Strategies & Market Trends | 50% Gains Investing


Previous 10 | Next 10 
To: Dale Baker who wrote (101493)6/21/2011 9:55:04 AM
From: Joe Dancy of 114415
 
TITN is a real rocket Dale, don't have a target. These guys are minting money, as long as corn prices stay high (we think they will). Also still like ARTW, think they will surprise on the upside.

Do not talk much stocks today on the blog, but the investment climate looks pretty good still to us if the systemic risk of global meltdown is controlled:

lsgifund.com 

Also like the energy sector still Dale, EPM, FXEN and GTE to name 3. And GEOI.

Share Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read

To: Jerrymac who wrote (101766)6/21/2011 1:02:59 PM
From: E_K_S of 114415
 
Hi - Jerrymac

Re: Gastar Exploration, Ltd. (GST) - Effective yield based on discount $9.25%. (Note: 7% possible capital gain if issue increases in price to $25 Par value)

o 8.625% Series A Cumulative Preferred Securities
o $23.25 Per Share
o Liquidation Preference $25.00 Per Share

xml.10kwizard.com 

---------------------------------------------------------------------

I plan to buy a few shares. I may sell some of my MHRpC, book my gain and put the proceeds into this preferred. The net yield is about 1/2% lower @ 9.25 but it can not be called away w/o them paying a premium until 6/2014.

EKS

FWIW: They even included a "Penalty Rate" provision"

"...Failure to Make Dividend Payments

If Gastar USA has committed a dividend default by failing to pay the accrued cash dividends on the outstanding Series A Preferred Securities in full for any monthly dividend period within a quarterly period for a total of four consecutive or non-consecutive quarterly periods, then (i) the annual dividend rate on the Series A Preferred Securities will be increased to 10.625% per annum (the “Penalty Rate”), commencing on the first day after the dividend payment date on which such dividend default occurs; (ii) if dividends are not paid in cash, dividends on the Series A Preferred Securities, including all accrued but unpaid dividends, will be paid by issuing to the holders thereof: (a) if Gastar USA’s common stock is then listed on a National Exchange and to the extent permitted under the rules of the National Exchange on which such shares are listed, registered common stock of Gastar USA (based on the weighted average daily trading price for the 10 business day period ending on the business day immediately preceding the payment) and cash in lieu of any fractional share or (b) if Gastar USA’s common stock is not listed on a National Exchange, either, at Gastar USA’s election, (x) additional shares of Series A Preferred Securities with a liquidation value equal to the amount of the dividend and cash in lieu of any fractional share or (y) if the Parent Common Stock is then listed on a National Exchange, Parent owns a majority of the voting stock of Gastar USA and to the extent permitted under applicable securities laws and the rules of the National Exchange on which such shares are listed, registered shares of Parent Common Stock (based on the weighted average daily trading price for the 10 business day period ending on the business day immediately preceding the payment) and cash in lieu of any fractional shares of Parent Common Stock, provided that the Parent consents to such issuance of registered shares of Parent Common Stock; and (iii) the holders of the Series A Preferred Securities will have the voting rights described below. See “Description of Series A Preferred Securities — Voting Rights.” Once all accumulated and unpaid dividends have been paid in full and cash dividends at the Penalty Rate have been paid in full for an additional two consecutive quarters, the dividend rate will be restored to the stated rate and the foregoing provisions will not be applicable, unless Gastar USA again fails to pay any monthly dividend for any future quarter...."

Share Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read | Read Replies (2)

To: E_K_S who wrote (101798)6/21/2011 1:51:50 PM
From: CusterInvestor of 114415
 
EKS, so far I have not been able to find a trading symbol for the GST pref--do you have one?
Thanks--

Share Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read | Read Replies (1)

To: CusterInvestor who wrote (101799)6/21/2011 2:19:24 PM
From: E_K_S of 114415
 
Hi Custerinvestor -

It should be GSTp but will not be listed until the original issues have been sold by the broker. That usually takes 1 or 2 weeks after the announcement. I believe to get the issue price of $23.25/share, you have to buy directly from the sponsored broker.

EKS

Share Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read | Read Replies (1)

To: E_K_S who wrote (101798)6/21/2011 2:19:34 PM
From: rllee of 114415
 
Can someone post an alert when this preferred is buyable or trading? I am interested in a few. TIA

Share Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read

From: Dale Baker6/21/2011 2:36:57 PM
of 114415
 
By SIMON NIXON

As the Greek turmoil swirls, some commonly held beliefs are worth debunking:

1. Greece is insolvent.

No, it isn't. As economists Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff have noted, sovereign defaults are typically about willingness to pay rather than ability to pay. Greece has plenty of assets and huge potential to cut spending, increase tax collection and improve productivity if it is willing to make sacrifices. Rather than solvency, Greece's challenge is whether the changes required are politically possible.

2. It is in Greece's interest to default.

Hardly. The country is still running a large primary deficit, so even if it inflicted 50% "haircuts" on bondholders, it would still need to borrow money immediately or face huge spending cuts overnight to balance the books. Worse, the Greek banking system would collapse as its capital was wiped out and its funding dried up; under European Central Bank rules, Greek government bonds would no longer be eligible as collateral. Nor would it make life easier if Greece tried to leave the euro, since this would likely trigger an immediate run on its banks.

3. A Greek default wouldn't be a Lehman moment.

Even the German government now seems to accept it was too complacent in imagining the market was prepared for a Greek debt restructuring. Despite Angela Merkel's climb-down last week, contagion effects have spread across the euro zone, notably to Spain, where bond yields have risen sharply. Germany's mistake was to consider only first-order effects on bank capital, whereas it would be the second-order contagion effects on government and bank borrowing costs that would do the greatest damage. Lehman was a severe market shock, but a Greek default could trigger a global slump as credit dried up around the world.

4. You can't keep kicking the can.

Yes, you can. Time is a great healer. Even if a Greek default becomes unavoidable, there are good reasons to delay it: partly to encourage Portugal and Ireland to stick to their bailout programs, but more importantly to reassure investors so they keep buying other peripheral European government and bank debt. The euro zone needs to avoid any defaults until countries like Spain and Italy manage to grow their way out of the danger zone. Indeed, much as it may upset German taxpayers, the euro zone may have to continue kicking Greek debt down the road long after 2013.

5. It's all Greece's fault.

Not entirely. Now that the euro zone has accepted it has little option but to bail out Greece again, its objective should be to ensure the bailout works. Yet the euro zone is charging Greece a punitive lending rate—nearly double what the European Financial Stability Facility pays to borrow or what the International Monetary Fund is charging—making Greece's task far harder. This makes no sense. The only sensible way now for the euro zone to minimize moral hazard is to agree to closer political integration. Sooner or later, Europe's leaders will have to face up to this reality.

Share Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read | Read Replies (3)

To: Dale Baker who wrote (101802)6/21/2011 2:39:42 PM
From: Sultan of 114415
 
Interesting Blog on Greece..

sturdyblog.wordpress.com 

Share Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read | Read Replies (1)

To: Sultan who wrote (101803)6/21/2011 3:24:06 PM
From: straight life of 114415
 
How to lose a reader by your second sentence:


"Democracy vs Mythology: The Battle in Syntagma Square


...What is going on in Athens at the moment is resistance against an invasion; an invasion as brutal as that against Poland in 1939."


Please; you've just lost all possible credibility.

Share Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read | Read Replies (2)

To: Dale Baker who wrote (101802)6/21/2011 3:47:41 PM
From: Sam of 114415
 
Magentar wasn't charged in this action, Khuzami said, because the company "was not responsible for those disclosures to investors." But he said such deals "remain a high priority for the SEC."

It would be nice to see Marentar charged with something. Greed obviously isn't a crime, but just as obviously they were involved in the deception, they helped to create it. Isn't it a version of three card monte? Or some kind of "confidence" game on a huge, huge scale?

JPMorgan to pay $153.6M to settle civil fraud charges over complex mortgage investments
Marcy Gordon, AP Business Writer, On Tuesday June 21, 2011, 3:36 pm
finance.yahoo.com 

WASHINGTON (AP) -- JPMorgan Chase & Co. has agreed to pay $153.6 million to settle civil fraud charges that it misled buyers of complex mortgage investments just as the housing market was collapsing.

J.P. Morgan Securities, a division of the powerful Wall Street bank, failed to inform investors that a hedge fund helped select the investment portfolio and then bet that it would fail, the Securities and Exchange Commission said. Among the investors who lost money on the deal were autoworkers for General Motors, a Lutheran financial organization in Minneapolis, and a retirement services company in Topeka, Kan.

The settlement announced Tuesday is one of the most significant legal actions targeting Wall Street's role in the 2008 financial crisis. It comes a year after Goldman Sachs & Co. paid $550 million to settle similar charges.

Still, the settlement amounts to less than 1 percent of the bank's 2010 net income of $17.4 billion -- which is less than what JP Morgan earns in one week.

In its announcement, the SEC said it had also charged Edward Steffelin with misleading investors. Steffelin headed the team at GSCP, an investment firm that was supposed to have been selecting the portfolio of mortgage securities in the $1.1 billion deal.

The SEC alleged that Steffelin knew that hedge fund Magnetar Capital was directly involved in choosing the securities and that he was seeking a job with Magnetar at the time. Steffelin has not reached a settlement with regulators.

As part of the JPMorgan settlement, investors who were harmed will receive all of their money back, the SEC said. JPMorgan also agreed to improve the way it reviews and approves mortgage securities transactions.

JPMorgan neither admitted nor denied wrongdoing under the settlement. The bank released a statement saying it lost nearly $900 million on the investment. It also noted that it reviewed similar mortgage investments and voluntarily paid $56 million to compensate some investors in those deals.

The bank agreed to settle the charges two weeks after Jamie Dimon, CEO of JPMorgan Chase & Co., complained to Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke that new financial regulations designed to prevent another financial crisis were too burdensome on banks.

Regulators have been investigating a number of major banks' actions ahead of the financial crisis. More charges are expected.

SEC enforcement chief Robert Khuzami said the JPMorgan case, at its core, is about getting investors truthful information about their investment options.

"The appropriate disclosures would have been to inform investors that an entity with economic interests adverse to their own was involved in selecting the portfolio," he said.

Magnetar essentially made a $600 million bet that the investments would fail once the deal closed in May 2007, the SEC said. Just one month earlier, JPMorgan had launched a "frantic global sales effort" going beyond its traditional customers to sell mortgage securities, according to the agency's suit.

Magentar wasn't charged in this action, Khuzami said, because the company "was not responsible for those disclosures to investors." But he said such deals "remain a high priority for the SEC."

JPMorgan sold about $150 million in those securities to more than a dozen financial institutions that lost nearly their entire investment, the SEC said. Under the settlement, nearly $126 million of the $153.6 million will be returned to investors. The rest will go to the U.S. Treasury.

The investors included Thrivent Financial for Lutherans, a faith-based membership organization based in Minneapolis; Security Benefit Corp., an insurance and retirement services company based in Topeka, Kan.; General Motors Asset Management, which manages the automaker's pension plans; and several Asian financial institutions such as Tokyo Star Bank, Far Glory Life Insurance Co. Ltd., Taiwan Life Insurance Co. Ltd. and East Asia Asset Management Ltd.

The penalty is the highest since Goldman Sachs & Co. settled civil fraud charges last summer. Those were the largest against a Wall Street firm in SEC history. The Goldman settlement amounted to less than 5 percent of Goldman's 2009 net income of $12.2 billion after payment of dividends to preferred shareholders -- or a little more than two weeks of net income.

Goldman was accused of steering investors toward mortgage investments without telling thee buyers that the securities had been crafted with input from a client that was betting on them to fail.

Share Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read

From: kayco6/21/2011 4:18:54 PM
of 114415
 
"....bailout would not help the people of Greece: "This is not assistance for Greece, it's not how anyone there sees it. They understand perfectly well what the bail-out means, which is that the money will go to European bankers and bondholders, but the repayment will come from Greek taxpayers. So far from being helped, Greece is being sacrificed to save the euro."

BBC

bbc.co.uk 

Share Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read | Read Replies (2)
Previous 10 | Next 10 

Copyright © 1995-2013 Knight Sac Media. All rights reserved.