Posts Tagged ‘Investing’

Good Start For Visa IPO So Far

I guess I was sort of an inspiration for 2 of my other friends with limited stock trading experience, as they both purchased some stock as well. After being down on the first day (from what I purchased it at), the stock jumped up over 14% today (including after-hours trading), making me about $230 on my $2,994 invested:

My Visa stock

I’d say that’s a pretty good start :) I have been contemplating selling the shares and then buying again later. I have a feeling there will be a big selloff from the banks and people trying to make a quick buck, which will affect the stock price negatively. Overall I think it’s a safe long-term investment stock, so even with a selloff, I feel that it will stabilize and then start to trend upwards. From everything I’ve read, the opinions about what the stock will do are all over the place. From people saying it will go back down to the IPO price, to others saying it will go up to $70-$90. In reality, the stock market is a gamble. Do as much research as you can, learn what you can, see how news, etc affects other stocks, and use that to make a better judgment with your own stocks. I’m definitely no expert, my overall portfolio is down 30% (before Visa)…but just giving my two cents.

All I know is that I had a hunch about Google when they became an IPO. I put them in my fake portfolio at the $95/share, and now look where they are at. I’ve had Apple in my fake portfolio since their shares were $11.38….I would have a 1071.09% return on that right now! I have the same feeling about Visa, so this time I’m running with it. If you do the same thing, and are new to the market, just make sure you don’t invest more than you can afford to lose.

One other interesting thing I found is that many of the major credit card/bank companies went up pretty big today:

American Express: +9.48%
Discover: +10.26%
Mastercard: +5.75%
Capital One: +7.66%
Citigroup: +10.24%
HSBC: +3.01%
JP Morgan Chase & Co: +9.25%
Barclays: +7.26%
Bank of America: +8.56%

I wonder how Visa helped affect these?

Anybody Investing In The Visa IPO?

Visa logoJust curious if any of you guys are investing in today’s Visa IPO? The stock is up 35% from the opening IPO price as of writing this. I just bought $3,000 worth of shares at $59.75…I think the stock has a lot of potential.

Visa stock chart

I’m curious to know your thoughts on whether it’s a good buy or not…regardless if you invested or not. I’m pretty new to the stock market, so any advice is more than helpful.

Managing My Personal Finances & How You Should Too

I’m very finicky when it comes to managing my personal finances. I like to make sure all bills are paid on time, and I know where all of my money is and how much I have. This is going to be one of my more informative posts, so make sure to give it a read AND take action if you are trying to better manage your own financial situation.

Enter Microsoft Money. The software that keeps it all in check for me. For $30-$100 you will have the perfect solution for managing your finances. I’ve been using MS Money to track my finances since about 2000, which is great because I have a lot of historical data that I can pull from.

My first process is that I’ll normally keep any receipt that I get and put it in my wallet. I try and use my credit card for most purchases since I get 1.5-5% cash back rewards. After a week or two when my wallet has a decent amount of receipts, I’ll empty it out on my desk and start inputting them into MS Money. For any items which may be a write-off on taxes, I add “write off activetuning” or whatever business of mine it may apply to in the memo field. This just makes it easier for me at the end of the year when I’m giving all my information to my accountant.

Inputting money into MS Money 2007

At the end of each month when I get my statement for each account, I’ll go in and balance the account. This will ensure that I have all charges in the software, and of course it will ensure I don’t find any mistakes on the statement (I’ve found double charges, incorrect tips, etc before, so it’s always good to go line-by-line). I do this for each account, every month (savings, checking, credit cards, etc…you can even do your PayPal account). Each account doesn’t take very long to do, especially if you actively input your receipts through the month.

The best method I’ve found to do this is to go through the statement, and highlight the amount in each line once it has been cleared in MS Money. This way once you go through everything, you can just back to the stuff that hasn’t been highlighted and make sure they either need to be put in, or are mistakes. The most important reason for doing this is making sure that you never fall behind, and all of your numbers are accurate at least up to that month.

Alternatively, you can have MS Money connect to your financial institution and just download everything from the statement and put it into the software. I don’t like this method for a few reasons:

  1. I don’t like the names of the items that are chosen.
  2. They don’t choose the right categories that I want
  3. I want to add memos many times
  4. It’s hard to remember what they are for
  5. You get lazy and don’t proactively update your own financials, therefore you lose touch with it.

Once you have data in there, it’s easy to just pull up the “accounts list” page and easily see where everything stands. On top of my regular accounts, I also track my investment accounts through MS Money. Investment accounts also show up in your accounts list, so you can easily track your net worth.

List of accounts in MS Money 2007

Another cool thing I use MS Money for is to track categories and run custom reports. When I set everything up for the first time, I went through every category that MS puts in by default. I added/deleted/modified everything as needed so I could have things specifically tailored to what I want. So now if I want to see how much my gas expenses have been over the past few years, I can see that I’m spending a lot more money than before (due to more driving and higher gas prices):

My gas spending in 2007

You can of course export the data to something like Excel if you want to create better charts.

The other thing I use MS Money for is to manage any sort of recurring deposits/bills. For example I know every month I’m going to have certain bills and a paycheck from various sources. I set these transactions up to either be automatic (for example I take a specific percentage out of every paycheck and put it into my ING savings account) or manually (ex: My electric bill varies from month to month). This gives me an idea of generally what I’m planning to spend/deposit, and I can better manage my finances knowing this information.

Bills summary

You can also use this to create a budget. Based on what you normally spend/make every month, you can budget a certain amount to specific categories, and MS Money will help you track this. For example if you only want to spend $200/month going out for food, you may find out mid-month you’ve used the amount you’ve allotted and you can tone it down for the rest of the month in order to maintain your budget. This is perfect for those of you that have a hard time realizing how much you are spending, and don’t want to end up with a massive credit card bill you weren’t expecting.

There’s much more, but this is pretty much what I use it for. Using my basic guidelines, you too can proactively manage your own finances and make sure you are in control.

Microsoft Money 2007 Deluxe

Microsoft Money 2007 Deluxe

Microsoft Money 2007 Deluxe brings all of your personal accounts – banking, credit, and investment – into one place and provides the tools you need to help you improve your credit and debt and tackle tax time with ease, so you can spend less time worrying about your money and more time enjoying it. Money 2007 Deluxe automatically consolidates your online accounts in one place.


Good Day For My Stocks And A Happy Birthday To Me

Today I’ve officially turned a 1/4 century old, as I am celebrating my 25th birthday. I’ll be going out to Sakura Steakhouse for dinner and Union Jacks for a little after-dinner drinking. Crystal will be coming into town as well, so it should be a great time!

On another side-note, all of the stocks I own are doing awesome today:

My stocks doing good on 5/18/2007

The obvious big hitters from today are Intuit and CNet. Intuit is doing good (finally!) because of an excellent 3rd quarter and raised outlooks from analyst firms. Intuit is the #2 highest gain stock today behind aQuantive, which you may know in the online advertising world for their Atlas ad serving technology. Microsoft picked them up today for $6 billion, a huge amount more per share then they are worth…and this jumped their stock almost 80% today. CNet is doing good because of analysts at First Albany reiterated their “buy” rating, and raised their target price from $10 to $11.

I got into stocks at first just as a forced way to learn more about the market. I only invested a small amount into one stock, but this pretty much forced me to watch it, and learn what affects the share price and many other things just from having to be more involved. The key to this is only to invest what you can afford to lose. Since then I have picked up a few other stocks, and although I had a great day today, overall I am still down. The main reason was from that original first stock (AMD), which lost over 60% of its value at one point. Overall I am down 7%, but things are looking better, and my other stocks have helped offset the loss from AMD. Now I understand when they say to diversify your portfolio.

How One Blog Post Can Cost A Company $4 Billion

Who says bloggers have no media power? Yesterday Engadget single handedly made Apple’s stock price lose $4 billion in market capitalization with just one post. Their story claimed that an internal e-mail to company employees at Apple stated that there would be another delay on the Leopard OS as well as on the much hyped iPhone.

“This one doesn’t bode well for Mac fans and the iPhone-hopeful: we have it on authority that as of today, the iPhone launch is being pushed back from June to… October (!), and Leopard is again seeing a delay, this time being pushed all the way back to January,”

What does news like this do to the stock price?

Apple??s stock price after Engadget

Apple’s stock dropped from $107.89 to $103.42 in just 6 minutes time. It was later on reported that the story was false, and the stock came back up after about 20 minutes, but it still ended up at a loss ($1.25 billion) by the end of the day. The stock is up today so far.

Engadget stated that the tipster sounded legit, and definitely came from Apple’s internal system. Apple is now on the lookout for an employee that sent out the e-mail.

This just goes to show the power of the media. Here’s to accurate reporting!