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Media & Marketing Director
High School Basketball Coach
University of Cincinnati Graduate
Center of Fiduciary Studies Graduate

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“I want to sell a “b”illion shares.  No wait, I meant a “m”illion…whoops.”  That’s what you call a spike.  This is a snapshot of what happened to P&G stock in a matter of seconds because a trader accidentally typed a “b” instead of an “m” when submitting the trade.  Still think the market isn’t efficient?  Think again.  It washed out that news out of the stock price before anyone could react.

“I want to sell a “b”illion shares.  No wait, I meant a “m”illion…whoops.”  That’s what you call a spike.  This is a snapshot of what happened to P&G stock in a matter of seconds because a trader accidentally typed a “b” instead of an “m” when submitting the trade.  Still think the market isn’t efficient?  Think again.  It washed out that news out of the stock price before anyone could react.

Posted at 3:28 PM (2 years ago) | Permalink

Style drift by a mutual fund manager can kill a portfolio’s performance and can cause an investor to end up with a portfolio that is far greater or less than their market exposure intentions.  Check out this latest video that explains how this happens.

Video posted at 2:22 PM (2 years ago) | Permalink

04/15/2010

How do you really alleviate fiduciary responsibility?  Flashy marketing gimmicks and tricky language are not the answer.

Video posted at 9:49 AM (2 years ago) | Permalink

04/14/2010

A little Wednesday humor…

A little Wednesday humor…

Posted at 2:55 PM (2 years ago) | Permalink

What do you do when your fund has terrible performance and you don’t want to close the fund? Watch this segment called “A Lesson in the Life of a Fund Company” to find out how Legg Mason did it!

Video posted at 4:28 PM (2 years ago) | Permalink

03/11/2010

Those pesky target date funds are at it again.  I didn’t know it was possible for them to become worse, but they have taken a step in that direction.  Check out this video where we discuss on Matson Money Live.

Video posted at 10:22 AM (2 years ago) | Permalink

02/24/2010

Want to know where all the TARP money is?  Check out this pic.  Click the image for a larger view.  Great job from Visual Economics on this graphic.

Want to know where all the TARP money is?  Check out this pic.  Click the image for a larger view.  Great job from Visual Economics on this graphic.

Posted at 12:56 PM (2 years ago) | Permalink

Posted at 2:26 PM (2 years ago) | Permalink

Building on one of my recent video posts regarding market premiums and where they come from, this post shows what the premiums are, where those premiums come from and how they are managed.

Three Equity Factors

In the first image, you have three equity factors: sensitivity to the market, sensitivity to size and sensitivity to BTM (value stocks).  This image explains that there are known historical premiums for being in the market vs. fixed income, owning small companies vs. large companies and owning distressed (value) companies vs. growth companies.

Size and Value Premium

In the second image, you can see that these premiums exist in the US and internationally and are very generous over long historical time periods.  One thing to keep in mind here is that with additional premium comes additional risk, therefore diversification is key so as to minimize the risk associated with these asset categories.

*In US dollars. Developed markets value and growth index data provided by Fama/French (ex utilities). The S&P data are provided by Standard & Poor’s Index Services Group. US Small Cap Index is the CRSP 6-10 Index. CRSP data provided by the Center for Research in Security Prices, University of Chicago. International Small Cap index data: 1970-June 1981, 50% UK small cap stocks provided by the London Business School and 50% Japan small cap stocks provided by Nomura Securities; July 1981-present: simulated by Dimensional from StyleResearch securities data; includes securities of MSCI EAFE Index countries, market-capitalization weighted, each country capped at 50%. MSCI data copyright MSCI 2008, all rights reserved.
Indexes are not available for direct investment; therefore, their performance does not reflect the expenses associated with the management of an actual portfolio. Compound returns have an assumed rate of return, are hypothetical, and are not representative of any specific type of investment. Standard deviation is one method of measuring risk and performance, and is presented as an approximation.

Two Fixed Income Factors

In the third image, you can see two ways to manage fixed income in a portfolio.  Fixed income should be utilized in a portfolio to reduce or dampen equity risk.  Keeping maturities short and high quality is how you achieve this in a diversified portfolio.  What most people don’t realize when it comes to their investments is that as maturities lengthen in fixed income, it actually becomes as risky as stocks they hold.  Therefore, you should take the risk in equities since their expected returns are greater than fixed income.

An overall portfolio strategy utilizing these tools would beneficial to any investor, but utilizing an investor coach to implement and stay disciplined is the key to a successful investing experience.

Video posted at 3:24 PM (2 years ago) | Permalink

02/12/2010

Check out Mark Matson on “The Call” with Larry Kudlow.  Great segment with superb points about markets and investing.

Video posted at 2:57 PM (2 years ago) | Permalink