Investing For Dummies. Eric Tyson

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corporations issue.

      Another reason people keep too much money in traditional bank accounts is that the local bank branch office or online bank makes the cash seem more accessible. Money market mutual funds, however, offer many quick ways to get your cash. Most money market mutual funds can be accessed online, just like most bank accounts. You can also write a check (most funds stipulate the check must be for at least $250), or you can call the fund and request that it mail or electronically transfer your money.

      

Move extra money that’s dozing away in your bank savings account into a higher-yielding money market mutual fund. Even if you have just a few thousand dollars, the extra yield more than pays for the cost of this book. If you’re in a high tax bracket, you can also use tax-free money market funds. (See Chapter 8 to find out about money market funds.)

      Suppose you think that IBM’s stock is a good investment. The direction that the management team is taking impresses you, and you like the products and services that the company offers. Profits seem to be on a positive trend. Things are looking up.

      You can go out and buy the stock. Suppose that it’s currently trading at around $100 per share. If the price rises to $150 in the next six months, you’ve made yourself a 50 percent profit ($150 – $100 = $50) on your original $100 investment. (Of course, you will incur some brokerage fees to buy and then sell the stock.)

      If IBM’s stock price skyrockets to, say, $150 in the next few months, the value of your options that allow you to buy the stock at $120 will be worth a lot — at least $30. You can then simply sell your options, which you bought for $6 in the example, at a huge profit — you’ve multiplied your money five-fold!

      

Although this talk of fat profits sounds much more exciting than simply buying the stock directly and making far less money from a stock price increase, call options have two big problems:

       You could easily lose your entire investment. If a company’s stock price goes nowhere or rises only a little during the six-month period when you hold the call option, the option expires as worthless, and you lose all — that is, 100 percent — of your investment. In fact, in my example, if IBM’s stock trades at $120 or less at the time the option expires, the option is worthless.

       A call option represents a short-term gamble on a company’s stock price, not an investment in the company itself. In my example, IBM could expand its business and profits greatly in the years and decades ahead, but the value of the call option hinges on the ups and downs of IBM’s stock price over a relatively short period of time (the next six months). If the stock market happens to dip in the next six months, IBM may get pulled down as well, despite the company’s improving financial health.

      

Futures are similar to options in that both can be used as gambling instruments. Futures, for example, can deal with the value of commodities such as heating oil, corn, wheat, gold, silver, and pork bellies. Futures have a delivery date that’s in the not-too-distant future. (Do you really want bushels of wheat delivered to your home? Or worse yet, pork bellies?) You can place a small down payment — around 10 percent — toward the purchase of futures, thereby greatly leveraging your “investment.” If prices fall, you need to put up more money to keep from having your position sold. (Note: Futures on financial instruments like stock market indices and interest rates are generally cash settlement rather than physical delivery, and they’re an increasingly large part of the market.) My advice: Don’t gamble with futures and options.

The only real use that you may (if ever) have for these derivatives (so called because their value is “derived” from the price of other securities) is to hedge. Suppose you hold a lot of a stock that has greatly appreciated, and you don’t want to sell now because of the taxes you would owe on the profit. Perhaps you want to postpone selling the stock until next year because you plan on not working or because you can then benefit from a lower tax rate. You can buy what’s called a put option, which increases in value when a stock’s price falls (because the put option grants its seller the right to sell his stock to the purchaser of the put option at a preset stock price). Thus, if the stock price does fall, the rising put option value offsets some of your losses on the stock you still hold. Using put options allows you to postpone selling your stock without exposing yourself to the risk of a falling stock price.

      Over the millennia, gold and silver have served as mediums of exchange or currency because they have some intrinsic value and can’t be debased the way paper currencies can (by printing more money). These precious metals are used in jewelry and manufacturing.

      As investments, gold and silver perform well during bouts of inflation. For example, from 1972 to 1980, when inflation zoomed into the double-digit range in the United States and stocks and bonds went into the tank, gold and silver prices skyrocketed more than 500 percent. With precious metals pricing zooming upward in the decade that began in 2000, some feared the return of inflation.

      

Over the long term, precious metals are lousy investments. They don’t pay any dividends, and their price increases may, at best, just keep up with (not keep ahead of) increases in the cost of living. Although investing in precious metals is better than keeping cash in a piggy bank or stuffing it in a mattress, the long-term investment returns aren’t nearly as good as quality bonds, stocks, and real estate. (I discuss bonds, stocks, and real estate in detail in Parts 2 and 3.) One way to possibly earn better long-term returns is to invest in a mutual fund or exchange-traded fund containing the stocks of gold and precious metals companies (see Chapter 8 for information).

      From time to time, you may see some ads or articles touting investing in currencies such as the British pound, Swiss franc, Japanese yen, and so on. Because such currencies have the backing of their particular country’s government, they are usually somewhat stable unless the country has a problematic economic situation (really high inflation) or troublesome finances (extremely high levels of government debt that will make repayment difficult).

      

But I shouldn’t really call placing your money into a specific currency in the hopes it will rise in value relative to other currencies investing because it’s more akin to gambling. Currency movements are influenced by many factors

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