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The last
- but not the least - sector in this series concerns portfolio
holdings in financial businesses. These equity holdings would
include those in commercial, savings and investment banks,
brokerage firms, asset management firms, and venture capital
firms.
Our money
is an asset, and a necessity to live in this society. It helps
us meet basic needs, and can provide safety. Beyond this,
we can buy education and social status, if we want them. Money,
as it moves in and out of our hands, has to go somewhere.
Unless you keep your money under your mattress, this "somewhere"
is usually a business intent on profits as they help us move
our assets from one place to another. Many of these businesses
are traded on the markets, and it helps to include this sector
in your portfolio for diversification purposes.
Every
time we move money, whether in withdrawals or deposits, or
in purchases and sales of equities and other financial tools,
the business we choose to trade with charges us a fee. They
also use our money for their own investments. These fees and
investments, hopefully, help keep the financial institution
rolling.
These
financial businesses are just like any other business, because
they need to make profits, pay employees, and market their
services. They also operate in acquisitions, sales, and other
changes in holdings. Some of the 'name brand' chains consist
of franchises. Others operate solely online, with no brick-and-mortar
other than offices for their employees. Other business names
operate only on local and regional levels, and others are
national or international. Some operate as their own separate
entities, and others do business under an umbrella of a larger
corporation.
And, just
like any other business, bigger may not mean better, and newer
may not mean riskier. We need to decipher these businesses
based on our own personal mode of research. One way to peer
into financial sector possibilities is through SEC filings.
The SEC, or U.S.
Securities and Exchange Commission, has a tutorial section
to help us decipher financial papers filed with the government.
This site also contains litigations, updated news and regulatory
actions proposed and enacted by the SEC and others. This SEC
information is good, especially for information regarding
regulations governing this sector.
Financial
institutions all need to comply with federal regulations.
This, hopefully, keeps our money in a safe environment. Safe
environments tend to trigger trust; but we can't let this
safety-triggered trust blind us to the bottom line.
Even though
federal regulations are heavily applied and guarded in this
country's financial institutions, there are other factors
that can alter this sector's mood with dramatic consequences.
These factors may make our investments in financial equities
seem like a theme park ride from the dark side.
- Politics
plays a heavy hand in how this sector moves. Sometimes,
politics can affect this sector for several years running,
either on the positive or negative side. Mostly, these runs
last in four-year cycles.
- War,
or threat of war, deals cards in the financial sector, too.
It seems the financial sector reflects our opinions and
motivations during these times.
- The
state of the country's economy is a very decisive factor
in this sector. The trends seem to follow public confidence
and employment polls.
- A government
decision on financial regulation can move this sector into
peaks and valleys.
We usually
don't need a wizard's hat to follow these trends. Most trends
are obvious in daily news stories. However, it seems analysts
can't decipher the whys and wherefores of this sector's movements
lately, as we flail through a weakening economy, war, and
unstable situations.
One would
think these financial businesses would do well during uncertainty.
During these times, people usually sell heavily, buy sporadically,
and move finances from one portfolio to another. For instance:
lower mortgage rates have some people rushing to banks to
refinance their homes. Each transaction is processed with
fees. Therefore, it would seem logical that the financial
institution would be riding high on profits right now, based
on home refinancing.
However,
this same economy can make it more costly for the financial
institution to complete these transactions. Paper, printing,
mailings, employees to work the figures out for you, filing,
etc. all cost more these days. Undoubtedly, there are very
few pennies left for profit in the long run.
On the
other hand, these institutions are part of the American and
global economic structure. It would take a complete overhaul
of global markets to change the financial sector environment.
Just about everyone who lives within the construct of capitalism
uses banks and other financial institutions on a daily or
weekly basis. Businesses can't run without these institutions,
and other businesses can't hope to get off the ground without
the use of financial help provided by these same institutions.
This sector
is as worthy of scrutiny as any other sector in our portfolios,
and perhaps more so, because money is such a personal item.
Money plays part in how we're born and how we live. It's a
factor in just about everything we do in this country.
On this
factor alone, the strength is apparent in the longevity of
this sector. The same can't be said for each individual business
within this sector. This is where our own strategies go into
action. We decide which business deserves our money for any
monetary transaction, whether it's stocks, bonds, savings,
loans, or other needs. If we can find happiness in any of
these institutions for our daily personal and business transactions,
they may be worth investing in for the long haul.
Until
next week,
Linda Goin
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