20 Cents from October 2011

Pennies

It’s hard to believe 2011 is already winding down. Soon we’ll be busy with holiday preparations, year end reviews and goals for 2012. It’s been a beautiful fall in our new city and I look forward to experiencing Christmas here for the first time. Now ~ 1. Where to find a tree? & 2. Where to put it in the new house?  Hmmm . . .

While I wrestle with these profound questions, I’ll leave you with a selection of 2 cents from 10 different places. Enjoy!

1. Jonathan Burton of Market Watch wrote an interesting article on Why Geezers Give the Best Investment Advice. ‘Based on the evidence found in the research, anyone between 43 and 63 “is really in their cognitive sweet spot.”’ Woo hoo! I’m almost in my cognitive sweet spot! Wait . . . does that mean I’m almost [...]

Read on and enjoy … 20 Cents from October 2011

Portfolio Options for a Risky Market

nothing-on-the-menu

If I had a formula for bypassing trouble, I would not pass it round. Trouble creates a capacity to handle it. I don’t embrace trouble; that’s as bad as treating it as an enemy. But I do say meet it as a friend, for you’ll see a lot of it and had better be on speaking terms with it.

~Oliver Wendell Holmes

When I wrote about Why This Is No Market for Couch Potatoes, it sounded like I was saying that there’s elevated risk in both the stock and bond markets at this moment in history. I was. That begs the question then: Where can we invest? If not stocks or bonds, where? Gold? Real estate?

An astute reader posed that exact question and I said I would address it in a future article. So here we go. I [...]

Read on and enjoy … Portfolio Options for a Risky Market

Inverse ETFs: Pros & Cons

The problem is not that there are problems. The problem is expecting otherwise and thinking that having problems is a problem.

~ Theodore Rubin

Update: This article was included in the Carnival of Personal Finance – Gettin’ Hot in Here Edition posted at Nerd Wallet. Thanks!

I’ve mentioned inverse ETFs a couple of times lately, so I thought it might be a good idea to explain what they are and how to use them for those who aren’t already familiar with them. Inverse ETFs are exchange traded funds that rise in value when the index that they track falls in value. If you believe the markets are going down, you can buy shares in an inverse ETF just like an individual stock. If you’re right, your shares will rise in value. But if the market rises, the share price of your inverse ETF will [...]

Read on and enjoy … Inverse ETFs: Pros & Cons