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Hedge Funds Cut Allocation to Gold

“Gold dropped for the first time in four days alongside equities and commodities on concern thatChina’s economy is slowing as speculators cut their positions by the most since August 2008.

China’s exports grew at a slower pace than forecast, contributing to the biggest trade deficit in at least 22 years last month, data showed March 10, adding to figures last week on factory output and retail sales that signaled slowing economic growth. That sent equities and commodities lower. Physical gold markets are “still keeping their distance,” according to UBS AG. The U.S. Federal Open Market Committee, which sets U.S. interest-rate policy, meets tomorrow….”

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NFL: Peyton Manning Meets With Denver Broncos

ENGLEWOOD, Colo. — Peyton Manning’s whirlwind free-agency tour kicked off in grand fashion, complete with a chartered plane coming to pick him up and a helicopter hovering overhead as he met with the Denver Broncos.

And this was only Day 1 of his adventure.

Manning spent Friday in Tim Tebow’s neighborhood, chatting with the Broncos for nearly six hours.

Speculation was that Arizona was next up, and television crews were staking out the Cardinals’ headquarters in Tempe on Saturday. But there was no sight of the superstar.

Not that the facility was quiet. The Manning frenzy coincided with Kurt Warner’s “Ultimate Football Experience,” a fundraiser for his foundation.

Manning is the NFL’s marquee free agent after being released by the Indianapolis Colts two days ago. The Broncos rolled out the red carpet for visit by the four-time MVP.

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Velocipede Magic

[youtube://http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cj6ho1-G6tw&feature=relmfu 450 300]

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Should You Have Concerns Over Your Dividend Paying Stocks ?

Source

“(MoneyWatch) Many investors are seduced by the allure of dividend-paying stocks, tempted by their high yields relative to what they earn on safe bonds. Trouble is, people often don’t appreciate that because these are stocks, they carry different risks than bonds. So what’s the right way to think about such investments?
First, we need to briefly review an important point. A few weeks ago, we demonstrated that an investment in the S&P High Yield Dividend Aristocrats Index (SDY) was similar to investing in a Russell 1000 Value Index fund. Our analysis showed that the fund had market exposure of 0.66 and value exposure of 0.60, along with a slightly lower expected return relative to the market (0.41 versus 0.58).

 

An investment in a fast-growing dividend strategy, via the Vanguard Dividend Appreciation ETF (VIG), is similar to investing in the S&P 500 Index. Our analysis found that the ETF had market exposure of 0.78 and the exact same exposures to the size (-0.12) and value (0.05) risk factors as the S&P 500. With the same loadings on size and value, and a lower beta loading, VIG has a lower expected return relative to the market (and relatively less risk).

 

With this in mind, let’s now explore how switching out of safe fixed-income investments affects an investor’s asset allocation.

Consider an investor who begins with $200,000 in assets and a 50/50 split between stocks and bonds. Having been tempted by the allure of high dividends, he sells his bonds and buys $100,000 of SDY. Given SDY’s beta loading of 0.66, we can calculate that the $100,000 investment is equivalent to owning $66,000 of stocks and $34,000 of bonds. And with the 0.9 loading on the value factor, he also has a high degree of exposure to the risks of value stocks. In terms of risk, we see that his allocation has shifted from $100,000/$100,000 (50/50) to $166,000/$34,000 (83/17), and he has likely exceeded his ability, willingness, and need to take risk. Similar analysis on an investment in VIG would show a shift to an allocation of 89 percent stocks/11 percent bonds.

 

Because most investors can’t or don’t do this type of analysis, they fail to understand how much more risk they’re actually accepting in return for a relatively small increase in the yield on their investments. Another mistake is to confuse yield and return. The yield of risky investments isn’t guaranteed, and that’s certainly true of dividends.

 

For instance, it wasn’t destiny that the recent recession we experienced didn’t into a full-blown depression. In fact, there were many “experts” who were making such forecasts. If that had occurred, there is no doubt that many dividend payments would have been slashed and some, if not many, would have been eliminated. Not only would investors have generated lower yields, but the values of their portfolios would have been devastated.

 

As hedge fund manager and author Nassim Nicholas Taleb has noted: “Lucky fools do not bear the slightest suspicion that they may be lucky fools — by definition, they do not know that they belong to such a category. They will act as if they deserve the money. The lucky fool [is] defined as a person who benefited from a disproportionate share of luck but attributes his success to some other, generally very precise, reason.”

Remember these words of wisdom the next time you’re tempted by the allure of dividend-paying stocks.”

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Introducing Google Play

Google’s Android Market has undergone some tremendous changes over the last year or so. What started as just a standalone app store has quickly grown to encompass e-books, music, videos, and now Google feels like the “Android Market” moniker is getting to be too restrictive, too constraining for what they’re really trying to deliver to their users.

That’s why Google is officially putting the Android Market name to rest. Starting today, all of Google’s digital media services have been rebranded to fly under a brand new banner: Google Play. That’s right gadget buffs, despite some delectable new rumors Google Play isn’t a new tablet from the folks at Mountain View, but rather a unified brand that seeks to tie the company’s digital media services together.

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