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Forex Trading: An Interview With Forex Market Expert Thomas Fischer, Part 1

June 15th, 2009 Dr. Scott Brown No comments

by Dr. Scott Brown, Education Director of Investment U
Tuesday, June 16, 2009: Issue #1019

Forex trading is hot, hot, hot right now. And one of the biggest reasons why is that traders are using leverage to amplify returns by 200 times – where $1 controls $200 worth of foreign currency. The returns can be staggering.

For example, on the British “Black Wednesday” of September 16, 1992, George Soros made a single day’s forex profit of $1 billion by short selling the Great Britain Pound Sterling.

At the time, these kinds of profits were only available to large players. Read more…

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Excessive Executive Compensation: When is Too Much, Too Much?

June 8th, 2009 Dr. Scott Brown No comments

by Dr. Scott Brown, Education Director, Investment U
Monday, June 8, 2009: Issue #1014

With every disclosure I receive on executive compensation coming out of failing and defunct firms it makes me sick – as an investor and citizen alike. And I’m not the only one…

Many Americans have been outraged as the CEOs and other executives responsible for the financial crisis have pocketed millions of dollars in bonuses and golden parachutes.

And rightfully so.

The recent bailouts of banks, automakers and insurance companies has brought excessive executive compensation into the public eye. And the numbers are staggering. Read more…

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The CRB Index: What Commodities Can Tell Investors About Stocks

February 18th, 2009 Dr. Scott Brown No comments

by Dr. Scott Brown, Investment U Advisory Panelist
Wednesday, February 18, 2009: Issue #938

In 1933 and 1934, President Franklin D. Roosevelt was doing the same thing Obama is working to do today – reduce the corruption in our capital markets by increasing transparency and regulation.

Most investors know that the SEC and our key securities laws were enacted in those years…

Few know that in 1934, at the request of the U.S. Department of the Treasury, the Bureau of Labor Statistics began the computation of a daily commodity price index, using quotations for sensitive commodities.

The Commodities Research Bureau Index (the CRB Index) let’s you see what the commodity markets are doing, just like the S&P 500 does for stocks. Read more…

Investment U & The Oxford Club: Empowering Investors & Building Long-Lasting Wealth

February 17th, 2009 Dr. Scott Brown No comments

by Dr. Scott Brown, Investment U Advisory Panelist
Tuesday, February 17, 2009: Issue #937

As a professor, I am always amazed when I ask “core concept” finance questions to MBA students, only to find out they have no knowledge of it. If my intelligent and attentive finance students don’t get these fundamental principles, how do we expect an average investor to?

But that just scratches the surface…

My students didn’t understand how to extract stellar returns from insider buying, hot IPOs, risk arbitrage, value and international stocks. Again, if finance students need help to master the basics, then we have a lot of work to do.

It’s one of the reasons we created the Investment U course. And you’ll hear more about it in the coming weeks and months. It builds on the core moneymaking concepts behind The Oxford Clubs most successful services. Read more…

Warren Buffett’s Investment Model: Insider Trading Reveals Undervalued Stocks

February 12th, 2009 Dr. Scott Brown No comments

by Dr. Scott Brown, Investment U Advisory Panelist
Thursday, February 12, 2009: Issue #934

Almost four months ago, Warren Buffett famously wrote his endorsement of U.S. equities in his op-ed piece to The New York Times entitled “Buy American, I Am.” Since then, it’s dropped 11.4%. It’s hard even for an Oracle to help when people just don’t believe.

Warren Buffett’s investment model and purchase criteria are unbearably fuzzy to analysts since they can’t just go punch numbers from their database – no matter how big or expensive it is.

Don’t let anybody fool you into believing that value investing is based on any kind of ratio analysis, or that looking at one simple financial figure accurately defines an “undervalued” company. It’s just not that simple. Read more…