Thursday, October 7, 2010

Meeting #29 Go through The financial Review

Another successful meeting in the Westin Hotel. Thanks to Roy and Justin for their hard work in between sips of beer. Condolences to Giselle who was unfortunately not well and could not attend. Regards to Mandy who hopefully is getting creative on holiday somewhere and could not attend.

We went through the financial Review and noted down any companies we recognized from all the companies in the ASX omitting any sector that were too hard. We hope by doing this we can work on the lowest hanging fruit first (easiest to understand).We each have 2 hours of homework to do before our next meetup.




Actions
So we have 3 weeks until the next meeting and we all have 2 hours of homework to do in 4 weeks. Thats 45 mins a week.


Paul

  • Complete - write up our selections amend to a spreadsheet and add market capitalization. See this link for the spreadsheet
  • Complete - Set calendar and document on this blog

Roy to Review Infomedia

  • Get 10 years worth of financial info
  • Read 1 Annual report
  • Compile a list of the key soft attribute about the company - consumer monopoly etc
  • Evaluate the overall performance of the company
  • Evaluate the Overall performance of the managers
  • Watch the crash course

Justin to Review Infomedia

  • Get 10 years worth of financial info
  • Read 1 Annual report
  • Compile a list of the key soft attribute about the company - consumer monopoly etc
  • Evaluate the overall performance of the company
  • Evaluate the Overall performance of the managers
  • Put the Documents on Definitions onto google documents

Giselle

  • Complete reading from last time
  • Watch the crash course

Mandy - Optional

  • Read "The warren buffet way or buffetology"

Friday, September 24, 2010

Economic Fundamentals - The Crash Course


I was listening to an interview with Chris Martinson on the survival podcast.

Chris Materson is a really interesting, intelligent guy with scientific training and a thirst for numbers more details can be found about him here.

He has a free video course that you can watch on youtube (click on the image above to view it). It is very logical and well cited. I would recommend anyone who is investing at present to spend some time watching this so they can understand the major financial issues that will shape the economy in the future.

Wednesday, September 8, 2010

Meeting #28 - 9th September 2010


We just had our meeting Justin had made good progress on Buffetology. Giselle still has quite a bit of reading to do.
Actions
All
  • All buy a financial review and bring along with highlighter
  • Select one company we think is of good quality according to Warrens criteria


Giselle
  • Read the parts of Buffetology related to selection of high quality companies


Next Agenda
  • Each of us Present why we selected the company we selected
  • Agree on three companies in the same market sector to analyse
  • Allocate a company each to then analyse to calculate a value range for the shares

Friday, July 23, 2010

Meeting #27



Me to find a suitable stock to find for us to value - Straights Resources and to schedule

J&G To listen to the investor questions podcast and start analysis on the company
J to get his extra data on the company
Me to publish spreadsheet on the company to be the basis for calcs

Thursday, February 11, 2010

Hyper Inflation - Again and hedging strategies





It's a bit depressing but more people are now talking about the US and it's likelihood for having huge inflation. 
Ron Paul (video above) is my favourite US politician (I only really like him and Ralph Nader). He serves on the House Financial Services Committee, the International Relations committee, and the Joint Economic Committee and on the Financial Services Committee, Rep. Paul serves as the vice-chairman of the Oversight and Investigations subcommittee.


There is another interesting article about the fed here all in all the more I understand about the subject the bleaker it looks. 

As part of my investment strategy and as a hedge against hyperinflation I am looking into how I buy land with some of my superannuation. I will let you know how I get on

Saturday, January 30, 2010

Tasks

Ahh 2010 and we have all been on holiday! I think we all forgot what we were supposed to be working on so I thought to make things easier I'd add a sheet here so we can see what we commited to last time. At any time click "Current Tasks Assigned" toward the top of the screen.

Friday, November 13, 2009

Meeting #26



There are now a few more members to the club and we are busily working on analysis of some companies. There will be 3 new spreadsheets going up when we have our next meeting (beginning of December)

Friday, October 2, 2009

Pauls Current Financial strategy

As I am convinced we are entering a new inflationary time. (which in turn probably means higher interest rates)

We actually already have currency devaluation in Australia but not against the currencies of the world (at the moment we are looking pretty good and I think the AU dollar will only get stronger over the next 5 years against both the UK pound and US dollar).

The AU dollar has devalued (along with all the major international currencies) against commodities. This makes perfect sense as all the major economies of the world have been busy printing money (in huge volumes in the case of the US approx 4 x the US GDP [this figure will be disputed - I have discussed this in an earlier post]).


As a result of this my current strategy with regards to my DIY superfund is


1. Invest in companies like warren buffet (this is a natrual hedge against inflation because I will be looking for companies with a consumer monopoly and therefore the ability to easily raise prices with inflation and low debt)

2. Invest in rural agricultural land (as food prices will be a good hedge against inflation and also in the long term is likely to continue to become more expensive - In the last 6 out of 9 years the world has not produced enough food for it's population.

3. Invest in gold and silver as a hedge against inflation. Also as countries try to untie themselves from the US dollar countries will start to increase their gold reserves. China is currently doing this now - see article


Anyway this is just what I am thinking. I am allways open to any feedback on anything and welcome you to comment on this article below

Workings on How much I'd pay for cabcharge


It's been a while!

I have made some progress and managed to do all the maths on Cabcharge ala Warren Buffet. I have imported the spreadsheet I have been working on (find it here, all the numbers are correct although the formulas didn't import).

the spreadsheet is here

If you have any advice or comments or questions about anything on the sheet then please drop me a line!


Paul

Thursday, December 11, 2008

How bad is the credit crisis Part 2


Warren Buffet has come to my aid (how very fitting)

The conclusion he was at in 2002 was that

"derivatives are financial weapons of mass destruction"

I thought the numbers in the last post were big - this just blows them away.The total value of all the derivatives in the market is $500 trillion
or
500,000 bn
 or

200 times all the tax raised in the US in 2007
or
38 times US GDP
or 
9 times the Global GDP   (55,000bn)

Scary numbers when you start to read what derivatives are and how they work.

There is a good article on wikipeadia on this


Once you understand how they work in practice it starts to look like  great big pyramid scheme. Its a house of cards what it does is amplify any problem massively. The spark that set fire to the trillion dollar crisis was 200 million bad loans and because of all of these derivatives based on these 200 billions can magnify into trillions of dollars in losses. 

I think I now understand how this whole thing has come about and how bad it will be.

The answer to my origonal question 
"How bad is the credit crisis"
  • Very bad 
  • Very high inflation
  • Not sure on when it will get really bad though
 I am unsure of how to deal with it. I have holdings in cash and shares (although most of mine were bought after the first large dip and are holding quite well). I also ave other investments and am continuing to contribute to my superannuation (which is currently 100% cash). The question is ...

Now I think I can see the future how do I use this information to assist me in my financial planning over the next 5-10 years?

If anyone has some good ideas I would love to hear from you




Reference
The World and US GDP

The value of derivatives