings.

5. The current stock price should not be more than 1.5 times the last reported book value.

(Warren Buffett : An Illustrated Biography of the World’s Most Successful Investor)

Forbes: The Richest Dropouts

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Filed under Economy & Finance

It is very interesting to read the story the richest dropouts in the world. Among those listed are Michael Dell of Dell Inc, Li Ka Shing, Sheldon Adelson, Larry Elison of Oracle, Richard Branson who suffers dyslexia, Roman Abrahamovich and of course Bill Gates of Microsoft.

Here are the Michael Dell interesting story…


Michael Dell enrolled as a biology major at University of Texas but spent more time fiddling with stacks of computer parts in his dorm room than hitting up the library. Instead of studying, he started selling new computers through advertisements in local papers.

It was a lucrative distraction. By the end of his freshman year, Dell was selling about $80,000 a month in computers. With the money rolling in, Dell decided not to return to school.

He dropped out of college at 19 to run the company that would become Dell Inc. Within the next few years, Dell’s annual sales passed $100 million. This March, Forbes’ pegged Michael Dell’s net worth at $16.4 billion.

And also an interesting quote from the founder of Microsoft.

“Too many of our students fail to graduate from high school with the basic skills they will need to succeed in the 21st-century economy, much less prepared for the rigors of college and career,” said Gates.

You can read more on the Richest Dropouts here at Yahoo Finance.

Investing Advice From Peter Lynch

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Filed under Books, Investing, Stocks

Peter Lynch, who was a portfolio manager of Fidellity Magellan Fund, which was the best performing fund in the world unedr his leadership from May 1997 to May 1990. Mr Lynch is currently vice chairman of Fidelity Management & Research Company.

Here are some advice form Peter Lynch, on investing, particularly in stock market investment area:

1. Don’t overestimate the skill and wisdom of professionals.
2. Take advantage of what you already know.
3. Look for opportunities that haven’t yet being discovered and certified by Wall Sreet - companies that are “off the radar scope”
4. Invest in a house before you invest in a stock
5. Invest in companies, not in the stock market
6. Ignore short-term fluctuations
7. Large profits can be made in common stocks
8. Large losses can be made in commons stocks
9. Predicting the economy is futile
10. Predicting the short term direction of the stock market is futile
11. The long term-retuns from stocks are both relatively predictable and also far superior to the long term returns from bonds.
12. Keeping up with a company in which you own stocks is like playing and endless stud-poker hand.
13. Common stocks aren’t for everyone, nor even for all phases of a person’s life.
14. The average person is exposed to interesting local companies and products years before the professionals
15. Having an edge will help you make money in stocks
16. In the stock market, one in the hand is worth in the bush

(Peter Lynch & John Rothchild - One Up Wall Street)

How You Can Avoid Credit Card Tricks

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Filed under Debt Management, Personal Finance

Found this video on YouTube. This video will discover what credit card companies don’t tell you that can cost you thousands! Plus, how you can fight them at their own game!

Global resources shares slump as commodities deflate

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Filed under CPO, Economy & Finance, News

CPO price declined RM 140 in the opening session for nearby contract month and closed at 2780 for the morning session.

Here was the news related …


HONG KONG, Aug 5 (Reuters) - Fear of a global slowdown has caught up with high-flying commodities stocks after a sharp decline in oil and metal prices, more gloom in the U.S. economy and a glimmer of deceleration in China.

“You’ve got an economic slowdown and markets are slowly coming to terms with it. Some of the speculation that was looking for safe harbour in commodities is starting to unwind,” said Mark Konyn, chief executive of Allianz SE’s RCM Asia Pacific arm, which manages about $15 billion.

“Our longer-term view is still for a structural uptrend, because we don’t see the demand easing at all and we still see some supply side constraints.”

Investors have relied for months on China’s boom supporting prices for oil, copper, aluminium and steel, even as the U.S. economy has suffered a housing crisis that has taken it to the brink of recession. Richer households in China and India have also contributed to a sharp rise in food prices.

But copper hit a six-month low and other industrial metal prices declined on Monday as rising inventories pointed to lower demand, while U.S. soybean futures hit their lowest in three months, with ideal crop weather boosting supply just as Chinese buying slowed down ahead of the Olympics in Beijing.

“At the moment, people are taking the view that the glass is half-empty, rather than the glass is half-full,” said Greg Goodsell, equity strategist at ABN AMRO in Sydney.

“Rather than looking at the positive side, that weaker commodities take the pressure off inflation, people are seeing it as a product of slower growth.”

Data last Friday showed China’s manufacturing sector contracted in July for the first time since an official survey began in 2005, although analysts said the slowdown was due at least in part to the shutdown of polluting industries ahead of the Olympics, which start on Friday.

“China’s economic growth has shown a drastic deterioration lately, which is much faster and worse than many people’s expectations,” Citigroup Asia strategist Lan Xue said in a note to clients.

The Reuters-Jefferies CRB index which tracks a basket of 19 commodities, fell 3 percent on Monday, wiping out all the gains made since early May.

The UK mining index shed 3.5 percent in London on Monday and Australia’s resources giants followed suit on Tuesday, with BHP Billiton and Rio Tinto down 5.6 percent and 4.8 percent, respectively.

Japan’s iron and steel index was down 3.0 percent and the MSCI ACWI Materials Index was 1.1 percent lower.

“After several years where the focus has been mainly on tight metal supplies, it seems the markets are finally focusing more on the implications of rapidly weakening demand,” said MF Global analyst Edward Meir.

The slide in U.S. crude oil which was trading at $120.65 in early Asian trade on Tuesday, also helped undermine U.S. natural gas futures which fell 8 percent on Monday.

Pressured by weak U.S. demand, oil prices have tumbled nearly 20 percent since hitting a record high of $147.27 a barrel on July 11. But oil is still up about 25 percent so far this year.

Australian oil and gas producer Woodside Petroleum was 5.4 percent lower on Tuesday, after a 4.9 percent fall in S&P Energy index.

China’s top oil producers PetroChina and CNOOC were down 2.5 percent and 4.5 percent, while refiner Sinopec gained 0.6 percent as the cost of crude oil fell.

“There is speculation that the commodity sector will continue to slip over the next few weeks,” said Joe Kinahan, chief derivatives strategist at online brokerage thinkorswim Inc.

“Many who have enjoyed great gains in this sector are buying puts as a protective measure.”

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