Is economic downturn stressing you out?

Gentle-man

New member
Aug 21, 2002
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tbill said:

"gentle-man" why dont you point out here the investments that made your clients 20%..if not email me your strategy at clear_hey@hotmail.com


I have just finished emailing tbill a web page containing a list of mutual fund companies all of which made in excess of 20% gain during the past one-year. All of those companies were top rated four or five star by Morningstar a highly reputable and respected survey company.

All told not less than 49 Mutual fund companies managed better than 20% during the past year. I was unable to reproduce the web page as a post, but if anyone else would like the information by email, please email or PM me.

Please keep in mind that receiving this information does not mean that I am recommending any of those companies as an investment. Anyone wishing to invest in such companies must see a licensed financial advisor as well as carefully studying the relevant prospectuses before deciding to spend their hard earned money to purchase shares in such mutual fund companies.
 

james t kirk

Well-known member
Aug 17, 2001
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Interesting thread...

The stock market has killed my holdings, to the point where i don't even open my statements. Yes, i own/ed Nortel, JDS, Rim, Celestica et al, but also sun life, Bombardier, TD.

Blah blah blah.

Many things previously said on this thread are true, consumers are spending, yes on borrowed money, but since when is that new?

Yes companies are NOT spending, but sooner or later they will have to and there is a lot of pent up demand.

Someone mentioned that unemployment is low. By my lifetime memories, yes, it is.

Perhaps a lot has to do with Demographics. With boomers now entering retirement, the employment picture for the Gen Xers such as myself (32 to 39 yr olds) is more secure than it would have been say 10 or more years ago under similar circumstances.

The so called Gen Yers have had it easy. They have never experienced recession.

I went through the early 90's recession and it was far more brutal than this. I didn't see any real turn around till 94, and by 96, it was starting to boom again.

If the economy follows a 10 year cycle (it used to be 7, but increases in producitivity and a change in the economy itself has stretched that to 10 years) and i believe that it does, we still have another 2 years of these doldrums.

Sorry to pee in your cherios.

All summer long i have been thinking, wow, there are some bargoons out there in the market, but thankfully, i have avoided temptation as every "rally" has turned into a sucker rally.

In fact, since march of 2000, every rally has been a sucker rally.

I am not so sure that real estate is a good investment at the current time. The prices are very very high in toronto, driven by low interest rates and the desire to get into the market. (The heard mentality)

I basically would be scared off at the price of my own house now.

To me, the current condo boom signals an END to the current real estate market.

Last time, in the late 80's, early 90 or so, you saw the exact same thing happening.

Condos were being built like weeds around the GTA. You had people spec-ing on condos. Putting 10 grand down on `10 units before they even broke ground and flipping them before theyh even had occupancy permits in hand.

Then the bottom fell out. First out of the condo market, then moving up the food chain.

Guys were trapped, owing more in mortgage than they could even hope to sell the place for. There were a lot of walk aways when interest and unemployment rates climbed together. The condo market and the neveau rich high end took it hardest.

Prices in real estate started to slide from 91 and didn't start to go up till 96. Single detached houses in toronto fell by as much as 40 percent from their 90 peak to 95/96. Condos even moreso.

Developers who had condo projects on the books in 91 / 92 either forgot about it, went broke (Bramalea comes to mind as one that went tits up), or switched at the design stage from condo to gov't housing (Daniels in Etobicoke at the former Good year plant site which once was going to be high end condos, switched to gov't housing when there was no more housing market.)

I am not so sure EXACTLY what caused it, but in 91, the unemployment picture got pretty ugly, and many many people were "under- employed", working for little money, etc.

All i know is that you can't convince me that a house in riverdale is worth a half million bucks right now.

It's going to turn, it's just lagging the stock market.

Moral of the story, if you are a couple, make sure you can survive on one person's salary, and don't over mortgage yourself.

I have heard that the banks are actually getting nervous these days with all the credit that is out there.

cheers
 
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SirTier

Senior Member
Aug 17, 2001
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Re: Don't get swayed away by low interest rates

Big Daddy said:
I was stupid to buy a house in May because of low interest rates. People will tell you buying is better than renting. One thing I have noticed that the combined cost of property taxes+ home insurance + maintenence (mowing, trimming, snow removal, mulching etc.) itself comes to be higher than or close to renting.

Right now, I am barely surviving. So if anyone is pondering buying a house to hedge against the volitality in the market. Be careful!

Standard Real Estate Broker trick ... "but the interest is so low, you can afford it" .. for now. More bad news ... wait till the interest rate goes up!!!

Sorry Big Daddy, I feel for you.

Some tips to help you get by: increase your deductible, pack a sandwich, defer some maintenance, TTC it, go country rather than alpine, books rather than movies, go for 1/2 hr. instead on an hour, visit Mrs. Palmer - or the Mrs. - more frequently. But seriously, in the long run ... real estate (particularly houses) are still the better investment. My last house appreciated by a whooping 40% over 10 years. My mutual funds ... let's not go there. My current home will be worth $1M (okay FV, but inflation, historically in Canada and US, has been very low ... and this is above and beyond my savings and hopefully my mutual funds).

Real Estate Brokers ... almost as bad as:

1. SPs who flame for negative reviews,
2. loud mouthed Americans on TERB who thinks TERB is the USA and they can give you their opinions since they feel so at home with our SPs
3. Canadian apologists who supports all of the above.


JMHO

P/S: I am in the market for a new car ... I've noticed even car salesmen are better behaved than the RE brokers.
 
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Big Daddy

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Sep 1, 2001
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The other minor irritable costs..

There are other minor costs that a first time home buyer does not think of. For example, a squirrel can find a home between the roof of your bed room and roof of your home, a ground hog can fuck you, and other wild life costs. Also, every weekend you will see kids at your door trying to raise money for cancer society or will sell something to raise money for thier soccer or football team.

I would say that adds to about $20-50 extra dollars per month as well. There are so many minor things that a new home buyer cannot think of and a Realtor will never mention.

On the bright side, having a home is a really satisfying experience. My advice to new buyers is that at least keep extra $10K for "initial unknown costs" when you buy a home. This will reduce a lot of frustrations. Many of these "unknown costs" can be one time costs, but you are likely to be hit by them in first two months after you buy a home. After that you can predict these costs well. Job security helps as well. Single home buyers have to be careful as they only have single source of income.
 

james t kirk

Well-known member
Aug 17, 2001
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CARPET?????

Who puts carpet in a house any more?

Hardwood all the way.

It's cleaner, looks better, easier to clean, lasts longer, adds value to a house.

I ripped out the old carpets in my place to expose long since forgotten hardwood.'

A few hundred bucks renting a sander, a dust storm and some wax and i had a new looking 100 year old floor.
 

SirTier

Senior Member
Aug 17, 2001
259
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tbill said:
the wall street journal wrote an article on renovations and in it they said you only get back 60 to 90 cents on the dollar for stuff you do to your house, i believe they said you get back 85 to 90 cents on the dollar for hardwood floors. i think its pretty obvious you don't get your moola back on most renovation work.

it reminds me of this chick i went to high school with way back; a nose job literally turned her from a dog to a fox.

Like this chick, a slightly renovated home on the market might not get you back 100 cents on the dollar, but it will enhance its curb appeal and sell the home faster. A stale home (meaning more than 30 days on the market) loses up to 10% of its possible selling pricebecause of less traffic and bids. I just bought a new home down my street that was on the market for 3 months and I picked it up for 15% less - had an engineer checked it out and all that was wrong was the paint job was one coat less than specified. The builder panicked and unloaded it to get his cash flow back.

The nose job on this chick got her "reviewed" on TERB. Does she SP, tbill?
 

Gentle-man

New member
Aug 21, 2002
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tbill said:
so what was on pages 2, 3 and 4
Just 34 more Funds that did better than 20% in one year. I did not e-mail them to you because I figured that the 15 on page one were enough to prove that I was not lying as you implied. And besides I have better things to do.

You are obviously not going to apologize for that statement or even admitting that you were wrong. Just shows everybody what kind of guy you are.

And if you are such an expert on investing how come you are not successful?
 

Gentle-man

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Aug 21, 2002
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Sure tbill, you'll do just fine, have a nice Thanksgiving......
 

CyberGoth

Veteran of the angel wars
Apr 18, 2002
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uhm... WHAT economic downturn?

unlike the 90s recession which was not much fun at all.

grins
cheers
 
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BigBlack

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Jun 26, 2002
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Gentle-man I Agree With Ya

Gentle-man I have also made well-over 20% this year with small and mid caps.It is definately a traders market though, very tough. You got to analyze the fundamentals and do a lot of charting to avoid the pits in this market.

Much of the advice on investing in terb is rather dubious, most outrageously stupid (the most foolish was from a sex board original veteran who obviously talks right out of his ass). Reading it always makes me shake my head and laugh. Sound like a couple of guys who read maybe a Peter Lynch book, understand a quarter of it and newspaper articles, thinking they are experts. Laughable. When it comes down to it, your consistent bottom line in all market conditions determines how much of an expert you are. Adapting investing styles to different market environments period.

Anyways, Gentle...you worry about your bottom line, let them worry about theirs. When the market turn around occurs everyone can make a boatload of money and stop calling people liars, or throw jealous accusations around with no basis. Doing your homework pays in investing. I am a hobbiest but have read over 20 books, the last few on charting, and trading in all the ranges. Interesting stuff.
 

BigBlack

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Jun 26, 2002
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Junk??

Why would a small cap or mid cap be junk? Large caps got rocked much more than smalls in this environment. I would hardly call stocks like Forzani and ALT junk, although their time of huge expansion is over. Then again companies like Nortel which you held for quite a while, with the piss poor balance sheets, dishonest executives, unethical , unrealistic projections..would definately be "junk."

You are the first guy that Has ever criticized my portfolio without even knowing what the hell is in it.
 

Malibook

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Gentle-man said:
As an experienced Ontario licensed, Independent Investments and Insurance broker, I can tell you that many conservative investors not only have not lost money but have actually been holding mutual funds which during the past 12 months have generated a return of about 20% and in fact have been doing that on average for ten years or more.
Conservative is a highly subjective term.

20% over 1 year is one thing, but to average this for 10 years or more is quite another and is certainly not so common.

This is a short term trader's market, long and short, and stop losses are prudent to lock in some gains and to avoid disasters.
Many are trapped waiting for massive gains just to get out of the hole.
For many it will never happen.
Buy and hold and dollar cost averaging is a good way to lose your money.
Play the bounces but don't get caught.
The bear martket that follows the greatest bubble ever has much more ways to go.
Average P/E's will be lower than their historical averages, and many complacent investors will have finally thrown in the towel before the markets truely bottom.
Long overdue options and pension plan accounting reforms will open many eyes to some truely scary realities.
It would be naive to believe that there are no more skeletons in the closets of numerous CEOs, accountants, brokers, and market makers.
Other than the shredding incident, was Andersen really so unique and different than the rest of them?
Massive numbers of people, companies, and countries are drowning in a sea of overwhelming debt.
The IMF has patched up recent crisises but they did not resolve anything.
Debt is a reality that must be faced and can't be resolved by printing more money.
Countries that were on the brink, now have even more debt and seriously devalued currencies.
When one defaults, it means that someone else must pay.
God help us all if the housing bubble bursts.
A severe recession would be a certainty and even a depression would be possible.
 
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