webspace hosting reseller hosting|             | blog| forum| dating| free hosting| openhost| report abuse
Internet Fax To Email - Unlimited

Unlimited Faxes, No Fees, Dedicated Phone Number

Free Website Templates


  TagCloud:


Link to us:



  Finance Ebooks:
 Film & Movie Finance.
Film Finance & Investment Banking.
 Cash In On Real Estate.
How I Improved My Finances $602,620.98 In One Evening With This Amazing New Real Estate System!
 Power Station Financial Models.
Power Station Financial Models Membership Website - Project Finance Spreadsheet Ms Excel Models.
 AmbaiU / Ambai.
Online Business Management Finance Investing Courses.
 New! Dynacom Accounting Software - Soho.
Promote Accounting Software ** 75% Profit! Make $22.46 Per Sale! Value $149 For Only $29,95. Help Entrepreneurs And Small Businesses Manage Their Finances The Easy Way! Offer A Full-featured Accounting Software. Need Help? Email Affiliates@dynacom.com.
 Learn Real Estate Secrets.
Real Estate Finance Secrets That Can Make You Rich.
 After Prom Party Guide.
How To Plan, Finance, Promote And Stage A Fun Substance-free After Prom Party.
 How To Never Get Ripped Off When Getting A Mortgage.
If You, Or Someone You Know Is Getting Ready To Purchase A First Home, Move Up, Or Refinance, You Better Pay Close Attention To What Im Going To Share With You.
 Top Selling Real Estate Course Online - How To Broker Commercial Loans.
$101 Or $55 Payout. Course Only 8 Months Old Over 500 Units Sold - Commercial Finance And Investment Course. Insider Secrets Of How To Make A 6 Figure Income Now In Real Estate With No Money! 16 Chapter Audio Course Download W/ 6 Manuals Over 300 Pages.
 Easy MoneyPlanner - Control Your Finances.
A Simple System To Plan And Project Your Monthly Expenses To Keep Yourself Out Of The Red. Little Computing Knowledge Required - Designed To Be Easily Compared With Your Bank Statement On A Regular Basis. Great For The Self-employed As Well.
 The Smart Startup Guide.
Startup Secrets Of The Inc 500 Fastest Growing Companies. Learn How To Finance Your Startup The Way Serial Entrepreneurs Do.
 Banking Secrets - Revealed.
Gain Total Control Of Your Finances And Stop Wasting Money. Eliminate Unnecessary Bank Fees And Get Better Rates On Loans And Savings By Following These Simple Steps.
 OptionSmart Picks.
OptionSmart Picks: Trade Us Stock Options With The Average Return 10% Per Month! With OptionSmart As Your Guide You Dont Need To Be A Finance Expert Or Mathematician To Trade Options.
 Financial Planning/Money Management E-Book.
This Financial Planning Manual Is More Practical In Nature Than Theoretical. Learn Powerful Money Management Techniques To Help You Take Control Of Your Personal Finances, Manage Your Money, Eliminate Your Credit Card Debt And Stay Out Of Debt!
 Personal Finance Software By Parcus Group.
100% Positive Customer Feedback, Take Or Improve Control Of Your Money, Learn How To Manage Finances & Invest, Increase Your Financial Intelligence, Take Care About Financial Future Of Your Family.


  Blogs & Sites:


Tecnorati


 






money online
finance





[07/03/2008, 15:30] Financial Success Stories for the Fourth

Tomorrow is Independence Day in the United States, a time for friends and family to gather and enjoy the early summer. I’m taking a l-o-n-g weekend, and won’t return until Monday. If I’m lucky, I’ll get a chance to play in the sprinkler.

Alex in the Sprinkler

In the meantime, I thought it would be fun to devote a thread to financial success stories. People send me e-mail all the time to say how they’ve taken control of their personal finances. I love to read these tales, and I know that other people do, too. (We even have a section of the forums devoted to them.)

For example, here’s what one long-time reader wrote a few weeks ago:

I paid off a credit card today!  At times its balance had been as high as $12K, but with the severance pay from my old job, signing bonus from new job, and various other resources, I paid it off completely today.  

The next step is to move the existing balance on my other credit card (about $8K) onto the now-zeroed card at a low balance transfer rate, and then pay down that last balance. It feels really good to have this thing off my back after so long.

Do you have a financial success story to share? Big or small, it doesn’t matter. Tell us about it! You have all weekend to do so. Have a safe and happy fourth, everybody…

---
Related Articles at Get Rich Slowly:


[10/14/2008, 06:22] Financial Crisis: The Theological Aspect

Here is an excerpt from an interesting article I read a few days ago:

Says Anthea Butler, an expert in Pentecostalism at the University of Rochester in New York: “The pastor’s not gonna say, ‘Go down to Wachovia and get a loan,’ but I have heard, ‘Even if you have a poor credit rating, God can still bless you ? if you put some faith out there [that is, make a big donation to the church], you’ll get that house or that car or that apartment.’ ” Adds J. Lee Grady, editor of the magazine Charisma: “It definitely goes on, that a preacher might say, ‘If you give this offering, God will give you a house.’ And if they did get the house, people did think that it was an answer to prayer, when in fact it was really bad banking policy.” If so, the situation offers a look at how a native-born faith built partially on American economic optimism entered into a toxic symbiosis with a pathological market.  …

“Narratives of how ‘God blessed me with my first house despite my credit’ were common. Sermons declaring ‘It’s your season to overflow’ supplanted messages of economic sobriety,” and “little attention was paid to … the dangers of using one’s home equity as an ATM to subsidize cars, clothes and vacations.”

Read the rest of it here.

In addition to Wall Street, it looks like the faith business also needs a little more scrutiny. Apart from that, I am always surprised at how gullible people can be when it comes to being sold out divine rhetoric.

If we keep up with this even God will need a bailout someday!

Finally, God helps those who help themselves, for everybody else there is Mastercard everybody else needs to clearly understand the meaning of the words “deliquency” and “foreclosure”.

[05/30/2008, 14:17] Change is Bad, Change is Good, Change is Coming!

Some people like change, other people don’t.  You could argue that change is distracting and slows you down but you can also argue that without change we’d all still be living in caves.

Personally change makes me nervous but I know that it’s necessary for growth.  I’ve been working on a few things related to this site for a while now that I’m getting ready to roll out.  I’ll let you know more once change is imminent.  Until then, what are a few things you’d like to see changed about this site? Please leave your thoughts in the comments.

One more thing to cover.  I’ve been meaning to highlight some more money articles over the last few days but hadn’t gotten around to it since I’ve been working on “the changes”.  Here are some articles you might want to check out.

– The Sun talks about a new rule for online real estate brokers

– The Lazy Man reviews the Amazon Kindle: Buy or Not?

– GenX Finance looks at the cost of a family cookout

-Free Money Finance takes a look at an  Investment Portfolio Using Only Three Index Funds

-No Credit Needed gives us 10 Steps For Getting Back On Track

– Five Cent Nickel covers SmartMoney’s Best and Worst Brokers,as did Blueprint for Financial Prosperity, SmartMoney’s 2008 Best Discount Brokers

[06/29/2008, 13:00] Report from Motley Fool HQ: How Do People Find and Use Financial Information?

The Motley Fool is a web site devoted to helping average people make better investment and financial decisions. Recently, GRS forum administrator (and resident economist) Jericho Hill got a chance to visit The Motley Fool headquarters. This is part two of a report on his experience. (Here’s part one.)

When I was in high school, I participated in my state?s stock market game. It was designed to introduce our economics class to the world of investing. That?s where I first heard of The Motley Fool, an upstart website for financial investors that went against the grain of having advisors manage your money. Their newsletter analyzed the advantages of managing your investments yourself, and advocated indexed mutual funds over managed funds.

So, when I received an invitation recently to visit the Fool Headquarters in Alexandria, VA for a focus group, I jumped at the chance. The purpose of the focus group was two-fold.

  • One part of the meeting focused on The Motley Fool?s free CAPS service, a community stock-picking tool. I discussed this experience last week.
  • The second part of the focus group dealt with how the participants used financial information, where they got it from, and what our views on investing were.

It was the second part of the meeting that I felt was the most valuable. Along with various Motley Fool staffers, the group members spoke about their personal investing habits, beliefs, thoughts, and attitudes. We heard from people ranging from first-time investors saving for retirement, to a professional financial planner, to well, myself. The breadth and depth of perspective was illuminating.

Prior to the focus group, I had walked around the office floor and noticed quite a few quotes on the walls. One by Peter Lynch read ?Never invest in any idea you can?t illustrate with a crayon.? Another said ?Though it?s easy to forget sometimes, a share is not a lottery ticket, its part ownership in a business.?

Later, during the group discussion, another quote came up by Warren Buffett: ?If you have one or two great ideas a year, you?re doing great.? The two new investors in the room stated that they felt pressure to succeed and succeed often as they started to invest for retirement. Knowing there were resources that played on the psychology of investing rather than mathematics of investing was important to those attendees. They also didn?t know where the best sources of information were, or who to follow.

Many of those in the room felt that it was not prudent to follow one particular author or person. Rather, it was the subject matter that as important, and as Burton Malkiel said ?Investors should act like intelligence agencies, gathering information no matter how seemingly insignificant.?

Somewhere during the conversation, I brought up the problem of risk. Individuals have different risk profiles, just as some people can ride very scary roller coasters while I?m stuck on the Dahlonega Mine Train ride at Six Flags. Further, not only do we handle risk differently, but another attendee pointed out that we even define risk differently. Our group took five minutes to write individual definitions of risk. They were all different when we reconvened.

We had a long discussion about risk, and about how our differing views on risk can make conversations on financial topics difficult. Different risk tolerances create difficulties in determining just what one?s best financial plan is. How does one define risk? More importantly, how do you define risk? All agreed that becoming more comfortable with one element of risk (volatility) was exceptionally important to being a successful long-term investor.

When the focus group ended, there was no general consensus on what information we should consume, to whom we should listen, where we should invest, or even how we should invest. That seems like a profound thought to me: that your best personal finance advisor is yourself, regardless of whether you?re just starting out or finishing up.

Jericho Hill also recently had a chance to speak with David Gardner, one of the founders of The Motley Fool. Look for excerpts from that interview at Get Rich Slowly in the future.

---
Related Articles at Get Rich Slowly:


[06/30/2008, 22:00] The Best of Get Rich Slowly: June 2008

June was a difficult month for me. I was busy in Real Life, distracted by home remodeling and by physical fitness. Things are settling, which will allow me to spend more time on the site. On top of that, I now have actual help around here!

  • My wife, Kris, is processing the backlog of e-mail.
  • My friend, Winston, who is one of the inspirations behind GRS, is doing research and handling publicity.
  • Another friend, Lisa, will help copy-edit guest posts. (You may remember Lisa from “Saving with Albert” and other guest posts.)
  • Meanwhile, JerichoHill continues to keep an eye on the discussion forums.

Thanks to everyone who is lending a hand. I appreciate it. And thank you for your comments, links, and tips. The readers are the heart of Get Rich Slowly. You keep the site a vibrant place for exchanging money-saving (and money-making) ideas.

Here’s a brief overview of some of June’s top stories on the blog:

Best of the Forums
The Get Rich Slowly discussion forums were active again this month, spawning several interesting conversations:

The forums are a great place to chat with your fellow readers. Have questions about emergency funds? Ask! Want to chat about cheap vacations? This is the place to do it. (Since opening a year ago, the forums have 1800 registered users and over 21,500 posts.)

Subscribe!
You may subscribe to Get Rich Slowly via any of the following methods:

Join over 7,600 people who receive Get Rich Slowly via e-mail by supplying your address:
 

You may also subscribe to the Get Rich Slowly feed:

You’d be doing me a favor by adding GRS to your Technorati favorites.

This weblog is a success because of you and your support. As always, I welcome reader contributions, either as ideas for stories, or as guest entries. If you have any comments or requests to improve this site, please feel free to pass them on.

---
Related Articles at Get Rich Slowly:


[01/01/1970, 01:00] Estrellafunds Review
[06/03/2008, 14:59] Gift Ideas for College Grads for a Financial Headstart

What gift should you get for a college graduate?  Cash is always the easiest and probably the most coveted present for recent graduates.  The problem, as I remember it, is that cash is a hard thing to hold onto once you’re out of school and thrust int the job hunt or working world.

Here are a few ideas for graduation gifts that can help them save money or get a leg up on their future finances:

Financial Filing System
The deluge of bills, paystubs, receipts, and tax forms can turn into an ugly mess stuffed into a drawer in a graduate’s tiny new apartment.  A simple system such as the Homefile Financial Planning Organizer Kit should cover all their financial paperwork filing needs.

Free Entertainment
Going to a full time job all week every week can be a real drag after the flexible college lifestyle.  It can be tempting (and also expensive) to blow off a little steam at the end of the workday by meeting up with friends for dinner, drinks, or a movie.  A cheaper alternative for a graduate is bringing friends back to their place to eat and hang out. 

Help them out with a subscription to Blockbuster online video rentals and gift certificates to a cook it yourself pizza place like Papa Murphy’s.  Popping in a DVD and eating an oven cooked pizza on weeknights is much cheaper than heading out on the town after work.

Investment Matching Program
Offer to match all or a portion of money that they invest for the future.  My parents did this for me and I invested the maximum amount that they’d match.  They can invest whatever they can afford each month with automatic investments of small amount if they open a ShareBuilder Account. 

Another option is to open a Roth IRA that has no no minimum balance and no account fees. For example, open an Etrade IRA, they waive minimums and fees if they sign up for online delivery of statements and confirms.

Emergency Fund
Most college grads already have some level of debt when they graduate, they don’t want to add anything else onto their credit cards if the car breaks down or some other emergency arises. Help them setup an emergency fund. Signup for an ING Direct savings account, then send them an invite from within your account.  Both the graduate and you get a signup bonus using this method and you can choose to send your bonus to the graduate as well.

Financial Education
Sign them up for a magazine subscription to Kiplingers or Smart Money magazine.  Sure, they can get it for free online but when they’re on the computer they’re probably catching up with college buddies. Give them them a copy for the coffee table, bus, or bathroom reading : )

Keep them Healthy
If you know where the graduate will be living, get them a gym membership nearby.  Staying healthy will save them countless dollars over the course of their life. Plus, the gym is a great place to socialize, maybe they’ll meet their future spouse there. Two people paying rent makes housing much more affordable : )

Buy Health Insurance
There’s sometimes a gap in health insurance coverage between graduation and finding a first job with benefits.  Especially if they’re avid atheletes with a higher risk of getting injured, make sure they have some type of short term health insurance.  A huge health care bill is the last thing a new graduate wants to worry about.

Financial Advice
Let the graduate know you’re always there if they have any questions on investing, taxes, bills, etc.  You’ve already traveled the financial maze and have many of the answers they’ll be looking for.  Setup an “unofficial meeting”, set some time aside where you just talk finances.  Let them voice their concerns, ask their questions, and tap into your knowlege. 

This post was my take on Gifts to Give Grads a Headstart.

[05/29/2008, 13:23] Save Money on Gas By Learning How to Ride the Bus

If you could save a lot of money on gas by trying something new would the hassle of learning a new system be worth the cost savings to you?  I imagine several years ago most people would have answered no but with the high price of fuel everyone is looking for tips on how to save money on gas.

Save Money with Public Transportation
I spent many years riding the bus as part of my daily commute during which time I saved thousands of dollars not just on gas but also on parking and wear and tear on my car.  Having lived in Europe for several years, where everyone rides the bus or the train, I was very comfortable taking public transportation.

In major urban areas in the US people are using to hopping on a bus but throughout suburbia many people are clueless about the ins and outs of public transport.  They’ve never had to use it and can be a bit intimidated by learning the system.  Sure it sounds simple, just catch the bus, but it’s a whole new experience and people tend to shy away from things they’re no familiar with.

I’m always amazed at how many questions people have about riding the bus.  I’ll try and address some of those here and give some tips for the best experience riding the bus.

Learn How to Read a Bus Schedule
Here’s an example of a bus schedule from Oklahoma City.  Let’s say you lived there and wanted to commute from your home at 22nd. & Vine into work at 10th & Walnut every day. 

Buschedule2

First off you’d notice that the schedule doesn’t list 10th & Walnut as a stop, not too worry.  Most schedules don’t list every stop, there simply wouldn’t be enough room, so they only publish the major stops.  The bus may go right by 10th & Walnut and even if it doesn’t, it will probably get you to within a few blocks of there.

Many bus schedules, such as this one, will include a map of the route on the back or at the bottom so can get a feel for where the bus travels.  If you don’t understand the map you can just call the local metro office and they’ll help you out. 

So in this example, lets say you need to be at work by 8 AM.  You could catch the bus at NE 20th & Vine at 7:32 and get off at NE 8th & Lincoln at 7:52.  Notice you’d want the Inbound schedule, the Outbound schedule will list the times you can catch the bus in the evening on the way home. 

Also note that you want to look at the Weekday section of the schedule.  Most weekend routes are different, which can mean different pickup times and fewer trips.

Take a Trial Run
The best way to get comfortable with a bus route is to ride it on a day when you’re not in a hurry and there is no schedule breathing down your neck.  Most of us make a few mistakes the first time we try something, making a mistake is a big deal if you’re in a hurry but if you have time to spare a mistake isn’t such a big deal so take a trial run of the bus.

Get to the bus stop 10 minutes early the first time to get a feel whether the bus runs early, on time, or late.  Drivers try and meet the schedule but my experience has been that buses can come up to 5 minutes before or 5 minutes after the listed time due to traffic and other variables.  You can also ask the people waiting for the bus whether it runs early, late, or right on time.

Get on the Right Bus
Most buses will have the route number and the final destination displayed in the window.  Make sure you check it before you get on, don’t assume because a bus is stopping for you that it’s the one you want.  Different routes can share the same stops, just check with the driver the first time you get on.  Tell them where you’re headed and ask if it’s the right bus.

It might sound silly but don’t be afraid to ask.  I’ve seen people who are obviously riding the bus for the first time, too intimidated by the new environment to ask questions.  They end up getting on the wrong bus and going to the wrong place simply because they didn’t take 30 seconds to ask before getting on.

Paying Your Bus Fare
If you’re going to commute regularly I’d recommend buying a buss pass.  You almost always save money with a pass as opposed to paying for each trip individually.  You might also be able to get cheaper fares through your job.  It’s also easier, you just get on and swipe your buss pass rather than having to fumble around with putting in money every time.  If you are going to pay with cash be aware many buses have automated ticket booths that only accept exact change.

Getting Off the Bus
Obviously you’ll want to take a schedule along with you the first time you ride the bus.  As you get closer to your destination start to pay attention to where you’re stopping and how close you are to where you want to get off.  One way to do it is tell another rider where you want to get off and ask them to let you know when its coming up.  The bus will either have a button to push or a cord to pull to let the driver know you want to get off at the next stop. Make sure you signal before you get to your stop or the driver might just drive on by.

If you have to switch busses as part of your commute, make sure to ask the bus driver for a transfer.  Most metro systems allow you to travel across multiple bus routes for one fare if they’re all part of one trip.  If you forget to ask for a transfer the driver of the next bus you get on will ask you to pay again.  If the whole reason you’re riding the bus is to save money you don’t want to have to pay twice for the ride.

Combining Driving and Riding
Of course riding the bus won’t eliminate the need for spending money on gas.  Some days you’ll have to drive in because you need to get there early, leave late, or maybe run errands after work.  Depending on where you live you may also have to drive partway into town to a park and ride, parking your car in a lot designed for commuters then catching the bus from there.

Even though you won’t eliminate your gas bill completely, riding public transportation can drastically cut the amount you spend on gas.  Combine that with strategies such as getting cashback with one of the best gas credit cards and gas rebates from grocery stores and the prices at the pump won’t take quite the same bite out of your paycheck.

[07/03/2007, 14:39] AGLOCO Viewbar is ready to download. Finally!!!
AGLOCO will Make money by surfing the web, and by referring other members. This programs need AGLOCO Viewbar that software to surfing the web with AGLOCO.
After a long times of waiting, AGLOCO Viewbar has been released and is ready for you to download now. Agloco send email to Agloco member for this.

Here is how to download and launch your Viewbar:

1. Go to the AGLOCO website at https://www.agloco.com/c/portal/login and login to get to your Member Account page. There is now a ?Download the Viewbar? button on that page.
2. Simply click the Viewbar download button and follow the download directions. Please click ?Run? when offered to Run, Save or Cancel.
3. You will need to enter your Account ID# (or email address) and your AGLOCO account password to activate your Viewbar.
4. After you download the Viewbar, you can launch it for first time by going to your Windows Start Menu and clicking on the AGLOCO Viewbar Icon.

I hope AGLOCO Puts Online Money Making Opportunities.
If you want join please visit http://www.agloco.com/r/BBCV7906
[06/02/2008, 14:20] Thanks to Some Interesting Personal Finance Sites

The month of May brought the largest number of visitors to date for Money Smart Life!  Many of those visitors came from sites in the the Money Writers and Money Blog networks whom you are familiar with via my weekly mentions.

I also wanted to say thanks to 10 other personal finance sites that sent over the most visitors by recommending an article on Money Smart Life.  I’ve listed each site and a recent article you might find interesting:

US News World Report (Kimberly Palmer) – Six Ways to Save Money on Vacation

MSN Money Blog (Donna Freedman) – Why is it so Easy to Throw Things Away?

The Simple Dollar – Financial Independence as a Goal

Frugal Dad – Used Car Buying for Teenagers

My Two Dollars – 29 Free or Low Cost Ways To Save Energy & Money

Frugal for Life – Slowing Down Takes Time

Not Made of Money – Four Tips to Saving Money on Home Improvement

Money Under 30 – How I Organize My Financial Records

Moolamy – Carnival of Personal Finance – Family Edition

Frugal Law Student – Save Time & Money by Working Out

[11/10/2008, 22:26] Living on Cash
(3 steps back to the sanity of cash) Here is an idea I wonder about all the time. If I didn't have credit where would I be. Could I just live on cash alone. I find the cushion of a credit card very nice. It is nice to have something there in case you have a problem, but I do agree with the author that far too often people use it as a quick way out and don't think about the long term. We see what we get now and forget that for the next 6 months we have less to live on cause the credit card payment is more. Do you think you would be OK without credit?
[12/05/2008, 08:15] Bailouts hurt our standard of living

The “Big Three” automakers Ford, General Motors, and Chrysler, and the United Auto Workers union, traveled to Washington today to ask for a bailout.  They asked collectively for $34 billion, but some estimates suggest that they would actually need almost four times that.  Let’s just say that the banking committee wasn’t whipping out its checkbook.

Whether they actually get the bailout or not doesn’t change the fact that they shouldn’t be getting it in the first place.  Bailouts help the few at the expense of everyone else, and encourage the recipients of the bailouts to come back for more.

A bailout of the auto industry will save a few jobs for a little while.  OK, it will save a lot of jobs for a little while.  But in the long run, a bailout reduces everyone’s standard of living.  It’s interference in the free market, and causes a misallocation of resources.  It’s a misallocation because the market has already given the company the thumbs-down, in that the company has not been able to deliver a product profitably at a price that the market is willing to pay.  A bailout says to the market: “You’re wrong.  This company deserves to stay in business.”

In the absence of a bailout, here’s what would happen to a failing business under free market competition:

  1. The common stock investors (if any) lose their investment.  Investors higher up the food chain get only part of their investment back.
  2. The assets are sold at fire sale prices, usually to a stronger competitor seeking to increase its market share.  The bidding is competitive.
  3. Some, or many, of the workers may not have jobs after the company is acquired.  The ones that do continue to do what they do, perhaps more cheaply.  Others don’t, but they can now enter another field and be productive.
  4. The inefficient, inferior company goes away, and the efficient, superior company gets stronger.
  5. We all win because the resources have been re-allocated efficiently, as a result of what we, the customers, have already said we want:  less of the failing business’s products, and more of the succeeding business’s products.

When the failing business appeals to the powers that be for a bailout, and it is granted, here’s what happens instead:

  1. The failing business stays in business, despite the fact that it doesn’t deliver its product as efficiently as its competitors.
  2. The workers keep their jobs, perhaps at above-market wages, despite the fact that this situation is not sustainable by the free market.
  3. The people footing the bill (us, mainly) don’t have that money available to us to purchase the products we want.
  4. We all lose because the resources have been re-allocated inefficiently by force, against what we, the customers, have already said we want.  We instead get more of the failing business’s products and less of the succeeding business’s products, and have to pay for this situation to boot.

Society functions most efficiently when its members are free to enjoy the fruits of their labor as they please.  From all I can see, society enjoys Toyotas and Hondas more than it enjoys GMs and Fords.  Why should we forced to pay for products we don’t enjoy?

The same is true of things like subsidies, unions, tariffs, import quotas, regulation, price control, and antitrust actions.  All of these things ultimately reduce our standard of living because they interfere with people choosing how to enjoy the fruits of their labors.  John Pugsley’s book The Alpha Strategy explains why these all hurt our standard or living in an exceptionally clear way.  It was written at the end of the Carter administration but the explanation of these phenomena still holds.

I expect we’ll get more of the same, but it will cost us all.  Who’s next in line for a bailout?

[07/17/2008, 15:02] Canadian Household Debt On the Rise
The level of household debt has been steadily increasing for the last 20 years in Canada so it should be no surprise that it continued to rise again this quarter. The average Canadian household now has an average of 19.6 cents of debt for every dollar of networth and household debt is averaging about 123.8% of personal disposable income.

This is a frightening figure at this stage of the financial cycle as it is much more likely that interest rates will be rising than decreasing. An increase in interest rates will of course make managing this debt much more difficult for many Canadian households. How does your household debt compare to your personal disposable income?
[10/25/2007, 23:15] Herbal Energy Product Reduces Stress
Financial Freedom Society (FFSI) is dead. The owner pulled the plug on his sales force. It took us over a year to find something else worthwhile to get involved in, and I am very excited to announce we have found it! Please visit our new site at  www.velocity.hereweb.com . This product sells itself. Visit the site, and e-mail me from the site if you are interested in a 3 day sample pack. I'll be glad to send it to you.

Say goodbye to expensive and crash-inducing energy drinks. Get a GOOD night's sleep. Wake up "ready to go". Reduce the effects of stress. I am about as skeptical as they come, but after trying this product for 3 days, I was convinced. You will be too. Maximum Velocity - Achieve Life Speed

Again, optional income opportunity. But the way this product sells itself, it's a no-brainer.

View the Maximum Velocity video here : Maximum Velocity Video.wmv (right-click and download)







[07/08/2007, 08:29] Getting started with Ebay marketing by Dottye Blake

If you have ever read an article on eBay, you'll have discovered the type of income people earn - it isn't strange to find out about people earning thousands of dollars per month on eBay. Next time you are surfing the eBay site, check out how many PowerSellers there are: you'll find quite a few. Now think about the fact every single one of one of them must be making at least $1,000 per month, as that's eBay's requirement for becoming a PowerSeller. Silver PowerSellers make at least $3,000 monthly, while Gold PowerSellers make more than $10,000, and the Platinum level is $25,000. The top level is Titanium PowerSeller, and to measure up you must make at least $150,000 in sales each month!

It's hard to believe that Ebay has been around for ten years. eBay started in September 1995, by a man named Pierre Omidyar, who was residing in San Jose, California. He envisioned his site - formerly known as 'AuctionWeb' - to be an internet mart, and composed the first code for it in one weekend. It was one of the first sites of its type on the planet. The name 'eBay' follows from the domain Omidyar applied to his internet site His company's name was Echo Bay, and the 'eBay AuctionWeb' was formerly just one part of Echo Bay's website at ebay.com. The first product ever traded on the site was Omidyar's defective laser pointer, which sold for $14 .

The web site rapidly became hugely popular, as vendors arrived to auction off all sorts of strange things and buyers actually purchased them. Relying on faith appeared to work out outstandingly well, and implied that the web site could just about be left alone to run itself. The internet site had been configured from the beginning to take in a small fee on every sale, and it was this revenue that Omidyar applied to finance AuctionWeb's expansion. The fees speedily totaled up to more than his salary at the time, so he resolved to quit his job and devote attention to the site full-time. It was at this point in time, in 1996, that he added the feedback capability, to let buyers and sellers rate one another and make purchasing and trading safer.

In 1997, Omidyar modified AuctionWeb's - and his company's - name to 'eBay', which is what people had been using to refer to the site for awhile. He started to spend a great deal of money on promotion, and had the eBay logo created. A milestone was reached in this year - the one-millionth item was sold (it was a miniature version of Big Bird from Sesame Street). Then, in 1998 - the peak of the dot com company boom - eBay became big business, and the investment in Internet businesses at the time allowed it to bring in senior managers and business strategists, who took in public on the stock market. It began to encourage people to trade more than only collectibles, and rapidly morphed into a huge site on which you could trade anything, big or little. Different from the other websites, though, eBay endured the final stage of the bonanza, and is still going strong nowadays.

1999 saw eBay go worldwide, unveiling sites in the UK, Australia and Germany. eBay purchased half.com, an Amazon-like internet retailer, in the year 2000 - the same year it inaugurated Buy it Now - and bought PayPal, an internet payment service, in 2002.

Pierre Omidyar has now cleared an estimated $3 billion from eBay, and still serves as Chairman of the Board.There are now literally millions of items bought and sold every day on eBay, all over the world. For every $100 spent online worldwide, it is estimated that $14 is spent on eBay - that's a lot of laser pointers.

The fact that these PowerSellers are around gives you some idea of the money possibilities on Ebay. Most of the power sellers never intended to even launch a commercial enterprise on eBay - they merely began trading a couple of items, and then continued. There are quite a lot of people whose full-time job is merchandising items on eBay, and some of them have been working at it for years now. Can you believe that? Once they've purchased the merchandise, everything else is basically pure profit for these people - they don't need to spend money on any business premises, employees, or anything else. There are multi-million dollar commercial enterprises earning less in genuine net income than eBay PowerSellers do.

Even if you do not want to resign from your line of work and really try for it, you can use all the same eBay to make a substantial supplemental income. You can package customer purchases during the week and bring them to the local post office for shipping each Saturday. There are few other things you could be doing with your free time that have anywhere close to that kind of money-making potential.

What's more, eBay could care less about who you are, where you reside, or if you are good-looking. Some PowerSellers are very old, or very young. Some live out in very rural areas where selling on eBay is one of the few options to agriculture or being very impoverished. eBay levels the playing field and removes the roadblocks to earning that the real world constantly erects. There's no job interview and no traveling back and forth involved - if you can post items on the site, you can make it happen!

Put it this way: if you know where to acquire something fairly inexpensively that you could sell, then you can sell it on eBay - and because you can always get discount rates for mass purchases at wholesale, that's not hard. Purchase a job lot of something in-demand inexpensively, sell it on eBay, and you are earning cash already, with no set-up expenses.

If you wish to try it out before you commit to really purchasing anything, then you can just sell unwanted objects that you've got sitting around in the home. Explore that closet full of items that you never use, and you'll in all likelihood find you've got a couple of hundred bucks' worth of stuff lying around in there! This is the beauty of eBay: there is always someone who wants what you're selling, whatever it might be, and because they have come searching you out, you don't even need to do anything to get them to buy it.

Please visit http://homebizhelper.com and http://www.computingninternet.com/

About the Author

Dottye is an Educational Consultant. Please visit http://homebizhelper.com and http://www.computingninternet.com/

[12/02/2008, 15:30] hedge fund tweets: Use of derivatives by fund managers will rise over the next 12 to 18 - according to a report by Protiviti - http://tinyurl.com/5zzz66
hedgefundfocus: Use of derivatives by fund managers will rise over the next 12 to 18 - according to a report by Protiviti - http://tinyurl.com/5zzz66

More from MoneyScience.
[07/13/2006, 17:25] Credit Monitoring for at least a Year?

Yes! What if your wallet is lost or stolen? Many of us have our driver's license, social security cards, etc. in them. Chuck Jaffe at MarketWatch lays out why credit monitoring is a good way to know whether your identity has been stolen....

Full article: http://www.marketwatch.com/News/Story/Story.aspx?dist=newsfinder&siteid=google&guid=%7B5D8BA284-55D6-49AC-8DCD-9E15E6EEB064%7D&keyword=

[11/27/2008, 21:25] Happy Thanksgiving, and some free articles

Happy Thanksgiving everyone!  I’m thankful to be able to write this blog and that I have you as readers.  (And of course I’m thankful for many other things.)

The four articles that Gary North published today on his website are free for anyone to read today.  You’ll find them in the Recent Articles section.  These four articles are centered around the topic of Thanksgiving.  These articles are good advice for anyone.  I don’t know how long they’ll be free, so even if you don’t read them today, just go over and print them out.  Gary North is a big influence on how I think about the economy, investment, and a host of other things.  So, there you go.

Have a great day filled with thankfulness.

[01/01/1970, 01:00] Operator Tactical Pants Rave
[07/12/2008, 21:50] Online Chat Room Helps Save Foreclosure Homeowner

Okay I admit it? I used to be an active ?chatter? in a local chat room on Yahoo. It was a room where many people from the Dallas area met up to?Chat. Many of us had met outside of the cyber room at local restaurants, clubs and the like.

Yahoo had recently shut down a lot of the member created chat rooms in the wake of all the negativity and sponsor lawsuits. Lets face it?The public opinion of chat rooms was not good. I was a virtual unknown person to most chatters because I stayed away from the ?in person? socials but, that all changed one morning. Here is what happened:

A room regular was talking on ?voice? and venting about his house early one morning and I was listening a few steps away making my breakfast. This is what ?Monte? said, ?I got this letter from some attorney who says he is going to sell my house! How does he think he can do that? He doesn?t own MY house so, how can he sell MY house?? My head spun around so fast that I almost gave myself whiplash. I ran to the computer and grabbed the microphone to speak in the room and here is what was said?

Jim: Monte, what is the name of the law firm that sent you that letter?
Monte: Uhmmm, it says ummm.. Barnett, Burke & Associates.
Jim: Would that be BARRETT Burke?
Monte: Yeah, that?s it.
Jim: Monte, email me your number. I need to talk to you NOW.
(That law firm processes nearly 40% of all foreclosures in the state of Texas)

Within a few minutes I was on the phone with him and I told him that I was a local foreclosure expert and taught classes at Foreclosure Listing Service in Addison. I told him I needed to meet with him and his wife right away because, the letter he got was his notice that his house was in foreclosure and he had less than three weeks left before it would go to the auction. He was shocked and claimed he had no idea (I didn?t know how he could be shocked after missing nine payments). Two hours later I was at his house and explained all about the foreclosure process to him and his wife and what options he may have to save his house.

I remember how bad I felt while explaining the situation because his wife just sat there, staring at me with her eyes wide open, not able to say a word. She had no idea the mortgage was past due at all. She had not seen any letters from the lender or taken any call from them. Monte never told her early on and the situation only got worse as the missed payments added up.

After going over all of the possible solutions, I decided that bankruptcy was likely the best option for them and they agreed. I made a call to Hariett Langston, a friend of mine who is a bankruptcy lawyer in Dallas. Monte and his wife were overwhelmed with the situation and asked if I would go with them when they met with the attorney and I told them I would.

We met with Hariett that same week and everything appeared to be set to stop the foreclosure. All Monte needed to do was pay the bankruptcy filing fee.

A week before the foreclosure sale I went to their house and was a bit surprised to learn that he had not paid the filing fee. I asked him when he was going to file and he just shook his head and said he didn?t know. I remember pausing for a few seconds and it dawned on me why he had not filed. I said, ?Monte? You don?t have the money to file, do you?? In a very humble manner, he looked down at the floor and shook his head. ($500 was the amount he needed to get the bankruptcy filed)

As I drove home I thought to myself that it would be simple if I just wrote a check for the $500 but, I thought that he really needed to pay something so important himself. I got an idea about that time and sent an email to one of the chat room regulars who organized the chat room socials. I recall stating in that email that online chat rooms have such a negative public image and went on to tell her about Monte, his situation and I asked her if she could set up a fund raising get together. It would be our way of proving that normal, everyday people go to chat rooms and this was a chance to show at least one chat room could do something good. I told her that he only needed $500 and all it would take is $5 here, $10 there and a $20 from a few? $500 could be raised.

She arranged to have a Dallas chat fundraiser social for that coming Saturday night. I called Monte and told him about the fundraiser. He asked me to not do it (his pride was the obstacle) but, I told him that we were going to do it anyway and it would be nice if he attended. He later told me he was so choked up that he couldn?t say anything but, he did finally say he would attend.

I expected a handful of people to show up for the fundraiser but, I was wrong. Much to my surprise? At least 50 to 60 regulars from that chat room showed up and contributed. At the end of the night, ordinary people from a Yahoo chat room donated more than $700 to help save someone from losing their house.

The next day I gave the proceeds to Monte & his wife and they quickly paid the attorney the fee to file their bankruptcy and their house?No?Their ?home? was saved.

The story got another interesting twist a few days later. I got a call from a reporter who wrote for a well known local media outlet. They had heard about the fundraiser and thought it was a great community effort story that should be told and asked if I wanted them to write about it.

It took only a few seconds for me to process my answer but, I remember thinking that such publicity would be great for business and my classes would see a boost in attendance. Then I thought about the possibility of other homeowners that would read the story and what would my answer be to them if they contacted me and asked me to do a fundraiser for them as well?

I told the reporter that as wild as the story was, I never expected things to unfold as they did. I told them that I had to pass on their offer because, I had done it to help someone and wouldn?t feel right about profiting off of someone else?s stressful and humbling foreclosure experience. They understood and that was the end of it.

I have to admit . . . Of all the positive experiences I have had in real estate, helping Monte might rank as number one. What stands out in my mind was the fact that so many people pitched in to help save a family from losing their home and they did it for someone most had never met or only knew of by screen name?That?s what made it so great.

This happened in 2005 and two days ago I got a phone call from Monte. He just wanted to give me an update and I was happy to hear they still have their home.

During the call I told him about the reporter. He was surprised I hadn?t told him and more surprised that I turned them down. At the end of the call, Monte told me that three years was long enough and he encouraged me to tell the story of how a bunch of chatters from a Yahoo chat room, came together and did something good.

Thanks Monte.

Advertisement: Real Estate Investing Forums Discuss real estate, network, or learn about investing on our forums!

This Post is from the BiggerPockets Real Estate Blog. Copyright © 2008 BiggerPockets, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Online Chat Room Helps Save Foreclosure Homeowner

[07/29/2008, 15:34] U.S Housing - Just Walk Away...
Well if you?re in the market for a house in Las Vegas or Miami they all just went on sale for 28% off. I?m not suggesting that they?re good value, just cheaper than they were. Compared with the previous year house prices in both Las Vegas and Miami dropped a whopping 28% last month. These markets sagged a full 12% lower than the national average, which saw declines of approximately 16%. With declines like these it is no wonder that the delinquency rate is rising. In many markets it?s now cheaper and faster to simply default on your mortgage and walk away from the house than it would be to pay off an inflated mortgage. In the amount of time it would take to pay off the value that you?ve lost on your home you could have saved enough money for another house and rebuilt your credit. For example, if you purchased a house last year in Las Vegas or Miami for $350,000 you would now be down a whopping $98,000 in equity. At that point the only financially responsible thing to do would be to default on your mortgage. Why not just walk away?
[11/17/2008, 19:02] My Own Job Layoff Story Plus A Job Loss Tracker

I no longer have a job to worry about (today, I’m self-employed and have other problems…), but allow me to share my own job layoff story with you from way back when.

Scary things are beginning to happen around here as the harsh realities of recession begin to hit closer to home.

At this time, I’m personally encountering more and more people who are hurting because of the effects of the shrinking economy. Here in Silicon Valley, there’s practically nobody I know now who isn’t either laid off, worried about being laid off in the near term, or is in the middle of an active job hunt. Just last week, a dear friend was involuntarily released from his job, while others are debating whether they should take some work time off because “business is slowing down” and they’d rather prepare for what they think is the inevitable.

My Own Job Layoff Story

What I’m seeing here is a much more broad-based recession than the one I remember in 2000. Seven years ago, I was laid off from my position at a Silicon Valley startup because of the dot com bust. The company I worked for imploded painfully after 4 waves of lay offs. I stuck with the company till the bitter end, being one of the core managers and early employees of the company, so I had to participate in the layoff process from both sides of the desk. I had to lay off people in the first 3 waves, and finally, as was expected, I was let go on the last wave as the company itself shut down altogether. It was definitely a sad and stunning process to live through, especially since it was one place I truly enjoyed working 14 hours a day at ;) . But those are the risks and vagaries of startups. Startups and recessions prove to be a lethal combination, unfortunately: they just don’t mix well.

So as the recession hits, we’ve gone from foreclosures, tighter credit, plummeting housing prices, failing banks, crashing stock markets to the dreaded layoffs. The last thing that stands between us and the food line is our cash flow, and once that’s at risk, it’ll be like landing in the final circle of doom in Dante’s Inferno (for some). Speaking of lethal…. More and more are resorting to extreme behavior when their livelihood is threatened. Yet one more tragic indicator of how far this economy has fallen?

Job Loss Tracker and Where To Get Your Next Job

More signs and symptoms of our weakening economy include this Job Layoff Tracker from Techcrunch that I stumbled upon recently. But don’t panic just yet, as there are many options available to those on the lookout for new jobs, which I promise to cover in detail sometime this week. In the meantime, if you’re needing a job or wanting to be proactive about your employment situation, you can check out a few online resources such as Job.com, Resume Rabbit and Snag A Job. It never hurts to be one step ahead of the game.

This is a post from The Digerati Life.

[04/20/2006, 19:53] Article: "Questions on Rebuilding Credit" from Washington Mutual
Here are some additional resources on getting information from credit bureaus, correcting mistakes and how to decipher your credit report and score information:

Article: "Questions on Rebuilding Credit" from Washington Mutual - Makes contacting the credit agencies a bit less overwhelming as you will be armed with the knowledge to understand the process and also what to expect from the process overall.

http://moneycentral.msn.com/content/Banking/Yourcreditrating/P88401.asp - Gives readers a breakdown of a credit report, how to read the symbols, numbers and acronyms so that one can understand how the information applied to them and where to begin making corrections or improvements.

Enjoy!
[11/23/2008, 20:33] Signs of Economic Recession: Laid Off Bloggers, Web Sites For Sale

Additional casualties and signs of economic recession: laid off bloggers and your favorite web sites for sale!

Do you see what’s in store for you next year? Well, I’ve peeked at my crystal ball and can see the same thing you’re all seeing, an ugly 2009 as the economy continues to contract. Still no relief in sight (or maybe just a little, with Obama stepping in with a pep talk and an action plan).

Still, the tremors reverberate in the blogosphere.

More and more bloggers are reporting that they’ve been laid off, or are afraid that they will be. Some of the ones I know:

Judging by the dates on these posts, changes have been coming fast and quick! I’ve also mentioned that TechCrunch has this layoff tracker while Gawker (the online media name that bloggers look up to ;) ) is selling off The Consumerist, and Valleywag (what!? one less Silicon Valley blog?) and trimming its staff. You can see how the online world has been taking its hits.

The trends have been reflecting reality for a while now, so when are they announcing that we’re officially in the dog house?

I’ve also talked about how we’re coping with the recession in Silicon Valley, but whatever else I’ve got to say about this can fill a book. Anyway, it’s been the subject of deep conversation between me and my close friends and family these past few weeks.

More Signs of Economic Recession Where I Live

Just to see how widespread the financial pain is, I’ve polled the people I know for their stories and concerns — here are just a few:

  • A couple of people I know have been laid off in the last two weeks. These are people who work at smaller companies that are now embarking on cost cutting measures. With the VC spigot closing off, startups that aren’t solvent will be forced to cut back heavily or close down completely. Startups are living on borrowed time. These events are reminiscent of massive layoffs in Silicon Valley in 2000 during the tech bust, so it’s not new to me. I should get used to this happening every 5 to 8 years, I guess.
  • Friends of mine who are consultants are experiencing delays in payments. Uh oh. They’ve done the work, but there’s some worry they’ll end up on a long list of creditors waiting to get paid.
  • Too close to home! I never thought it would happen, but someone I know pretty well actually is in the process of losing their house. The story is complicated — he was a victim of a drawn out scam that got exposed by the housing downturn. And I’ve heard rumors of acquaintances going on short sales on expensive homes they purchased only a few years ago (and which I had the pleasure of visiting during house-warming parties galore way back when).
  • I heard about how there are scores of luxury cars just sitting on Long Beach right now, with no takers. I got this story from a guy who’s well insulated from the crisis because he’s sitting on a huge pile of cash (he’s very conservative with his savings). Yet, he’s concerned about the effect of currency exchange on his international business.
  • Some of us self-employed folks are seriously thinking of joining the many out there who’re already chasing what few jobs are around. I read that Cisco’s job listings have dropped by 93% in one week, from many thousands of openings to a trickle of a few hundred.
  • I miss “happy” news. Could this be capitulation? Or close?

Break Open Your Emergency Funds

For many whose lives have been viciously upturned by the forces of the economy, it sure feels that this recession isn’t “normal”. But the reality is that this is probably what a “true” recession feels like. The waves of an economic downturn are much like dealing with the effects of an impending tornado. The tornado spares some while it devastates others. You just pray it doesn’t hit your household when it comes, although you can expect it to do a number on your landscape.

This has become a time of emergency for many. Our situation clearly emphasizes the importance of having enough insurance to cover ourselves when such a “disaster” hits — and when I mean insurance, I am referring to emergency funds and enough liquidity to tide you over during the storm. Does this mean we should have at least 1 years’ worth of expenses in cash? Maybe so, especially since nasty recessions can last that long! If you’ve got unemployment benefits covering you for 6 to 9 months plus a one year stash of cash, you could get through this nail-biting ride.

So let’s hunker down in the basement and see if we can ignore the angry winds out there for now. I’m doing it by starting the ball rolling on some portfolio rebalancing efforts (gah!) and selling off investment losers.

So let’s check what else is on the minds of our favorite financial bloggers, shall we?

Notable Mentions Around The Web

Recent Carnivals

This is a post from The Digerati Life.

[03/19/2008, 15:29] So, what's the problem with Multi Level Marketing scams (er, business models)

PyramidRecently, I wrote a post about the product, Mona Vie, which is sold through a Multi-Level Marketing system.  In case you are not familiar with the product, it is a super juice of some sort with exotic ingredients, such as Acai Berries and Kyrptonite.  I questioned the ability for the juice to cure all the ailments that is claimed by the many distributors out there, and the viability of the business model to actually make money for those same distributors.

The number of comments on that post was pretty incredible.  Many of the comments, not surprisingly, defended the quality of the juice.  The juice was credited with healing, curing or aiding in the following areas:  multiple sclorosis, weight loss, joint pain, high blood pressure, mood swings, something about ORAC values in Leukemia cells, insomnia, headaches, stomachaches, arthritis and gas reduction.  I'm serious.  It does all this.  Read the comments for yourself.  They don't lie.

Of course, there were comments that defended the business model, and in fact the MLM business model in general.  Frankly, being a money blog, this is what interested me.  I could give a damn about the juice.  If it tastes good, doesn't kill people, and can sell, maybe I'll sign up to make some money.  But do I really want to be one of those MLM people out there?

So, here were the arguments in favor of multi-level marketing.

  1. The only way commissions are earned is through the sale of the product.  Building a "downline" can build commissions, but only if the downline sells juice.  The fact that commissions are only tied to the sale of product makes it not a pyramid.
  2. The corporate structure of CEO>VP>Director>Manager>Peon is a pyramid scheme.
  3. It's sales, just like being in sales for a big company.  You get paid commissions for making sales.
  4. MLMs generated over 40 billion in revenue last year, so they can't be scams

I guess so.

So, not a scam?  Sure, why not?  Still something about it bothers me.  Let's say you walk in to your local used car lot, and see a cherry red Mustang.  A salesperson spots you and walks over.   "Sure is purty, ain't she?" he asks.  "Yea," you reply, "how much is it?"  Used car salesperson responds, "well, I'm not supposed to let her go for anything less than $35 grand, but I like your style.  For you?  Let's make it an even $34 grand."  "Wow, really?" you exclaim, "sounds great, let's start up the paperwork."

No scam happened in our little used car skit.  But something just ain't right, you know?

Same feeling I get with all these Mona Vie juice sellers.  If someone tells me that he has felt healthier since drinking a juice that he buys at Whole Foods, I may give it a try.  If that same guy tells me that he feels healthier, and he would be glad to sponsor me to be a distributor in his downline, the red flags go up.

This is the problem with the MLM.  Not that it's a scam.  But your consumers are your salespeople.  There is no greater way to sell a product than third party endorsement.  Third party endorsement happens when someone else compliments you or your product.  If you compliment yourself or your own product, it will always be met with skepticism.  With an MLM, your consumers are your salespeople.  Anytime someone says, "I tried it and it's great," the red flags will always go up.

[07/21/2008, 14:01] God and Money: Prayer Won?t Fix People?s Finances
By M. Ellis, Special Guest Writer The other day a friend invited me to her church because she knows that I’m interested in finance and the minister was beginning a series on God and finance. I almost declined because the thought of a minister preaching on God and finance gives me the heebie jeebies. I’ve often [...]
[01/01/1970, 01:00] VIX???
[01/01/1970, 01:00] Out of Dodge...

My prayers go out to all those Houstonians riding out the storm.  I live in West Houston but decided yesterday to head up to my parents' house in Fort Worth. 

While our thoughts now are on everyone's safety, soon enough we'll be thinking about insurance, deductables, repairs and contractors.  No one buys an investment property with the expecation that it will get knocked down by a hurricane - but unexpected things happen, and when they do they're usually bad. 

Skimping on insurance is a way that some investors nudge a borderline property into positive cashflow territory.  Ask yourself about the risk/reward tradeoff.

[01/08/2006, 08:35] 12DailyPro changes payment processors: out with E-Gold and in with EMOcorp!
If you've checked out the recent updates from Charis at 12DailyPro, you know that they are giving e-gold the boot. I can understand their nervousness given how screwed up things were last month with all that donwtime, but I can't help but think that this is a bit of an overreaction. Here's what happened:

United States federal investigators with a legal court order enlisted the assistance of e-gold to check out the transaction histories of accounts that they believed were linked to illegal activities. This resulted in e-gold's website being offline for nearly 36 hours in December. That slowed down the upgrade and payout machine at 12DailyPro, much to the annoyance of its members and administrators.

It's important to note that there is absolutely nothing in the BusinessWeek article to suggest that e-gold has done anything wrong. But the article is written with a bit of a slant that suggests e-gold is somewhat complacent about illegalities being financed with their currency. It's no great secret that there are a lot of shady characters who use e-gold to do their shady activities, but those same shady characters use good old US dollars (or Euros, or whatever) to do the same things. Investigators enlist the assistance of e-gold to track down those criminals just as they would enlist the assistance of the bank down the street, and e-gold is always very enthusiastic about complying with their requests, as they should be.

You can read the BusinessWeek article here. (May require free registration)
You can read a rebuttal from the e-gold administrator here.
You can read
an interesting Q&A about e-gold's legal status in the eyes of federal regulators here.

12DailyPro's decision to oust e-gold was made primarily because their service was so unreliable last month while they were assisting with the federal investigation of those suspicious accounts, NOT because e-gold itself has been accused of doing anything illegal. Furthermore, they fear that more extensive investigations like that may lead to the freezing of a lot of accounts found to be linked to illegal activities, and the resulting possible decrease in e-gold liquidity. That could slow things down for processing payouts and upgrades. They have chosen to be proactive and switch to a processor that they feel will be more reliable in the future: EMOcorp.

EMOcorp is a very attractive alternative. Their fees for transferring money between EMO account holders are negligible. You can withdraw money from your EMO account by printing out a money order with your computer and taking it to your local bank for cashing. They also have a debit card that you can fund with your EMO balance and use at ATM's or POS's, or you can transfer the money directly to your checking account. You can even link your EMO account to your e-gold account and exchange your e-gold for cash through one of three supported exchangers. All in all it's a pretty complete package.

But what I like best about EMOcorp are the security features. You log in with an email address and a password. Then you can add additional layers of security. You can require that a code be entered every time someone logs into your account. You print out a randomized code card like the one at left and then use it every time you want to access your account. So long as you make sure that card doesn't fall into the wrong hands (or get lost), there is no way that your account can be compromised, even if someone steals your password with a keylogger. You can also restrict access to your account to specific IP addresses or ranges of IP addresses. And they have anti-money laundering features that require you to confirm your identity with various types of documentation before they allow you to print money orders, or move money bewteen EMO and your bank or other e-currencies. It really is an impressive setup.

Payouts at 12DailyPro are going to be delayed while they take care of all the pending e-gold payouts and start people up with EMOcorp. Those of us who have e-gold payouts from upgrades that expired between December 24-January 18th have several options for our payouts.
They are going to open a special support center on Monday, January 9th so that members can select one of these options. All pending e-gold transactions should be completed by January 31st, although many will be resolved before then.
  1. Request payout with StormPay
  2. Request payout with EMO
  3. Request that 12DailyPro mail you an EMO money order ($1000 minimum)
  4. Compound those earnings, purchase upgrades at 12DailyPro, and then get your next cashout with one of the other alternatives.
Now, it really is a hassle to be changing over like this. I'm not saying that I'm not excited about my new EMO account (in fact, I hope that other programs follow suit and add them), but I hope that it's worth 12DailyPro's trouble to be doing this. I don't expect e-gold to fall off the face of the earth any time soon, but I would hope that they are better about keeping their members informed when downtime of this magnitude occurs. There are a lot of internet businesses that rely on e-gold for their livelihood, and they have nothing to do with child porn, drugs, terrorism, or money laundering.





 



LifeLock Identity Theft Prevention - Save 10%



Guaranteed Personal Loans - Any credit history