Thursday, December 11, 2014

The Basics of Dividends

Lets talk about the basics of stock dividends, what they mean, and how we look at dividends as Rule #1 Investors.

What are Dividends?


What are dividends? Dividends are a distribution of a companies earnings, decided by the board of directors, to its shareholders. They may be in the form of cash, stock or property.


Dividends are the money that the company pays out to its shareholders in cash.


For example, Coca Cola probably pays about a 2% dividend. If Coca Cola stock is, say, $40 dollars a share, 2% of 40 dollars is about a buck, .80 cents to a dollar and thats what its dividend is.


A lot of people live on the dividends of a company. In fact, in the great depression, people thought that the only value of stocks at all is the value of the dividend being paid out, because stocks weren’t going up they were going way down.

How Rule #1 Investors Look at Dividends


When we look at dividends as Rule #1 Investors, we look at it very differently than most people do. we see dividends, not as a return on our investment of 2% or 3% a year, we see it as a simple return of our capital. We’re looking to get our money off of the table.

Using Dividends to Lower Risk


We want to lower our risk every year by receiving dividends, so that reduces the amount of what we call basis every single year. As our basis goes down every single year, our risk of owning that business goes down. If the dividend is very high, lets say 6% a year, then in 10 years we might have removed 60% of our risk off of the table and we have a very low chance of losing money on that investment.

Read the full blog at ruleoneinvesting.com

Friday, December 5, 2014

Paper Trading

I'm going to talk to you real quick about using something called “paper money” in order to learn how to invest. Paper money trading is really cool. Let me tell you about it.

What is Paper Money and Paper Trading?

What is paper trading? It’s an idea that basically means working with pretend money, but doing it with real numbers in real time.

By combining the internet with the idea of paper trading, we have a really great package for online stock trading that helps us develop ourselves as investors, without taking any real money risk. We can also trade paper money without incurring the kind of emotional trauma when we use real money and we know that we don’t know what were doing.

How to Set Up a Paper Trading Account

What you should do is get yourself onto one of the paper money trading sites. Think or Swim is the one that we use a lot, but there might be some other great sites out there. Just google “paper money” or “paper trading” and go out there and get your account set up.

After you sign up, on thinkorswim.com you end up with about 200,000 dollars of pretend money to “invest” with in a system thats using virtually real time data.

Why You Should Practice Stock Trading

When you start investing you want to see that the effects are going well for you before you go out and start investing with real money. You want to have the benefit of doing some real trades before you start using real money because, stock trading for beginners is scary using real money when you’ve never done it before.

Read the full blog at ruleoneinvesting.com


Wednesday, November 26, 2014

Being Thankful

I spent some time in Japan with a good friend of mine named Wahei Takeda. He’s known as the Warren Buffett of Japan, who made his entire fortune from scratch in post WWII Japan. Let me share with you what he told me about being thankful...


Wahei told me that the most important thing that you can do every day, the thing that was responsible for him making billions of dollars, is...

"Be thankful 1,000 times a day."


Read the full blog at ruleoneinvesting.com



Friday, November 21, 2014

Rule #1 Investing Call Options

Call options are a fantastic way to generate cash flow and reduce basis on companies we already own. When we already own a company we call a call option a "Rule #1 Call Option." Let me briefly explain the call option definition.


What is a Call Option?


Essentially, a call option example is a coupon to get cheap milk. There's two sides to this coupon. There’s the grocery store, which is essentially selling the coupon at a very, very, cheap price and there's the buyer of the coupon who is getting a right to go buy this milk.

So, when we use the coupon between the store, the store has an obligation to sell the milk at a set price and the buyer of the coupon gets the right to buy that milk at a set price. That’s just a coupon and we’re used to using them all day long.


Call Option Definition


Call options are just like that. Basically, if you sell a call option to someone, you are now obligated to sell them your stock at that price. If you buy a call option you now have a right to buy that stock at that set price for a set amount of time.


Selling Call Options


Why would we do that as Rule #1 Investors? If we own this company, and we sell someone the right to buy our stock at a price higher than we think it’s worth, then we have almost no risk whatsoever. Because, if the stock price goes up to that super high price, we want to sell it anyway. We want to sell into greed and we want to buy into fear.

If there is greed going on and the stock price is shooting up like a rocket, we want to be a seller of that stock. We can pick up cash flow, by putting out and selling call options, which basically gives someone the obligation to buy our stock at that higher price so that they buy it from us. They pay us a premium and we can put that money in our pocket.

If the stock price doesn't go up we get to keep our money. If the stock price does go up, then we sell the stock. Either way we win.


Read the full blog post at ruleoneinvesting.com




Thursday, October 23, 2014

Responsible Investing With Your Own Personal Values

Our individual values are imperative to effective investing. Practically nobody discusses how to join your values to where your cash is going.

I think it is the most important vote in your life to put your cash into the things that you esteem and that you need to see on the planet a long time from now.

The Importance of Socially Responsible Investing


Keep in mind that wherever you're putting your cash is what is going to develop on the planet.


I realize that you don't think you're going to change the world by investing your $1,000, $10,000 or even your million dollars given that the stock market is something like $15 trillion. 

Contemplate this, we as a group of small investors, have 85% of the cash in stocks. The California Teacher's Retirement Fund is one of the biggest financial investors on the planet. Those educators have about $180 billion in the stock market. 

It's extraordinary how effective we can be when we vote our cash with our values...


Read the full blog post at ruleoneinvesting.com



Wednesday, October 15, 2014

3 Common Stock Market Investing Myths Busted

There are consistent myths about investing that to an extensive degree can scare the individual investor and make them consider whether investing is really worth it.

Here are 3 investing myths and the realities so you can create your wealth and attain your financial goals. And you can do it with Rule #1.

Myth #1: You Have to be an Expert to Manage Money


You don't have to be an expert. All you must be is an expert at one part of the business area. We call it being an inch wide and a mile deep…

What are the other two myths?

Read the whole blog at ruleoneinvesting.com



Thursday, October 9, 2014

Value Investing With Rule #1

To most people, Rule #1 investors are value investors. They see us as endeavoring to buy cheap stocks and group us in with the authentic "value" investors who are centered on sub-10 PE ratios. We're not that dogmatic. We chase down "cheap" even in stocks with PE's in the 20's, yet its not out of line to put us with the primary group that Ben Graham at first made.

Value Investing as it Applies to Rule #1

We do for sure attempt to discover cheap stuff, although we prefer it to be wonderful cheap stuff, I'll buy less than wonderful cheap stuff if:

a) its cheap enough, and
b) its durable and reliable enough to determine(a).

I wrote in Rule #1 and Payback Time that I am hunting down 10% growth rates in the Big Four and ROE's in excess of 10% and no debt, I'm not dogmatic about it.

Yes, the Town Toolbox will paint scores that are short of perfect with red or yellow, then again its a computer program, not a human brain, and until I can assess a better approach to deal with what is out there, those Rule #1 Scores will need to do for a starter. The point here is to not let those Scores be an ender.

Moreover the best approach to do that is, to verify you know your industry and business.

Read the entire blog article at ruleoneinvesting.com