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The Death of
      Capital Gains
        Investing
(And What Replaces It)

        A free report by Richard Stooker
     (author of Income Investing Secrets, Master Limited
Partnerships, Bring on the Crash, REITs Around the World, and
            Stock Market Investing for Beginners)
Copyright 2012 by Richard Stooker and Gold Egg Investing LLC.

You have the right to give this report away. In fact, I encourage you to do so.

However, you do not have the right to change it in any way, with one exception. If you
are a Clickbank affiliate, you may replace the links with your own affiliate links.
Chapter 1
                          Any Happy Investors in the House?



Look at the bottom line of your 401(K), IRA, Roth IRA or other brokerage account.

Like what you see?

When was the last time you liked what you saw there?

If you're like most people, it was late in 2007, when the Dow Jones Industrial Average
broke 14,000.

As I write this, on December 3, 2011, over four years later, it's 12,019 -- and THAT only
after a major post-Thanksgiving rally. Not long ago it under 11,000 (and it first reached
11,000 around April 2000).

It's down 2,000 points from that 14,000 record.

And nobody knows where it's going next.

Yet people keep trying to make money this way.

When they fail, they're quick to label "Wall Street" a scam or a conspiracy.

The stock market itself is not a scam.

The trouble comes from how people are brainwashed into trying to make money from
the stock market.

That is Wall Street's fault.

Now it's time to lay bare the truth, so you can position your investments to give yourself
ongoing streams of income to reinvest, so you build yourself a fortune by the time you
retire.

But first, let's define terms.

                            What is Capital Gains Investing?

It's what the vast majority of people call simply "investing."

It's buying a stock now in the hope you'll be able to sell it for a profit in the future.




Death of Capital Gains Investing                                               1
If you're like most people, you're now confused.

That IS investing, you might be thinking. What else?

There IS an "else," and I'll get to that in a minute.

But first . . .




Death of Capital Gains Investing                        2
Chapter 2
             What's Wrong With Investing to Sell at a Higher Price



1. The simple answer is, once you sell, you no longer own the stock.

You ever hear the old saying, "You can't have your cake and eat it too"?

Duh, huh?

You can't sell a stock and own it too.

So you no longer benefit from the stock going higher in price.

How many times have you heard of somebody selling a stock at its highest price, then
happily counting their cash as the stock's price goes down?

Not often, I bet. Most of the time, the stock keeps going up in price while you kick
yourself.

Or it goes down, then goes back up.

Look at the long term graph of any great stock, whether it's Wal-Mart or Microsoft.

They all trend up in the long term, but have many sharp downward jags, and periods
where the price went virtually nowhere.

The overall stock market is the same.

How many people over the years have bought, then sold such stocks as Wal-Mart and
Microsoft, then kicked themselves, because they spent the cash they received, so it's
gone, but the stock keeps going up.

Sometimes you need cash. Hey, it happens to all of us.

But sometimes you sell one stock because it's been going down and you think another
company will do better.

Sometimes you're right, but often you're not.

2. Finding stocks that go up more than the stock market as a whole is not as easy as
brokers, fund managers and stock pickers want you to believe.




Death of Capital Gains Investing                                           3
In fact, it's hard as Hell to succeed in stock picking and market timing on a long-term
basis.

Hundreds of studies since the Cowles Commission examined why none of the stock
pickers and timers of that era predicted the 1929 crash have statistically analyzed the
claims of fund managers and stock pundits of all kinds.

The universal result?

In the long run, almost nobody has successfully picked stocks that beat the market.

"Hot" mutual fund managers turn cold -- or have to invest so much more money their
funds are forced to mirror the market as a whole.

Stock pickers edit their records. They tell you about their winners, not their losers.

Sure Warren Buffett has done a terrific job, but he's the exception that proves the rule.
Besides, you and I can't buy up entire businesses (Berkshire Hathaway owns See's
Candies and Geico Car Insurance 100%). If you and I go visit a company's headquarters,
we don't get the red carpet treatment. You and I don't get a seat on the Board of
Directors. And we can't get the same favorable terms he negotiates. And many of his
stock picks pay generous dividends. And his favorite holding time is "forever," indicating
he recognizes the perils of selling one company just to buy another company.

Besides, this stock market's woes have limited even Berkshire Hathaway's record run.




Death of Capital Gains Investing                                            4
Chapter 3
  Trying to Find Undervalued Stocks is Like Trying to Outsmart the Whole
                                 World



Do you know how many people are trying to find the next Microsoft or Wal-Mart?

Are you smarter than all of them?

Do you have access to some special knowledge they don't? If not, how do you expect to
beat them all? If you do, trading on insider information is illegal, so if you get caught
you're still screwed. Don't believe me, just ask Martha Stewart.

Around this world there are people -- mutual fund managers, private management
firms, pension fund managers, hedge funds, and others -- seeking to make trades to beat
the market.

What do you have that they don't?

They have:

Banks of powerful computers with real time access to market quotes around the world.
And databases of prices going back a century.

Proprietary software that finds opportunities and executes the orders automatically.

Access to all the financial documents filed by publicly listed companies around the
world, along with the programs to screen them.

Teams of analysts flying around the world to visit factories and company headquarters
of companies on every continent except Antarctica.

Not to mention networks of contacts in institutions, businesses and governments
around the globe. By the time you see or read the story on Fox, CNN, Reuters or the
BBC, it's old news to them.

And even THOSE guys fail to beat the market, long term.

             The "Lost Decade" is Becoming the "Lost Dozen Years"

The 1990s bubble bull market peaked in March 2000 with the Dow at 11,700. As I wrote
above, it's now just barely over 12,000.




Death of Capital Gains Investing                                           5
So in the past nearly twelve years it's gone up a grand total of 400 points. Wow.
Whoopee.

Small wonder people who measure their investment results this way are crying.

Small wonder people who in 1999 were planning their early retirements are now
delaying leaving the workforce.

Small wonder many otherwise intelligent people are joining the Occupy Wall Street
protests.

            Stock Indexing is Maximizing a Dysfunctional Strategy

Their brokers and the mass media promised them the stock market would go up an
average of 10% per year.

Where is that? In your dreams?

Because stock picking is so risky and liable to fail, according to many intelligent stock
market writers, such as Burton Malkiel author of A Random Walk Down Wall Street, the
solution is to invest in the market as a whole. Buy into Vanguard's S&P 500 Index
mutual fund or Exchange Traded Fund.

This eliminates the risk of relying on picking individual companies to invest in.

Invest in them all, and profit from the rising wealth of the market.

Maybe that 10% per year average will show up soon.

After all, responsible investment advisors have always stressed an average is just an
average, and the stock market can have many down years.

It's just -- after the 25 year bull market from 1982 to 2007, nobody expected to ever see
such down years again.

Yet here they are.




Death of Capital Gains Investing                                          6
Chapter 4
                              Where's the Silver Lining?



We're facing a host of major economic problems:

1. The US economy is in a sluggish, minimalist "recovery" that shows few signs of
strengthening any time soon. Unemployment is still close to 9%.

2. A few months ago S&P downgraded the credit worthiness of the United States
government, something which would have been almost unimaginable just a few years
ago. This was caused by the huge amount of debt the government took on to prevent a
major depression in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis.

3. Democrats and Republicans are at loggerheads over how to reduce this budget deficit.
A bipartisan "super committee" failed to agree on how to reduce the budget by $1.1
trillion (to nobody's surprise). This sets the country up for wide, sweeping across the
board cuts as of January 2013 (conveniently after the next election is over), which will
hurt many and satisfy nobody.

Although in theory the government could come up with an alternative budget before
then, President Obama has said he won't approve that.

As 2012 is an election year, we can expect a lot more rhetoric than action from all sides.

4. Besides the on the books debt, the US government faces the prospect of paying
trillions of dollars of unfunded liabilities in the next few years: Social Security,
Medicare, Medicaid, and other welfare programs.

5. State and local governments also have to pay millions of dollars of pensions for which
they don't have the funds.

6. Many corporations are in the same boat.

7. 80 million baby boomers have started to retire. That's a lot of experience and
expertise leaving the workplace. It's also a lot of people who are no longer buying stocks
through payroll deduction, but selling them to supplement their inadequate Social
Security and pension checks.

Less buying and more selling of stocks reduces their price.

8. Leftwing activists have managed to capitalize on the nation's fears and frustration
with the economy, to attract thousands of young people to camp out in big cities as a
protest against Wall Street. Most Occupy Wall Street participants are well-meaning,


Death of Capital Gains Investing                                           7
naive young people who will be yuppies when they get a job. However, OWS threatens to
disrupt law and order, and is draining the coffers of already-desperate cities.

9. Soon the healthcare "reform" law will go into effect, draining more money from the
US taxpayers.

10. The Eurozone is threatening to come apart. Greece is close to defaulting on its
government bonds. So are Spain, Ireland, Italy and Portugal. There's a lot of pressure on
Germany to back up the excess spending of rest of the continent, but German taxpayers
have their limits. Pundits around the world are predicting a huge financial disaster if the
euro fails.

Meanwhile, people around Europe are protesting the budget cutbacks. Like OWS,
they're contributing to the financial problems, though without offering any solutions,
and often even more violently.

11. In Asia, Japan's recession has entered its third decade, with no relief in sight. The
Japanese people are growing older and dying faster than they're reproducing.

Thanks to the one family, one child policy decreed sixty years ago, the Chinese people
are also getting old. Although it's not well-known, in 2008 China enacted its own
version of a stimulus bill, propping up many businesses around the country. They've
built several cities which are currently empty. Yes - empty. They're trying not to be so
export-dependent, but if Europe falls they'll be in trouble. Inflation in China is on the
rise. So is civil disorder. Many experts believe there are many protests throughout the
country on a daily basis, but usually not allowed on the news. The government wants to
keep dissatisfied citizens from organizing into another Tiananmen Square revolt. Part of
their strategy is to keep young people working, so they don't have time to take to the
streets.




Death of Capital Gains Investing                                            8
Chapter 5
                 Financial Experts are Divided About the Future



Some believe the huge amounts of debt in the world, together with the slowing of
business due to baby boomers retiring (and Europe has its own baby boomers who plan
to retire with government pensions and paid health care plans) is going to cause a
deflationary spiral which will drag down the market prices of everybody’s assets
(including houses and stocks), raise unemployment and slow down the entire world's
economy.

If this happens, the Dow Jones Average could plummet to levels we haven't seen in
decades. That may not happen, but it's not likely to break that 14,000 record any time
soon.

Other experts believe the US Federal Reserve's policies of injecting liquidity into the
system to prevent a depression are going to overload the world with US dollars.

If the Fed doesn't do the job, they argue, one of our major creditors -- probably China --
is going to get tired of holding Treasury bonds and sell them.

Either way, the world will be flooded with US dollars, causing a hyperinflation that may
remind us of Germany in 1924 or even Zimbabwe a few years back.

The good news is your stock portfolio will go up in value. The bad news is it may not go
up as fast as inflation does, and it still won't buy any more than it does now.

Perhaps we'll keep muddling through as we are now, though the idea that more of the
"same" is the good news, is itself frightening.

Maybe everybody is wrong, and the next booming stock market will start up next year.

Are you ready to bet your retirement on that?




Death of Capital Gains Investing                                           9
Chapter 6
                    How Long Can a Stock Market Stay Down?



It took over twenty-five years -- until November 1954 -- for the Dow Jones to break the
record it set in September 1929. Ten years of a Great Depression, four years of world
war, four years of a "police action" in Korea, and building a nuclear arsenal to defend the
country against the threat of world communism.

Japan's stock market reached its peak of 49,000 in 1989. The Nikkei Index is now at
8,643. The country is in its third decade of slow to no growth and near-zero interest
rates.

How much longer can the current US bear market last?

The truth is, nobody knows.

However, someday stocks will go up again, whether it's next year or 2032.

                    When Stocks Go Up, You're Happy, Right?

The truth is, capital gains investors have no way of winning the war against their
emotions.

Many stock and investing writers tell you, don't trade on your emotions. Use your
intellect.

Unfortunately, our intellects are no better at predicting the future than our emotions.
And studies have proven few people can use their brains (or even their electronic brains
-- computers) to beat the market long term.

One thing conventional financial writers tell you I agree with is stock market investing
(for capital gains) is a war between fear and greed.

In a bull market, greed prevails.

In a bear market, fear rules.

But both emotions are present in the individual investor with a decent profit in their
stock.

A capital gains investor's heart is as volatile as the stock market itself, because they
know the market is fickle.




Death of Capital Gains Investing                                             10
Today the market gives you a 5% gain. It may take it – and more -- away tomorrow.

Knowing this, stock investors are tempted to sell before the price goes back down. That's
the fear of loss.

Old Wall Street maxim: You can't lose money by taking a profit.

Ah, but greed plays a part too.

Remember, if you sell a stock you don't participate in its later price rises.

If your stock went up 5% today, maybe it'll go up 10% tomorrow. Who knows? But you
don't want to miss out on that.

Another Old Wall Street maxim: Cut your losses short but let your winners run.

Here is where responsible mainstream financial writers tell you to invest for the long
run. Buy many good stocks, or an index fund, and hang on for 20 to 30 years, and you're
guaranteed to be ahead.

But when you retire, you're still faced with the sell or hold dilemma.

What if a bear market starts up right after you retire? (Ask people who retired in 2007.)

So if it's impossible to find the super winning stocks (without the benefit of hindsight,
when it's too late) and the prospects for the immediate future seem dim, and even when
you have a winner you'll have emotional unrest instead of happiness, what's an investor
to do?

Abandon the hope of reselling for a profit?

Yes.




Death of Capital Gains Investing                                                11
Chapter 7
                                   Invest for Income



Buy and hold forever -- but get a continuous stream of ever-increasing income, starting
almost right away.

Money you can use to buy new shares with, thus growing your portfolio or -- if you're
retired -- live on.

If the price of the stock goes up, who cares? You don't need to sell it to put cash money
back into your pocket, because you're getting quarterly dividends.

If the price of the stock goes down, who cares? You're getting your quarterly
dividends.

If the price of the stock goes nowhere, who cares? You're getting your quarterly
dividends.

Poof! There goes the conflict between your fear and greed. Suddenly, fear and greed are
on the same side.

Greed tells you not to sell stocks, because greed wants those quarterly dividends.

Fear tells you not to sell stocks, because you're afraid of losing those quarterly
dividends.

There goes the need to find stocks that go up more than the market, or even as much as
the market. You're after dividends.

                     Real Businesses Demand Current Income

It always amuses me when I read a mainstream financial writer advise people to buy
stocks as though they're buying a business, because shares of stocks are shares of
ownership in the business.

That's good advice of course, but then they turn around and tell you to buy stocks you
think will go up in price. Since when did depending on the stock market and passively
waiting for it to give you capital gains become a good business strategy?

Would you buy a business if they told you the only way to get ANY money back from it
was to sell it?

Of course not.


Death of Capital Gains Investing                                            12
Even if you have to borrow money to buy or start a business, it may take time to pay the
loan back, but you still expect some financial return right away.

Yet people willingly trade their life's savings for pieces of paper for the sheer joy of
seeing the price of those pieces of paper go up (hopefully) year after year.

Sure, they plan to sell those pieces of paper for a big profit once they retire.

And if they retire during a bear market like the current one, there's no guarantee they'll
get nearly the money they hoped for years ago.

And once they sell, at whatever price, they no longer have them.

We're back to that fundamental truth.




Death of Capital Gains Investing                                             13
Chapter 8

       If Dividends are So Great, Why Don't All Companies Pay Them?



They can't afford to.

Critics of investing for income often use that to criticize buying stocks for dividends, but
it's actually a good reason to do so.

See, many companies listed by the stock exchanges are relatively new. They're not well-
established in their markets. They're fighting hard to compete.

They need to use all available cash to buy new equipment or to invest in Research and
Development. They have to keep up, or they'll fall behind and go out of business.

It would be irresponsible of investors to demand dividends from such companies.

But aren't such companies the riskiest to invest in? They're the ones most likely to go out
of business, taking your hard-earned money with them.

Some do go up a lot over the years but, as we've covered, you can't predict the future.
For every Microsoft, there's a ton of Lotuses. For every Wal-Mart, there's a ton of K-
Marts.
                             Stick to Safety With Income

Companies that pay dividends are generally well-established. They're successful. They've
been around for years, and are still doing well. You've probably heard of them, because
many of them are well-known consumer brand names, but even the established in their
markets business to business companies have secure incomes.

They make more money than they need, so they reward their investors well.

In the United States, there are two kinds of companies which are REQUIRED to pay at
least 90% of their cash to their investors. One of those types of companies is regulated
by the government, and allowed to raise prices every year by MORE than the rate of
inflation.

And if you're not in the US, you may be in one of the almost forty countries that have a
similar version of one of those types of companies.




Death of Capital Gains Investing                                            14
And then there are utilities. They're allowed to supply customers with electricity, natural
gas, water and telephone services without competition, in exchange for regulation that
guarantees them a profit they are expected to share with their shareholders.

You don't have to buy a string of pearls, a grand piano or even an Apple iPod. In bad
economic times you can cut out such luxuries. You do have to turn on the lights, heat
your home, and drink water.

Would you rather base your retirement on one software company trying to compete
against five others for fickle consumer loyalty -- or on the need of those people to eat, to
drive, and to flush their toilets?




Death of Capital Gains Investing                                            15
Chapter 9
    Join the REAL Revolution Against Wall Street -- Investing for Income



The word is getting out. People are starting to remember what their parents and
grandparents once knew -- some stocks pay dividends.

Dividend are money you can use to build wealth or pay expenses WITHOUT selling the
stocks you own.

What a revelation.

You CAN eat your cake -- at least lick some icing off the spoon every three months -- and
have it too.

The word is spreading. Too many senior citizens are currently living restricted lives
because they put their money into "safe" certificates of deposit, only to see interest rates
slide down to nearly zero.

Many other retirees and near-retirees are looking at their current portfolios,
remembering how fat they once looked, and how skinny they are at current prices, and
begin thinking now's a good time to sell the losers and buy something that will pay a real
return.

The above group includes millions of baby boomers. We forced society to build us new
schools and to accept rock music. When this generation takes up income investing en
masse, prices are going to go up, yields down.

So you want to sell your current "growth" stocks and get in on the ground floor of
income investing before that happens.

And you don't want to do so "blind," because I never said income investing was without
risk.

And in my world, "risk" means real danger.

But first, an income investing success story:

                           Growing $5,000 to $22 Million

Not many people have heard of Anne Schieber, but she's one of the outstanding
investors of all time, with an average annual return of 22.1% beating all the well-known
pros. According to one article after she died in 1995, Warren Buffett was ahead of her. I
suspect that, 15 years later, with the current bear market, he's behind her.


Death of Capital Gains Investing                                            16
Her investing career has two big lessons:

Don't sell unless you have to. Her stocks went down a lot in the 1973-1974 bear market.
She didn't sell, because she didn't want to pay additional brokerage commissions.

Reinvest dividends. She lived entirely on her retirement pension.

                     Could You Repeat Her Accomplishment?

I can't promise that. She had the advantage of starting out when companies generally
paid higher dividend yields than they do now.

On the other hand, she couldn't buy the two types of modern investments which are
required to pay out at least 90% of their cash to their owners. You can.

You have another advantage right now.

You're starting out in a bear market.

Why's that important? Aren't bear markets a bad thing?

They are if you're selling stocks. When you're buying stocks for dividends, a good long
bear market is exactly what you want.

That's because you're buying stocks more cheaply than during a bull market when all
stocks are driven up by the people planning to sell them to an even greater fool.

Let's take a simple example.

You have $1,000 to invest. You've found a stock that pays dividends. Its market price is
$10 per share. It pays 50 cents a share in dividends.

Because 1,000 / 10 = 100, you can buy 100 shares.

You'll get .50 X 100 = $50 in dividends.

But what if it cost only $5 per share?

Then 1000 / 5 = 200. You could buy 200 shares. Your dividend income will be .50 X
200 = $100.

So all the reasons to expect the current bear market to continue are actually a good thing
for income investors.

As you buy new shares with money from your paycheck or business, and as you buy new
shares with your dividends, you're getting them for less.


Death of Capital Gains Investing                                          17
That allows you to grow your income even faster.

Remember how, after the 1929 crash, the Dow Jones Average didn't break its record
high for twenty-five years?

Did that mean nobody made money in the stock market from 1929 to 1954?

Not at all. According to Dr. Jeremy Siegel in The Future for Investors, you could have
multiplied your money over 400% during that period . . .

Just by holding stocks that paid dividends and reinvesting those dividends.

If in August 1929 you bought typical "growth" stocks that didn't pay dividends, you were
underwater until nearly the end of 1954.

Some "growth," huh?

If in August 1929 you bought typical stocks that paid dividends, and reinvested those
dividends, by the end of 1954 your portfolio was worth 4 times more.




Death of Capital Gains Investing                                         18
Chapter 10
                               There are Risks, However



In the world of investing for capital gains, "risk" is defined as volatility. That is, how
much the stock's price goes up or down.

But if you don't have to sell your stocks to get money back from them, you can ignore
that superficial definition of risk and concentrate on the risks that really matter:

Some companies go downhill and have to reduce or even stop paying dividends. Some
companies even go out of business.

Anybody who buys the stocks of individual companies faces this risk.

I can remember when IBM and General Motors were two of the biggest and most
successful companies in the world. They were considered the peak of American
business.

If you were to go back in time to 1965 and try to tell somebody that in forty-five years
IBM would be a lagging high-tech stock and General Motors on government welfare,
they'd laugh at you and call you crazy.

They'd believe you really traveled through time before they'd believe those two
companies could not be prime stock investments.

What major companies of 2012 are going to be casualties before you retire?

I can't tell you that.

I don't have a crystal ball, and neither does anybody else, no matter what they claim.

But I can tell you how to structure your retirement portfolio so you can avoid suffering
when those companies reduce or stop paying dividends.

You can manage the risks of income investing.

I want to show you how it's done.

I also want to show the best kinds of income investments.

Sure, you can go out and buy any old bond or stock, but you'll do better if you pick out
the best sectors, and understand how to keep your risk to a minimum.




Death of Capital Gains Investing                                              19
I've been studying income investments for years now, and I put what I learned into the
Income Investing Secrets program.

To see more, just go to:


                  Income Investing Secrets Program
Yours for more investing income,

Rick

Richard Stooker

P.S. You can keep on buying "growth" stocks if you like. Some of them will grow, at least
for a while. Heck, sooner or later this bear market will be over, though I'm not holding
my breath.

But when you have some capital gains, you'll be faced with that war between fear and
greed that has destroyed many investors before you.

And once you sell a winner, you don't own it any more.

That's true even in the mightiest of bull markets. In fact, the conflict -- and resulting
regret -- is more severe then. Just ask anyone who sold Amazon or Yahoo in 1998.

And if you don't sell, the pain can also be severe. Just ask anyone who still owned
Amazon or Yahoo in April 2000.

With dividends, you put cash back in your pocket, and still own the stock -- forever, or
until you die, whichever comes first.

Check it out:

                     Income Investing Secrets Program




Death of Capital Gains Investing                                             20

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Death of Capital Gains

  • 1. The Death of Capital Gains Investing (And What Replaces It) A free report by Richard Stooker (author of Income Investing Secrets, Master Limited Partnerships, Bring on the Crash, REITs Around the World, and Stock Market Investing for Beginners)
  • 2. Copyright 2012 by Richard Stooker and Gold Egg Investing LLC. You have the right to give this report away. In fact, I encourage you to do so. However, you do not have the right to change it in any way, with one exception. If you are a Clickbank affiliate, you may replace the links with your own affiliate links.
  • 3. Chapter 1 Any Happy Investors in the House? Look at the bottom line of your 401(K), IRA, Roth IRA or other brokerage account. Like what you see? When was the last time you liked what you saw there? If you're like most people, it was late in 2007, when the Dow Jones Industrial Average broke 14,000. As I write this, on December 3, 2011, over four years later, it's 12,019 -- and THAT only after a major post-Thanksgiving rally. Not long ago it under 11,000 (and it first reached 11,000 around April 2000). It's down 2,000 points from that 14,000 record. And nobody knows where it's going next. Yet people keep trying to make money this way. When they fail, they're quick to label "Wall Street" a scam or a conspiracy. The stock market itself is not a scam. The trouble comes from how people are brainwashed into trying to make money from the stock market. That is Wall Street's fault. Now it's time to lay bare the truth, so you can position your investments to give yourself ongoing streams of income to reinvest, so you build yourself a fortune by the time you retire. But first, let's define terms. What is Capital Gains Investing? It's what the vast majority of people call simply "investing." It's buying a stock now in the hope you'll be able to sell it for a profit in the future. Death of Capital Gains Investing 1
  • 4. If you're like most people, you're now confused. That IS investing, you might be thinking. What else? There IS an "else," and I'll get to that in a minute. But first . . . Death of Capital Gains Investing 2
  • 5. Chapter 2 What's Wrong With Investing to Sell at a Higher Price 1. The simple answer is, once you sell, you no longer own the stock. You ever hear the old saying, "You can't have your cake and eat it too"? Duh, huh? You can't sell a stock and own it too. So you no longer benefit from the stock going higher in price. How many times have you heard of somebody selling a stock at its highest price, then happily counting their cash as the stock's price goes down? Not often, I bet. Most of the time, the stock keeps going up in price while you kick yourself. Or it goes down, then goes back up. Look at the long term graph of any great stock, whether it's Wal-Mart or Microsoft. They all trend up in the long term, but have many sharp downward jags, and periods where the price went virtually nowhere. The overall stock market is the same. How many people over the years have bought, then sold such stocks as Wal-Mart and Microsoft, then kicked themselves, because they spent the cash they received, so it's gone, but the stock keeps going up. Sometimes you need cash. Hey, it happens to all of us. But sometimes you sell one stock because it's been going down and you think another company will do better. Sometimes you're right, but often you're not. 2. Finding stocks that go up more than the stock market as a whole is not as easy as brokers, fund managers and stock pickers want you to believe. Death of Capital Gains Investing 3
  • 6. In fact, it's hard as Hell to succeed in stock picking and market timing on a long-term basis. Hundreds of studies since the Cowles Commission examined why none of the stock pickers and timers of that era predicted the 1929 crash have statistically analyzed the claims of fund managers and stock pundits of all kinds. The universal result? In the long run, almost nobody has successfully picked stocks that beat the market. "Hot" mutual fund managers turn cold -- or have to invest so much more money their funds are forced to mirror the market as a whole. Stock pickers edit their records. They tell you about their winners, not their losers. Sure Warren Buffett has done a terrific job, but he's the exception that proves the rule. Besides, you and I can't buy up entire businesses (Berkshire Hathaway owns See's Candies and Geico Car Insurance 100%). If you and I go visit a company's headquarters, we don't get the red carpet treatment. You and I don't get a seat on the Board of Directors. And we can't get the same favorable terms he negotiates. And many of his stock picks pay generous dividends. And his favorite holding time is "forever," indicating he recognizes the perils of selling one company just to buy another company. Besides, this stock market's woes have limited even Berkshire Hathaway's record run. Death of Capital Gains Investing 4
  • 7. Chapter 3 Trying to Find Undervalued Stocks is Like Trying to Outsmart the Whole World Do you know how many people are trying to find the next Microsoft or Wal-Mart? Are you smarter than all of them? Do you have access to some special knowledge they don't? If not, how do you expect to beat them all? If you do, trading on insider information is illegal, so if you get caught you're still screwed. Don't believe me, just ask Martha Stewart. Around this world there are people -- mutual fund managers, private management firms, pension fund managers, hedge funds, and others -- seeking to make trades to beat the market. What do you have that they don't? They have: Banks of powerful computers with real time access to market quotes around the world. And databases of prices going back a century. Proprietary software that finds opportunities and executes the orders automatically. Access to all the financial documents filed by publicly listed companies around the world, along with the programs to screen them. Teams of analysts flying around the world to visit factories and company headquarters of companies on every continent except Antarctica. Not to mention networks of contacts in institutions, businesses and governments around the globe. By the time you see or read the story on Fox, CNN, Reuters or the BBC, it's old news to them. And even THOSE guys fail to beat the market, long term. The "Lost Decade" is Becoming the "Lost Dozen Years" The 1990s bubble bull market peaked in March 2000 with the Dow at 11,700. As I wrote above, it's now just barely over 12,000. Death of Capital Gains Investing 5
  • 8. So in the past nearly twelve years it's gone up a grand total of 400 points. Wow. Whoopee. Small wonder people who measure their investment results this way are crying. Small wonder people who in 1999 were planning their early retirements are now delaying leaving the workforce. Small wonder many otherwise intelligent people are joining the Occupy Wall Street protests. Stock Indexing is Maximizing a Dysfunctional Strategy Their brokers and the mass media promised them the stock market would go up an average of 10% per year. Where is that? In your dreams? Because stock picking is so risky and liable to fail, according to many intelligent stock market writers, such as Burton Malkiel author of A Random Walk Down Wall Street, the solution is to invest in the market as a whole. Buy into Vanguard's S&P 500 Index mutual fund or Exchange Traded Fund. This eliminates the risk of relying on picking individual companies to invest in. Invest in them all, and profit from the rising wealth of the market. Maybe that 10% per year average will show up soon. After all, responsible investment advisors have always stressed an average is just an average, and the stock market can have many down years. It's just -- after the 25 year bull market from 1982 to 2007, nobody expected to ever see such down years again. Yet here they are. Death of Capital Gains Investing 6
  • 9. Chapter 4 Where's the Silver Lining? We're facing a host of major economic problems: 1. The US economy is in a sluggish, minimalist "recovery" that shows few signs of strengthening any time soon. Unemployment is still close to 9%. 2. A few months ago S&P downgraded the credit worthiness of the United States government, something which would have been almost unimaginable just a few years ago. This was caused by the huge amount of debt the government took on to prevent a major depression in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis. 3. Democrats and Republicans are at loggerheads over how to reduce this budget deficit. A bipartisan "super committee" failed to agree on how to reduce the budget by $1.1 trillion (to nobody's surprise). This sets the country up for wide, sweeping across the board cuts as of January 2013 (conveniently after the next election is over), which will hurt many and satisfy nobody. Although in theory the government could come up with an alternative budget before then, President Obama has said he won't approve that. As 2012 is an election year, we can expect a lot more rhetoric than action from all sides. 4. Besides the on the books debt, the US government faces the prospect of paying trillions of dollars of unfunded liabilities in the next few years: Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, and other welfare programs. 5. State and local governments also have to pay millions of dollars of pensions for which they don't have the funds. 6. Many corporations are in the same boat. 7. 80 million baby boomers have started to retire. That's a lot of experience and expertise leaving the workplace. It's also a lot of people who are no longer buying stocks through payroll deduction, but selling them to supplement their inadequate Social Security and pension checks. Less buying and more selling of stocks reduces their price. 8. Leftwing activists have managed to capitalize on the nation's fears and frustration with the economy, to attract thousands of young people to camp out in big cities as a protest against Wall Street. Most Occupy Wall Street participants are well-meaning, Death of Capital Gains Investing 7
  • 10. naive young people who will be yuppies when they get a job. However, OWS threatens to disrupt law and order, and is draining the coffers of already-desperate cities. 9. Soon the healthcare "reform" law will go into effect, draining more money from the US taxpayers. 10. The Eurozone is threatening to come apart. Greece is close to defaulting on its government bonds. So are Spain, Ireland, Italy and Portugal. There's a lot of pressure on Germany to back up the excess spending of rest of the continent, but German taxpayers have their limits. Pundits around the world are predicting a huge financial disaster if the euro fails. Meanwhile, people around Europe are protesting the budget cutbacks. Like OWS, they're contributing to the financial problems, though without offering any solutions, and often even more violently. 11. In Asia, Japan's recession has entered its third decade, with no relief in sight. The Japanese people are growing older and dying faster than they're reproducing. Thanks to the one family, one child policy decreed sixty years ago, the Chinese people are also getting old. Although it's not well-known, in 2008 China enacted its own version of a stimulus bill, propping up many businesses around the country. They've built several cities which are currently empty. Yes - empty. They're trying not to be so export-dependent, but if Europe falls they'll be in trouble. Inflation in China is on the rise. So is civil disorder. Many experts believe there are many protests throughout the country on a daily basis, but usually not allowed on the news. The government wants to keep dissatisfied citizens from organizing into another Tiananmen Square revolt. Part of their strategy is to keep young people working, so they don't have time to take to the streets. Death of Capital Gains Investing 8
  • 11. Chapter 5 Financial Experts are Divided About the Future Some believe the huge amounts of debt in the world, together with the slowing of business due to baby boomers retiring (and Europe has its own baby boomers who plan to retire with government pensions and paid health care plans) is going to cause a deflationary spiral which will drag down the market prices of everybody’s assets (including houses and stocks), raise unemployment and slow down the entire world's economy. If this happens, the Dow Jones Average could plummet to levels we haven't seen in decades. That may not happen, but it's not likely to break that 14,000 record any time soon. Other experts believe the US Federal Reserve's policies of injecting liquidity into the system to prevent a depression are going to overload the world with US dollars. If the Fed doesn't do the job, they argue, one of our major creditors -- probably China -- is going to get tired of holding Treasury bonds and sell them. Either way, the world will be flooded with US dollars, causing a hyperinflation that may remind us of Germany in 1924 or even Zimbabwe a few years back. The good news is your stock portfolio will go up in value. The bad news is it may not go up as fast as inflation does, and it still won't buy any more than it does now. Perhaps we'll keep muddling through as we are now, though the idea that more of the "same" is the good news, is itself frightening. Maybe everybody is wrong, and the next booming stock market will start up next year. Are you ready to bet your retirement on that? Death of Capital Gains Investing 9
  • 12. Chapter 6 How Long Can a Stock Market Stay Down? It took over twenty-five years -- until November 1954 -- for the Dow Jones to break the record it set in September 1929. Ten years of a Great Depression, four years of world war, four years of a "police action" in Korea, and building a nuclear arsenal to defend the country against the threat of world communism. Japan's stock market reached its peak of 49,000 in 1989. The Nikkei Index is now at 8,643. The country is in its third decade of slow to no growth and near-zero interest rates. How much longer can the current US bear market last? The truth is, nobody knows. However, someday stocks will go up again, whether it's next year or 2032. When Stocks Go Up, You're Happy, Right? The truth is, capital gains investors have no way of winning the war against their emotions. Many stock and investing writers tell you, don't trade on your emotions. Use your intellect. Unfortunately, our intellects are no better at predicting the future than our emotions. And studies have proven few people can use their brains (or even their electronic brains -- computers) to beat the market long term. One thing conventional financial writers tell you I agree with is stock market investing (for capital gains) is a war between fear and greed. In a bull market, greed prevails. In a bear market, fear rules. But both emotions are present in the individual investor with a decent profit in their stock. A capital gains investor's heart is as volatile as the stock market itself, because they know the market is fickle. Death of Capital Gains Investing 10
  • 13. Today the market gives you a 5% gain. It may take it – and more -- away tomorrow. Knowing this, stock investors are tempted to sell before the price goes back down. That's the fear of loss. Old Wall Street maxim: You can't lose money by taking a profit. Ah, but greed plays a part too. Remember, if you sell a stock you don't participate in its later price rises. If your stock went up 5% today, maybe it'll go up 10% tomorrow. Who knows? But you don't want to miss out on that. Another Old Wall Street maxim: Cut your losses short but let your winners run. Here is where responsible mainstream financial writers tell you to invest for the long run. Buy many good stocks, or an index fund, and hang on for 20 to 30 years, and you're guaranteed to be ahead. But when you retire, you're still faced with the sell or hold dilemma. What if a bear market starts up right after you retire? (Ask people who retired in 2007.) So if it's impossible to find the super winning stocks (without the benefit of hindsight, when it's too late) and the prospects for the immediate future seem dim, and even when you have a winner you'll have emotional unrest instead of happiness, what's an investor to do? Abandon the hope of reselling for a profit? Yes. Death of Capital Gains Investing 11
  • 14. Chapter 7 Invest for Income Buy and hold forever -- but get a continuous stream of ever-increasing income, starting almost right away. Money you can use to buy new shares with, thus growing your portfolio or -- if you're retired -- live on. If the price of the stock goes up, who cares? You don't need to sell it to put cash money back into your pocket, because you're getting quarterly dividends. If the price of the stock goes down, who cares? You're getting your quarterly dividends. If the price of the stock goes nowhere, who cares? You're getting your quarterly dividends. Poof! There goes the conflict between your fear and greed. Suddenly, fear and greed are on the same side. Greed tells you not to sell stocks, because greed wants those quarterly dividends. Fear tells you not to sell stocks, because you're afraid of losing those quarterly dividends. There goes the need to find stocks that go up more than the market, or even as much as the market. You're after dividends. Real Businesses Demand Current Income It always amuses me when I read a mainstream financial writer advise people to buy stocks as though they're buying a business, because shares of stocks are shares of ownership in the business. That's good advice of course, but then they turn around and tell you to buy stocks you think will go up in price. Since when did depending on the stock market and passively waiting for it to give you capital gains become a good business strategy? Would you buy a business if they told you the only way to get ANY money back from it was to sell it? Of course not. Death of Capital Gains Investing 12
  • 15. Even if you have to borrow money to buy or start a business, it may take time to pay the loan back, but you still expect some financial return right away. Yet people willingly trade their life's savings for pieces of paper for the sheer joy of seeing the price of those pieces of paper go up (hopefully) year after year. Sure, they plan to sell those pieces of paper for a big profit once they retire. And if they retire during a bear market like the current one, there's no guarantee they'll get nearly the money they hoped for years ago. And once they sell, at whatever price, they no longer have them. We're back to that fundamental truth. Death of Capital Gains Investing 13
  • 16. Chapter 8 If Dividends are So Great, Why Don't All Companies Pay Them? They can't afford to. Critics of investing for income often use that to criticize buying stocks for dividends, but it's actually a good reason to do so. See, many companies listed by the stock exchanges are relatively new. They're not well- established in their markets. They're fighting hard to compete. They need to use all available cash to buy new equipment or to invest in Research and Development. They have to keep up, or they'll fall behind and go out of business. It would be irresponsible of investors to demand dividends from such companies. But aren't such companies the riskiest to invest in? They're the ones most likely to go out of business, taking your hard-earned money with them. Some do go up a lot over the years but, as we've covered, you can't predict the future. For every Microsoft, there's a ton of Lotuses. For every Wal-Mart, there's a ton of K- Marts. Stick to Safety With Income Companies that pay dividends are generally well-established. They're successful. They've been around for years, and are still doing well. You've probably heard of them, because many of them are well-known consumer brand names, but even the established in their markets business to business companies have secure incomes. They make more money than they need, so they reward their investors well. In the United States, there are two kinds of companies which are REQUIRED to pay at least 90% of their cash to their investors. One of those types of companies is regulated by the government, and allowed to raise prices every year by MORE than the rate of inflation. And if you're not in the US, you may be in one of the almost forty countries that have a similar version of one of those types of companies. Death of Capital Gains Investing 14
  • 17. And then there are utilities. They're allowed to supply customers with electricity, natural gas, water and telephone services without competition, in exchange for regulation that guarantees them a profit they are expected to share with their shareholders. You don't have to buy a string of pearls, a grand piano or even an Apple iPod. In bad economic times you can cut out such luxuries. You do have to turn on the lights, heat your home, and drink water. Would you rather base your retirement on one software company trying to compete against five others for fickle consumer loyalty -- or on the need of those people to eat, to drive, and to flush their toilets? Death of Capital Gains Investing 15
  • 18. Chapter 9 Join the REAL Revolution Against Wall Street -- Investing for Income The word is getting out. People are starting to remember what their parents and grandparents once knew -- some stocks pay dividends. Dividend are money you can use to build wealth or pay expenses WITHOUT selling the stocks you own. What a revelation. You CAN eat your cake -- at least lick some icing off the spoon every three months -- and have it too. The word is spreading. Too many senior citizens are currently living restricted lives because they put their money into "safe" certificates of deposit, only to see interest rates slide down to nearly zero. Many other retirees and near-retirees are looking at their current portfolios, remembering how fat they once looked, and how skinny they are at current prices, and begin thinking now's a good time to sell the losers and buy something that will pay a real return. The above group includes millions of baby boomers. We forced society to build us new schools and to accept rock music. When this generation takes up income investing en masse, prices are going to go up, yields down. So you want to sell your current "growth" stocks and get in on the ground floor of income investing before that happens. And you don't want to do so "blind," because I never said income investing was without risk. And in my world, "risk" means real danger. But first, an income investing success story: Growing $5,000 to $22 Million Not many people have heard of Anne Schieber, but she's one of the outstanding investors of all time, with an average annual return of 22.1% beating all the well-known pros. According to one article after she died in 1995, Warren Buffett was ahead of her. I suspect that, 15 years later, with the current bear market, he's behind her. Death of Capital Gains Investing 16
  • 19. Her investing career has two big lessons: Don't sell unless you have to. Her stocks went down a lot in the 1973-1974 bear market. She didn't sell, because she didn't want to pay additional brokerage commissions. Reinvest dividends. She lived entirely on her retirement pension. Could You Repeat Her Accomplishment? I can't promise that. She had the advantage of starting out when companies generally paid higher dividend yields than they do now. On the other hand, she couldn't buy the two types of modern investments which are required to pay out at least 90% of their cash to their owners. You can. You have another advantage right now. You're starting out in a bear market. Why's that important? Aren't bear markets a bad thing? They are if you're selling stocks. When you're buying stocks for dividends, a good long bear market is exactly what you want. That's because you're buying stocks more cheaply than during a bull market when all stocks are driven up by the people planning to sell them to an even greater fool. Let's take a simple example. You have $1,000 to invest. You've found a stock that pays dividends. Its market price is $10 per share. It pays 50 cents a share in dividends. Because 1,000 / 10 = 100, you can buy 100 shares. You'll get .50 X 100 = $50 in dividends. But what if it cost only $5 per share? Then 1000 / 5 = 200. You could buy 200 shares. Your dividend income will be .50 X 200 = $100. So all the reasons to expect the current bear market to continue are actually a good thing for income investors. As you buy new shares with money from your paycheck or business, and as you buy new shares with your dividends, you're getting them for less. Death of Capital Gains Investing 17
  • 20. That allows you to grow your income even faster. Remember how, after the 1929 crash, the Dow Jones Average didn't break its record high for twenty-five years? Did that mean nobody made money in the stock market from 1929 to 1954? Not at all. According to Dr. Jeremy Siegel in The Future for Investors, you could have multiplied your money over 400% during that period . . . Just by holding stocks that paid dividends and reinvesting those dividends. If in August 1929 you bought typical "growth" stocks that didn't pay dividends, you were underwater until nearly the end of 1954. Some "growth," huh? If in August 1929 you bought typical stocks that paid dividends, and reinvested those dividends, by the end of 1954 your portfolio was worth 4 times more. Death of Capital Gains Investing 18
  • 21. Chapter 10 There are Risks, However In the world of investing for capital gains, "risk" is defined as volatility. That is, how much the stock's price goes up or down. But if you don't have to sell your stocks to get money back from them, you can ignore that superficial definition of risk and concentrate on the risks that really matter: Some companies go downhill and have to reduce or even stop paying dividends. Some companies even go out of business. Anybody who buys the stocks of individual companies faces this risk. I can remember when IBM and General Motors were two of the biggest and most successful companies in the world. They were considered the peak of American business. If you were to go back in time to 1965 and try to tell somebody that in forty-five years IBM would be a lagging high-tech stock and General Motors on government welfare, they'd laugh at you and call you crazy. They'd believe you really traveled through time before they'd believe those two companies could not be prime stock investments. What major companies of 2012 are going to be casualties before you retire? I can't tell you that. I don't have a crystal ball, and neither does anybody else, no matter what they claim. But I can tell you how to structure your retirement portfolio so you can avoid suffering when those companies reduce or stop paying dividends. You can manage the risks of income investing. I want to show you how it's done. I also want to show the best kinds of income investments. Sure, you can go out and buy any old bond or stock, but you'll do better if you pick out the best sectors, and understand how to keep your risk to a minimum. Death of Capital Gains Investing 19
  • 22. I've been studying income investments for years now, and I put what I learned into the Income Investing Secrets program. To see more, just go to: Income Investing Secrets Program Yours for more investing income, Rick Richard Stooker P.S. You can keep on buying "growth" stocks if you like. Some of them will grow, at least for a while. Heck, sooner or later this bear market will be over, though I'm not holding my breath. But when you have some capital gains, you'll be faced with that war between fear and greed that has destroyed many investors before you. And once you sell a winner, you don't own it any more. That's true even in the mightiest of bull markets. In fact, the conflict -- and resulting regret -- is more severe then. Just ask anyone who sold Amazon or Yahoo in 1998. And if you don't sell, the pain can also be severe. Just ask anyone who still owned Amazon or Yahoo in April 2000. With dividends, you put cash back in your pocket, and still own the stock -- forever, or until you die, whichever comes first. Check it out: Income Investing Secrets Program Death of Capital Gains Investing 20