Digg It |   Del.icio.us |   Printer Friendly |   PDF |   Email

Don't Follow The Financial Herd!

Tuesday, November 14, 2006 | Jason Jovine

Rating:

Hi, all.  It's Jason Jovine here.  I know that many investors, as well as many people in general, tend to be followers instead of leaders.  This is not in your best interest, and I want to urge you to always go with your gut in your life no matter what anyone else’s agenda is for you.

The powers that be want you to stay part of the herd (a follower,) but it is incumbent on you to use the brain that your Creator gave you to help you decide for yourself what is best for you.  You know yourself better than anyone else does.  Live your own life, don’t live anyone else’s.

That said, one of my biggest winners of 2006 was General Motors. When I was about to recommend it, everyone and his mother were telling me not to.  Sound familiar?  I didn’t listen, because I am hard- headed, and I go with my gut.

Thank the Lord that I didn’t listen.  As you can see from the article below that was originally published on 2/14/06, I told you that I was very bullish on GM.  I told you, “I am telling you that you must OWN or LOAN GM one way or another.”

When I recommended GM on that day, the stock price was at about $21-$22 per share, and the bond was at about $70 per bond.  Since then, the stock has traded over $36 per share and the bond has traded over $90 per bond!  This good news is not even counting the dividend of about 3% on the stock or the coupon of about 8.375% on the bond!

This was my first ever recommendation for the Tycoon Report. Take a read and enjoy. I want to thank all of you for your constructive feedback over the last several months.  I hope you have learned a great deal from it, and I hope that it has made me a better writer.  Next week, I will be back to start tackling our future and how we make money going forward.  Have patience; hang in there.

ARICLE THAT WAS ORIGINALLY PUBLISHED ON 2/14/06:

I would like to tell all of you wonderful people that I give an oath to you right here and right now.  
 
I solemnly swear that I will do my very best to provide you with the very best bond recommendations possible.  
 
I WILL NOT be right 100% of the time, but I will do my best to come as close to that as possible.  
 
What I aim to accomplish is to give you fixed income ideas that have the highest yield possible with the least amount of risk
to add to your portfolio.  
 
But risk and reward go hand and hand, so you have to be willing to assume SOME risk to get the higher returns.  
 
What I'll do is take my education and experience and give you the ideas that I believe the marketplace has incorrectly assessed.  
 
Let me start by showing you a way to be profitable and patriotic at the same time. 
You know, of course, that American car companies have been in a great deal of trouble lately, namely Ford Motor Company and General Motors. And I agree with the beating that their stocks have taken recently, but I believe that General Motors
has been unfairly cast as Ford’s evil twin.  
 
In other words, I believe that GM is a pretty darn good company that is going through some bumps in the road.  
 
Let me explain:  
 
Did you know that the world’s population is about 6.5 billion people?  
 
Did you know that the population of the United States is only about 300 million people, and that the populations of China and India are approximately 1.3 and 1.1 BILLION respectively?  
 
Did you know that in 2004, GM and its manufacturing operations in mainland China sold a record 492,014 vehicles, an increase of 27.2% from the previous year?  
 
Market share was 9.3% in 2004, compared with 8.5% in 2003.  
 
Did you know that in China, auto sales have jumped over 70% recently?  
 
What I am telling you, ladies and gentlemen, is that GM still has MANY more potential customers out there, and they're going after these new markets aggressively!  
 
GM may be having problems here in the U.S. and parts of Europe, but these problems will be temporary, and over the long haul GM cannot be taken lightly.  
 
The so-called best analysts on the street disagree as to whether to upgrade or downgrade GM.  
 
I am telling you that you must OWN or LOAN GM one way or another.  
 
GM wants to borrow money from you, so you may want to be patriotic and make some money at the same time.  
 
Consider the GM bond with the symbol GM.HB.  
 
It pays a coupon of 8.375% and matures in 2033.  
 
Its price, by the time you read this, should be around 70 and it is NOT callable; that means that its yield is around 12%.  
 
More specifically, the information is:  
 
SYMBOL: GM.HB
ISSUE: GM 8.375 (07/15/33)
CUSIP: 370442BT1  
 
This bond is rated B1 and B by Moody’s and S&P respectively.  
 
Don’t be afraid of this.  
 
If you're not as familiar with bonds as you may be with stocks, looking up a bond is just as simple. You can get a quote and see more information for this bond as well as others by simply going to Yahoo! Finance or any other stock look-up site.  
 
In the case of Yahoo!, after you are in the finance section, just scroll down and click on the bonds link.  
 
There, you'll see a search area that says “Find Bonds by Name.” To find this General Motors bond, just type in “General Mtrs Corp” (obviously shorthand for the full
company’s name. There will be several GM bonds listed, so look for the one that matures on 15-Jul-2033 and has a coupon that says 8.375.  
 
After you have that information, you would call up your broker just as you do with a stock and tell him/her that you want to buy this bond, and he/she will quote you the current price and other information on the bond.  
 
Keep a lookout for more bond ideas and resources in the future ... STAY TUNED. 
 
As for the GM bond, I believe that the return that you get for this debt is more than the risk that it carries.  
 
This play will either be a trade or a hold.  
 
I will keep you posted.  
 
 
-- By Jason A. Jovine  
 
 
P.S. - These definitions might be helpful:  
 
CUSIP: 
Committee on Uniform Securities Identification Procedures.  The committee which supplies a unique nine-character identification, called a CUSIP number, for each class of security approved for trading in the U.S., to facilitate clearing and settlement. These numbers are used when any buy and sell orders are recorded.  
 
ISSUE: 
A stock or bond which has been offered for sale by a corporation or government entity, usually through an underwriter or in a private placement.



(Please let us know what you think about Jason Jovine's article.)
Rate his article here »



Jason Jovine
Contributing Editor
The Tycoon Report


Rate this article
Thank you for your vote!

1 Comments

Post your own comment
  • Most recent
  • 1
  • Oldest
  1. Ida (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    test
  • Most recent
  • 1
  • Oldest

Add Your Comments

Please keep your comments relevant to this blog entry. Email addresses are never displayed.

Please fill in the missing field(s).

Important: To comment on Tycoon Report articles, you must first log in. If you are a paying customer of Tycoon, you may use the same login and password that you use normally. If you do not yet have a login, please take a moment to register below. It’s free, and you only need to do it once.

Register

(email address and password information will NOT be displayed publicly)

Name *

Email *

Password *

Subscribe to The Tycoon Report
By registering, you agree to our terms of service.

Already a member? Log in!

(you will not be taken away from this page)

Email *

Password *

Remember?

Forgot Password?




Important Notice to all stock spammers, scammers and penny stock pump-and-dumpers: You will get no respect here. Don’t bother submitting fraudulent or misleading information in the guise of an article, because we will remove it. Any piece of content submitted on this site can be removed at the sole discretion of the Tycoon staff.