Wednesday, November 30, 2005

eats noot wad eu saay ...

How to drive your english teacher crazy.

{eats noot wad eu saay, ets h0weu saay eet}

... from clara's blogspot (404 not found)


SAY EU LURFE ME

Yesterday you asked me something
I thought you knew
So i told you with a smile
Its all about you
Then you whispered in my ear
And you told me too
Said you make my life worthwhile
Its all about you

And i would answer all your wishes
If you ask me to
But if you deny me one of your kisses
I don't know what I would do
So hold me close
And just say those three words like you used to
I love you

Tuesday, November 29, 2005

Updated Photo



It's time for an updated profile photo.

Here I am in Banff National Park, proud as
can be of our 1981 Olds Omega.

Photo by wag; (my vivacious ex).

Thursday, November 24, 2005

Doug Casey - Gold

What Most People Don’t Know About Gold
By Doug Casey


Historically, gold has never been viewed as a speculation. It was simply money: cash in the most basic form. It was a medium of exchange and a store of value. People did not accumulate gold because it could make them wealthy, but because it was a convenient, liquid way to keep the wealth they had.

Sunday, November 20, 2005

Adrian Rogers


At Bellevue Baptist, thousands say goodbye to Adrian Rogers ‘til heavenly reunion


Source ...

Steve Gaines - message transcript

Some people can’t find Jesus for the same reason a thief cannot find a policeman.” -Adrian Rogers

Friday, November 04, 2005

9 Red Flags


9 Red Flags to help spot message board Scammers

1/ Someone who hyper-posts on only one stock.

2/ Someone who uses multiple identities.

3/ Some who repeatedly attacks or belittles others on a stock's message boards.

4/ Someone who emerges as the stock's moderator, or even the leader of the discussion group on that stock.

5/ Someone, with a short history in their member profile, who suddenly shows up during a stock run-up, and appears to know "all about" the company.

6/ Someone who is nearly always the first to respond to company developments.

7/ Someone who continuously hints at upcoming news and unannounced contracts.

8/ Someone who hypes the company during the run-up and then "changes" his/her mind and begins attacking the company, its insiders and the project.

9/ Someone who goes out of their way to find bad news about the company and makes a "case" out of it.

Preferred Shares

Source: Canadian Wealth Advisor January 2003

Insiders guide to preferreds.

Preferred shares can offer investors a better after-tax yield than bonds, while being close in security to bonds.

There are two main differences between bonds and preferreds: security, and the tax treatment of bond interest versus preferred share dividends.

Dividends come with a credit.
Dividends paid on preferred shares are treated identically for tax purposes as dividends from common shares. So indicated dividend yields on preferred shares are actually even higher when you factor in the Canadian dividend tax credit. The dividend tax credit makes dividends from eligible Canadian companies worth around one-third more, after tax, than the same amount of interest income.

For example, an investor in the 50% tax bracket would pay 50% tax on interest income. Canadian dividend income, after factoring in the dividend tax credit, would be taxed at only around 33%. That means that a preferred share yielding 5% is equivalent, on an after-tax basis, to a bond yielding 6.7%.

Investment quality provides security.
Preferred shares have a prior claim on a firm's assets over the common shares, in the event of the winding up or the dissolution of the company. However, preferred shares rank behind creditors and bondholders. that's why when evaluating preferred stock, an issuer's creditworthiness is of prime importance. When you buy bonds, it's best to stick with high-quality government bonds, and avoid higher-risk corporate bonds. When you invest in preferreds, choose bank or utility company preferreds, rather than higher-yielding preferreds from riskier firms.

Preferred shares are usually entitled to a fixed dividend. However, unlike bond or debt interest, a firm's board can vote to not pay preferred dividends. But they usually have to suspend common dividends first. Again, stick with the highest quality preferreds.

Special features.
Callable or redemption feature:
Preferred share issuers often have the right to call or redeem preferred issues. This is an advantage to the issuer. Usually the terms provide for a small premium over the par value of the shares.

Retractable preferreds: The preferred shareholder can force the company to buy back the shares on a specified date at a specified price.

Cumulative feature: If a company's board votes to not pay preferred dividends, then the unpaid dividends accumulate in arrears. All arrears must be paid before common dividends are resumed or the preferred shares are redeemed.

Non-cumulative feature: Non-cumulative preferred shares are entitled to dividends only when declared. Skipped dividends do not accumulate in arrears. However, common dividends have to end before companies cut preferred dividends.

Wednesday, November 02, 2005