User Panel
I found that and I also found who wanted to sell AAPL at around $83 (USMC88-93) archive.ar15.com/forums/topic.html?b=1&f=133&t=535449(I'd been looking for that) I hope he held off selling. (Cpl_Chaos) archive.ar15.com/forums/topic.html?b=1&f=133&t=514490 Here's the story: I'm a 20 year old single soldier (E-3). I live in the barracks, and aside from food, toiletries, and cleaning supplies, I have no monthly expenses (no gas, insurance, phone, internet, etc.). My goal is to squirrel away as much of my paycheck as possible. I figure I can make it on about $200 a month, given my lack of bills. That will leave me with around $1500-$1800 (after deductions) a month to place into investments and savings. Of that I would like to put at least $1000 (and probably more likely $1200-$1500) towards stocks and/or mutual funds each month. The remainder of my disposable income I would like to put into a money market account for savings. My goal with the stocks and mutual funds would be to earn additional income, which would be redistributed into more investments and savings based on my future goals. My intention with the money market account is to establish an emergency fund of $3,000-$5,000, with anything over that amount being available for luxury purchases (guns, ammo, maybe a vehicle in a year or two). My target growth for stocks and/or mutual funds would be 8-10%. My target for a money market account would be 5%, but I'd take 4% if it meant going with a more reputable firm. Presently, I have $11,000 in cash with which to start. That's my story, and here's my problem: I'm no financial wizkid. I know how to save money, but I don't really know how to make it grow. For example, are my goals realistic? How about if I invest x dollars in y stock that pays z dividend, how much do I make? Do I get dividends quarterly or annually? What do I need to look at to determine which stocks I should buy if I'm buying for dividends and not based on pure speculation? Which firm should I go with? I've been looking into Scottrade, would they be a good choice given my situation? For a money market account, which should I go with based on my goals? Are they easy to set up and maintain, and do they really allow easy access to the money? Can I effectively manage all of this via the internet? These are just a few questions I have right now; I'm sure I'll think of more later. I appreciate any help offered. Posted :: 11/5/2006 9:57:57 PM EDT |
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There is no pressing need for optics that allow shooters to make sniper shots from over one hundred meters.
Posted by Brady Campaign on Sunday, February 18, 2007 at 2:11 PM |
Update, 20 Jul 2007:
I’m contemplating selling off all of LVLT into earnings (26 Jul). I would significantly reduce the speculative component of the portfolio and replace it with four stocks equally divided into $1200 segments. I’m happy with HAL and I believe CCIX will grow, although I bought it at the wrong time. Here’s what I’m considering: UTX- Has good domestic and overseas exposure, machinery play AHM- Owned this before and it’s in a sector that is getting pounded – home mortgage. I’m prepared to lose it all, but AHM will be my speculative play. If and when it rebounds, it should move strongly. This sector is a train wreck, but AHM is so cheap now, the downside risk is minimal. ACM – This is an infrastructure play in a very strong performing sector. I own a stake in this since $22 outside the 10K portfolio. CBI- This is an infrastructure play based in Europe. I’ll add more if I decide to do this Jim Current 10K numbers as of 20 July: Cash: $55.98 Overall Value: $11,208.98 LVLT holdings at Friday close: $4,656.00 |
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There is no pressing need for optics that allow shooters to make sniper shots from over one hundred meters.
Posted by Brady Campaign on Sunday, February 18, 2007 at 2:11 PM |
UPDATE:
SOLD 40 shares of HAL @37.03 on 26 July for a 26% gain. I really wanted to reduce my LVLT, but I was too late to pull the trigger before the correction came. I figured August was the month, but it hit earlier than I forecast. This can be a time of panic for an investor. I'm not concerned, as it is a normal market function. I was close to 15% unrealized gain when the correction came. Monday options: Buy 300 more shares of LVLT - why? To lower my overall cost. If I buy more shares, it's for a trade, not long term hold. Buy 20 shares of UTX Buy 35 share of CBI Buy 55-60 shares of ACM (I have a position in this in another portfolio) Also looking at AKAM, JEC, TXN; EMC and NYX (I have a position in both of these in another portfolio) All mortgage and builders are presently toxic and off the table for the forseeable future. Last option: do nothing. $1,527.15 Cash $10,245.75 10 portfolio value Jim |
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There is no pressing need for optics that allow shooters to make sniper shots from over one hundred meters.
Posted by Brady Campaign on Sunday, February 18, 2007 at 2:11 PM |
"Due to the special procedures performed by the Enigma machine, the solvability is so far removed from practical possibility that the cipher system of the machine must be regarded as virtually incapable of solution." -- German cryptographer, 1937
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UPDATE:
BOUGHT 10 shares of CCIX @ 16 on 10 August CCIX has really been crushed in the last few weeks of trading and is the main reason I’m in negative territory at present. CCIX short interest skyrocketed in July and it got hammered along with BGC, it’s main competitor when BGC announced earnings. Due to low volume, I suspect CCIX is being manipulated and that there's no underlying problems with the stock that I'm aware of. I’m not sweating it. I was on the road when a lot of the CCIX drop was happening, but even so, I couldn’t call a bottom and CCIX is a very long term hold. All things considered, I probably would have not sold it anyway. In fact, if it goes lower, I may pick more shares up. I also bought more ACM and EMC outside the 10K portfolio. EMC is a trade and I plan to sell it when EMC spins off the VMware IPO on 14 August. 10K Holdings: 60/HAL Long 110/CCIX Long 800/LVLT Long, may trade some if it runs above $7 $1357.15 Cash $9752.45 portfolio value Jim |
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There is no pressing need for optics that allow shooters to make sniper shots from over one hundred meters.
Posted by Brady Campaign on Sunday, February 18, 2007 at 2:11 PM |
UPDATE:
BOUGHT 40 shares of CCIX @ 17.99 on 22 August BOUGHT 100 shares of LVLT @ 5.06 on 22 August CCIX continued to be crushed through August. The worst part was I had just sold my old house and was moving into a new one, which was hugely stressful for me, but also very profitable. I only had my Blackberry, since I disconnected all my other comms and I see CCIX is under $10 and now I’m wondering WTF is going on. I get up and running by Friday and start to research. I see that the recently announced quarter was below expectations and the DOW is very negative, a double whammy in a very sucky week. At this juncture, I consider it pointless to sell since CCIX is way oversold, so I take a wait and see, figuring I’ll add to the position and average down, since this is a long term hold and not a trading stock for me. I decide to add to CCIX after I digest the two items below: - 21 August a co-chairman of Coleman Cable bought 66,300 shares of common stock. Insider buying is usually a good sign - 16 August a hedge fund took a 2,000,000 share position almost at the very bottom of CCIXs drop, which I also found interesting. I probably should’ve bought 100 shares, but I decided to add 100 shares to LVLT @ 5.03, giving me my cheapest shares to date. 10K Holdings: 60/HAL Long 150/CCIX Long 900/LVLT Long, will likely trade some if it runs above $7 $324.15 Cash $ 8,742.15 portfolio value (-12.7%). These are probably my last trades for the year and I still believe I’ll be at my target 15% at the end of the year. LVLT is a big chunk of speculation and I don’t know when it will hit, but I’m willing to wait it out through early 2008. Nothing is levered to sub prime, so I’ve minimized exposure as best I could. I also bought back CHDX at $17.99 for a trade into November outside of the 10k portfolio. Jim |
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There is no pressing need for optics that allow shooters to make sniper shots from over one hundred meters.
Posted by Brady Campaign on Sunday, February 18, 2007 at 2:11 PM |
Super interested to see arjedi's mix right now - are we going to get a EOM report?
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They are all animated.... because they have really long necks....
It doesnt kick, it just has bad recoil..... |
is a 24 hour wait until the EOM ok with you? ar-jedi |
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"Due to the special procedures performed by the Enigma machine, the solvability is so far removed from practical possibility that the cipher system of the machine must be regarded as virtually incapable of solution." -- German cryptographer, 1937
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"Due to the special procedures performed by the Enigma machine, the solvability is so far removed from practical possibility that the cipher system of the machine must be regarded as virtually incapable of solution." -- German cryptographer, 1937
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Outstanding.... given the turmoil. Cant wait till next month. I am betting on a big loss. |
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They are all animated.... because they have really long necks....
It doesnt kick, it just has bad recoil..... |
your bet = sitting on cash or actively short? ar-jedi |
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"Due to the special procedures performed by the Enigma machine, the solvability is so far removed from practical possibility that the cipher system of the machine must be regarded as virtually incapable of solution." -- German cryptographer, 1937
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Cash... except for a few equities underwater and I still believe in. I dont do the short game. Buying equities is gambling enough for me. Cash is paying 5.1% right now.... I know fear should be controlled in personal investments... but I am fearful about the next two months, and cash just seems like it gives me more options right now. I plan to re-evaluate in 60 days.... maybe sooner if there is movement. PS... I felt the exact same way laster year, at this exact same time. I pulled to cash - and that turned out to be a huge mistake. However... the market is in a different place than it was last year (at least, that is what I am telling myself to rationalize it) |
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They are all animated.... because they have really long necks....
It doesnt kick, it just has bad recoil..... |
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"War is less costly than servitude. The choice is always between Verdun and Dachau." -Jean Dutourd
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If the liquidity crunch turns out to be really bad, you might be the one having the last laugh if you're long in cash right now. I'm no CFA and I didn't stay at a Holiday Inn Express last night but if big names like JPM Chase are going to the discount window to borrow cash, that has me worried across a whole bunch of sectors. |
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NRA and GOA Life member
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For $10,000, I'm a big fan of the DJ-5 Strategy (AKA: Dogs of the Dow strategy/scheme)... Has worked pretty well too!
Basically, if you've got $10,000 sitting around that you can spare, check up on the Dow Jones Industrial listings, and find the top-10 performing stocks (lists can be found on the internet just about anywhere). Then pick 5 of the top-10 performers (or just pick the top-5), and buy up $2000 of each of those 5 stocks! The dividends & splits of each stock will compound and be reinvested into more shares, and then you'll get to watch your investment return about 20% per year on average... At the end of each year, see which ones are still top performers, and after holding the stocks for 370 days, sell the 'under-performer' stocks, and buy into the ones that are returning higher average percentages on their dividends... However, if I had $10,000 more to invest in I'd play it a bit more risky... Invest in the top-4 DJIA performers, and keep $2000 on the side to daytrade in the penny stocks... Then take the $$ earned from the daytrading, dump that back into your long-term investments with the DJIA top-4/5. Right now I've just got stock in Pfizer, and I've thrown a majority of my $$ into OTC:BB Securities shares, and I'm awaiting news & an 8K SEC filing to watch my money skyrocket soon. Then another cash-out, and reinvestment of more $$ back into the DowJones Top-5 for a long-hold. YMMV, but it's worked pretty effectively for many investors over time, and I'll see how things go soon enough with my OTC Securities (Very Risky)... That said, if you put in enough research & DD you can usually come out NICELY on top after a couple flips & buy-ins with the right timing... After WorldCom crashed I bought in about 7cents/share, flipped a couple times and walked away with $14,500 in profit just as it moved onto the pinksheets market. YMMV. |
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"An unloaded gun is about as helpful as a Wellstone supporter...Utterly useless in real life situations."-100w_Warlock |
you didn't explain this correctly, and that makes me wonder. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dogs_of_the_dow
no way. for the past 7 years, ar-jedi |
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"Due to the special procedures performed by the Enigma machine, the solvability is so far removed from practical possibility that the cipher system of the machine must be regarded as virtually incapable of solution." -- German cryptographer, 1937
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There is more to it than just that...
Also, though the Price Per Share on some of the 'dogs' will decrease! There also is no 'rule' stating that you MUST hold onto those shares, or invest in the same 5 companies for a full year! You'll be taxed for selling/flipping, but that's all a personal preference... What I'm saying is that even though those 'dogs' do have a turnover rate (and the WikiLink you provided cites this source further mentioning the 'evolution' of the theories, and how their popularity has caused some issues, but can still be a viable investment if you play your cards right), and sometimes show a negative rate, it's important to note HOW YOU MANAGE your investments in them, and contrary to popular opinion, ***IT IS POSSIBLE TO MAKE MONEY IN A 'DOWN' MARKET*** Even though the price/share drops, it is common fact that the dividend payouts are not significantly reduced, and they are quite stable compared to many other stocks... If the $/share drops I'd consider it a good buying opportunity to pick up shares for cheaper, and still compound a significant dividend. Personally, I **PREFER** investing in companies that are in financial jeopardy, or have issues with assets, etc. It's INFINITELY riskier, but much better return on your investment if you do your research. Another favorite of mine is newly emerging technologies & trends that are on the upswing (and you can sometimes catch IPO shares, securities, etc.)... Industries such as Agriculture, Energy, Aerospace, Machinery, and Minerals are consistently growing right now, and to NOT catch the train and take it for a ride seems ignorant. FAR TOO MANY investors are easily frightened by the first sign of a downturn and normal market fluctuations, they sell out their shares and take a loss... |
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"An unloaded gun is about as helpful as a Wellstone supporter...Utterly useless in real life situations."-100w_Warlock |
No I kept AAPL it and as of today 10/9/2007 I am up 145%, now I just need to figure out where to set up a stop loss sell if it starts back down too far again. My other choices on the other hand are not so hot. |
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Duffy:...Typical symptom: flinch at buying $3 can of tuna, but spend $1500 on a scope and call it "a great deal because it normally sells for $1800 .....Duffy
Plays well with self, and cleverly disguised as a responsible adult. |
this is called "Value Investing". ps: i strongly disagree with your word "INFINITELY".
this is called "Growth Investing". you have just covered the two major but diametrically opposed schools of thought on modern investing techniques. ar-jedi |
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"Due to the special procedures performed by the Enigma machine, the solvability is so far removed from practical possibility that the cipher system of the machine must be regarded as virtually incapable of solution." -- German cryptographer, 1937
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How the 10k portfolio doing?
It seems LVLT took a hit. |
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"The trouble with our liberal friends is not that they're ignorant: It's just that they know so much that isn't so." Ronald Reagan
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They are all animated.... because they have really long necks....
It doesnt kick, it just has bad recoil..... |
Thanks for the informative answer. |
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"The trouble with our liberal friends is not that they're ignorant: It's just that they know so much that isn't so." Ronald Reagan
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was the look on my face when I saw the LVLT stock price..... as an investor in the stock. |
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They are all animated.... because they have really long necks....
It doesnt kick, it just has bad recoil..... |
"Due to the special procedures performed by the Enigma machine, the solvability is so far removed from practical possibility that the cipher system of the machine must be regarded as virtually incapable of solution." -- German cryptographer, 1937
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Thanks jedi. I dont feel so bad anymore.
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if we had some eggs we could have eggs and bacon if we had some bacon
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10K2008 - 420 shares of ACM $10,652.92 - I will peel some of this off into a short fund at some point, probably after the DOW moves another 600-700 points or when SDS or DXD approach a 52 week low. There's probably at least one or more interest rate cuts still to follow. We are probably close to a bottom in housing, but there's still a lot of supply on the market.
I was itching to buy KB Homes when it was in the $18s (now at $28 in just nine trading days), but I may still have another chance to buy it lower before it starts a big run. It would also give me two construction stocks, so I need to consider another sector for counter balance, which is where a utility like PPL may work, instead. I am not including a speculative stock this year, so HOKU is out. 10K2007 - $7,149.75 - CCIX is starting to move upward and there was a lot of insider buying when it was near the bottom. LVLT will be sold if it gets into the 5-6 range. Jim |
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Omar have you considered sell calls on the stocks with at least 100sh. You could have brought in extra income ie like with HAL selling calls deep out of the money.
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Very educational thread. Thanks to the original poster, who would make a good financial analyst.
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The summer soldier and the sunshine patriot will, in this crisis, shrink from the service of their country; but he that stands it now, deserves the love and thanks of man and woman.
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ar-jedi -
Your $10k portfolio has pretty much mirrored mine, which is invested completely in Vanguard's Total Stock Market and was begun in Jan of 2007. I havn't kept records, but I was up to $11k at one point (probably Oct '07). This may be of some use to those who ponder the merrits of active trading vs. passive index investing. |
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AKuzer, Sorry for the late reply. I had a family emergency and have been out of communication for the last few weeks. I've never bought options, just watched them for unsual activity in stocks I've owned. I am not confident enough to purchase options at this time, but will probably test the waters and purchase options as cheap insurance against downside on a stock. I will be inheriting a sizable portion of PPL stock, so I won't be buying that as planned. Jim |
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UPDATE:
10K2008 - 420 shares of ACM $12,156.49 up 14.11%. ACM announces earnings on 8 May and I expect it will continue to run up to earnings, which will probably be blow out. My dilemma will be whether I should take some off the table or let it run. ACM continues to acquire companies that immediately contribute to the bottom line. At some point, a larger company will attempt to acquire ACM. So I think buy and hold will work just fine if I choose to leave it alone. On the other hand, there will be another pullback when almost every stock will go red including ACM, which currently is trading in a 25-30 range and I’ll probably have an opportunity to buy back at a cheaper price. BTE really ran up and I won't buy any at the current price. 10K2007 - 7792.80 down (22.08%) -- 60 shares HAL up 52.60% -- 900 shares LVLT down (43.94%) -- 150 shares CCIX down (31.10%) |
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10K2008 UPDATE:
05/08/08 11:23 AM EDT Sell 328 ACM Executed @ $29.6 05/08/08 3:37 PM EDT Buy 100 KBH Executed @ $23.9 Holdings: 92 shares of ACM 100 shares of KBH Cash: $7315.49 Start: $10,652.92 Portfolio value as of 05/08/08: 12456.49 up 16.9% If ACM goes higher, I'll sell the rest and wait for a pullback and buy back in. ACMs earning were very good, but I expect it will slowly drift lower in concert with the market in general, due to energy and inflation concerns. In the meantime, KBH (KB Homes) is a stock I've watched for a long time and I decided to do a small buy. If KBH drops lower $19-20, I'll buy 100-200 more shares. KBH bounces off $19 probably due to the dividend/yield and is a really good entry point. If it climbs to $28 in the near term, I'll reevaluate/sell as its trading in a band. The housing market probably won't turn until next year, but just in case, I'm putting a toe in the water. I'm still interested in the Canadian and U.S. energy trusts, but we are probably turning the corner on oil and I think we may see a pullback. In any event, my prime pick BTE has run up too much to chance buying it now, so PGH, PVX, PWE, AAV, PBT and HTE are all contenders. 10K2007UPDATE: $8,057.10 down (19.42%) -- 60 shares HAL up 61.98% -- 900 shares LVLT down (43.41%) -- 150 shares CCIX down (28.51%) |
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10K2008 UPDATE:
Fri May 16 15:45:35 2008 Buy 150 PGH Executed @ $20.59 Holdings: 92 shares of ACM 100 shares of KBH 150 shares PGH Cash: $4213.00 (includes $12.99 trade fee) Start: $10,652.92 Portfolio value as of 05/16/08: 12,641.40 for a 18.6% unrealized gain ACM appears to be going higher and I may sell the rest next week. I missed an opportunity to sell KBH (KB Homes) this morning and add another 2% I can’t figure out when oil will drop, but I’m going to hold on to PGH, a Canadian oil trust and take advantage of the 13% yield. If it starts running like its competitor BTE is, I’ll reevaluate. 10K2007UPDATE 8,353.80 for a (16.4%) unrealized loss -- 60 shares HAL up 66.94% -- 900 shares LVLT down (37.81%) -- 150 shares CCIX down (31.43%) |
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10K2008 UPDATE:
Monday, May 19, 2008 05/19/08 2:50 PM EDT Sell 92 ACM Executed @ $31.4 / 2888.78 05/19/08 2:14 PM EDT Buy 10 FSLR Executed @ $298.8/2988.00 Fees: (25.98) Holdings 100 shares KBH 150 shares PGH 10 shares FSLR Cash: 4087.80 FSLR is a short term trade I decided to sell ACM on good news I'll buy back some ACM on a pullback. Also, it might be time to short the DOW with DXD or the S&P with UltraShort S&P500 ProShares (SDS) Exchange Traded funds. Portfolio Start: $10,652.92 Portfolio value as 05/19/08: 12,621.8 |
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I will add to Omars post having passed my 63/65 financial exams but no pro in any way.. IMHO anyone with less than 50k should be in Mutual funds not individual stocks. Its all about risk/reward with overconfidence as the investors enemy............Any S&P500/FTSE Global x_US would be a great split IMO with out the Small cap value premium= 50%domesic SP500/50%international equites still puts 100% in equites with much less risk.Good Luck!
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<img src=/images/smilies/anim_bounce.gif border=0 align=middle> its me again,and I will neither confirm or deny I have anything to say.<img src=/images/smilies/anim_bounce.gif border=0 align=middle>
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I currently have almost exact split in my 401K (49%/50% + 1% treasuries). My 10K 2008 is out performing that and my 10K 2007 is under performing. Jim |
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Stock Purchases:
07/31/08 11:33 AM EDT Buy 50 PGH Executed @ $17.45 Day buy order for 50 PGH at a limit price of $17.5 was executed at $17.45. 07/31/08 11:29 AM EDT Buy 100 ACM Executed @ $28.6 Day buy order for 100 ACM at a limit price of $28.6 was executed at $28.6. PGH $885.49 (Includes fee) ACM $2872.99(Includes fee) Total: $3758.48 Dividends 07/24/08 Dividend KB HOME CASH DIV ON 100 SHS REC 07/10/08 PAY ... $25.00 07/15/08 Dividend ***PENGROWTH ENERGY TRUST UNIT NEW CASH DIV O... $33.63 06/16/08 Dividend ***PENGROWTH ENERGY TRUST UNIT NEW DIST ON 15... $32.95 Dividend Total: $91.58 10K2008 Portfolio Value at close 31 Jul 2008: $11,339.20 Holdings 100 shares ACM 100 shares KBH 200 shares PGH 10 shares FSLR Cash: 4087.80 Cash: $420.90 I bought ACM back and will reevaluate in the mid-thirties. While ACM and KBH are both construction companies, one is a home builder and the other is major infrastructure, so I don't consider them two of a kind. I really wanted to add a wind stock (see below) but they've run up too much in recent weeks. So in the meantime, I bought ACM back. PGH remains a long term hold. I missed the ex-dividend date, so I probably won't see distribution in August on the 50 shares just purchased, only the 150 shares owned before 28 July 2 008. KBH is a long term hold and is my start of a 1000 share position. I figure if I can buy it when its hated, I will ride back up to the $50s, where it was before the building slump. I don't expect it to do much before the builders turn, which is probably next spring, so I'm adding to my position outside this portfolio whenever it takes hits with the rest of the housing construction sector. I bought more at $17 but not for this project. KBH also pays a good dividend, which does not appear to be at risk. If I'm correct, that protects it from more downside around $16. If they decide to lower it due to losses, that's OK. I'm also interested in Centex (CTX). FSLR turned out to be not so much a short term trade. I'm looking to unload it at around $350. I'd like to add a windpower stock, but they've been running up - Otter Tail Corp (OTTR) and Trinity Industries Inc (TRN) are two I'm interested in. Also of interest is AeroVironment, Inc. (AVAV) and American Superconductor Corporation (AMSC) TRN is not a pure wind play, but it manufactures wind towers and associated equipment. It's been on a tear lately. If I can catch it on a pull back, I'll probably put it in this portfolio. If you drive down I-10 and I-20 in Texas, you'll see hundreds of windmills. These companies are a part of the Texas wind power projects, which are rejuvenating and transforming parts of rural Texas. Jim |
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Dividend Paid
Payment Date: 08/15/2008 Security: ***PENGROWTH ENERGY TRUST (PGH) Amount Credited: $31.66 Holdings 100 shares ACM 100 shares KBH 200 shares PGH 10 shares FSLR 420.90 +31.66= Cash: $452.56 10K2008 Portfolio Value at close 15 Aug 2008: 11474.76 The dividend is only for 150 shares as I missed the ex-div date. Next month it will be around $41.00. Jim |
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Update:
Dividend Paid Payment Date: 09/15/2008 Security: ***PENGROWTH ENERGY TRUST (PGH) Amount Credited: $41.90 Holdings 100 shares ACM 100 shares KBH 200 shares PGH 10 shares FSLR CASH $452.56 +41.90 = $494.46 10K2008 Portfolio Value at close 19 Sep 2008: $11,253.46 I placed a limit order at $25.30 for Monday. If that triggers, I'll repurchase KBH on a pullback or maybe purchase Diana Shipping (DSX), a dry bulk shipper from China. That business will pick back up if we've crossed the hump of this mortgage problem and lack of confidence in the markets. Another option is to hold on and watch to see if FSLR pulls back and buy 10 more shares. I'm also interested in OTTR, which makes windmill components. It took a big hit on Friday and didn't recover with the market and I don't know why, so that's iffy until I can determine the reason. I bought OTTR at $35.36 on 5 Aug when it took a deep cut after disappointing earnings and sold it on a bounce at $40.75. At $30 something it's looking attractive, subject to knowing the reason for the recent decline in share price. As I look at the 10K stocks, KBH is my least favorite and probably wasn't the right pick for this portfolio, especially since I have two construction stocks. Additionally, there is still a lot of new, unsold supply on the market. Combined with more stringent mortgage requirements, the home builders may not come back as strong as they were due to a smaller pool of qualified buyers. Monday may provide an opportunity to eject and buy something in another sector to increase diversification or dollar cost average on ACM, or FSLR buy buying more at a cheaper price than the original purchase. Jim |
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