T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
441.1 | Best Business Publication | LMOPST::AUDIO::MCGREAL | | Wed Apr 07 1993 10:00 | 23 |
| I can't really speak for which is the best but I can speak for what I like.
I've had a subscription to Money for several years. I think the basic
information they provide such as "Fund Watch" for tracking the performance of
all categories of mutual funds, low interest credit cards, CD interest rates
etc. is useful. They also have good articles on a host of subjects from taxes
and 401K strategies to life insurance and estate planning.
The drawback of this magazine (an most others I suspect) is the info is
sometimes a little old. Such is the problem with when the research for an article
is done and when the magazine arrives at my door. The WSJ is a good supplement
for this problem. Also, there cover stories (as are other mags I've seen) seem
to be a bit sensational, such as "Ten best investments for '93" ect. Once you
filter out that garbage most of the reading is pretty good.
If your library has a good selection of magazines that they subscribe to you can
sample them and get a feel for which you like best. After you pick one
(to subscribe to) the library is a cheap way to follow the others that you
don't wish to pay for. That's what I do.
Hope this helps.
Pat
|
441.2 | Determine what info you need, then choose. | KYOA::BOYLE | Dirty Jobs Done Dirt Cheap | Wed Apr 07 1993 10:09 | 20 |
| Like .1, I have a personal favorite and use the library (and others) to
get at other publications. Each magazine is targetting a different
type of information.
I believe that Business Week is the best source of information
concerning companies that you want to invest in. Their analysis about
the strengths and weaknesses of companies is compared to similiar
companies within their industry.
Money is for general investing and money advice for individuals. it
gives more guidance about how to invest then analysis about what to
invest in.
Most magazines fall into either general money advice or specific
company advice.
For what it is worth,
Jack Boyle
|
441.3 | | VMSDEV::HAMMOND | Charlie Hammond -- ZKO3-04/S23 -- dtn 381-2684 | Wed Apr 07 1993 10:51 | 36 |
| I certainly agree that all of these publications offer something
to somebody -- else they wouldn't sell! Like the man said, to make
YOUR decision you must know what kind of informration and advice
YOU are seeking.
That said, I'll put in a plug for Barrons. Its more of a
"newspaper" (weekly) than a magazine, so its article tend to be
more current. It also has a very complete section of market data
-- stock, bond, mutual fund and futures prices, market averages
and other indicators. A 1-2 year stack of Barrons in your library
can be an excellent source of historical data.
I think I'll also plug U S News and Word Report. This is a weekly
magazine with general news. Although it is not specifically
oriented to financial news, it does contain financial news and
frequently has issues dedicated to financial market topics.
Now its confession time -- Part of the reason I like this
publications is familiarity. My father subscribed to these, so
I've been reading them more-or-less regularly for 25-30 years.
I've "grown accusstomed" to them, so they work better for me than
they might for you.
BTW -- It is very easy to spend many hundreds of dollars --
probably thousands! -- subscribing to every financial magazine on
the market. I strongly advise you to resist this temptation. Use
the resources of your nearest library to look at many publications
and then decide which ones you want to get for yourself.
Don't subscribe to more publications than you can keep up with.
You're better off thoroughly reading and understanding a few
periodicals than getting a confused hodge-podge of hit-or-miss
exposure to many. Initially subscribe for only 6-12 months -- no
more than a year. At renewal time ask yourself (1) "Do I read this
regularly?" and (2) "Do I find it useful?". A "no" answer to
either question means don't renew.
|
441.4 | Depends on what you want | WILBRY::DODGE | Defense wins championships | Wed Apr 07 1993 13:45 | 29 |
| Here is my vote for Forbes. I have had subscriptions to Money,
Venture, Forbes, and U.S. News & World Report for years. I let them
all expire except Forbes.
Money is a good magazine for beginners. It usually has articles around
financial planning, taxes, home budgets, college costs, etc. that focus
on how one or two families are dealing with these issues. The families
are often just like you and me, and really help to personalize how one
should deal with these things. Money is NOT a stock investor magazine.
You won't find company profiles, industry trends, market analysis, etc.
It is a good magazine to get an overall view of personal financial
planning. After a while I was ready to move on to something else.
The same subjects tend to come up year after year.
Forbes is heavy duty ! It comes out every two weeks and is generally
200 - 275 pages of meaty articles on companies, industry trends,
market analysis, and some general business coverage. They have monthly
columnists who cover stocks, bonds, mutual funds, contrarians, timers,
etc. For my money it is the best. It is not, however, light reading.
You have to really love business, competitive strategies, stock market
analysis.
Business Week is pretty good too. They cover many of the same things
but from a more "newsy" level. They will cover all the current events
in a reporting sort of way. Not the deep analysis of the event that
I see in Forbes. But still a good magazine.
Don
|
441.5 | Good stuff! | HYEND::T_HOLLAND | DV8! | Wed Apr 07 1993 13:57 | 8 |
| Good stuff! Appreciate your comments. I agree that what you're after
should determine which publication is best for you. I am interested in
exactly the kind of info that is being exchanged here ie - what does
each publication specialize in and who/what is it geared towards.
All other comments welcome - keep em comin'
Cheers,
Tim
|
441.6 | | AOSG::GILLETT | Candidate for DCU Board of Directors | Wed Apr 07 1993 16:22 | 39 |
| Here's what I read, and what I think of what I
read. Note that I follow way too much stuff here...I suffer
from permanent information overload:
Publication Comments
Money Got me up to speed...good fund
data...lightweight on stocks
Barrons My personal favorite...Alan Abelson's
commentary is worth the price of
admission. Proceed carefully, but the
interviews can be revealing and the
stock tips are plentiful.
Worth Worthless unless you think that
investing is for the beautiful
people. Peter Lynch's column is
interesting, but I won't renew.
Mutual Fund Forecaster Good sanity checking for mutual
fund investors. Also, they publish
a seasonality index for mutual
fund traders.
Investors Business Daily Like numbers a lot? They have many
on a daily basis. If you're a CANSLIM
devotee you can't live without this
paper. They profile different companies
everyday, with lots of charts and useful
data. They also provide rankings on
stocks in terms of relative strenght and
earnings per share.
Someone else mentioned that you can drop big bucks on investment news
and advice....tis true. It's also provisionally tax deductible if
it exceeds a certain percentage of your adjusted gross income.
./chris
|
441.7 | My vote for Financial World/Barron's | FREEBE::NEARY | Bob Neary | Wed Apr 07 1993 17:28 | 82 |
| My vote go for Barron's and Financial World.
Enough already said about Barron's. I'll give my 2 cents worth about FW.
First of all, I like it because not everyone reads it. Also, it comes biweekly.
I find that with Money magazine they are much too general since they are
writing for the masses.
Financial World will pick a few topics in each issue and go through them
completely. In addition, they have a few pages of charts and one page of
recommendations by 6 or 8 (I can't remember) professionals. About every 6 weeks
or so they have pages of tables on stocks or mutual funds.
One issue will have tables on all mutual funds...
the next issue will have all OTC stocks
the next issue will have all NYSE/Amex stocks
six weeks later same cycle ...
The info I find there I can't find as easily anywhere else.
They'll have:
Company name
Company business
Symbol
Recent price
52 wk range (high/low)
P/E
Book value
Cash flow/share
EPS
EPS growth rate 1 year
EPS growth rate 5 years
# of institutions holding the stock
# of shares held by institutions
FW rating (A-E)
etc. ... on 100's/1000's of stocks/mutual funds.
Using only this info I came up with the following recommendations to a
customer of mine in FNN's Investment challenge a few years ago. I used FW's
rating system along with a growth rate larger than the P/E ratio.
P.S.: he still teases me about not REALLY buying this list.
11/28/90 2/15/91 3/15/91
ADAPTEC 10 3/8 12 12 1/8
ADV. LOGIC 7 3/4 13 16
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ALIAS RESEARCH 14 1/2 19 22 1/2
APPLE 41 1/2
ARCHIVE 5 5/8 7 7 3/8
ASK 8
BORLAND 27 1/4 53 46 3/8
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CENTEL 30 1/2 35 1/8 32 5/8
CONNER PERIPH. 26 3/8 26 5/8 25 3/4
CYBERTEK 9 3/8 14 3/4 14 1/4
ENRON 57 3/8 55 7/8 55 1/8
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ENVIROSAFE 8 1/2 11 9 3/4
EXABYTE 12 7/8 20 1/2 19 1/2
GEN HOUSEWARES 10 3/4 13 3/8 14 1/8
INTELL. ELECT. 14 3/4 30 3/4 30 1/2
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
KN ENERGY 25 7/8 23 3/8 22 3/4
MARION MERRILL 32 3/4 37 1/2 38 1/2
METHOD 'A' 6 1/2 8 7/8 8
MICRO HEALTH 17 3/4 30 35 1/4
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ORACLE 8 1/2
PEPSI 29
PYRAMID 14 1/4 21 1/2 22 3/8
QUAKER STATE 9 5/8 11 7/8 12
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SAFEWAY 12 3/8 16 3/4 18 1/2
SANIFILL 22 1/2 29 5/8 31 1/2
SCHULMAN 29 1/4 39 5/8 41
SCI-MED LIFE 25 1/4 39 1/4 45 3/8
SILICON GRAPHICS 25 39 7/8 40 7/8
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SUN MICRO 19 5/8 29 1/2 32 5/8
...
Keep in mind that I knew almost nothing on most of these companies.
(which is why I didn't buy them for real.)
I only used the info available in FW. Check the prices now !
|
441.8 | | DSSDEV::PIEKOS | Zoo TV | Thu Apr 08 1993 09:42 | 10 |
| I'd second Financial World. They run a variety of interesting articles every
issue. For example, last month they looked at Mutual funds that would
best/worst survive a market setback. Another issue reviewed fund NAV gain
potential based on the holdings and predicted EPS of those companies. They
ranked a ton of funds (and one that I have got an A, and has gained nicely
since then). They also have a regular column devoted to companies, contrarians,
and sometimes short-selling. Interesting stuff. Oh, and the average
compensation of the readers of FW is something like $98K. Someday... :-)
John Piekos
|
441.9 | Big Salaries == Big Prices? | AOSG::GILLETT | Candidate for DCU Board of Directors | Mon Apr 12 1993 17:37 | 9 |
| Is the subscription price of "Financial World" consistent
with a $98K salary readership?
On the serious side, somebody have a phone # for them?
./chris
who thinks average salary per reader is a measure of snob appeal.
P.S. For the smiley impaired: :-) :-) :-)
|
441.10 | FW subscription $36/year | DABEAN::NEARY | Bob Neary | Mon Apr 12 1993 20:34 | 8 |
| 24 biweekly issues ( I know that's only 48 weeks but I'm looking at a
subscription card for FW which says late dec-early Jan issue and a
combined late Aug-early Sept issue = 1 year) - $36.00.
No 800 number I can see, but full of postage paid cards - go to Barnes
& Noble,etc pick up magazine and cards will fall out onto the floor -
pick one up. Or you can try 1-800-555-1212.
|
441.11 | | DSSDEV::PIEKOS | Zoo TV | Tue Apr 13 1993 09:12 | 5 |
| If you belong to AAII (see a few notes back) you can get a year subscription
to FW for around $23. They also offer similar specials for Money, Fortune,
Forbes, etc...
John Piekos
|
441.12 | Depends on what kind of information you're looking for.... | CADSYS::BOLIO::BENOIT | | Wed Apr 14 1993 09:35 | 29 |
| By I like 5-Star Investor published my Morningstar the best. My reason for this
is I only invest in Mutual Funds. Morningstar is one of the leaders in Mutual
Fund tracking, and publish a quality monthly. You don't need to subscribe to
Moringstar itself, but some famillarity with it is helpful (check it out at the
library). They monitor the Moringstar 500 (and the hall of fame closed fund
list) each month. The articles are all based on how to build a portfolio for
a wide range of personal situations. They have a feautre called portfolio
makeover each month. They take a letter describing a current portfolio, and
redesign it for the individual. They give you the thought process behind the
makeover (I find that these are great to save because a lot of the situations I
will also face, ie. retirement age investing, planning for college education,
etc.). They also will sell you a subset of the Moriningstar reports of just the
Morningstar 500. This months issue contained an interview with Peter Lynch, and
a portfolio analysis of the Meridian fund (the analysis is a regular feature).
It is 32 pages in length (which is about the amount of time I have in addition
to reading my local newspaper daily, and my daughter's Sesame Street magazine).
Sixteen pages are devoted to the 500 list. I find the wrap up article by Don
Phillips one of the most interesting pieces of the magazine. For example the
March issue intitled "The Knowledge Least Worth Having?; Top-down Trivia"
highlighted the focus in the media and by portfolio managers on macro economic
predictions. The article stated that the famous Elaine Garzarelli made some
macro economic predictions 1 year ago and was completely correct on all of them,
yet her portfolio trailed the S&P 500 by 6 points (things that make you go hmmm).
The article wrapped up with a quote from Peter Lynch. "An Investor who spends
12 minutes a year on macroeconomics wastes 10 minutes".
my 2 cents.
Michael
|
441.13 | | ASDG::MISTRY | | Wed Apr 14 1993 14:07 | 7 |
|
Re: -1
How much is it?
Kaizad
|
441.14 | 5 star | CADSYS::BOLIO::BENOIT | | Wed Apr 14 1993 14:09 | 3 |
| $65 a year...1-800-876-5005
/mtb
|
441.15 | | CPDW::ROSCH | | Wed Apr 14 1993 14:48 | 1 |
| Call and ask for a free copy - sample. No charge.
|
441.16 | Kiplinger's Personal Finance | DNEAST::STEVENS_JIM | | Mon Apr 26 1993 13:24 | 9 |
| Interesting. No one said anything about Kiplinger's...
For awhile, I subscribed to Money and Kiplinger's. Got bored with Money and I
found Kiplinger's better reading.
Kilpinger's seemed more to my taste in reading and has less adverstisements
than Money..
FWIW..Jim
|
441.17 | | SOLVIT::REDZIN::DCOX | | Mon Apr 26 1993 14:27 | 31 |
| just a caveat about Kiplingers.....
Every now and then they make a recommendation that piques my interest
but, after I have done some research, I find that either they had some
facts wrong, the article was misleading, and or the article was
in-complete.
In the last issue, they touted L. Roy Papp fund as a small, but good
performing, conservative, low cost fund well suited for their typical
readers. After reading the prospectus, I found that the expenses were
not sufficiently low to attract attention and you need $10K to invest
(Kiplingers articles are usually aimed at lower initial investing).
Reading their Annual Report shows that their major holding are
relatively neutral in terms of security (based upon Value Line
ratings).
In the same issue they rate COPLEY FUND as a high flyer. After reading
the prospectus you find that, in order to increase their yield, they
take advantage of semi-obscure tax codes and incorporate the fund.
However, public corporations who invest their assets (as opposed to
Mutual Funds) are not regulated (beyond corporation regulations) and
not insured. If you find comfort/security in knowing that your
investment has SOME fiscal regulation, this fund would cause you to
lose sleep.
So, I would caution notes that all of these publication are simply a
place to start looking.
As always, For What It's Worth.
Dave
|
441.18 | Smart Money | I18N::GLANTZ | | Tue Apr 27 1993 14:04 | 30 |
| I've tried Business Week, Forbes, Money, Financial World, Fortune, and
Kiplinger; and I have found them wanting in one way or another.
However, let me suggest a new one: Smart Money. This is published by the Wall
Street Journal, so it has the conciseness of that newspaper, plus a jaundiced
viewpoint which I favor.
The metric of value I use is the extent to which I cut out articles. By that
measure, the first four issues this year were gold mines.
In the latest issue (labelled "June", even though it arrived at my house in
Aprli), the cover article was about the search for the perfect set of
(open-end) mutual funds. They imposed only two criteria: (1) fund had to be
in existence at least 5 years, and (2) fund had to at least double the
performance of the S&P 500 over the last five years. Only two funds measured
up, so they had to lower the bar.
Version 2 of their screen had these criteria:
(1) Longevity -- in existence at least 5 years
(2) Profitability -- beat the S&P 500 by at least 40% over past 5 years
(3) Consistency -- no fluke year where >45% of 5-yr. gain occurred in 1 year
(4) Volatility -- no 3-month period where fund dropped >25%
(5) Star Search -- same lead manager over past 5 years
(6) Manageability -- no sudden spurt in size
(7) Availability -- fund still open to new accounts or not about to close
Only seven funds made it past these hurdles.
Full Disclosure Notice: maybe I like this magazine because three of my funds
made the list [but were eliminated by criterion (7)].
|
441.19 | | SSAG::SUSSWEIN | Ski for real, with a free heel | Tue Apr 27 1993 14:20 | 7 |
| RE: .18
>>>Only seven funds made it past these hurdles.
Can you give us the names of these 7 funds?
Steve
|
441.20 | The "Smart Money" Super-Star Mutual Funds | I18N::GLANTZ | | Wed Apr 28 1993 10:26 | 34 |
| Fidelity Advisor Equity: Growth Institutional
total 5-yr return: 224.7%
mgr: Bob Stansky, 37
mgrs's money in fund: none; until late 1992, closed to retail investors
Fidelity Contrafund
total 5-yr return: 223.3%
mgr: Will Danoff, 32
mgrs's money in fund: "all of my retirement savings"
Pasadena Growth
total 5-yr return: 206.4%
mgr: Roger Engemann, 52
mgrs's money in fund: largest shareholder, with $3M invested
Brandywine
total 5-yr return: 171.5%
mgr: Foster Friess, 53
mgrs's money in fund: with co-mgrs & employee profit-sharing plan, $20M
Meridian
total 5-yr return: 167.6%
mgr: Rick Aster, 53
mgrs's money in fund: family is largest shareholder, with $2M invested
IDEX II Growth
total 5-yr return: 178.0%
mgr: Tom Marsico, 38
mgrs's money in fund: none
Strong Discovery
total 5-yr return: 158.0%
mgr: Dick Strong, 51
mgrs's money in fund: "significant portion" of family's assets
|
441.21 | Brandywine | ANGLIN::LEHTINEN | Finnish & Foolish | Wed Apr 28 1993 11:04 | 4 |
|
I believe Brandywine has a $20,000 initial investment (?).
|
441.22 | The Full List | I18N::GLANTZ | | Wed Apr 28 1993 14:06 | 42 |
| Here is the list of winners (see .18 for criteria):
5-yr Perf Worst
Fund Rel to S&P 3-mo.
------------------------------------- ---------- ------
Fidelity Advisor Equity: Growth Inst. 1.99x -22.2%
Fidelity Contrafund 1.93 -13.3
Pasadena Growth 1.71 -25.0
Brandywine 1.55 -18.6
Meridian 1.52 -17.9
IDEX II Growth 1.47 -17.6
Strong Discovery 1.43 -12.3
And the runners-up (failed one criterion):
Vista Growth & Income 2.58 -13.8
Alger Small Capitalization 2.07 -22.4
Twentieth Century Ultra 1.99 -16.3
Janus Twenty 1.92 -17.7
Vista Capital Growth 1.88 -18.5
Skyline Special Equities 1.87 -24.4
Thomson Opportunity B 1.79 -19.6
Berger 100 1.74 -20.8
Hartwell Emerging Growth 1.67 -23.3
FAM Value 1.67 -17.8
Founders Frontier 1.64 -18.1
Robertson-Stephens Emerging Growth 1.62 -21.7
ABT Emerging Growth 1.61 -19.9
Transamerica Special Emerging Growth 1.57 -23.1
Gabelli Growth 1.52 -11.5
Fidelity Growth Company 1.49 -20.9
Janus Venture 1.47 -14.8
Monetta 1.45 -20.4
Janus 1.43 -13.9
Oppenheimer Discovery 1.43 -17.1
Equitable Growth Back-Load 1.41 -23.9
Legg-Mason Special Investment 1.41 -16.5
AIM Value (c) 1.40 -20.1
S&P 500 1.00x -13.8%
|
441.23 | | CADSYS::BOLIO::BENOIT | | Wed Apr 28 1993 14:19 | 12 |
| Gee mine only failed in two categories...
5yr vs sp worst 3-mon
CGM Captial Development 3.40x -23.19
it's closed, and 1991 at 99.08% return it blew the "fluke" test....of course
having been in the fund for over ten years Mr. Heebner is not considered a fluke
by my standards.
/mtb
|
441.24 | Another vote for Smart Money | DABEAN::NEARY | Bob Neary | Wed Apr 28 1993 22:20 | 6 |
| re .18
I had forgotten about SMART MONEY. I second it's nomination.
No charts etc for the technicians out there,but good,relevant reading
nonetheless.
|
441.25 | | DSSDEV::PIEKOS | Zoo TV | Thu Apr 29 1993 09:10 | 5 |
| The latest issue of Financial World has a nice spread of mutual fund rankings
(similar to their stock ranking tables). I find this type of info much more
valuable than that of Money...
John Piekos
|
441.26 | Where and how much? | SOLVIT::CHEN | | Thu Apr 29 1993 09:56 | 6 |
| Can someone please post the phone # for Smart Money and tell us how
much it costs?
Thanks,
Mike
|
441.27 | | SUBWAY::SAMBAMURTY | Raja | Thu Apr 29 1993 15:31 | 4 |
| .26
It costs about $2.50 (atleast in the NY metro area) and should be
available in most newspaper/book stores
|
441.28 | (800) number for "Smart Money" | I18N::GLANTZ | | Fri Apr 30 1993 10:29 | 7 |
| Re .26:
The (800) number for "Smart Money" is 444-4204.
Or you can mail your subscription to P.O. Box 7538, Red Oak IA 51592.
Introductory rates are 6 issues for $14.97, 12 issues for $29.94.
|
441.29 | | SOLVIT::CHEN | | Fri Apr 30 1993 10:59 | 3 |
| re: .27 & .28
Thanks for the info.!
|
441.30 | BW and Economist | ESGWST::HALEY | become a wasp and hornet | Fri May 21 1993 20:50 | 20 |
|
Well, I'll throw in my $.02 and support The Economist and Business Week. I
find that most of my investment direction is set by larger trends and these
help me follow them. The Economist is great for seeing things in a more
internatinal flavor, is available every week at many newstands and replaces
my need for the fluff newsweeklies like Time, US News and World Report and
Newsweek.
Business Week makes it a lot easier to keep up with the short term business
trends for reviewing potentials. It augments some of the world news I
can't seem to find in the other weeklies. I found that I can't keep up
with more than 2 weekly mags and these cover most of what I need when added
to a daily paper. As a sales rep this is also a mag that is widely read by
my customers and helps me keep up on what normal people read.
I obviously don't trade futures or any other more advanced securities and
don't need the more detailed information available in Barron's and some of
the others that are more suitable for others.
Matt
|