My Roth IRA Has An Annual Growth Rate of 52.75 % Since Inception!

Move over Mr. Buffett, there is a new bull in town (don’t I wish)!

According to my Broker, my Roth IRA has average a 52.75% return since inception!  I’m an investing GOD, not.

Please note the following statistics provided by my online Charles Schwab account, and read the real deal below:

RothIRAPerformanceSM

 

It really does make me look like an investing God, but unfortunately the Inception Date is not quite old enough.  Apparently the Inception Date is when my broker started keeping records because I had the account much earlier than the year 2009…

Back around 2003, I started my online Roth IRA with my broker, and I did very well.  In fact, I doubled my balance in less than 5 years.  Unfortunately, I was in some risky stock and I actually loss money and ended the 5 year with less than I put in originally (just by a little bit though).

Devastated, but still excited by the incredible stock market ride, I decided to alter my strategy to a two stage approach:

1.) Invest in a solid dividend stock that would not decrease in value (this was for my emergency fund aspect of the Roth IRA).

2.) Invest in something that I thought would do well in the market, but wasn’t a sure thing.  So I invested in a speculative stock (BAIDU).  I was actually pretty sure this was a good choice, but with speculative stocks one never knows.

Well, my dividend stock did fine, but BAIDU (ticker bidu) went nuts over the next few years.  It’s been my biggest win ever in fact!

So while my numbers look impressive above, practically all of my big gain was betting on the BAIDU racehorse of a stock to make me the big gains.  I’m no longer own BAIDU in my Roth IRA, but the was a fun ride while it lasted.

If I doubled my income in 7 years, that’s only around a 10.2% return, but I sure wish it was 52.75% since inception.  If that were the case, I’d be bragging like there was no tomorrow 🙂

Statistics are funny sometimes, I just wanted to show how interesting they can really be.  Oh, and so far this year I’m off to a great start!  10.12% in the first month, not too shabby!

Have fun this year, the market should be another wild ride!

Don

Icahn vs Ackman

OMG, I just saw a life changing fight on TV!  The billionaire battle between Bill Ackman and Carl Icahn was incredible!

During my lunch break, I was watching CNBC and I lucky enough to see the live verbal fight (via phone) between Bill Ackman and Carl Icahn.  It was by far the most incredible thing that I’ve ever seen on CNBC!  Two billionaires with bad blood between them fighting in a way that we never see “the really, really rich” fight!

Both billionaires use similar technique in the stock market, so they are really too drastically different in the ways that they make money.  Amazing…

If you do watch the clip above, remember that emotions often make people say things that they wouldn’t normally say in their day-to-day communications.  Mr Icahn definitely got emotional about it when he called in when Mr. Ackman was dissing him on the TV.  Mr Icahn said things that I’m sure tomorrow that he’s probably regret.  Especially when he attacked the news reporter in the middle of the phone fight.

The gist of the billionaire battle was when Ackman was doing an online interview and started attacking Icahn.  Icahn heard and called in to defend himself.  Carl was fuming and came into the fight holding back nothing.  He was swearing and took the attack very emotionally.  Bill kept it very proper and didn’t swear, at least as far as I could remember.  Now just because Ackman didn’t swear doesn’t mean that he’s right or wrong (same for Ackman), but he protected himself from any future lawsuits.

I have to admit, I wasn’t happy when Bill Ackman announced his short as a big public event, to me if felt like he was going a pump and dump kind of maneuver.  After all, he’s in the stock (shorting it), and he tell everybody knowing that it will cause a flooding of sell trades.  This instantly makes him money, and thus seems like a pump and dump kind of maneuver.

While Carl Icahn doesn’t go as public as Bill Ackman, his moves still has a drastic effect on the market too.

I’m not here to judge, but based on the emotional response of Carl Icahn, I get the feeling that Mr Ackman used his education and the law to out maneuver Mr. Icahn in their feuding sometime in the past and Mr. Icahn, being tough, still has extreme dislike for Bill Ackman.  But really how knows.  Unless others come out of the woodwork that are reputable (like maybe a Warren Buffett) who support one or the other, we’ll never really know who is more likely right or wrong…

Again, amazing!  Watch the video, I’m pretty sure you probably never have seen anything like it.

Don

 

Dark Side of an HSA

There is a dark side to the Health Savings Accounts (HSAs) that practically nobody mentions, and today I’m going to speak from my personal experience with this instrument.

Dark Side of an HSA

If you live on a middle class salary and have a family with kids, an HSA has one huge disadvantage.  It’s subtle and mostly affect those of us in the middle classes (for the rich this is a non-issue, and perhaps soon the poor too).  The Dark Side of an HSA is that you as an adult, and especially if you are a parent, don’t get proper medical treatment on “non-major” problems for fear that you’ll run out of money in your HSA before the company takes over the payments after certain money amount thresholds.  This fact makes you hold onto the money contributed to your HSA in case your children need the money instead.  As was the case in my Son wounded article.  Believe it or not, but the puncture wound that required stitches cost us over $2,000.  It was just him lying in bed unattended (except for me and my daughter) for hours and then maybe a 20 minute stitch job on the puncture wound.

After 5 years of participating in an HSA, I now have a few medical problems that I can’t kick by myself over for not getting treatment.  They are nagging injuries and in so non-life threatening, but not wanting to deplete all the money in the account, I wait for a year when one of my kids get a serious injury that I hope will never occur.  It’s a strange, quite queer feeling to be waiting for something that with all your heart you hope never happens… It is my own self imposed version of hell, and a very dark side of an HSA Account.

Ironically, I was going to switch back to a PPO this year so I could take care of some of my problems, but my employer totally did away with that option and now the only option provided by my employer is an HSA account.  Now I, as a member of the middle class, will receive less healthcare and yet at the same time more of my take home money will be spent (or saved) for my health.  In many ways, it’s the middle classes that are feeling the pain of the new Healthcare programs.  If I were a bit more wealthy, I’d be able to not worry about it, but with kids I am.  You see, I always put my kids first because that’s what responsible parents do.  And with both of my kids in very physical sports, I sit in limbo waiting from something that I hope never happens.

Perhaps I’m looking at this new HSA problem all wrong, perhaps this will push me into a higher income class out of desperation?  I have to think that the odds are against me though.  Anymore it seems like it become harder and harder to exist in the middle class.

Take a hard look at going the HSA route if you still have other options (which unfortunately, I doubt you’ll have if you are middle class and married with a family like me).

Good luck,

Don

Is it Okay for the Government to Cook The Books

Business has it rough compared to the government!  So I have this question “Is it Okay for the Government to Cook The Books”?

First let me say what Businesses aren’t allowed to do!

  1. Manipulate the bookkeeping records to alter their financial statements.  In Accounting, this was called “cooking the book” or creating accounting, and this process was often used to change the bottom line depending on what a company wants their financial records to state.  It goes both ways, sometimes a company (especially private ones) want the numbers to show little profit so they don’t have to pay high taxes.  On the other hand, a company will inflate Sales and other income sources to make their stock more appealing to investors or potential buyers of the company.  Both forms of manipulation are against IRS rules and basically fraud (if my memory serves me correctly).  The excerpt at the end of this article sounds a lot like cooking the books to me.
  2. Now granted that I’m not a lawyer, I believe the employers aren’t allowed to borrow from the employee pensions plans that exist at the company.  I believe this is a no-no that history has proved to be a horrible move!  But ironically it’s not stopping the government from borrowing from the federal employee pension fund.  Oh, the federal employees don’t have to worry about their retirement nest because if there is a shortcoming in the “federal employee pension fund”, you can bet your bottom dollar that it would be a priority for the government to refund.  On the other hand, with Social Security… well we all know that state of that public (as in us) fund is doing.

Read the yahoo article titled “US taps pension fund to avoid passing debt limit” to read the full article, but below is the except that explains how it sounds like the government may be cooking the books?

WASHINGTON (AP) — Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner says the government has begun borrowing from the federal employee pension fund to keep operating without surpassing its debt limit.

Geithner says in a letter to congressional leaders that the move will free up $156 billion in borrowing authority while Congress debates increasing the $16.4 trillion debt limit.

The government reached its borrowing limit on Dec. 31, but began using bookkeeping maneuvers to keep from surpassing it. Geithner has told congressional leaders that Treasury expects to exhaust those measures by mid-February to early March.

What say you?  It kind of reminds me of that old saying “Do as I say, not as I do”.

Don