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Category Archives: Finance, Economic terms and Buzz Words

Term of the Day: CASH FLOW LOAN

 

Definition of ‘Cash Flow Loan’

Borrowing cash typically to meet day-to-day operations or acquisitions. It is a type of debt financing, in which a bank lends funds, generally for working capital, using the expected cash flows that a borrowing company generates as collateral for the loan.

Reasons for needing a cash flow loan could be seasonal-demand changes, business expansion or changes in the business cycle.

Cash-flow loans can help in temporary situations, but if cash flow problems persist then companies need to improve their cash conversion cycle and get customers to pay faster.

 

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Finance Terms : RENT-A-CROWD

Definition of ‘Rent-A-Crowd’

A group of people rented to make a  business appear busy. Rent-a-crowds are sometimes employed on the grand openings  of a new business to give the appearance that something is attracting people to  the store, which then potentially attracts real customers, who come to see why  the crowd has gathered.

Rent-a-crowds can be a good  strategy to help get new customers into the door. This can also make a  business look busy and give potential clients the impression that business is  good.

SOURCE: INVESTOPEDIA

 
 

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Cash Per Share: definition

Also known as ‘Cash Flow Per Share’ is a measure of a firm’s financial strength, calculated as:

Cash Flow Per Share = (Operating Cash Flow – Preferred Dividends) / Common Shares Outstanding.

Cash flow per share shows the after-tax earnings plus depreciation, on a per share basis.

As a financial analyst i prefer to place more emphasis on the cash flow per share value than on earnings per share values. While an earnings per share value can be easily manipulated to appear more positive than it really is, therefore putting its reliability in question, cash is more difficult to alter, resulting in what some analysts believe is a more accurate value of the strength and sustainability of a particular business model.

A company’s earnings per share is the portion of a company’s profit that is allocated to each outstanding share of common stock, and, like cash flow per share, serves as an indicator of a company’s profitability. Because the cash flow per share takes into consideration a company’s ability to generate cash, it is regarded by some analysts as a more accurate measure of a company’s financial situation than the earnings per share metric. Cash flow per share represents the net cash a firm produces, on a per share basis.

MF

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Theory X Theory Y…and Z where do you fall in?

According to concepts  the US college-administrator and professor Douglas McGregor  (1906-64) in his 1960 book ‘The Human Side Of Eenterprise’ these are two distinct sets of assumptions  that managers,  in general,  have about their employees  and which often turn out to be self-fulfilling prophesies.

Theory-X assumptions  are:

(1) most people dislike work and will  avoid it to the extent possible, therefore

(2) they must be continually coerced,  controlled, and threatened with punishment  to get the work done, and that

(3) they have little or no ambition, prefer to  avoid responsibility,  and choose security  above everything else.

Theory-Y assumptions are: (1) physical and mental effort  are natural and most people (depending on the work  environment) find work to be a source  of satisfaction,

(2) they generally, on their own motivation, exercise  self-control, self-direction, creativity,  and ingenuity in pursuit of individual  and collective (company) goals,

(3)  they either seek responsibility or learn to accept it willingly, and that

(4)  their full potential is not tapped in most organizations.

These assumptions serve as powerful behavioral models  reflected in the way an organization is structured.

Management  that believes in theory-X assumptions, creates  stick-and-carrot approach based firms with restrictive discipline  and pervasivecontrols.  Theory-Y believers create trust based  firms with empowered employees.

What about theory Z;

Japanese consensus management  style based on the assumptions  that

(1) employeeswant to build cooperativerelationships  with their employers,  peers, and other employees in the firm; for this they

(2) require high degree of  support in the form of secure employment  and facilities  for development  of multiple skills  through training  and job  rotation,

(3) they value family life, culture and  traditions, and social institutions  as much as materialsuccess,

(4) they have well-developed sense of dedication, moral obligations,  and self-discipline, and

(5) they can make collective decisions  through consensus.

This was Introduced by the author  William Ouchi (born 1943) in his book ‘Theory Z.’

 

 
 

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Business Term: Total Quality Management (TQM)

TQM Model

TQM Model

Total quality managent is A holistic approach to long-term success that views continuous improvement in all aspects of an organization as a process and not as a short-term goal.

It aims to radically transform the organization through progressive changes in the attitudes, practices, structures, and systems.

Total quality management transcends the product quality approach, involves everyone in the organization, and encompasses its every function: administration, communications, distribution, manufacturing, marketing, planning, training, etc.
Coined by the US Naval Air Systems Command in early 1980s, this term has now taken on several meanings and includes:

(1) commitment and direct involvement of highest-level executives in setting quality goals and policies, allocation of resources, and monitoring of results;

(2) realization that transforming an organization means fundamental changes in basic beliefs and practices and that this transformation is everyone’s job;

(3) building quality into products and practices right from the beginning;

(4) understanding of the changing needs of the internal and external customers, and stakeholders, and satisfying them in a cost effective manner;

(5) instituting leadership in place of mere supervision so that every individual performs in the best possible manner to improve quality and productivity, thereby continually reducing total cost;

(6) eliminating barriers between people and departments so that they work as teams to achieve common objectives; and

(7) instituting flexible programs for training and education, and providing meaningful measures of performance that guide the self-improvement efforts of everyone involved.

Source. Business Directory.
 

 
1 Comment

Posted by on September 22, 2012 in Finance, Economic terms and Buzz Words

 

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Finance Term: Paris Club

An informal group of creditor nations whose objective is to find workable  solutions to payment problems faced by debtor nations. The Paris Club has 19  permanent members, including most of the western European and Scandinavian  nations, the United States of America, the United Kingdom and Japan. The Paris  Club stresses the informal nature of its existence and deems itself a  “non-institution.” As an informal group, it has no official statutes and no  formal inception date, although its first meeting with a debtor nation was in  1956, with Argentina.

The members of the Paris Club meet  each month in the French capital, except for the months of February and August.  These monthly meetings may also include negotiations with one or more debtor  countries that have met the Club’s pre-conditions for debt negotiation. The main  conditions a debtor nation has to meet are that it should have a demonstrated  need for debt relief and should be committed to implementing economic reform,  which in effect means that it must already have a current program with the  International Monetary Fund (IMF) supported by a conditional arrangement.
The Paris Club has five key functioning principles: case by case,  consensus, conditionality, solidarity and comparability of treatment.

 
 

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Finance Terms: “80 – 20 Rule”

Defition of “80-20 Rule”

A rule of thumb that states that 80% of outcomes can be attributed to 20% of  the causes for a given event. In business, the 80-20 rule is used to help  managers identify problems and determine which operating factors are most  important and should receive the most attention based on an efficient use  of resources. Resources should be allocated to addressing the input factors have  the most effect on a company’s final results.

 

Also known as the “Pareto principle”, the “principle of factor sparsity” and  the “law of the vital few.”

The 80-20 rule was developed by  Joseph Juran, a 20th century figure in the study of management techniques and  principles. The 80-20 rule has been applied to a number of different facets of  business.
An example of the 80-20 rule in economics would be that  80% of a country’s wealth is controlled by 20% of the population, although this  can be explained by the Gini index.

For you who visits the famous 80-20Fashions Blog by Shamim Mwasha ‘Zeze’  This is the meaning behind the name.

 

 
 

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Finance Term: TANSTAAFL – ”There Ain’t No Such Thing As A Free Lunch”

Definition of ‘There Ain’t No Such Thing As A Free Lunch – TANSTAAFL’

An acronym that attempts to describe the cost of decision making and  consumption. “There ain’t no such thing as a free lunch” (TANSTAAFL) expresses  the idea that even if something seems like it is free, there is always a cost,  no matter how indirect or hidden.
In finance, TANSTAAFL refers to the  opportunity cost paid to make a decision. The decision to consume one product  usually comes with the trade-off of giving up the consumption of something  else.
Also known as “there is no such thing as a free lunch”  (TINSTAAFL).

According to Investopedia,  The phrase ‘TANSTAAFL’  is thought to have originated because many saloons  in the U.S. used to provide free lunches to their patrons, but required them to  purchase drinks in order to get them.
Although the phrase is a double  negative, it is not intended to be interpreted as such. Therefore, the alternate  acronym TINSTAAFL is often used.

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Finance Term: DINKS: ‘Dual Income, No Kids.

Definition:
A household in which there are two incomes and no children (either both partners are working or one has two incomes). DINKS are often the target of marketing efforts for luxury items such as expensive cars and vacations.

Couples living in a DINK household are thought to have more disposable income because they don’t have the added expenses that come with children. Contrast this with “DEWKS”.-

Dewks is A household in which there are children and both partners earn an income.

DEWKS families are marketing targets for toys, children’s clothes and other goods and services that pertain to children. Contrast this with “DINKS”.  

MF

 

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Finance Term:Waterfall Payment

A type of payment scheme in which higher-tiered creditors receive interest and principal payments, while the lower-tiered creditors receive only interest payments. When the higher tiered creditors have received all interest and principal payments in full, the next tier of creditors begins to receive interest and principal payments

For example, this type of payment scheme would work for a company repaying more than one loan. Assume this company has three operating loans, all with different interest rates. The company would make principal and interest payments on the more costly loan, and make only interest payments on the remaining two loans. Once the more expensive loan is paid off, the company can make all interest and principal payments on the next, more expensive loan. The process continues until all loans are repaid.

Source : Finance Journal.

 

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Taxation Terms: Double Irish With A Dutch Sandwich

Definition of ‘Double Irish With A Dutch Sandwich’

A tax avoidance  technique employed by certain large corporations, involving the use of a  combination of Irish and Dutch subsidiary companies to shift profits to low or  no tax jurisdictions. The double Irish with a Dutch sandwich technique involves  sending profits first through one Irish company, then to a Dutch company and  finally to a second Irish company headquartered in a tax haven. This technique  has allowed certain corporations to dramatically reduce their overall corporate  tax rates.

The double  Irish with a Dutch sandwich technique is just one of a class of similar  international tax avoidance schemes. Each involves arranging transactions  between subsidiary companies to take advantage of the idiosyncrasies of varied  national tax codes. These techniques are most prominently used by tech companies  because these firms can easily shift large portions of profits to other  countries by assigning intellectual property rights to subsidiaries abroad.

 

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Buzz word: ‘Eating Someone’s Lunch’

The act of an aggressive competition that results in one company taking portions of another company’s market share. Market share is the percentage of an industry or market’s total sales that is achieved by one company during a specified time period. A more aggressive company “eats the lunch” of another company when it take some of its competitor’s market share. This can be achieved through the release of a better or newer product, aggressive pricing or marketing strategies or other competitive advantages. When these strategies result in one company having a bigger market share for a particular product or service, the company enjoying the larger market share is said to be eating someone’s lunch.

Eating someone’s lunch generally refers to defeating or outwitting an opponent. In the business world, it describes situations where one company outperforms another and earns a larger market share. Eating someone’s lunch is considered a necessary component of a competitive market, and may help bring better pricing and services to consumers as companies compete for larger market shares. A company may eat someone’s lunch at one point in time, only to have their own lunch eaten during a subsequent time as competitors fight back for market share.

 

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Buzz Word: ‘Stop Trading On Congressional Knowledge Act – STOCK Act’

Definition of ‘Stop Trading On Congressional Knowledge Act – STOCK Act’

A bipartisan bill signed into law Apr. 4, 2012 by President Barack Obama that  prevents members of congress from trading stocks based on nonpublic information  gathered on Capitol Hill.

The Stop Trading on Congressional Knowledge (STOCK)  Act elucidates that congressional members and staff owe a duty to United States  citizens not to misappropriate nonpublic information to make a profit.

In  addition to banning insider trading for members and Congressional staff, the  STOCK Act provides for increases transparency in financial disclosure reporting,  and requires members of Congress and government employees to report certain  investment transactions within 45 days.

According to Investopedia The STOCK Act amended the Ethics in Government Act of 1978 to require  electronic reporting and online availability of public financial disclosure  information. This information must be made available on agency web sites and  through databases that can be searched and sorted.
According to the Act,  a member of Congress who commits one of several corruption offenses while  serving as an elected official will be required to forfeit his or her federal  pension.

The STOCK Act expands forfeiture to apply to misconduct by members  committed in other federal, state and local elected offices and adds insider  trading as a crime for which forfeiture will be required.

fThe STOCK Act  also requires disclosure of personal mortgage terms, bans special access to  initial public offerings and bans bonuses for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac senior  executives.

 

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General Understanding of The Kyoto Protocol

What do you understand by the term Kyoto Protocol?

First time i heard the term i thought it a type of mushrooms from China or Japan! So the more i heard of it on the International meia houses i decided to find out what exactly is the KYOTO Protocol.

 

Definition of ‘Kyoto Protocol’

Kyoto Protocol

An international agreement that  aims to reduce carbon dioxide emissions and the presence of greenhouse  gases. Countries that ratify the Kyoto Protocol are assigned maximum carbon  emission levels and can participate in carbon credit trading. Emitting more than  the assigned limit will result in a penalty for the violating country in the  form of a lower emission limit in the following period.

The Kyoto Protocol is a protocol to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC or FCCC), aimed at fighting global warming. The UNFCCC is an international environmental treaty with the goal of achieving the “stabilisation of greenhouse gas concentrations in the atmosphere at a level that would prevent dangerous anthropogenic interference with the climate system

The Protocol was initially adopted on 11 December 1997 in Kyoto, Japan, and entered into force on 16 February 2005. As of September 2011, 191 states have signed and ratified the protocol.[ The only remaining signatory not to have ratified the protocol is the United States. Other United Nations member states which did not ratify the protocol are Afghanistan, Andorra and South Sudan. In December 2011, Canada renounced the Protocol.

Tanzania ratified and accepted the kyoto protocol in August 2002.  One of the initiatives in Tanzania is through The national REDD strategy  which is  yet to be completed though it is at an advanced stage of preparation. It will enable Tanzania to gain billion of shillings annually from the international carbon trading markets, through conserving forests.

The Kyoto Protocol separates  countries into two groups. Annex I includes developed nations, while  Non-Annex I refers to developing countries like Tanzania. Emission limitations are only placed  on Annex I countries. Non-Annex I nations participate by investing in projects  that lower emissions in their own countries. For these projects, they earn  carbon credits. These credits can be traded or sold to Annex I countries, which  allow them a higher level of maximum carbon emissions for that period.

Carbon Credit is  permit that allows the holder to emit one ton of carbon  dioxide. Credits are awarded to countries or groups that have reduced  their green house gases below their emission quota. Carbon  credits can be traded in the international market at their current  market price.

The carbon credit system was  ratified in conjunction with the Kyoto Protocol. Its goal is to stop the  increase of carbon dioxide emissions.
For example, if an  environmentalist group plants enough trees to reduce emissions by one  ton, the group will be awarded a credit. If a steel producer  has an emissions quota of 10 tons, but is expecting to produce 11  tons, it could purchase this carbon credit from the environmental  group. The carbon credit system looks to reduce emissions by having  countries honor their emission quotas and offer incentives for being below them.

In response to the Kyoto Protocol a Carbon Trade idea was presented. The Idea  involves the trading of greenhouse gas (GHG) emission rights between nations.

For example, if Country A exceeds  its capacity of GHG and Country B has a surplus of capacity, a monetary  agreement could be made that would see Country A pay Country B for the right to  use its surplus capacity.
The Kyoto Protocol presents nations with the  challenge of reducing greenhouse gases and storing more carbon. A nation that  finds it hard to meet its target of reducing GHG could pay another nation  to reduce emissions by an appropriate quantity.


 

 

 

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Buzz Words: Death by a Thousand Cuts

Death by a thousand cuts is A failure that occurs as a result of many smaller problems. Death by a thousand cuts could refer to the termination of a proposed deal as a result of several small issues rather than one major cause. This term can also apply to a product or idea that is destroyed by too many minor changes or the failure of a plan as a result of a cumulative chain of events.

This word is derived from the idea that a small cut will not kill you but, if you get enough of them, you could bleed to death. The term is derived from an ancient form of torture, in which the condemned person was subjected to a number of less devastating wounds over time until the accumulation of damage eventually became fatal.

 

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What is GDP and Why is it so Important?

Recently the term GDP has been heard and or seen everywhere in our media in Tanzania, This follows the presentation of 2012/2013  Government Budget, Do you understand what it means? When Mh. Mgimwa said “The real GDP grew by 6.4% in 2011 compared to 7.0% in 2010″ What did he mean exactly?

I will explain below in brief the meaning of GDP (Gross Domestic Revenue)

File:Map of countries by GDP (nominal) in US$.png

Map of Countries by GDP – Source Wikipedia

 

The Gross Domestic Product (GDP) is one the  primary indicators used to gauge the health  of a country’s economy. It represents the  total money value of all goods and services produced over a specific time  period – you can think of it as the size of the economy. Usually, GDP is  expressed as a comparison to the previous quarter or year. For example, if the  year-to-year GDP is up 3%, this is thought to mean that the economy has grown by  3% over the last year.
Measuring GDP is complicated (which is why we  leave it to the economists), but at its most basic, the calculation can be done  in one of two ways: either by adding up what everyone earned in a year (income  approach), or by adding up what everyone spent (expenditure method). Logically,  both measures should arrive at roughly the same total.
The income  approach, which is sometimes referred to as GDP(I), is calculated by adding up  total compensation to employees, gross profits for incorporated and non  incorporated firms, and taxes less any subsidies.

The expenditure method is the  more common approach and is calculated by adding total consumption, investment,  government spending and net exports.

Why do we Care about GDP?

GDP is the main measure of the health of the economy and is used by the central banks as one of the key indicators in setting interest rates each month. Also it is used by major international organisation like IMF to measure the Economic healthy of countries. See List of Countries by nominal GDP below (Tanzania No. 97) according to IMF data of 2011:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_GDP_(nominal)#List

 

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Finance term: Macaroni Defence

Meaning:

An approach taken by a company that does not want to be taken over. The company issues a large number of bonds with the condition they must be redeemed at a high price if the company is taken over.

It is called macaroni defence because  if a company is in danger, the  redemption price of the bonds expands like Macaroni in a pot!
 

 

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Economic Term ‘A Prisoner’s Dilemma

A paradox in decision analysis in which two individuals acting in their own best  interest pursue a course of action that does not result in the ideal outcome.  The typical prisoner’s dilemma is set up in such a way that both parties choose  to protect themselves at the expense of the other participant. As a result of  following a purely logical thought process to help oneself, both participants  find themselves in a worse state than if they had cooperated with each other in  the decision-making process.

An example of a Prisoner Dilemma;

Suppose two friends, Ally and Baker are suspected of committing a crime and are  being interrogated in separate rooms. Both individuals want to minimize their  jail sentence. Both of them face the same scenario: Ally has the option of  pleading guilty or not guilty. If he pleads not guilty, Baker can plead not  guilty and get a two-year sentence, or he can plead guilty and get a one-year  sentence. It is in Baker’s best interest to plead guilty if Ally pleads not  guilty. If Ally pleads guilty, Baker can plead not guilty and receive a  five-year sentence. Otherwise he can plead guilty and get a three-year sentence.  It is in Baker’s best interest to plead guilty if Ally pleads guilty. Ally faces  the same decision matrix and follows the same logic as Baker. As a result, both  parties plead guilty and spend three years in jail although through cooperation  they could have served only two. A true prisoner’s dilemma is typically “played”  only once; otherwise it is classified as an iterated prisoner’s dilemma.

 

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Hot Waitress Economic Index

What Does it Mean?

An index that indicates the state of the economy by measuring the number of attractive people working as waiters/waitresses. According to the hot waitress index, the higher the number of good looking servers, the weaker the current state of the economy. It is assumed that attractive individuals do not tend to have trouble finding high-paying jobs during good economics times. During poor economic times, these jobs will be more difficult to find and therefore more attractive people will be forced to work in lower paying jobs such as being waiters/waitresses.

According to http://www.investopedia.com/ ; Hot Waitress Economic Index is a Traditional economic theory contends that employment tends to be a lagging indicator for economic recovery. However, the hot waitress economic index could be a coincident or even a leading indicator for economic recovery because  attractive people may be the first group of individuals to find better paying  jobs when a bad economy begins to turn around.

Do you think this applies to Developing countries like Tanzania where Unemployent is a huge problem?  I will appreaciate your contribution.

 

 

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Loss leader Strategy

 

What Is a Loss Leader?

A business strategy in which a business offers a product or  service at a price that is not profitable for the sake of offering another  product/service at a greater profit or to attract new customers. This is a  common practice when a business first enters a market; a loss leader introduces  new customers to a service or product in the hope of building a customer  base and securing future recurring revenue.

The loss leader strategy is more than just a nifty business trick – it is a  successful strategy if executed properly. A classic example is that of mobile phone company giving away a free network Locked Mobile phone knowing that you will need to use their network only on that Mobile phone. Cool huh!?

This startegy can be used for retail shops as well, At the shop kwa Mpemba he offers a kilo of Sembe at half a price; and doubles prices on other products, we all run kwa mpemba cause sembe price is very low and assumes everything else is cheaper at Mpemba’s shop, more sales and more profits for mpemba.

On International marketing; The Lower price of Amazon kindle Fire is one of the the Loss Leader strategy; Even if Amazon pays more to build the $79 Kindle than it sells it for, the company has several other ways to bring in money from the device. This Kindle model includes ads that show up as screensavers and at the bottom of the device’s home screen. And Amazon sees all the devices in the Kindle family — and the free Kindle apps it offers for mobile devices and computers — as a way to spur more sales of its digital e-books, music, games and apps. Definately It is making its money back through media content.

 

 

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Finance Tip: Know Your Market Value

Finance Tip: Know Your Market Value

Hello MonFinance readers, i hope you had a wonderful weekend. Today i am going to give you a tip on getting paid what your job  worth; and how to ask for a raise if you feel underpaid .

It sounds simple, but many people struggle with this  basic rule; getting paid what you’re worth and of course spend less than you earn .

Whether you are employed or self-employed,  Make sure you know what your job is worth in the marketplace, by conducting an evaluation of your skills, productivity, job tasks, contribution to the company, and the going rate, both inside and outside the company, for what you do. Being underpaid even one hundred thousand shillings a month can have a significant cumulative effect over the course of your working life.

After reading this and you feel underpaid; then you have to ask for a raise in a professional way.

How do you ask for a Raise?

Many employees make the mistake of asking for a raise because they need more money, can’t pay their bills, etc.  Your personal budgeting and financial problems are not your company’s problem.  Need has nothing to do with it, so it’s best not to talk about need when asking for a raise.

Base your request on your evaluation of your skills, productivity, job tasks, your contribution to the company, and the going rate, both inside and outside the company, for what you do.  Look at the entire situation from your company’s perspective, and base your approach on THEIR needs, and on what YOU can do for THEM.

However, no matter how much or how little you’re paid, you’ll never get ahead if you spend more than you earn. this is when the Budget Tip apply.  Often it’s easier to spend less than it is to earn more, and a little cost-cutting effort in a number of areas can result in big savings. It doesn’t always have to involve making big sacrifices.

Happy reading.

Monica.

 

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Finance Tip: Budget

For you to  be financially health, build yourself a solid budget  and stick to it.

This is just good sense for absolutely everyone – Men,Women, single,  married or divorced..Employed or student, Everyone.

Examine your monthly expenses, remembering to include  everything from housing costs, utilities, groceries, car payments, gasoline,  insurance and esthetics. Do the same for your income. Subtract your expenses  from your income, and see what you’ve got leftover. You can divide the remainder  up based on what you’d like to save and what you’d like to budget toward discretionary spending. Don’t  forget to factor in money towards repayment of credit card debt, student loans  or any other debts you may have. You’ll want to get debts  paid off as quickly as you can in order to save yourself those pesky  interest costs. You should also examine methods for reducing costs, like eating  meals at home or reducing the amount you spend on entertainment  expenses.

MJ.

 

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Tips for Investing in Initial Public Offering (IPOs)

Most people think Stocks investments is just eating a piece of cake. You do not have to be there physically to control your investments, you just browse daily or weekly on Dar es Salaam Stock Exchange site and manage your portfolio and your money multiplies.

Sounds so much Easier. In the days of dotcom mania, investors could throw money into an IPO and be almost guaranteed killer returns. Numerous companies, experienced huge first-day gains, but ended up  disappointing investors in the long-term. People who had the foresight to get  in, and out, on some of these companies, made investing look way too easy.

However, no investment is a sure thing. Investors could no  longer expect the double and triple-digit gains they got in the early tech IPO  days simply by flipping stocks. There is  still money to be made in IPOs, but the focus has shifted from the quick buck to  the long-term outlook. Rather than trying to capitalize on a stock’s initial  bounce, investors are more inclined to carefully scrutinize long-term prospects.
IPOs can be a risky investment. For the individual investor, it is tough to  predict what the stock will do on its initial day of trading and in the near  future because there is often little historical data with which to  analyze the company. Also, most IPOs are of companies going through a  transitory growth period, which are subject to additional uncertainty regarding  their future values.

WHAT IS AN IPO?

  ‘An IPO is The first sale of stock by a private company to the public. IPOs are  often issued by smaller, younger companies seeking the capital to  expand, but can also be done by large privately owned companies looking to  become publicly traded.’

 Even if you have a longer-term focus, finding a good IPO is difficult. IPOs have  many unique risks that make them different from the average stock which has been  trading for a while. If you do decide to take a chance on an IPO, here are five  points to keep in mind: 

1. Objective research is a scarce commodity 

Getting  information on companies set to go public is tough. Unlike most publicly traded  companies, private companies do not have swarms of  analysts covering them, attempting to uncover possible cracks in their corporate armor.  Remember that although most companies try to fully disclose all information in  their prospectus it is still written by  them and not by an unbiased third-party.

Search the Internet for  information on the company and its competitors, financing, past press releases,  as well as overall industry health. Even though info may be scarce, learning as  much as you can about the company is a crucial step in making a wise investment.  On the other hand, your research may lead to the discovery that a company’s  prospects are being overblown and that not acting on the investment opportunity  is the best idea.

2. Pick a company with strong brokers

Try to select a  company that has a strong underwriter.  I am not saying that the big investment banks never bring duds public, but in  general, quality brokerages bring quality companies public. Exercise more  caution when selecting smaller brokerages, because they may be willing to  underwrite any company.  However, one positive of smaller brokers is that, because of their smaller  client base, they make it easier for the individual investor to purchase pre-IPO  shares. Be aware  that most large brokerage firms will not allow your first investment to be an  IPO. The only individual investors who get in on IPOs are long-standing,  established (and often high-net-worth) customers. Of course in our country most of the brokerage firms aims at SELLING instead of ADVISING an investor.

3. Always read the prospectus

I have told you not to put all  your faith in it, but you should never skip reading the prospectus. It may be a  dry read, but the prospectus lays out the company’s risks and opportunities,  along with the proposed uses for the money raised by the IPO.

For example, if  the money is going to repay loans, or buy the equity from founders or private  investors, then look out! It is a bad sign if the company cannot afford to repay  its loans without issuing stock. Money that is going towards research, marketing  or expanding into new markets paints a better picture. Most companies have  learned that over-promising and under-delivering are mistakes often made by  those vying for marketplace success. Therefore, one of the biggest things to be  on the lookout for while reading a prospectus is an overly optimistic future  earnings outlook; this means reading the projected accounting figures carefully.
You can always request the prospectus from the broker bringing the  company public.  Get a professional to help you understand the prospectus because not anyone can read and understand the accounting information and statements disclosed in a prospectus.

4. Be cautious

Skepticism is a positive attribute to  cultivate in the IPO market. As i mentioned earlier, there is always a lot of  uncertainty surrounding IPOs, mainly because of the lack of available  information. Therefore, you should always approach an IPO with caution.
If your broker recommends an IPO, you should exercise increased caution.  This is a clear indication that most institutions and money managers have  graciously passed on the underwriter’s attempts to sell them stock. In this  situation, individual investors are likely getting the bottom feed, the  leftovers that the “big money” didn’t want. If your broker is strongly pitching  shares, there is probably a reason behind the high number of these available  stocks. This brings up an important point: even if you find a company going  public that you deem to be a worthwhile investment, it’s possible you won’t be  able to get shares. Brokers have a habit of saving their IPO allocations for  favored clients, so unless you are a high roller, chances are good that you  won’t be able to get in.

5. Consider waiting for the lock-up period to end

The lock-up period is a legally binding contract (Mostly 3 to 24 months)  between the underwriters and insiders of the company prohibiting them from  selling any shares of stock for a specified period.
The point here is that waiting until insiders are free to sell their shares is  not a bad strategy, because if they continue to hold stock once the lock-up  period has expired, it may be an indication that the company has a bright and  sustainable future. During the lock-up period, there is no way to tell whether  insiders would in fact be happy to take the spot price of the stock or not.

Let the market take its course before you take the plunge. A good company is  still going to be a good company, and a worthy investment, even after the  lock-up period expires.

The Bottom Line

By no means  I am suggesting that all IPOs should be avoided: some investors who have  bought stock at the IPO price have been rewarded handsomely by the companies in  question. Every month successful companies go public, but it is difficult to  sift through the riffraff and find the investments with the most potential. Just  keep in mind that when it comes to dealing with the IPO market, a skeptical and  informed investor is likely to perform much better than one who is not.

Happy reading and Go beat the Market!

Monica.

 

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