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Tax Rebate Check 2008 For Late Filers: Clarifying a Common Misconception

April 22nd, 2008 by tommy

I must have heard from over a dozen people that swore to me that if you did not file your taxes on time for 2008 (and instead filed for an extension) that you did not qualify for a tax rebate check. After speaking with a CPA, according to his professional insight, you are still DEFINITELY going to get a rebate check (assuming you qualify) even if you file late.

I am posting this simply because there seems to be a ton of incorrect information floating around about this issue. So, if you missed the initial April 15th deadline date, don’t despair: it’s not too late to get a little bit of your money back. Hopefully you can find some great ways to invest the money and let it grow! Good luck.

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A Perfect Time For GARP Money Management?

April 17th, 2008 by tommy

Current fears and uncertainties in the investment market place have lowered the PE ratios on many growth stocks. This situation yields to a perfect situation to find opportunities for GARP money managers. What is GARP? Growth At a Reasonable Price. The GARP approach strives to find the benefits of growth investing while assigning an additional discipline for value. Further insights on the definition of GARP can be found on the investopedia website. Long term studies in academic finance have shown that value investing tends to outperform growth investing due to the tendency for human error to systematically overestimate the longevity of growth factors when valuing equities.

GARP investing attempts to mollify this negative aspect of growth investing by discovering growth stocks that still fit inside a threshold of reasonable price valuation. Let’s take a look at Google for example. There is no argument that Google is a growth stock. On the eve of Google publishing their Q1 2008 results, with the stock down 39% from its 52 week high, it becomes an easier and easier argument to make that at this price, the long term growth of Google is now attainable at a reasonable price. Chinese counterpart Baidu for example is trading at 57x future expected price to earnings, vs. Google’s 32.6 (Yahoo incidentally is at 48.4x, but given speculation on sweetened Microsoft takeover offer, the metric is not germane to the argument at hand).
GOOG is just one such example. But with tech being beat of up in the first three months of this year, there are many such buys available at the moment. Now just might be the perfect time to grab those growth stocks at a reasonable price.

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Navigenics: A Good Investment In Your Future?

April 11th, 2008 by tommy

Is investing into cutting edge genetic companies a good long term investing play? Or is the reality of companies making REAL profits in this sector so far off, that it is not worth the opportunity cost of capital at this junction in time?

Earlier this week I was able to attend an opening event in New York for a genetic testing company called Navigenics: a new company startup out of The Valley funded by none other than by Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Buyers. The crux of the business is offering insight into your health future via genetic testing. The bet is that there’s enough of a market out there right now to cough up $1500 and a dollop of saliva in order to determine their genetic risk profile for diseases. It seems the technology is there: and certainly, with our ever widening gap between have and haven’t, there will be enough people with disposable income to pay for a glance into the genetic crystal ball that is DNA testing.

I would imagine this product is a marketers dream… you could go a million directions positioning this product. Certainly the logical direction, which the company’s website indicates, is providing people a sense of control in their destiny that is a commercial first of its kind. Parents wanting to ‘be there’ for their kids, and whatnot.

Designer Genes
Obviously, Navigenics is start up, so there’s no investing in this particular venture. Well, not yet at least. But I myself do have some long term capital tied up in Clinical Data (CLDA), which focuses on pharmacogenomics: a big fancy word not in my spell checker which means a process of tailoring drugs to a person’s genetic profile to increase efficacy and mitigate toxicity. Remember the old joke about having ‘Designer Genes’. This would kind of be the Designer Drugs to go in the key pocket of those Designer Genes. Hopefully my DNA will keep me around long enough find out I made a good investment.

-Tommy

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Investment Management Definitions

April 7th, 2008 by tommy

Investment Management Definitions

Investment management is the professional management of various securities (shares, bonds etc) assets (e.g. real estate), to meet specified investment goals for the benefit of the investors. Investors may be institutions (insurance companies, pension funds, corporations etc.) or private investors (both directly via investment contracts and more commonly via collective investment schemes e.g. mutual funds) .

The term asset management is often used to refer to the investment management of collective investments, whilst the more generic fund management may refer to all forms of institutional investment as well as investment management for private investors. Investment managers who specialize in advisory or discretionary management on behalf of (normally wealthy) private investors may often refer to their services as wealth management or portfolio management often within the context of so-called “private banking”.

The provision of investment management services includes elements of financial analysis, asset selection, stock selection, plan implementation and ongoing monitoring of investments. Investment management is a large and important global industry in its own right responsible for caretaking of trillions of dollars, euro, pounds and yen. Coming under the remit of financial services many of the world’s largest companies are at least in part investment managers and employ millions of staff and create billions in revenue.

Fund manager (or investment advisor in the U.S.) refers to both a firm that provides investment management services and an individual(s) who directs “fund management” decisions.

== Process manager decide what to buy and when? (iii) How does the manager decide what to sell and when? (iv) Who takes the decisions and are they taken by committee? (v) What controls are in place to ensure that a rogue fund (one very different from others and from what is intended) cannot arise?

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