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  07-15-2008
The Bank of Japan cut its economic growth forecast, raised its inflation estimate and kept the benchmark interest rate at 0.5 percent, saying higher commodity prices are hurting expansion. The world's second-largest economy will grow 1.2 percent in the year ending March 31, slower than the 1.5 percent forecast on April 30, the central bank said in a statement in Tokyo. Consumer prices excluding fresh food will climb 1.8 percent, more than the 1.1 percent projected three months ago, it said. Growth is “slowing further” because higher energy and raw-materials costs are discouraging businesses and consumers from spending, the bank said. Governor Masaaki Shiirakawa has said the risk that record commodity costs will weaken spending and derail growth is more pressing than tackling inflation. The Bank of Japan regards core prices as stable when they are between zero and 2 percent. The yen traded at 105.85 per dollar at 2:32 p.m. in Tokyo compared with 105.80 before the announcement. Government debt held gains, sending the yield on the 10-year bond 4.5 basis points lower to 1.535 percent. “Economic growth is slowing further, reflecting weaker growth in business fixed investment and private consumption against the backdrop of high energy and materials prices,” the central bank said. The slowdown is temporary and inflation will abate next fiscal year, it added. The economy will expand 1.5 percent in the year starting April 1 and core consumer prices will rise 1.1 percent, the policy board forecast. All 39 economists surveyed expected today's rate decision. In April, the central bank shelved a policy calling for higher borrowing costs. The benchmark rate, doubled in February 2007, is the lowest among major economies. Commodities costs drained 1 percent from Japan's national income between 2000 and 2007, the Cabinet Office said last month. Japan imports almost all of its oil and 60 percent of its food. “Inflationary pressures are increasing globally,” the central bank said. “In Japan, it is necessary to be mindful of upside risks due to changes in the inflation expectations of households and the price-setting behavior of firms in addition to developments in energy and materials prices.” Consumer prices excluding fresh fish, fruit and vegetables rose 1.5 percent in May from a year earlier, the fastest pace in a decade, and economists say the inflation measure will soon surpass 2 percent. Core price gains will “gradually moderate” after they become “somewhat elevated in coming months” because of oil and food, the bank said. Should economic risks subside, Japan's expansion may become vulnerable to the side effects of keeping rates too low, it said. Large companies expect profits to decline this year for the first time since the 2001 recession, the central bank's Tankan survey showed July 1. That will make it more difficult for businesses to raise wages, which grew 0.2 percent in May, the slowest pace this year. Household confidence fell to the lowest level in at least 26 years in June as higher gasoline and food prices eroded purchasing power. The central bank cut its assessment of consumer spending in all of Japan's nine regions last week. Stalled wage growth is a reason households aren't spending and “that's why Japan doesn't have a risk of secondary inflation,” Economic and Fiscal Policy Minister Hiroko Ota said in an interview on July 3. “Beating out deflation, rather than the risk of inflation, is an important issue for Japan now.”

  07-14-2008
Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson put the weight of the federal government behind Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the beleaguered companies that buy or finance almost half of the $12 trillion of U.S. mortgages. Paulson, speaking on the steps of the Treasury facing the White House, asked Congress for authority to buy unlimited stakes in and lend to the companies, aiming to stem a collapse in confidence. The Federal Reserve separately authorized the firms to borrow directly from the central bank. The steps would bring the U.S. closer to giving an explicit guarantee for the debt sold by the shareholder-owned, federally chartered companies. That reflects a need for the government to bail out an economy that's been rocked by the worst housing recession in 25 years, the credit crisis, and soaring energy costs. The announcements followed weekend talks between the firms, government officials, lawmakers and regulators, after Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac lost about half their value last week. Paulson's proposal, which the Treasury anticipates will be incorporated into an existing congressional bill and approved this week, signals a shift toward an explicit guarantee of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac debt.



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   The process of spreading your investments across the major asset classes of stocks, bonds and cash is called asset allocation. According to most financial experts, your asset allocation decisions are the most important determinant of your investment returns. Trying to "time" the market on the way up and down is a much riskier way to boost returns. Asset allocation helps you to diversify your investments. Diversification results in either a higher rate of return for a given amount of risk, or a lower amount of risk for a given rate of return. Asset allocation is a fairly simple process. After you make your initial allocation you generally only need to rebalance your portfolio from time to time to achieve your financial goals.

To begin investing, you should have some idea of:

  Risk tolerance
Risk tolerance is a measure of your willingness to accept investment risk in exchange for higher potential returns. Risk is the uncertainty of earning your investment returns and is measured by the volatility of investment returns. For example, if you're an aggressive investor, you're likely willing to accept the risk of losing some of your investment capital in exchange for earning higher potential returns. A conservative investor, on the other hand, is less willing to accept risk, even for higher potential returns. Capital preservation is a top priority for conservative investors. As a result, they tend to favor conservative investments such as certificates of deposit, money market accounts and government bonds.

  Investment horizon
Your investment horizon is the length of time, in years, that you invest before you begin to use the money. For example, if you invest for your retirement in 25 years, your investment horizon is 25 years. Investment horizon is also called your time horizon. Investment horizon is also influenced by another point in time the duration over which you expect to use the money. As a general rule, the longer your investment horizon, the more aggressive you can afford to be as an investor. That's because you have more time to recover from declines in asset prices that inevitably occur. Aggressive investors with a long-term investment horizon can plan for higher expected returns than conservative investors since they have greater risk tolerance. You can also extend your investment horizon by postponing retirement a couple of years. This extra time in the workforce gives you a chance to save a larger nest egg.

  Portfolio approach to investing
Asset allocation consists of identifying appropriate investments from the major asset classes to build an investment portfolio. Let's look at some of the characteristics of each major asset class.
Stocks- Companies sell shares of their stocks to raise funds for their operations. Stocks are also called equities since they represent an ownership interest in the company. Of the three major asset classes, stocks have the greatest amount of risk since they have higher potential returns than bonds or cash.
Bonds- Companies, governments, municipalities and government agencies sell bonds to raise funds. Bonds are similar to an IOU: the issuer borrows money at a contracted interest rate and period and repays the bonds at the end of the bond term. Bonds are also called fixed-income securities since the coupon rate is often fixed. This predictability in cash flows provides more certainty to investors than stock dividends, which are not contracted. You buy bonds using a brokerage account or can buy bond mutual funds.
Cash- The third major asset category is cash. Cash includes cash-equivalent securities (also called "near cash") such as savings accounts and deposits, CDs, Treasury bills, money market accounts and money market mutual funds. Cash investments are the most liquid and least risky of the three major asset classes. As a result, cash investments have lower historical returns than stocks or bonds.


  Investment categories
There are several investment categories within each major asset class. Some investment categories offer a greater risk-return trade-off than others. For example, aggressive growth and growth stocks are riskier than income or value stocks. As a result, growth stocks generally have higher rates of return over longer periods of time. A similar dichotomy exists for other asset classes. For example, within the bond asset class, categories such as corporate and junk bonds offer higher returns than Treasury or agency bonds in exchange for having more risk. What's important is finding those investments whose risk characteristics match your risk tolerance.

  Portfolio diversification
An important objective of asset allocation is diversification. Lots of academic research shows that a diversified portfolio reduces risk for a given rate of return. A diversified portfolio does not concentrate in one or two investment categories. An example of a concentrated portfolio is one that is invested entirely in technology stocks. Sure, having a lot of tech "exposure" seemed like a wise strategy when the tech-heavy NASDAQ was posting annual gains of well over 20% in the late 1990s. But when the tech bubble burst in early 2000, investors holding tech-heavy portfolios took a drubbing that they've yet to recover from. There are different ways to diversify a portfolio. One way is to start by allocating a target percentage of your total investment portfolio to stocks, bonds and cash. For example, if you're a young investor with a distant investment horizon, you may decide to invest 70% of your assets in stocks and 15% each in bonds and cash. An investor with a shorter investment horizon would be more cautious. They might decide to allocate 60% to stocks, 20% to bonds and 20% to cash. At the next stage, you may decide to allocate to various investment categories within each major asset class. For example, the aggressive investor may allocate half of their stock allocation to each growth stocks. The conservative investor may decide to allocate half of their bond allocation to each government and municipal bonds. Successfully diversifying your portfolio means investing in securities whose investment returns do not move together. That's what investing in different asset classes helps to accomplish. To diversify, you'll want to invest in securities whose returns on such securities have low or negative correlation.

  Taxes & inflation
As a general rule, your financial goals, risk tolerance and investment horizon take precedence over tax considerations in setting up your asset allocation. Your financial goals articulate how much you want to save. Your risk tolerance helps you to identify the types of investments you're willing to make in order to reach those goals. And your investment horizon determines how long can save for those goals. Tax-advantaged accounts can be opened at a bank or brokerage. You buy and sell securities with these accounts much as you would for a taxable account. Inflation cuts into the value of your investments the way taxes cut into your investment returns. As a result, it is sometimes called a "hidden" tax. Inflation has averaged about 3% a year over the past decade. Inflation is bad for stocks and bonds. It raises prices that companies have to pay for everything from raw materials to labor, squeezing profits. Lower profits hurt stock prices. Inflation or the prospect of it means higher interest rates are around the corner. The prospect for higher interest rates sends markets into a frenzy: Bond prices suffer as investors demand higher coupon rates to keep up with those paid on newly issued bonds. Stock prices generally fall as investors look for business costs to increase. Inflation often results in investors rebalancing their portfolios. They tend to invest in variable-rate deposits and money market securities when inflation is higher, taking money out of stocks and bonds. When inflation subsides, interest rates decline and investors rotate back into stocks and bonds. Two major indicators of inflation are the consumer price index and producers price index. A yearly increase of more than 3% for either index often portends higher interest rates since economists often view that much of a climb to be unsustainable. Other inflation barometers include the level of bond yields, changes in credit spreads between high- and lower-quality bonds, and moves by the Federal Reserve to hike the fed funds rate.

  Investment categories

Once you decide on your asset allocation, you need to go out and buy those stocks and bonds to set up your allocation. This process is called portfolio construction.

Major stock investment categories

Value stocks- These are stocks that are considered cheap relative to other stocks by such valuation measures as price-to-earnings and price-to-book ratios.

Growth stocks- Growth stocks are stocks of companies whose sales and profits are expected to grow quickly. Growth stocks tend to retain any profits and avoid paying dividends. Investors seek to earn investment returns on growth stocks from a rise in share prices. Growth stocks are riskier than value stocks. Even riskier than growth stocks are aggressive-growth stocks, a high-octane version of growth stocks.

Income stocks- Income stocks generate a lot of dividends, a predictable and steady source of cash that appeals to more conservative investors. Income stocks tend to have higher dividend yields and often represent mature companies and industries such as utilities, financial-services firms and large-cap stocks. Income stocks are generally less risky than value and growth stocks because of their tendency to generate steady income.

Foreign stocks- These are stocks of companies that are registered outside of the U.S. Since foreign stocks' investment returns often have a low correlation with U.S. stocks, an allocation to foreign stock may help to reduce investment risk through diversification.

Major bond investment categories

Government bonds- The U.S. Treasury and other governments issue government bond. Treasury bonds are among the safest. The U.S. Treasury has never defaulted on its debt and Treasury securities are backed by the full faith of the U.S. government.

Agency bonds- Agency bond are backed by a government agency or government-sponsored enterprise. Agency bonds include mortgage-backed securities issued by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae. Agency bonds have a unique type of risk called prepayment risk that makes these bonds riskier than government bonds.

Corporate bonds- Corporate bonds include investment-grade or high-yield binds. High-yield, or "junk," bonds are among the riskier of bond fund categories since they have a higher default risk.

Tax-exempt (muni) bonds- These are bonds whose interest are exempt from federal and, in some cases, state income taxes. Tax-exempt bonds are also called municipal bonds. A muni bond whose interest income is exempt from federal and state income tax is a double-exempt muni bond. If interest income is also exempt from local tax, it is called a triple-exempt muni bond.

Zero-coupon bonds- Zeros are bonds sold at a substantial discount to par value. Over the bond's term to maturity, the bond price gradually rises to reach par value when it matures. Bond investors don't actually receive interest income, but owe taxes on the amount of imputed interest income earned. Investors may decide to buy zero-coupon bonds for a tax-advantage account since the account lets them defer income taxes until they begin to take money out.

Foreign- Foreign bonds issued by companies registered outside of the U.S.

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