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30 Apr 2005 10:11 AM
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Reverse mortgages let you use your house as a piggy-bank:
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Reverse mortgages will gain popularity as more baby boomers are approaching retirement. This kind of loan is indeed the opposite of a regular mortgage as it allows seniors to borrow against the equity in the house. Debt does not have to be repaid as long as the senior lives. The heirs will inherit the remaining part of the equity
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06 Apr 2005 10:35 AM
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Mutual Funds and Index Funds:
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Buy an index fund. Approximately 80% of mutual funds underperform the average return of the stock market.
Here’s something else you need to know about mutual funds.
We
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02 Apr 2005 05:10 AM
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Is there a mortgage after bankruptcy?:
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Sure there is. Even if you made the mistake of shoring up too much debt and were not able to cope with it at one point in your life, there are still people willing to make money off you by extending a mortgage loan.
This
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26 Mar 2005 10:36 AM
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Options:
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While many investors may believe that options are a product of recent financial innovation, options were, in fact, conceived thousands of years ago. Some market historians trace the origins of options as far back as ancient
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26 Mar 2005 10:29 AM
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Private equity:
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Private equity investments are capital invested in public, but more typically private, companies on a private placement basis and are not available in the public markets. Private equity investments run the gamut of corporate finance strategies, ranging from financing of start-up companies to debt investments in mature companies
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26 Mar 2005 07:32 AM
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Fixed Income Securities:
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Corporate bonds (also called corporates) are debt obligations, or IOUs, issued by private and public corporations. They are typically issued in multiples of $1,000 and/or $5,000. Companies use the funds they raise
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26 Mar 2005 04:34 AM
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Stocks:
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Stock generally refers to shares of Common Stock or an "equity share" of a corporation. Each share of Common Stock represents a share of ownership in a company.
The
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26 Mar 2005 02:25 AM
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Closed-end funds:
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A "closed-end fund," legally known as a "closed-end company," is one of three basic types of investment company. The two other basic types of investment companies are mutual funds (open-end investment companies
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25 Mar 2005 04:27 PM
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Exchange Funds:
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Exchange funds allow investors a tax-free means to diversify a low-cost-basis and/or restricted stock position. Exchange funds allow investors to pool their low-cost-basis stocks in a fund.
In
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23 Mar 2005 10:33 AM
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Real estate still beauty queen of investment market though future bodes caution:
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With stock markets faltering and some investors’ hearts still smouldering with the bitterness of the 2002 crash, more and more people are turning to real estate as a sure investment bet. The National Association of Realtors reports that last year about 1.8 million homes were bought in the US for investment, almost one-fourth
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10 Feb 2005 09:53 AM
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Other Basic Facts (Part 8):
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Registered Bonds: Some corporate bonds are issued as certificates, with the owner’s name printed on them. There are no coupons attached for the owner to submit for payment of interest. The issuer’s agent or trustee sends the interest to the bondholder at the proper intervals and forwards the principal at maturity.
Bearer Bonds:
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10 Feb 2005 07:45 AM
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Bond Funds, Taxation and Other Bond Facts (Part 7):
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Many investors who want to reap the returns available in the corporate bond market may buy shares in bond mutual funds instead of individual bonds - or in addition to individual bonds. They do so for the same reasons investors
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05 Feb 2005 04:43 AM
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Types of bonds (Part 6):
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Most corporate bonds are debentures - that is, unsecured debt obligations backed only by the issuer’s general credit and the capacity of its earnings to repay interest and principal. However, even unsecured bonds usually
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02 Feb 2005 09:25 AM
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Financing and mortgage broker lending practice:
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Holy smokes, do you feel like you’re just another number yet? Well, finance is based on numbers, and people who deal with numbers are more often than not left-brain thinkers. Back to Psychology 101, folks. I see it all the time…people thinking that the financial gods of Isaac are against them.
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01 Feb 2005 09:41 AM
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Bond terms (Part 5):
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A sinking fund is money taken from a corporation’s earnings that is used to redeem bonds periodically, before maturity, as specified in the indenture. If a bond issue has a sinking-fund provision, a certain portion of the issue must be retired each year. The bonds retired are usually selected by lottery.
One investor benefit of a sinking fund is that it lowers the risk of default by reducing the amount of the corporation’s
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