digging, planting, & pruning in the backyard of the stock market & personal finance
Wednesday, May 21, 2008
vacation & mj's money
In the meantime, I wanted to point out a blog that I have started frequenting that I find to be extremely insightful and certainly worth following:
Michael James on Money is an "amateur's clear explanations of personal finance and money". This blog provides a very interesting, every day, perspective on common themes within personal finance and investing. The author writes very well, with a style and perspective that are very familiar to me. I feel that many of the themes are similar to thoughts that I often express here on the moneygardener. Always interesting, short, and unique, his posts often draw you in to participate in the tangible content. If you haven't visited Michael James on Money, I would highly recommend reading most posts there, and subscribing via a reader.
Wednesday, May 14, 2008
net worth update year end may, 2008
- Debt/Asset ratio dropped to 0.51% (very close to having 2x more assets than liabilities)
- Net Worth moved up 11.3%
- Total Assets increased 4.7%
- Total Liabilities decreased 1.0%
- House Value/Total Assets dropped to 69.7%
- Non-Registered Portfolio grew 30.1%
- Debt/Asset ratio fell from 0.60% to 0.51%
- Net Worth moved up 39.6%
- Total Assets increased 12.5%
- Total Liabilities decreased 5.4%
- House Value / Total Assets dropped from 76.5% to 69.7%
- Non-Registered Portfolio grew 107.9% over the year
Results for Two Years Ended May 15, 2008
- Net Worth moved up 190.7%
- Debt/Asset moved from 0.77% to 0.51%
In two years we grew our net worth by an average value of $4,168 per month. We also went from having $0.77 cents of debt for every $1.00 in assets, to presently having $0.51 cents in debt for every $1.00 in assets.
--
Wow, what a great bi-monthly report! A combination of several factors allowed us to rebound in a big way from the March, 2008 update. These include an employment income bonus, tax return, and stock market gains.
For the year, I am very happy with the results as we grew our net worth by $43,226, which amounts to $3,602 per month, or $7,204 per bi-monthly update. All of this occurred in an environment with generally declining stock markets. The S&P 500 index is down more than 6% looking one year back from today. Basically all of this tells me that a significant portion of our income went towards growing our net worth. I believe if we can continue this while we are young, it should pay serious dividends later in life.
*previous net worth figures were adjusted for an error that I made on a debt repayment calculation
clorox hikes dividend 15%
Here is a glance at Clorox's recent dividend history in fiscal years:
- 2005 = $1.10/share
- 2006 = $1.14/share
- 2007 = $1.20/share
- 2008 = $1.60/share
- 2009 = $1.84/share (EST.)
This represents an average compounded annual increase of the dividend of over 13%. Clorox recently announced earnings which included an outlook that was better than the street was expecting. This would explain the spike in the stock from its lows. The company is currently fighting against rising resin costs as they're being affected like everyone else by high oil prices. They are also integrating a major acquisition and have just launched several new products. Read more about Clorox at my link above.
*I own shares in Clorox (CLX)
Tuesday, May 13, 2008
canadian investment styles diverge
XIC (Barclays ETF that tracks the largest most liquid names in Canada)
Year To Date = +5.8%
Some Highlights = Encana (ECA) +35%, Research in Motion (RIM) +25%, Potash Corp. of Saskatchewan (POT) +38%
XDV (Barclays ETF that tracks the 30 highest yielding dividend growing Canadian firms)
Year To Date = -2.7%
Some Lowlights = Bank of Montreal (BMO) -12.5%, Manitoba Telecom (MBT) -10.8%, National Bank of Canada (NA) -0.3%
It's no wonder the Canadian index is soaring while dividend paying stocks flounder. Commodities have been on fire lately, while banks remain under the dark clouds of the credit crunch. Financial services firms make up a much larger portion of the dividend paying universe in Canada than they comprise the total index.
One might assume that these two ETFs would perform quite similarly but this year to date is really showing that this would be a false assumption. Does this mean now is a great time to buy some of the growthy companies that make up the Canadian index? Who really knows, but as a dividend growth investor it is much easier to find value in some of the beaten down constituents of the boring old XDV. When most investors are ignoring these dividend paying firms, is usually the best time to get involved. The Canadian XDV will have its days in the sun in future years and that is perhaps when you want to be accumulating cash or diversifying into other areas. The nice thing about many of the Canadian financial service industry stocks is that at the end of the day they should benefit from any successes that the commodity economy in Canada garners through increased economic activity.
Monday, May 12, 2008
manic monday links
Money Under 30 is hosting the 152nd Carnival of Personal Finance, my article hedge yourself™ - gasoline costs was included. An astounding amount of articles there on several personal finance topics.
In the new economy 'Free' becomes inevitable. This is a fascinating article that everyone should read. I think we'll be hearing more about this trend in the months and years to come. This is really cutting edge, and is changing everything about the way business is done.
Walgreen is a 'big strong and healthy' buy from blogging stocks (you thought I could put together a group of links without including Walgreen..?)
PepsiCo (PEP) announces a healthy dividend increase of over 13%.
Friday, May 9, 2008
yellow pages Q1
- Adjusted Directory Revenue (not including acquisitions) increased 4.2%
- Directories margin reached a new high at 60.2%
- Online Revenue now makes up 13% of Total Revenue, as it grew 48%
- Total Earnings up 5%, Total Revenue up 8%
- Adjusted EBITDA +11.7%, Adj. Revenue +7.8% (excludes acquisition impacts)
Since the first quarter of 2007 the units are actually down a whopping 25%. The units are currently yielding 10.5%, and the company is distributing only about 80% of their cash available for distributions. Yellow Pages has stated that they plan to continue distributions at the current level through the income trust tax changes that will occur in 2011. For both sides of the trade on Yellow Pages see Middle Class Millionaire and I post on both angles. The company actually bought back 2.8 Million units in April of 2008 as it deems them to be undervalued.
Thursday, May 8, 2008
hedge yourself™ - gasoline costs
The elephant in the room lately when it comes to personal expenses has to be gasoline costs. Sometime within the past two years in Canada gasoline was selling for about $0.85/Liter. This price seems very attractive as I write it, because today in Brantford, Ontario gas is flowing into vehicles for about $1.20/Liter. Let's assume Joe drives the average car, a 2009 Toyota Corolla, with a fuel tank capacity of about 50L. 2 years ago Joe was paying $42.50 to fill up, while today he is paying $60. That is a difference of $17.50 per tank.
Assuming Joe fills up his Corolla once per week, he is spending an extra $17.50 today, versus what he was paying 2 years ago.
Joe is not happy about this extra $17.50, and he would like to mitigate it's affect on his budget. This is an extra $910 per year, assuming he fills up once per week. His options are limited: drive less (he has to get to work), comply with that chain email and boycott certain gas stations (this will surely get the price down...?). There is one more option that Joe may want to consider, a hedge. Joe should open a discount brokerage account if he doesn't already have one, and perform one of the following.
- Buy 114 units of Canadian Oil Sands Trust (COS.UN). This is an income trust that pays you cash monthly when you invest your money in their business. COS.UN extracts oil from the tar sands in Northern Alberta and benefits greatly from high oil prices.
COST TO JOE = ~$5,472 for 114 units of COS.UN including a trading fee.
WHAT THIS WILL ACCOMPLISH = This investment will provide Joe with $456 per year and eliminate approximately half of the impact that high gasoline prices have on his budget. Also if Joe is willing to hold COS.UN for the long term, his investment should appreciate, and his cash from the investment should increase with high energy prices allowing his hedge to be more effective or at least keep pace with his expenditures for years.
At the end of the day this allows Joe to pay about $1.02/liter for gas when in reality it actually sells for $1.20/liter.
*taxes on Joe's investment are not included, I am not a financial advisor
Monday, May 5, 2008
carnival & notable results
Canadian wealth manager Investors Group (IGM) had their profit come in flat for the first quarter as assets under management fell.
Automatic Data Processing (ADP) reports fiscal third quarter earnings increased 18%, as revenue grew 12%.
Canadian media giant Rogers Communications (RCI.B) doubles dividend on strong first quarter profit growth.
Saturday, May 3, 2008
economic green
While normally I tend to stick to issues relating to personal finance, stocks, and the market on this blog; I believe the answer here lies in a related realm. I think this one simple fact seems to be forgotten by many policy makers, green activists, and other environmentally concerned...
Being Green Must Be Economic, Otherwise Motivation Of The Masses Is Lost!
Here are a few examples of what I am getting at:
- Ontario's The Beer Store, which interestingly is actually owned by Labatt, Molson, and Sleemans, runs what is probably the best example of 'Economic Green' I can think of. The Beer Store's returnable bottle system claims a re-use rate of 99% for regular beer bottles. Each bottle is typically used 12 to 15 times. I wonder how many bottles would make it back to the store or find their way into blue boxes if customers could not receive the $0.10/bottle that The Beer Store doles out? What a fabulous success story of environmentalism. So that Heineken that we all drank to celebrate the moneygardener's one year birthday could have been swigged on by 14 people before toasted to Walgreens and Household Savings Rates, that's about as green as it gets. All of this because most people won't turn down an easy dime.
- The City of Woodstock, Ontario's garbage collection program has residents paying $1.25 to purchase a tag that they affix to each of their weekly garbage bags in order to have them picked up at the curb. This is 'Economic Green' at its best. Every city should implement such a program and perhaps we'll all use the first 'R' more often (REDUCE). Don't charge me a flat fee for collection inside property taxes, instead a pay-per-use system like this is true green motivation.
Thursday, May 1, 2008
why all the fuss over dividends?
Well, the actual amount of money is really secondary to why I get excited about income from investments, and why I cheer for ours to grow month after month. Here are some of the reasons why I believe income from investments in the form of dividends (or re-earned income) is important, and why I really get behind our income from investments graph:
- They're Passive! That's right, I don't have to get up early, I don't have to check my inbox, I don't even have to attend any meetings. I get paid simply because I am allowing my money to be at risk. My money sits patiently at the whim of the fickle and hyperactive stock market. As a fellow middle class guy once said, I get paid while I'm sleeping.
- They Grows Like Nobody's Business Ok, it is somebody's business, but they are a heck of a lot more generous with raises than my employer is. Many companies have grown their dividend payments at rates north of 10% annually for decades. Examples of these would be Johnson & Johnson (JNJ), Bank of Nova Scotia (BNS), and McDonalds (MCD)
- They're Human Dividends are tangible, and give us long term investors a warm and fuzzy feeling. Dividends affect our psychology as investors in a healthy way, they're also relatively permanent, and they're not 'paper gains'.
- They Sneer at The Government of Canada A resident of British Columbia earning $50,000/ year pays only 4.4% tax on Canadian dividends. In Ontario they would pay 8%.
Sometimes it's easy to be shortsighted and jaded when it comes to money. Passive income, especially when it comes from dividends, is one of the best things going. It can not be compared to employment income. Why not plant the oak tree seed early so that you can enjoy the shade it provides as the years get on.
This post was inspired by Re-Earned Income by Mr.Cheap, from Quest for Four Pillars.