Monday, November 3, 2008
New Video: E5. Introduction to Monetary Policy
Friday, October 31, 2008
New Video: E4. Economic Policy
New Video: E3. Inflation
Thursday, October 30, 2008
New Video: V8D. Earnings Yield
Valuation is probably not the most exciting topic on the saving and investing channel - and also to some extent affected by arguments in favour of market efficiency - nonetheless it is worth knowing what the terms refer to.
Best regards - Michael
Saturday, September 20, 2008
New Video: V8. What is Yield?
Monday, August 25, 2008
Learning about the Treasury
http://www.treas.gov/education
and a section for kids.
http://www.treas.gov/education
Clearly they have expended some effort to set this up - very interesting - and straight from the source!
Sunday, August 24, 2008
Government spending is the key to tax costs
Thursday, August 21, 2008
The Trickle-Down Effect
Saturday, August 9, 2008
UK: How to Beat the Credit Crunch

We thought you may be interested to know that TaxCafe has just published a brand new tax guide called How to Beat the Credit Crunch, by Toby Hone.
This new guide is packed with practical ideas and tips to help you survive and make money during the Credit Crunch. To learn more click on title of post or use link below.
www.taxcafebooks.co.uk/product.php?prodid=cru&id=11195
Overview
This unique new guide is packed with practical ideas and tips to help you survive and make money during the Credit Crunch.
Itís essential reading for ALL property investors and landlords.
The advice and strategies contained in this timely publication will help you drastically increase your rental income, slash your expenses and turn your property portfolio into a well-oiled cash generating machine!
The author also reveals his secrets for making lucrative new investments in the current climate.
What Information is Contained in the Guide
The guide contains numerous real-life examples from the authorís extensive experience in buying, selling, renovating, developing and managing a big portfolio of investment properties.
Subjects covered include:
Creative ways to boost your rental income by over 50%.
How to overcome the mortgage drought and find the best deals.
18 practical ways to slash ALL your property expenses.
...some of these tips will save you £100s, others will save you £1,000s!
How to tap into the fastest growing rental market with the highest rental yields.
6 ways you can seriously improve the health of your property portfolio.
How to protect yourself from rising interest rates.
How to improve your credit record and keep it squeaky clean.
The biggest threats to your property portfolio NOW and how to handle them.
Ways to boost your emergency cash reserves and shield yourself from the Credit Crunch.
How to virtually eliminate losses through effective deposit management.
How to avoid giving away up to 32% of your rental income without even knowing it.
Practical ways to eliminate void periods completely.
Ways to rent out problem properties quickly.
The outlook for the UK property market and a comparison with the US mark
The 1990s crash... will it be as bad this time round?
A detailed look at the benefits and drawbacks of selling property now.
How to source property at a 25% discount.
Innovative money-making strategies that work in the current climate.
... including buying below market value properties and
... creating potential goldmines within your portfolio.
About the Author
The Author of How to Beat the Credit Crunch is Toby Hone. Toby Hone is a professional property investor. Over the last 10 years he has built a portfolio of 30 properties worth around £3 million. He is also an active property developer, specializing in sourcing below market value properties, as well as properties requiring refurbishment and also development projects, and adding value to them using various techniques revealed in this book.
Sunday, August 3, 2008
Realistic Expectations
For us as savers and investors, what is important to remember is that saving and investing is a complement to working and making money (and not a replacement) - as ultimately it should provide a means of setting aside money, perhaps and ideally even tax free, and letting it grow. It is not about getting rich quickly in most cases - and taking on too much risk with this short-term goal in mind, as opposed to the facts about saving and investing definitely a bad idea with potentially very bad consequences, as market corrections like the one in housing right now can demonstrate.
Sunday, June 22, 2008
38. Getting Started
If you have gone through the videos here, read the book and really delved into the subject and you understand risk, time horizon - what is sure and what is total gambling, and you have a long-term view and understand how investing works - then prudently beginning is the next step.
Saturday, June 21, 2008
37. Transaction Costs
One of the things that can damage our returns is transaction costs - a brief video on this subject.
Thursday, June 19, 2008
36. Following the Crowd and the Role of Expectations
Blindly following the crowd can lead to some of the worst investment decisions - something everyone is expecting in the future is also often already reflected today.
Often one can read headlines like 'this market is expected to rise strongly for the coming year' or 'this stock will perform strongly'. If everyone, or a very large percentage of the market participants expect the same thing, then often all of the future expectation is already priced in today.
Smart investors spend a lot of time trying to figure out things that might not be expected or priced in - that is also a reason why financial literacy and therefore not having to believe everything you hear are so important.
35. Diversification - savingandinvesting.com
Diversification - or not putting all your eggs in one basket - has a solid foundation in math. In fact there are some really good reasons to always bear them in mind.
Wednesday, June 18, 2008
34. Two Generic Types of Pension Plans
There have been some horror stories regarding pension plans - but not all pension plans are alike. Newer pension plans are typically significantly different in their approach than the older ones.
Tuesday, June 17, 2008
33. First Principles of Taxation
Saving and investing is incentivised in most western countries through tax benefits. Governments want to collect taxes to provide the services that they provide - but they also provide tax benefits for saving and investing because it is considered beneficial for individuals and society as a whole.
Monday, June 16, 2008
32. Taxes and Compounding - savingandinvesting.com
Compounding is one of the key forces when it comes to any saving and investing plan - but the reality is that paying, or not paying taxes, has a huge impact on what we compound to. And often we can save the taxes because governments want us to save for when we retire, or for when our incomes are low
Sunday, June 15, 2008
31. Timing Investments and Dollar Cost Averaging
Timing investments is not straightforward, and there are ways of making the process pretty efficient.
Saturday, June 14, 2008
30. The Impact of Time
The nature of the stock market means that our time horizon makes a big difference in determining which investments are more suitable.
Friday, June 13, 2008
29. Hedge Funds 5: Prime Brokers
Prime brokers perform a very important role in the hedge fund industry by providing much of the infrastructure backbone that allows hedge funds to hold securities, employ leverage and even by assisting in raising assets.
Thursday, June 12, 2008
28. Hedge Funds 4: Funds of (Hedge) Funds
Because of the risk associated with investing in any single hedge fund - to diversify and lower volatility, a number of hedge funds are often combined into what is known as a fund of funds or fund of hedge funds.
Tuesday, June 10, 2008
*** New Video: V7C: The Risk-Free Rate
This video goes into what the risk-free rate is and what benchmarks might be used to establish its value.
27. Hedge Funds 3: Different Strategies
Hedge Funds use many different strategies to make money although broadly speaking they are often put into 3 main categories. This video details the categories and what the means are.
Monday, June 9, 2008
26. Hedge Funds 2: What is Short-Selling?
Short-selling is often spoken about, particularly in the context of hedge funds - this brief video explains what this is.
Sunday, June 8, 2008
25. Hedge Funds 1: What is a Hedge Fund?
An introductory summary of hedge funds. There is a lot more on this in the book because it is easier to convey in a written format than on tape - also at more info at savingandinvesting.com.
Friday, June 6, 2008
24. Index Funds and ETFs
Passively managed funds are index funds - funds that aim to hold securities in exactly the proportion that they are held in within an index and that typically have significantly lower fees that actively managed funds. These products offer market exposure at lower cost - so do ETFs.
22. Mutual Funds 3: Active and Passive Management
The terms active and passive management are often used when discussing mutual funds - what do the terms actually mean and what have some people concluded.
Wednesday, June 4, 2008
21. Mutual Funds 2: Types of Mutual Funds
There are many types of mutual funds - here is a summary of some and why they can exist.
Tuesday, June 3, 2008
19. Why do Financial Markets Exist?
Financial markets exist for a very important reason - one that has been around for a very long time. This is explained very simply.
Monday, June 2, 2008
*** 29. Prime Brokers
Sunday, June 1, 2008
*** New Video: V7B: Discounting
Saturday, May 31, 2008
17. Who issues Bonds?
Equity - or public equity in the form of stocks is issued by companies. Not only companies can borrow - and not only companies can borrow through securitised debt.
Friday, May 30, 2008
16. Private Equity, IPO, Public Equity
Equity can either be private or public and these terms are often used in the press. In the transition from the former to the latter there is typically an IPO. Public equity is also known as stocks or shares.
Thursday, May 29, 2008
15. The Capital Structure of a Company
This video highlights what is spoken about when we talk about the capital structure of a company - effectively the structure of that company's financing, which is very tied to the right side of that company's balance sheet - for the book values, as well as the market values of the items on the right side of the balance sheet.
Wednesday, May 28, 2008
14. What is a Bond?
Bonds are pieces of debt of companies or governments and this brief video details further what a bond is.
Everyone should know what a stock and a bond are - this video gives a quick intro to that. What stocks and bonds are has a lot to do with how providers of capital interact with users of capital (through equity (which includes stocks for many large companies)) and debt (which includes bonds for many large users of capital).
Tuesday, May 27, 2008
*** New Video: V4. The EV/EBITDA Ratio
This measure therefore compares a broader measure of the company's value - one which includes net debt which an acquirer would have to assume, and compares it to EBITDA - a measure of the operating earnings of the company, thereby neutralizing the effect of varying interest levels between companies and depreciation policies. The EBITDA measure is not perfect, but clearly one can argue that it 'cleans' the earnings to provide a number that is more reflective of the operating performance of the company.
The drawback that it only looks at one year's worth of data remains.
Monday, May 26, 2008
13. What is a Stock?
Everyone should know what a stock and a bond are - this video gives a quick intro to that. What stocks and bonds are has a lot to do with how providers of capital interact with users of capital (through equity (which includes stocks for many large companies) and debt (which includes bonds for many large users of capital).
12. Links between the Financial Statements
Each of the three financial statements captures different aspects of a companies financial situation - about operations as a going concern (Income Statement), about actual cash flows - also going beyond Operations to include Investing and Financing (Cash Flow Statement) and the assets and liabilities of the company (Balance Sheet).
Therefore it only makes sense that some links exist between all the three statements - income and cash flows for example, income over a year that is not paid out as dividends and change in assets etc.
Having an appreciation of these links is a clear indication that conceptually the 3 financial statement have become clear.
Sunday, May 25, 2008
*** New Video: 15. The Capital Structure of a Company
11. The Cash Flow Statement
The cash flow statement is typcally the 3rd of the 3 financial statements found in an Annual Report. This video provides an overview.
Saturday, May 24, 2008
10. What is a Balance Sheet
The Balance Sheet is one of the 3 main financial statements for companies, and it captures the assets, the equity and the debt at a certain point in time - like the end of the year. And it balances.
Friday, May 23, 2008
*** New Video: V2C. The P/E to Growth Ratio
In order to incorporate, normalize and adjust for differences in earnings growth, the P/E to growth ratio is often used.
It adds information and is another commonly used ratio - it does not address all of the shortcomings of using P/Es.
Thursday, May 22, 2008
9. What is an Income Statement
There are 3 main account statements for companies - the income statement, the balance sheet and the cash flow statement. This video in on the first of these - the income statement.
** New Video: 12. Links between the Financial Statements
Each of the three financial statements captures different aspects of a companies financial situation - about operations as a going concern (Income Statement), about actual cash flows - also going beyond Operations to include Investing and Financing (Cash Flow Statement) and the assets and liabilities of the company (Balance Sheet).
Therefore it only makes sense that some links exist between all the three statements - income and cash flows for example, income over a year that is not paid out as dividends and change in assets etc.
8. Debt Consolidation - savingandinvesting.com
Some of the principles behind consolidating your debt explained in a simple manner - in general, consolidating debt is something one should consider as a tweak to lower interest payments. Racking up huge debts on credit cards or in general as a percentage of one's net wort is a terrible idea right from the start.
Wednesday, May 21, 2008
7. High Credit Card Interest Rates
There are reasons which make credit card interest rates so high. High credit card interest rates make having this kind of debt a bad idea especially if we let it compound to buy things that quickly lose their value.
Tuesday, May 20, 2008
6. Borrowing Money
A brief simple video on why certain interest rates are higher (for example credit card rates) and others that have collateral against them lower.
Monday, May 19, 2008
5. Principles of Leverage - savingandinvesting.com
A follow on from 'What is Leverage?' looking at some of the principles surrounding leverage.
Sunday, May 18, 2008
4. What is Leverage? - savingandinvesting.com
Leverage explained in very simple terms - what it is and how it works.
Saturday, May 17, 2008
3. Providers and Users of Capital: Equity and Debt
There a 2 main ways for providers and users of capital to interact - this video provides more information on this.
Thursday, May 15, 2008
2. Providers and Users of Capital
It is the interaction between providers and users of capital that forms the basis of our financial system. It is that which allows our money to grow and for companies and governments to have access...
1. Compounding
This is the first video in the series - very important.
An introduction to what has been called the 8th wonder of the world - compounding. The principle that allows small sums to grow to large sums over time.
Wednesday, May 14, 2008
I7. 5 Popular Misconceptions Part 2
There are many misconceptions around saving and investing, and even how difficult it is (or is not). Here are some (Part 2).
Tuesday, May 13, 2008
I6. 5 Popular Misconceptions Part 1
Saving and investing seems to have more than its deserved share of negative connotations. That might be because of a few popular misconceptions - here are 5 that I think are out there and fairly significant.
Monday, May 12, 2008
I5. Starting with the Right Thing - savingandinvesting.com
When we start to think about saving and investing, the best place to start is with knowledge - certainly better to start with knowledge than to start by making decisions.
Saturday, May 10, 2008
I4. Why the Subject is so Important!
Getting back to the series - after the announcement of an additional video (6. Borrowing Money) - this is the fourth of the introductory videos.
Best Regards,
Michael
6. Borrowing Money
A new video has been added on the Saving and Investing channel regarding borrowing money.
Best Regards,
Michael
Thursday, May 8, 2008
I3. My Background
Some introductory information on my background and why this material is so important and I felt strongly about communicating some of this information.
Wednesday, May 7, 2008
SavingandInvesting.com
This month we are going to run a video a day on the savingandinvesting blog in a logical series because some of the newer ones actually fill in additional detail and give context to the earlier ones.
This is the second video (logically) in the series.
1. Introduction - by savingandinvesting.com
This is the first of two introductory videos - it was one of the first ones recorded and def. a bit different hopefully than the rest - nonetheless it gives an idea as to what this whole thing is supposed to be about. Thanks for watching.
Thursday, April 10, 2008
New Video: V6: The Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) Method
This method is rigorous in that it aims to capture a lot of information about the company, far into the future. These cash flows are inherently very difficult to predict, and also, they then need to be discounted at an appropiate discount rate which reflects their risk.
Wednesday, April 9, 2008
New Video: V5: The Dividend Discount Model (DDM)
Monday, April 7, 2008
New Video: V4. The P/Book Ratio
Sunday, April 6, 2008
New Video: V3: The Price/Sales Ratio
In all of the above situations, the Price to Sales Ratio might be a more useful, or complemenetary valuation tool. The characteristics of the P/Sales ratio are discussed in this video.
Saturday, April 5, 2008
New Video: V2. The P/E Ratio
New Video: V1B. Remarks on Valuation
New Video: Introduction to Valuation
The aim of this series is to highlight what the valuation methods involve - given arguments for market efficiency, the value of individual investors actually relying on publicly available information to make individual stock decisions is questionable - nonetheless knowing what the valuation methods involve and some of their characteristics and drawbacks is clearly useful.
Friday, April 4, 2008
New Video: Introduction to Diversification
Thursday, April 3, 2008
New Video: Following the Crowd and the Role of Expectations
Smart investors spend a lot of time trying to figure out things that might not be expected or priced in - that is also a reason why financial literacy and therefore not having to believe everything one hears is so important.
Often one can read headlines like 'this market is expected to rise strongly for the coming year' or 'this stock will perform strongly'. If everyone, or a very large percentage of the market participants, expect the same thing, then often that future expectation is already priced in today.
Monday, March 10, 2008
New Video on the Economy and how it can impact Earnings dramatically.
Thursday, March 6, 2008
New Video on Earnings at the Saving and Investing Channel on YouTube
Wednesday, January 2, 2008
New Videos at the Saving and Investing Channel on YouTube
- Private Equity, IPO, Public Equity
- Who issues Bonds?
- Market Efficiency
- Index Funds and ETFs
- Hedge Funds 4: Fund of (Hedge) Funds
- First Principles of Taxation
- Two Generic Types of Pension Plans
Best Regards,
Michael