Sunday, March 4, 2012

March 4, 2012, Bob Brinker's Moneytalk Show Summary with Excerpts and Commentary

March 4, 2012...Bob Brinker hosted Moneytalk today......(comments welcome)

STOCK MARKET:  With the S&P 500 at 1369.63, Bob remains fully invested (since 2003) and bullish, advising dollar-cost-averaging for new money. The only change is that he has slightly raised his S&P target range from "low-to-mid 1400s" to "mid-to-upper 1400s."

Honey EC: It's important to remember his projections were even more bullish back when the market was at its all-time-high in the fall of 2007 -- he was projecting mid-1600s then.

S&P 500 INDEX BEST BAROMETER OF STOCK MARKET....Bob said: "I'm comfortable using the S&P 500 as a barometer of the market....as a measure of what the market is doing. You are talking about essentially the 500 largest companies in the USA. This is a market weighted index. The Dow is not a market weighted index.....There are only 30 companies in the Dow....I know that people quote the Dow....I don't think it can be compared comparably with the S&P Index." 

 GO FOR STOCK MARKET DIVERSITY: Caller Carol said that due to the death of her husband she would be receiving a  million dollars which a broker had recommended she put into 25 different stocks. Bob replied: "I would go for way more diversification and also minimize your expense by using something like a total stock market index fund. You can do this through Vanguard....Fidelity Spartan....You can do it through an exchange-traded-fund, symbol VTI."

Honey EC: She can also go to Charles Schwab.  Strangely, even though Bob used Charles Schwab's for the accounts he managed on a fee-basis through the B J Group (until he sold it), he never mention Charles Schwab. I think it's unfair. Are Vanguard and Fidelity paying him or giving him breaks somehow for mentioning them? I don't know.  But I do know that Schwab's expense rates on index funds are equal to or less than Vanguard's.

CAR INDUSTRY....Bob said:  "It's good news for the economy to see the automobile industry doing better.....We saw auto sales this week jumping to a 16% increase....and a four-year high."

COMPARING AUTO MAKERS: "Bob said: "For the month of February, General Motors was in first place -- 209,000 sales, an 18.2 market share. In second place, Ford Motor with 178,000 sales -- 15.5 market share....Toyota with 159,000 sales -- 14% market share. And then Chrysler in fourth place with 133,000 sales -- 11.5% market share. Then we had Honda, Nissan, Hyundai and a few others down the line. 

 In terms of the most popular vehicles out there, I'm sure many of our listeners are driving around in one of these vehicles right now....the Ford F-Series is in first place in the U.S.A -- 47,000 sales in the month of February. That's a 26% year-over-year gain....The second best seller, the Toyota Camry, 34,000 in February, up 27% year-over-year. And look at this vehicle, the Nissan Altima, 33,000 sales, up 58% year-over-year.  Next we have the Chevrolet Silverado,  32,000 sales, up about 2% year-over-year. And the Honda Civic with 27,000, up 27% Y-O-Y.....It's an important part of the economy."

 JOBS.....Bob said: "Now obviously, we've been seeing new jobs coming into the marketplace, and we should see some more new jobs when that's announced next Friday for the month of February......At the same we've seen higher gasoline prices in many sections across the country." 

UNEMPLOYMENT....Expected to stay close to 8.3%. Figures will be coming out this week. 

TREASURY  BONDS....Bob said: "The ten-year Treasury has a yield right now 2% which tells us a number of things.....Rates relatively holding steady.....People not really worried about the credit of the U.S.A., despite the credit change that occurred last year courtesy of the S&P."

INVESTING IN MARKETIMER INCOME PORTFOLIO....Caller Tim (age 50) said he was invested in equities and asked how to establish a position in Bob's Marketimer income portfolio on page 7.

Bob replied: "If you want to establish a separate income portfolio, certainly you could use the recommendations in the income portfolio that you cite there on page 7 of the investment letter. And then I would treat that as a separate portfolio and that would get you started with fixed income investing." (Tim asked if he should put his money in all at once)  

Bob continued: "If you put the money in all at once and the economy over-heats and rates go up, then you're going to see net-asset-value depreciation. That's the reality of the risk that you would be taking......Being in that portfolio would probably be to your benefit if rates stay on a relatively even keel. That's the real question you have to determine in terms of your tolerance for risk. Now you can dollar-cost-average into that portfolio over time, and that is a conservative way to go about it."

APPROACH FOR INVESTING IN INCOME PORTFOLIO (INCLUDING VANGUARD GINNIE MAE FUND VFIIX)...Kevin wanted to know about investing his fixed income allocation in all Ginnie Maes. Bob said: "If you're taking income investing as a subject matter, that you're just going to go with one item, like a Ginnie Mae for example. What we've done, and we have an income portfolio that we publish on page 7 in the investment letter and one of the callers referred to it earlier in the hour. What we do is take an aggregate approach to income investing. 

Matter of fact right now, we have five separate entries, five separate no-load funds that are in the income portfolio. And have various percentages that we assign to each....One of the funds happens to be a Ginnie Mae Fund. I'd rather take a top-down view at income investing, rather than just say we are going to look at Ginnie Maes....."

Honey EC: Bob is right, there are five no-load funds in the once-obscure, recently-famous, off-the-books income portfolio on page 7 of Marketimer. As he mentioned, Vanguard Ginnie Mae Fund is in it, but he  has reduced the weighting to 15% -- not much compared to the former 50%. He has  also told us that the income portfolio contains Double Line Total Return Fund, Vanguard High-Yield Fund and Wellesley Income Fund in the portfolio -- those are in almost equal shares. And the fifth fund is Vanguard Short-Term Investment Grade (VFSTX).  

MORE INCOME PORTFOLIO AND INTEREST RATES: Bob continued: "Rates are at historic low, and as long as they stay down, fine. People will collect their income and everything will be copacetic.  But the reality is someday, the likelihood is we will see normalization of interest rates....When we do, we are going to see changes in the bond market....The changes are going to be the obvious changes....And it's possible that you could avoid this whole subject by simply putting together a fully FDIC insured ladder of CD's. (Certificates of Deposit) Yes, interest rates are low, but you're not risking any principal." 

 Honey EC: It's important to remember that the income portfolio is not part of Bob's Marketimer official portfolios record. Mark Hulbert does not include it in his Hulbert Financial Digest Marketimer ratings.  Perhaps Bob doesn't want to talk about his equity model portfolios because they both lost money last year and under-performed the Active-Passive portfolio, which is 80% total market index/20% international index. More importantly, they underperformed the total market index (VTSMX)

FIXED INDEX ANNUITY...Caller Cheryl asked Bob to give his views. Bob said: "No, I do not recommend these securities....I think they are too expensive....I think that they take too much off the top."

GOLD AND SILVER BULLION VS COINS....Caller Tony from New York asked Bob if there was any difference between buying gold and silver coins and bullion. Bob said: "In my opinion, one is a lot better than the other because one does not have a mark-up and the other one does......If you are going to invest in gold as a hedge in your portfolio, there is only one way that makes any sense.And that is to buy an exchange-traded-funds that's backed by gold bullion....symbol GLD....essentially tracks the price of gold....The problem with numismatic coins is the mark-up...Forget about coins....You can buy the gold bullion-content coins. The Krugerrand, the Maple Leaf, the Mexican Peso, the Austrian Crown, the U.S. Eagle, you can buy any of those. And typically the premium guideline that you could use on that is 4%." 

 HONEY EC: Personally, I like to use American Silver Eagles and other silver dollars for Christmas gifts. They are perfect for family members that "have everything." Just be sure that the recipient understands that you are giving them an ounce of silver, not $1.00.  :)

FEDERAL RESERVE INTEREST RATES POLICY COULD CHANGE....Bob said: "Ben Bernanke makes these comments  that the Federal Reserve has a policy of holding down rates into 2014.....I think the bottom line is this, yes, that is his intention based on everything he knows today. But it's a moveable feast. In other words, if the data changes, the policy changes.....Always remember that when the Federal Reserve makes a policy statement, the policy statement is within the context of all of the data that they have right now.....In the event that a year down the economy is gathering steam....I don't think there's any way in the world....that the Federal Reserve would be able to stick to their policy.....It's good for today, we'll see what follows."

CALCULATING CRITICAL MASS.....Bob said: "You are at critical mass when your level of income from your investment portfolio, coupled with whatever guaranteed  income you might have is enough to meet your outflow. It's really that simple."

GENERAL OBLIGATION MUNI-BONDS: Caller Mary from Colorado asked Bob about buying new issue muni-bonds. Bob said: "Almost every business day there are municipal issues that come to market in the form of offereings. And certainly you can buy those initial offerings for the most part through broker....The advantage of buying new issues is the seller pays the commission.....I'm comfortable with general obligations of the State of Colorado." 

ACTIVELY MANAGED FUNDS VS INDEX FUNDS.....Bob said: "Given the general record of active managers in mutual funds....the reality is they have a heck of a hard time beating the market over a long period of time. Let's face it, if you go back and look at the multi-decade record on managed mutual funds, it has been very difficult for fund managers to consistently outperform the indexes over the long term."

Best Bob Brinker quotes of the day:
* "Some of these listeners are so sharp that the sharks can't get the stuff by them." 
* "You believe everything that Obi Wan Ben says?"
* "It's just an opinion. Bob doesn't know everything, as we all know well."

Bob's third-hour guest-speaker was Adam Lashinsky: Inside Apple


26 comments:

Anonymous said...

Hi Honeybee,

I was waiting for Bob to start at 2:00 p.m. here in SoCal on KABC and it appears that they have dumped him yet again. When they did bring him back a few months ago his first hour was replaced with Nick Vertucci's infomercial, http://www.kabc.com/showdj.asp?DJID=51490 and now Bob's not on at all. The new show on right now, from 2:00 p.m. - 4:00 p.m. is called "the ultimate entrepreneur radio show" which also sounds like another infomercial from what I can gather from the first few minutes.

Take care,

Rob In Pasadena

Anonymous said...

KSFO is not streaming because of some contractual agreement regarding some football game I guess. Anyway, they are not broadcasting anything online.

Honeybee said...

I was frantically looking for a station that was playing Moneytalk when the second hour started.

As anonymous said, KSFO is doing sports and so is KION in Monterey. As we all know KGO no longer carries it.

I found it online here:

moneyradio1510

Dan G said...

I was listening to part of the first hour and was going to listen after 2PM when I heard that he was going to be pre-empted by college basketball. What could be more boring than a radio broadcast of college basketball?

This morning I started watching another so-called "advisor", Rick Edelman, who went on his rant about why one should never pay off his/her mortgage. Carry a 30-year mortgage, by all means!

And of course then you can let him "manage" the money you would have stupidly used to pay off your home. The banks must this moron!

I paid off my mortgage early years ago and have never regretted it for a single minute. Bob calls it "psychic income". And that's just what it is!

Dan G said...

Meant to say, "the banks must LOVE this moron!" I guess my fingers are too slow for my brain.

Anonymous said...

Dan G sez - "What could be more boring than a radio broadcast of college basketball?"

Quick answer for you -
Listening to Stinker on the radio!!

Anonymous said...

I heard about 5 minutes earlier and then about 15 minutes of the 3rd hour. Frankly I think it was Brinker at his best, he was advising on real estate and then coupe who wanted to take 100k out of their Roth and help their kids pay off student loans.

When he gets out of politics and his asinine market timing crap and talks about real estate or spending matters he gives interesting advice.

tfb

john said...

Thanks honeybee for the post. I agree with anonymous that is the reason I read and post in this blog. Often times Bob gives out good answers when he gets out of his market timing crap and political rhetoric.
I sometimes like his metaphors and his common sense answers. Its when he puts on his salesman hat and starts selling his market timer that I get turned off. Obviously none of us has all the answers so we are constantly looking and probing and comparing and he does have some input into that process.. Thanks again honeybee and thats a good idea on giving silver dollars for presents for the person even who has critical mass..

jeffchristie said...

TFB

I had several problems with Bob's call from Donna who wanted to give her children $100,000 to pay off student loans. First she said there would be no penalty from withdrawing money from the IRA because they are close to 59 1/2. Later she stated her husband was an airline pilot with 5 more years before retirement. Mandatory retirement age is 60. Can she explain this. Bob ask her about guaranteed income and she said her husband would be receiving a $40,000 a year pension. My question is how secure is that pension in the event his airline declares bankruptcy. Next, I don't like cashing in money from their Roth IRA. I would exhaust all other accounts first. Finally I think Bob brought up the gift tax limits but I don't think they apply because she said the loans were in their names as well as their children's.

Honeybee said...

Bob Brinker went into great detail about new car sales and how they are helping the economy.

Well, for some reason, the Chevy Volt didn't make his list. Here's why:

Volt Sleeps With the Fishes

By Eric Peters on 3.5.12 @ 6:06AM

It might as well have been a Trabant.

GM has just announced it will be idling the plant (and the 1,300 workers at that plant) where the "game changing" Chevy Volt electric car is -- uh, was -- built. GM says it's only temporary -- until they figure out how to "align production with demand."

It could be a long wait for those workers.

Read more

Anonymous said...

"...he never mention Charles Schwab. I think it's unfair. Are Vanguard and Fidelity paying him or giving him breaks somehow for mentioning them? I don't know. But I do know that Schwab's expense rates on index funds are equal to or less than Vanguard's..."

For one thing Schwab's index funds are relatively new and don't have a long term track record.

All index funds are not equal and Schwab just settled a class action lawsuit over a fund they said was a short term bond fund much like a money market fund. It tanked big time and investors lost a lot of money. I am one of those investors and personally I would never buy another Schwab product.

2 Schwab units paying $118.9M in settlement over bond fund risks

http://www.usatoday.com/money/perfi/funds/2011-01-11-schwab-settlement_N.htm

I don't trust Schwab nor their products.

Chuck

Honeybee said...

Sorry Chuck, but I don't feel sorry for anyone who bought into that fund and lost money. The holdings were disclosed and easily available.

I looked at it when they were marketing it and decided it was a lot of risk for little extra reward and made my own decision not to buy.

You know about making one's own decisions, don't you? :)

Here are excerpts from your article:

By Marcy Gordon, Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Charles Schwab(CSHW) on Tuesday agreed to pay $118.9 million to settle federal regulators' civil charges over disclosure of the risks of a short-term bond fund.

The company called the steep decline of the YieldPlus Fund the result "of an unprecedented and unforeseeable credit crisis and market collapse" in 2007 and 2008.

The Securities and Exchange Commission announced the settlement with two Schwab units, Charles Schwab Investment Management and Charles Schwab & Co. The agency said Schwab marketed the fund as a conservative investment only slightly riskier than a money-market fund even though half its assets were invested in high-risk securities.

The Schwab units neither admitted nor denied the allegations in the settlement with the SEC, the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority — the securities industry's self-policing organization — and Illinois regulators.

Company founder and chairman Charles Schwab was one of the biggest investors in the YieldPlus Fund, the company said in a statement.

"Schwab would never seek to profit at the expense of its clients," it said. "We regret that fund shareholders lost money in YieldPlus."

Read more

Anonymous said...

Re: Donna paying off student loans for her kids. There is a high probability that a parent who co-signs a student loan will end up paying for it. Don't expect the kids to pay. Most of the time the young student overspends for all expenses during the school enrollment, not just using the money for tuition and books. The easy available money is the kid's ticket out of the house and independence from mom and dad. Big bills are racked up, and the student usually overestimates her earnings potential upon finishing the program. If people watch the Suze Orman show they will see these kinds of scenarios all the time. Suze's advice almost every time will be to never ever co sign a student loan.
As for Donna, it is a shame that now she thinks she should pay the loan off. Taking money out of her retirement fund Is not a good idea. Her husbands 40K pension will not be enough going forward.
A big question remaining is: are the kids unable or just unwilling to pay for their obligation? If the answer is that the the kids are trained in something that will never produce much income then I say Donna is up the proverbial creek without a paddle. Too bad, as a co -signer she is on the hook. The 100k she spends on student loans would have been a nice cushion in retirement, after all that's why she put it in a retirement account to begin with.
I believe in Suze's advice don' t co-sign for any loan!

Apollo

Anonymous said...

The agency said Schwab marketed the fund as a conservative investment only slightly riskier than a money-market fund even though half its assets were invested in high-risk securities.

Schwab lied! Maybe some folks were able to see through their lies but not the thousands of investors who lost millions of dollars.

The regulators said Schwab committed fraud and they agreed to settle.

I've never had any such problem with investor-owned Vanguard nor have I even heard a hint of such activity.

I just won't ever buy another Schwab product ever again.

Chuck

Honeybee said...

Bob Brinker advertises his Marketimer as a

ta-da!!

Market-timing newsletter!

He has been 100% invested since March 2003.

Sometimes things are exaggerated when "it's all about the money"....aren't they?

Anonymous said...

Bob Brinker is a unregulated newsletter writer.

Charles Schwab is a regulated broker/dealer with strictly enforced fiduciary responsibilities.

Don't you see the difference?

I won't post anymore arguments but I just won't buy another Schwab product either.

Chuck

Honeybee said...

Okay, that's a point I can agree with.

Bob Brinker Marketimer newsletter and the methods he uses to sell it is not regulated.

There are no legal restraints to prevent him from covering up his tragic mistakes that probably cost subscribers millions, if not billions of dollars.

I know for a fact his mistakes have cost people dearly....

Honeybee said...

Fidelity offers a comprehensive research center for fixed income and bond markets at their website

Anonymous said...

A great idea to gift silver dollar. Any reputable places or stores to buy such metal you can trust? Online or walk-in in Bay area?

Thanks.
Doll

Honeybee said...

Hi Doll,

Yes, I do almost all of my silver buying from Apmex. They have always given me good service.

The old coins that I have bought -- like Morgan dollars -- are exactly the quality that they say they are.

I think those on my Christmas list like the old coins even better than the new Silver Eagles.

I have also given some Australian Koalas and Canadian Wolf. Those were also hits. :)

Here's the website: Apmex

jeffchristie said...

Honey

So Brinker is predicting S&P 500 in the mid 1400's. Yesterday Laszlo Birinyi was on CNBC. He predicted 1700 by the end of the year.

Honeybee said...

Hi Jeff,

Actually, in the March 2012 issue of Marketimer, Bob Brinker raised his prediction from "low-to-mid 1400's" to: "mid-to-high 1400's."

Anonymous said...

"Yesterday Laszlo Birinyi was on CNBC. He predicted 1700 by the end of the year."

Oh Birinyi calls for an even higher market specifically on September 4, 2013 so mark you calendars but don't hold your breath.

In January 2011, Birinyi said the average length and size of bull markets suggested the S&P 500 would rally to 2,854 on Sept. 4, 2013

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-03-01/birinyi-says-s-p-500-may-reach-1-700-by-year-end-in-echo-of-1995-sentiment.html

Gurusux

Honeybee said...

In the ongoing debate about the economy, the employment report for February would indicate that Bob Brinker is more correct than Lakshman Achuthan:

The ADP National Employment Report

February 2012 Report

Employment in the U.S. nonfarm private business sector increased by 216,000 from January to February on a seasonally adjusted basis. The estimated advance in employment from December to January was revised slightly upwards to 173,000 from the initially reported 170,000. Employment in the private, service-providing sector rose 170,000 in February, and employment in the private, goods-producing sector increased 46,000 in February. Manufacturing employment increased 21,000.


Read more and see graph

Anonymous said...

Wells Fargo Downgrades Annaly Capital to “Market Perform”; Long-Term Risks Persist

NLY

Linked by The Dividend Daily ( track newsfeed | ignore newsfeed ) - March 06, 09:07AM from (www.dividend.com)

Mortgage investment REIT Annaly Capital Management, Inc. (NLY) on Tuesday caught a big downgrade from analysts at Wells Fargo. The firm said it cut its rating on NLY from "Outperform" to "Market Perform" with a $16-17 valuation range. That range implies essentially zero upside to the stock's Monday closing price of $16.60. Wells Fargo noted ...

JReality said...

Thanks for the summary. I was listening to the KSFO archive, and they pre-empted him for college basketball (Yikes!).