Quantcast
Channel: DailyFinance.com
Viewing all 9760 articles
Browse latest View live

Survey: Nearly 9 in 10 Adults Now Have Health Insurance

$
0
0

Filed under: , , ,

Health Overhaul Privacy
Don Ryan/AP
By RICARDO ALONSO-ZALDIVAR

WASHINGTON -- Underlining a change across the nation, nearly 9 out of 10 adults now say they have health insurance, according to an extensive survey released Monday.

As recently as 2013, slightly more than 8 out of 10 had coverage.

Whether the new number from the Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index turns out to be a high-water mark for President Barack Obama's health care law, or a milestone on the path toward his goal of getting virtually all U.S. residents covered, remains to be seen.

The law's future is still up in the air, and will turn on factors ranging from an upcoming Supreme Court decision on consumer subsidies to actions by Republican leaders in states opposed to Medicaid expansion.

The Gallup-Healthways survey found that the share of adults who lack insurance dropped to 11.9 percent for the first three months of this year, the lowest level since that survey began its tracking in 2008. The latest update overlaps with the period when the health law's second sign-up season was winding down.

Coverage is increasing; there is no question about it.

Coverage gains from 2014-2015 translate to about 3.6 million fewer adults uninsured since the fall, before open enrollment got under way, according to Gallup.

"The Affordable Care Act had three major objectives: increase coverage, slow the rate of increase in costs and improve health," said Dan Witters, research director for the poll. "The first one is clearly a win. Coverage is increasing; there is no question about it."

On balance, an estimated 14.75 million adults have gained coverage since the fall of 2013, when the law's first open enrollment season was about to begin, according to Gallup.

"A big outstanding question is what will happen over the next couple of years," said Larry Levitt, a health insurance expert with the nonpartisan Kaiser Family Foundation. "To meet expectations, enrollment has to continue to grow and push the number of uninsured down."

HEALTH INSURANCE
The Gallup-Healthways survey is closely followed because it combines the depth of government-sponsored research with the timeliness of media polls. Pollsters interview 500 people a day, nearly every day of the year. One of the questions they ask is whether people have health insurance.

The health care law offers subsidized private insurance for people who don't have access to job-based coverage, combined with an expansion of Medicaid aimed at low-income adults in states that accept it. Big states like Florida and Texas are among those refusing to expand Medicaid.

The law requires nearly all Americans to have coverage, either through an employer, a government program, or by purchasing their own plan. Those remaining uninsured risk fines. It also provides subsidies to help low- to moderate-income people buy their own insurance.

Comparing the most recent sign-up period with the first open enrollment season, the survey found that the uninsured rate declined at a slightly slower pace this time around. In the first three months of this year, the uninsured rate fell by 1 percentage point. Over the same period last year there was a 1.5 percentage-point decline.

From government officials to local volunteers, many people involved with the health care law expected some kind of second-year slowdown. Open enrollment season was shorter, and those who had remained uninsured were seen as more skeptical about the value of coverage.

The survey also found:
  • Hispanics saw the biggest coverage gains of any ethnic or racial group. The uninsured rate dropped 8.3 points among Latinos since the end of 2013. Even so, Hispanics are still more likely to be uninsured. "At a time when Republicans are very keenly trying to court the Hispanic vote, a large chunk of Hispanics are gaining insurance via the Affordable Care Act," Witters said.
  • Recent gains in coverage have benefited people up and down the income ladder. But the most notable improvement has been among those making less than $36,000 a year, a group that traditionally struggled to get and keep health insurance. Their uninsured rate dropped 8.7 points since the end of 2013.
  • Although the economic recovery is likely to be contributing to coverage gains, the uninsured rate is now significantly lower than it was in early 2008, before the recession. That suggests that the gains in coverage are due to more than an improving economy.
Five years after its passage, the biggest question now for Obama's health care law is a Supreme Court challenge.

Opponents of the law argue that its literal language only allows the government to subsidize premiums in states that set up their own online insurance markets. Most haven't done so, defaulting to the federal HealthCare.gov.

Supporters say that while some provisions may be confusing when read in isolation, the intent of Congress was to help consumers in every state pay their premiums. A decision in that case is expected by late June.

The survey results were based on landline and cellphone interviews conducted from Jan. 2 to March 31 with a random sample of 43,575 adults ages 18 and older. For results based on the total sample, the margin of sampling error is plus or minus 1 percentage point.

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments


The 20 Best-Paying Jobs

$
0
0

Filed under: , ,

businessman climbing a ladder...
Shutterstock

What motto do you follow when it comes to your career? Do what you love? Get a job that makes you happy? Follow your passion? Or maybe you're old-fashioned and go for pursuing a job that makes loads of money.

If you tend to lean toward the latter, you've come to the right place, as U.S. News & World Report just released their 2015 list of the best-paying jobs. These are the 20 highest-paying careers from their Best Jobs list, with all of them having average and median salaries over a cool $80,000. They are also jobs that are expected to see massive upticks in hiring over the next decade.

So check out the list below, and see if your job, or your dream job, made the cut.

1. Physician. No surprise here, there's a reason your parents dreamed of you becoming a doctor. Physician ranked as U.S. News & World Report's Best Paying Job. In 2013, a general internist made a median salary of $186,850 and an average salary of $188,440, but be prepared for a long training period before you start making six-figures (four years of an undergraduate program, four years of medical school and up to eight years of an internship and residency).
> Find a job as a physician

2. Dentist. Treating gingivitis, tooth decay, and cavities are all specialized skills which dentists are well-payed for. In 2013, they earned a median salary of $146,340 and an average salary of $164,570.
> Find a job as a dentist

3. Marketing Manager. Marketing managers spin TV commercials and print advertisements to convince you to buy a product and work to promote products to specific demographics. In the age of social media, they're probably also working to generate buzz on the company Twitter and Facebook pages, in addition to traditional advertising campaigns. All this adds up to a median salary of $123,220 and an average salary of $133,700.
> Find a job as a Marketing Manager

4. IT Manager. In today's technology-driven world, there are probably few people more valuable at a company than a good IT manager. He or she often devises a security strategy, upgrades existing software or hardware, and coordinates workflows. Oh, and it's also always IT managers and their teams who get yelled at when any office technology is down. That alone makes their median salary of $123,950 and average salary of $132,570 sound justified.
> Find a job as an IT Manager

5. Lawyer. There are many types of law and an equally diverse spectrum of salaries for those who practice it. Still, lawyers earned a median salary of $114,300 and an average salary of $131,990 in 2013.
> Find a job as a lawyer

6. Financial Manager. Another essential person for any organization is a competent financial manager. If you're responsible for all company financial matters, devising strategies to maximize profits and minimize losses, and working long hours crunching numbers, you're probably getting well-paid yourself. Financial managers earned a median salary of $112,700 and an average salary of $126,600 in 2013.
> Find a job as a Financial Manager

7. Sales Manager. Sales managers manage the employees who are doing the cold calls or working the display room floors. They also analyze trends, set goals and strategies, and work with marketing and other departments. In 2013, sales managers earned a median salary of $108,540 and an average salary of $123,150.
> Find a job as a Sales Manager

8. Pharmacist. Pharmacists are entrusted with handling people's prescriptions, and therefore, their medical conditions, recovery, and general well-being. Thankfully, they are well-compensated with a median salary of $119,280 and an average salary of $116,500 in 2013.
> Find a job as a pharmacist

9. Business Operations Manager. Business operations managers hire people, negotiate contracts, and address budget matters. They have to truly be a leader, able to manage multiple departments and large staffs. For all this, they also have one of the highest paying occupations, with a median salary of $96,430 and an average salary of $116,090.
> Find a job as Business Operations Manager

10. Art Director. If you're more of the stylish glasses-wearing creative type, and some of the previously listed jobs seem too stuffy for you, never fear, art director came in at #10. Art directors earned a median salary of $83,000 and an average salary of $96,650. While you won't be a starving artist, don't expect to just daydream and be creative all day. Art directors often also juggle marketing, business decisions, and negotiating with freelancers, in addition to their more aesthetic duties.
> Find a job as an Art Director

Here were the jobs that rounded out the list at Nos. 11-20, as well as their median and average salaries.

11. Software Developer
Median salary: $92,660 Average salary: $96,260

12 .Veterinarian
Median salary: $86,640 ​Average salary: $96,140

13. Nurse Practitioner
Median salary: $92,670 ​Average salary: $95,070

14. Physician Assistant
Median salary: $92,970 ​Average salary: $94,350

15. Information Security Analyst
Median salary: $88,590 ​Average salary: $91,210

16. Mechanical Engineer
Median salary: $82,100 ​Average salary: $85,930

17. Civil Engineer
Median salary: $80,770 ​Average salary: $85,640

18. Computer Systems Analyst
Median salary: $81,190 ​Average salary: $85,320

19. Construction Manager
Median salary: $92,700 ​Average salary: $84,410

20. Physical Therapist
Median salary: $81,030 ​Average salary: $82,180

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

Gas Prices Continue to Fall Despite Rise in Crude Prices

$
0
0

Filed under: , , , ,

Summer Gasoline Prices
Chuck Burton/AP
CAMARILLO, Calif. -- The average national price of a regular gallon of gasoline continues to drop.

Industry analyst Trilby Lundberg said Sunday that the price of a regular gallon of gas dropped 5 cents in the past three weeks to $2.45 a gallon.

Lundberg says the drop came despite a rise in crude oil prices. She says retailers and refiners dropped prices to chase demand from U.S. drivers.

The San Francisco Bay Area had the most expensive gas at $3.13 a gallon among cities surveyed in the Lower 48 states. Charleston, South Carolina, had the cheapest at $2.10.

The average national price for midgrade gas was $2.66 and $2.83 for premium. Diesel dropped about 8 cents to $2.90.

The average price for a regular gallon of gas is down $1.16 from last year.

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

Last Week's Biggest Stock Movers: Mylan, Ocular Therapeutix

$
0
0

Filed under: , , , ,

The headquarters of Mylan Laboratories Inc., in Canonsburg, Pennsylvania.
Kristoffer Tripplaar/Alamy
Plenty of stocks go up and down in any given week. The gainers inspire us to keep investing. The decliners keep greed in check while reminding us about the risks of the equity markets.

Let's go over some of last week's best and worst performers.

Mylan (MYL) -- Up 21 percent last week

Getting hooked up was the secret to Mylan's success. The generic drug maker offered to buy rival Perrigo (PRGO) in a deal valued at roughly $29 billion. It's often just the company being acquired at a premium that moves higher, but the market likes the synergy that it sees here.

Adding Perrigo to Mylan's arsenal would create a company generating revenue north of $15 billion this year. It also would help diversify Mylan's generic pharmaceuticals stronghold, since Perrigo is also a big player in other niches, including animal health and infant formula.

General Electric (GE) -- Up 14 percent last week

GE shot higher on Friday after announcing that it's looking to unload its financial and real estate businesses in the next two years. This would leave the iconic conglomerate with just its industrial businesses, but the market's mesmerized with what GE should be able to fetch in unloading its other operations.

Taser International (TASR) -- Up 12 percent last week

Taser doesn't just make its namesake stun guns. It's also the company behind the Axon wearable cameras that are being worn by a growing number of police forces, and that's a market that once again heated up after footage was released of a South Carolina man who was fatally shot by an officer while fleeing from an altercation.

It's not just stateside police forces snapping up Axon cameras to make sure that any controversial incidents are recorded. Taser announced on Thursday that London was buying 178 of the Axon cameras, the company's first significant order in the United Kingdom.

Ocular Therapeutix (OCUL) -- Down 34 percent last week

Last week's biggest decliner was Ocular Therapeutix, which took a hit after announcing disappointing test results for a potential treatment for post-surgical ocular inflammation and pain. The late-stage trial was reasonably successful on the pain-tackling front, but its efficacy fell short in dealing with inflammation.

This is the "feast or famine" nature of upstarts. Stocks will be volatile for young biotech companies with a lot riding on a promising drug receiving regulatory approval to hit the market.

Extreme Networks (EXTR) -- Down 23 percent last week

Shares of the California-based provider of networking solutions crashed on Friday after it posted ugly preliminary quarterly results. Extreme Networks warned that revenue will fall well short of its earlier guidance. It will also be posting a larger deficit than its original forecast.

Extreme Networks blames the shortfall on customers in the higher-education market as well as stadium and venue deals pushing out orders after the end of the March quarter. This wouldn't be a problem if those sales materialize in the following quarter, but the market tends to be skeptical when key accounts are holding back on their spending.

Zynga (ZNGA) -- Down 10 percent last week

The company that put social gaming on the map with "FarmVille" and "Mafia Wars" took another step down last week after announcing that founder Mark Pincus would be replacing Don Matrrick as CEO. Mattrick replaced Pincus two years ago, and the market cheered the news at the time. Mattrick was heading up Microsoft's (MSFT) Xbox division, and that seemed like the right gaming pedigree to take Zynga to the next level.

Unfortuntely for Zynga, bookings never recovered from their 2012 peak. Folks on smartphones and social networking sites tend to tire quickly of games, forcing companies to stay on top by introducing new diversions. Perpetual reinvention isn't easy, and Zynga buckled. Naturally, the market isn't happy to see its former CEO come back, though Zynga was in a much better place when he left.

Motley Fool contributor Rick Munarriz has no position in any stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool owns shares of General Electric Company. Try any of our Foolish newsletter services free for 30 days. Check out our free report on one great stock to buy for 2015 and beyond.

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

Report Gives U.S. Airlines Lower Marks Across the Board

$
0
0

Filed under: , , , ,

Airline Quality
Seth Wenig/APAir travelers await their luggage at LaGuardia Airport in New York.
By DAVID KOENIG

DALLAS -- Think flying is getting worse? A pair of university researchers who track the airline business say it's a fact.

More flights are late, more bags are getting lost, and customers are lodging more complaints about U.S. airlines, government data shows. Dean Headley, a marketing professor at Wichita State and one of the co-authors of the annual report being released Monday, said passengers already know that air travel is getting worse. "We just got the numbers to prove it."

For the third straight year, Virgin America led the rankings. The niche airline with a limited route network was followed by Hawaiian Airlines and Delta Air Lines.

Among other findings in the report:
  • Lateness: The percentage of flights that arrived on time fell to 76.2 percent last year from 78.4 percent in 2013.
    Best: Hawaiian Airlines.
    Worst: Envoy Air, which operates most American Eagle flights.
  • Lost Bags: The rate of lost, stolen or delayed bags rose 13 percent in 2014.
    Best: Virgin America.
    Worst: Envoy. Airlines lose one bag for every 275 or so passengers, but at Envoy, the rate is one lost bag for every 110 passengers, according to government figures.
  • Overbooking: The rate of passengers getting bumped from flights rose 3 percent.
    Best: Virgin America.
    Worst: a tie, between SkyWest and its ExpressJet subsidiary.
  • Complaints: Consumer complaints to the government jumped 22 percent in 2014.
    Best: Alaska Airlines.
    Worst: Frontier.
Regional carriers, which operate flights under names such as American Eagle, United Express and Delta Connection, tend to earn the worst marks. They fly smaller planes, so when airlines are forced to cut flights due to bad weather, they ground the regionals first to inconvenience fewer passengers. Envoy Air, which operates most American Eagle flights, finished last in the overall rankings.

They have put the same number of people in fewer airplanes. Anytime the system ramps up, it goes haywire.

But the picture was bleak at the four biggest U.S. airlines too. On-time performance fell and complaint rates rose at American, United, Delta and Southwest. The researchers blamed consolidation through mergers, which has reduced competition.

Headley said airlines performed better in the years after 2001, when travel demand fell and planes were less crowded. Airlines were also losing money. They returned to profitability when the airlines left after mergers limited flights to keep fares up. The average plane is now more than 80 percent full at most airlines, and many flights are oversold.

"They have put the same number of people in fewer airplanes," Headley said in an interview. "Anytime the system ramps up, it goes haywire."

Airlines are ordering new planes and making other investments that they promise will lead to better service. Many of the biggest improvements are targeted at the airlines' most valued customers -- those in first-class and business-class sections.

The annual report is now in its 25th year. Headley and Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University professor Brent Bowen use information that the airlines submit to the U.S. Department of Transportation.

Here are the rankings, with 2013 rank in parentheses:
  1. Virgin America (1)
  2. Hawaiian Airlines (3)
  3. Delta Air Lines (4)
  4. JetBlue Airways (2)
  5. Alaska Airlines (5)
  6. Southwest Airlines (8)
  7. American Airlines (9)
  8. Frontier Airlines (11)
  9. United Airlines (12)
  10. SkyWest (14)
  11. ExpressJet (13)
  12. Envoy Air (15)
*Figures for Southwest include AirTran Airways, which stopped flying as a separate airline in December 2014. Figures for American include its US Airways subsidiary.

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

'Game of Thrones' Enters New Realm: Most-Pirated TV Show

$
0
0

Filed under: , ,

Watching
Ian Dagnall/Alamy
By Nyshka Chandran

HBO's medieval fantasy drama "Game of Thrones" has gained a cult-like following since first airing four years ago, and now the network is paying a price for that popularity.

"Game of Thrones" is the most-pirated television show in 2015, research shows, as new episodes were leaked over the weekend ahead of Sunday's official fifth season debut. Episodes from the first four seasons of "Game of Thrones" were downloaded over 7 million times worldwide from Feb. 5 through April 6 this year, anti-piracy firm Irdeto said -- a 45 percent increase from 2014.

Irdeto's findings come as the first four episodes from the show's new season emerged on BitTorrent sites Saturday. Within 24 hours, the episodes were downloaded well over a million times worldwide, according to several media reports. The leak dealt a blow to HBO's plan to simultaneously broadcast the first episode across 170 countries on Sunday evening Eastern time. In a statement, HBO said the leaked episodes originated from a group approved to receive them, adding that it's actively assessing how the breach occurred.

Piracy Is a Growing Concern

In the past, Time Warner, the owner of the HBO network, hasn't expressed worry about piracy. Last year, CEO Jeff Bewkes was quoted as saying the show's skyrocketing downloads were "better than an Emmy." Despite its negative impact on a cable company's bottom line, piracy can be interpreted as a positive factor in terms of high audience engagement.

But as downloads continue to spike, Irdeto said that companies are becoming more concerned. "It's often said that piracy is good marketing, but the mindset is shifting toward offering a compelling legal alternative like HBO Now to start converting pirates into paying customers," said Rory O'Connor, vice president, services, at Irdeto.

HBO Now is a new streaming service targeted for consumers without a cable subscription. Joining the ranks of Netflix and Hulu, the product is an expansion of HBO's cable business, CEO Richard Plepler told CNBC last month.

Hollywood recently upped its battle against online piracy. Earlier this month, a U.S. Federal Court ordered Australian internet service companies to provide names of users who illegally downloaded the film Dallas Buyers Club. Developing countries like Brazil and India are increasingly contributing to the rise in piracy, Irdeto noted, as broadband penetration improves.

The second most pirated show of 2015 was "The Walking Dead" with 5.7 million downloads from Feb. 5 through April 6, followed by "Breaking Bad" (3.8 million), "Vikings" (3.4 million) and "House of Cards" (2.7 million).

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

Budget Deficit Expanded Slightly in Fiscal First Half

$
0
0

Filed under: , , , ,

Budget Deficit
J. Scott Applewhite/APTreasury Secretary Jacob Lew
By MARTIN CRUTSINGER

WASHINGTON -- The deficit through the first half of the budget year ran slightly above last year's pace, with the March imbalance up $16 billion over a year ago.

The Treasury Department said Monday that the March deficit came to $52.9 billion compared to a deficit of $36.9 billion in March 2014. Through the first six months of the budget year, the deficit totaled $439.5 billion, 6.3 percent higher than last year's six-month deficit of $413.3 billion.

The Congressional Budget Office is forecasting a full-year deficit of $486 billion, roughly on par with 2014's deficit of $483.4 billion.

Congress returned Monday from a two-week recess facing what is expected to be months of wrangling between Republicans and Democrats over competing budget plans.

The latest budget report showed that government revenues over the last six months totaled $1.42 trillion, up 7.3 percent from a year ago. Government spending over the same period totaled $1.86 trillion, an increase of 7.1 percent over the previous year. Spending on Medicare rose 8 percent, and spending on Medicaid shot up 23 percent.

The 2014 deficit was down from $680.2 billion in 2013. Before 2013, the U.S. had recorded four straight years of annual deficits above $1 trillion, reflecting the impact of a severe financial crisis and the worst recession since the Great Depression of the 1930s.

President Barack Obama in February unveiled a budget proposal for 2016 -- his final full year in office -- that seeks authorization from Congress to spend $4 trillion next year. It projects a 2016 deficit of $474 billion.

Higher Taxes and Tax Breaks

Obama's spending plan would raise $2 trillion in higher taxes over the next decade from the wealthy, corporations and smokers while granting tax breaks to low-income and middle-income families. It would boost spending on domestic programs such as increased road construction and a proposal to provide a free community college education to students who qualify.

Republicans have attacked Obama's proposals for the tax increases and a failure to ever reach balance. Last month, they pushed through the House and Senate broadly similar measures that claim to erase the deficit entirely over the next decade.

The GOP proposals would trim deficits by $5 trillion without raising taxes but with sharp reductions in health care and other government benefit programs. But Democrats contend that the GOP proposals rely heavily on accounting gimmicks.

Passage of the GOP measures sets the stage for months of wrangling with the administration over a final spending plan for the budget year that begins Oct. 1. Congress will also face a fall deadline for raising the government's borrowing limit.

Republican leaders have said they do not want a repeat of the partial government shutdown that occurred in October 2013 or the 2011 standoff over raising the debt ceiling that triggered the first-ever downgrade of the federal government's AAA credit rating.

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

Market Wrap: Stocks End Lower as Earnings Worries Deepen

$
0
0

Filed under: , , , ,

Dow Down Nearly 300 Points On Weak Economic Data
Andrew Burton/Getty Images
By Caroline Valetkevitch

NEW YORK -- U.S. stocks fell Monday as fears increased that the strong dollar and lower oil prices will hurt U.S. first-quarter earnings.

Nine of the 10 S&P 500 sectors fell, led by a 1.1 percent decline in S&P industrials. Shares of General Electric (GE) dropped 3.1 percent to $27.63 after rallying Friday, when it said there was potential to return more than $90 billion to investors through 2018. Shares of 3M (MMM) were down 0.7 percent at $165.84.

The dollar was last up 0.1 percent against a basket of major currencies after hitting a peak of 99.99, its highest in four weeks. A stronger dollar tends to hurt profits for U.S. multinationals. U.S. crude oil edged higher but sharp losses since last year have weighed on energy companies' results.

We're all waiting on earnings, which are going to be coming fast and furious as we move through the week.

Corporate earnings kick into high gear this week. Estimates for first-quarter S&P 500 results have fallen sharply since Jan. 1, with earnings for the period expected to have declined 2.9 percent from a year ago, Thomson Reuters data showed.

"We're all waiting on earnings, which are going to be coming fast and furious as we move through the week. I think there is some trepidation about what the earnings announcements are going to look like and so investors are cautious," said John Carey, portfolio manager at Pioneer Investment Management in Boston, which has about $220 billion in assets under management.

"Most people are thinking earnings are going to be weak due the strong dollar and lower oil prices and sluggish consumer spending due to the winter weather. But we'll see. I'm sure there'll be some positive surprises as well."

Earnings Season

Among key companies expected to report this week are GE, Intel (INTC) and Johnson & Johnson (JNJ).

The Dow Jones industrial average (^DJI) fell 80.61 points, or 0.45 percent, to 17,977.04, the Standard & Poor's 500 index (^GSPC) lost 9.63 points, or 0.46 percent, to 2,092.43 and the Nasdaq composite (^IXIC) dropped 7.73 points, or 0.15 percent, to 4,988.25.

The Nasdaq briefly traded above 5,000 and came within 110 points of its all-time intraday high.

Apple (AAPL) shares slipped 0.2 percent to $126.85, reversing earlier gains that followed reports the Apple Watch may have received about a million orders in its debut.

Netflix (NFLX) shares rose 4.4 percent at $474.68. The video streaming company said Friday it was seeking to increase its share authorization by nearly 30 times as a possible first step towards a stock split.

Builders FirstSource (BLDR) shares jumped 67.7 percent to $11.57. The supplier of residential building products said it would buy privately held ProBuild Holdings for $1.63 billion in cash.

NYSE decliners outnumbered advancers 1,902 to 1,144, for a 1.66-to-1 ratio; on the Nasdaq, 1,408 issues fell and 1,309 advanced, for a 1.08-to-1 ratio.

The S&P 500 posted 24 new 52-week highs and no new lows; the Nasdaq composite recorded 104 new highs and 24 new lows.

About 5.4 billion shares changed hands on U.S. exchanges, below the 6 billion daily average for the last five sessions, according to BATS Global Markets.

-With additional reporting by Tanya Agrawal.

What to watch Tuesday:
  • At 8:30 a.m. Eastern time, the Labor Department releases the Producer Price Index for March, and the Commerce Department releases retail sales data for March.
  • The Commerce Department releases business inventories for February at 10 a.m.
These selected companies are scheduled to release quarterly financial results:
  • CSX (CSX)
  • Fastenal (FAST)
  • Intel (INTC)
  • JPMorgan Chase (JPM)
  • Johnson & Johnson (JNJ)
  • Wells Fargo (WFC)

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments


Ask Stacy: Are Market-Linked CDs a Good Investment?

$
0
0

Filed under: , , ,

Bank manager helping couple Creative image #:  75404708  License type:  Royalty-free  Photographer:  Image Source Release inform
Getty Images
By Stacy Johnson

With interest rates on savings earning practically nothing, it's little wonder I often field questions like this: "What do you suggest for people with a lot of cash which is now in a money market and not earning much of anything, but who want something completely safe with low risk but gets a better interest rate?" Or this: "Is there anything I can put my money in that is very low risk but better than the nothing that I get now?"

Guaranteed savings accounts are going through one of the worst interest droughts in history. Like refugees from the Dust Bowl, savers no longer able to scratch enough interest from their parched savings are being forced to wander in search of decent returns.

We've recently offered some potential solutions, including collectibles, peer lending and dividend-paying stocks. But none are free from either risk or hassle. What's a saver to do? If you're unwilling to take risk, then your only option is to wait for higher rates, which may come sooner than you think. But what should you avoid while you wait?

Stupid Investment Tricks

David Letterman's Stupid Pet Tricks was a funny franchise that ran for 30 years. Wall Street's stupid investment tricks have been going on longer, and they aren't funny at all. Case in point? Equity or market-indexed CDs.

My father-in-law went to the bank the other day to roll over a five-year CD within his retirement account. When he understandably balked at the minuscule rate he was expected to accept, he was introduced to an in-house, commission-based financial adviser. The adviser suggested a no-lose proposition: an FDIC-insured CD that also offered the potential for extra interest, courtesy of the stock market.

He forwarded the info. My first impression: This investment is as silly as a dog that says "Obama" or one that can hold a glass and drink from it. To understand why, take a look at some of the terms of this five-year CD:
  • Minimum rate: 0.75 percent.
  • Maximum rate: 5 percent.
  • Basket of stocks the returns are tied to: Apple (AAPL), Coke (KO), IBM (IBM), Merck (MRK) and Verizon (VZ).
  • How interest is determined: Every year on the anniversary date, if all five stocks are higher than they were on the inception date, you earn 5 percent. If even one is lower, however, you earn 0.75 percent.
These rates don't compound. In other words, you earn interest only on your original investment. If you invest $1,000 and happen to earn 5 percent, or $50, after year one, your investment is worth $1,050. But if you earn 5 percent the next year, it's only paid on the original $1,000, not $1,050. In addition, while you can cash out a traditional CD early and typically be penalized only interest, cash this CD early and you can lose principal.

After looking it over, here's the response I sent to my father-in-law: "In the very limited way you intend to use it, I guess it's OK. But barely. Salient points:
  • "Expect to earn 0.75 percent rather than 5 percent. That's the most likely scenario, because all five stocks have to be up on the anniversary date to earn the higher rate. Those odds aren't good, even in a bull market, and this one is getting long in the tooth.
  • "You're most likely going to have to hold it for the entire five-year term in order to get your principal. So be certain you'll have the liquidity elsewhere in your IRA to meet any cash requirements, such as required minimum IRA distributions.
"Since capital preservation is the primary goal and this product, if held to maturity, will at least accomplish that goal, I guess it's OK. But if you're dealing with a lot of money, I'd encourage you to consider other options. For example, look at CD search engines, and you can find five-year CD rates around 2 percent. That's a sure thing that at least offers limited liquidity. Better yet, bite the bullet, take out a shorter term CD and wait for rates to rise."

Why Do They Do This?

In my opinion, this investment, like many pushed by commissioned Wall-Streeters, is just one of many stupid investment tricks offering more sizzle than steak.

Visit the cleaning products aisle in your local supermarket, and you'll find literally hundreds of boxes, bottles, pods, wipes and packages of what boils down to soap. The packaging screams things like "NEW!", "IMPROVED!" and the ever popular "NEW AND IMPROVED!" But how many meaningful improvements can really be made to cleaning products?

Because they can't materially alter their products, the easiest option to goose sales is to simply repackage what they already offer and call it new.

Wall Street's no different. When it comes to investments, boil it down, and you can either be an owner (stocks) or a loaner (bonds, CDs, etc.). That's about it. Since they can't materially alter their products, the easiest option to goose sales is to simply repackage what they already offer and call it new. This is how stupid investment tricks are born.

Other Opinions on Market-Based CDs

From an FDIC-issued consumer alert of Market-Linked CDs: "While some of these market-linked products might be right for some consumers, there are definitely potential risks and other issues to consider before investing."

From a Forbes article called Equity Linked CDs: More Garbage Wall Street Wants to Feed You: "Are equity linked CDs a good deal? Perhaps for some investors. But, reviewing this offering reminded me of those words of wisdom that my mother used to whisper as she bounced me on her knee: 'Son, there ain't no such thing as a free lunch.'"

You can ask a question simply by hitting "reply" to our email newsletter. If you're not subscribed, fix that right now by clicking here. The questions I'm likeliest to answer are those that will interest other readers. In other words, don't ask for super-specific advice that applies only to you. And if I don't get to your question, promise not to hate me. I do my best, but I get way more questions than I have time to answer.

Stacy Johnson founded Money Talks News in 1991. He earned a CPA (currently inactive) and also earned licenses in stocks, commodities, options principal, mutual funds, life insurance, securities supervisor and real estate. Got some time to kill? You can learn more about him here. Like this article? Sign up for our newsletter and we'll send you a regular digest of our newest stories, full of money saving tips and advice, free! We'll also email you a PDF of his "205 Ways to Save Money" as soon as you've subscribed. It's full of great tips that'll help you save a ton of extra cash.

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

The Best Thing I Ever Did With My Tax Refund

$
0
0

Filed under: ,

Burmese Python
Tim QuadeBlogger Brian Fourman feels an encounter with a python was worthy of his tax refund.
By Elyssa Kirkham

If you're like most taxpayers, you're looking forward to getting a tax refund this year, and it's probably going to be a substantial amount. Refunds are averaging $2,938 per person. For many, that "extra" money can feel like a windfall, creating some much-needed breathing room in a budget. While it's all too tempting to spend a refund quickly and irresponsibly, using it wisely can help you work toward money goals and set yourself up for financial success for months to come.

Examining the money habits of personal finance experts can give insights into what responsible money management looks like in the real world. We asked 15 personal finance experts, "What is the best thing you ever bought with your tax refund?" Their answers revealed that being responsible with your tax refund doesn't have to mean saving it.

1. Invested in My Business

Emma Johnson is the founder of Wealthy Single Mommy, where she writes about money management as a single mother and professional. She tries to make sure she gets a small tax refund, "because I'm careful not to give the Fed an interest-free loan -- and you should be, too!" She got a modest refund this past year and used it to upgrade her business. "I put the $1,200 towards my website redesign." Investing her refund into growing her business will give Johnson an important boost to her earnings potential -- meaning a great return on investment.

2. Bought a Jeep Wrangler With Cash

A refund can also be a great opportunity to dodge debt while purchasing a much-needed essential. For Grayson Bell of Debt RoundUp, the best thing he ever bought with his tax refund was a Jeep Wrangler, paid for in cash. "I went to a used dealer lot, which had a yellow Jeep Wrangler I had been eyeing. I was able to talk them down a few thousand dollars and it was mine. It was the first vehicle I paid cash for and that felt good. I sold it a year later for a nice profit and bought another one after a unique opportunity arose!"

3. Maxed Out My Roth IRA

A tax refund can also be a great time to catch up or even get ahead on saving for retirement, said J. Money of Budgets Are Sexy. "The best thing I ever bought with my tax refund is a maxed-out Roth IRA account," he said. "That bad boy is going to bring me financial freedom one day - what's better than that?"

4. Treated It Like a Paycheck

While many view a tax refund as an extraordinary windfall, Stefanie O'Connell of The Broke and Beautiful Life said it helps her "to treat my tax refund like any other paycheck. That means dividing it up and contributing some to short-term savings, some to retirement, some to expenses and some to play."

"My tax refund is like a little bonus credit, almost like leap year," she said. "I say it buys me time because I have to spend time making money. I know I worked for it, of course, but when it all banks up like that and I get the surplus back in one chunk, it's like a little bonus day."

5. Purchased a Kindle

William from Doctor of Credit shares the view that a smaller refund is the smarter move, as it means no interest-free loan for the government and bigger paychecks all year. "By far the best purchase I've made with my tax refunds was a Kindle," he said. "I travel excessively for work and I love to read; unfortunately, carrying multiple books isn't really an option (especially when I'm trying to avoid checking luggage). Having a Kindle has been an absolute lifesaver in this regard. I can read as much as I want in my travel down time (of which there is a lot of waiting in airports and on planes) without having to worry about when my book will run out. I can also easily send myself work PDFs that I can read on flights, which leaves me more time for exploring new cities."

6. Funded the Trip of a Lifetime

Money can't buy happiness, but using money to purchase experiences related to your passions can definitely lift a consumer's mood, providing lasting, priceless memories. That was the approach Pauline from Reach Financial Independence took when she received a sizable refund right before a big trip and used it to make the experience even more memorable. "The year I graduated college, I had saved up all year to fund a 12-month round-the-world trip right after graduation," she said. "The tax refund came at a perfect time, a week or so before I left home to see the world. I used it for extra splurges such as diving or visiting expensive but amazing sites!"

7. Paid Off a Student Loan

One of the best ways to get a guaranteed return on investment with a tax refund is to put it toward debt and save yourself some interest down the road, like Andrew Josuweit, CEO of Student Loan Hero, did. "In 2014, I received a tax refund of $2,356," he said. True to the name of his company, he put that money where he knew it would matter: "Along with my typical monthly payment and some additional savings, I was able to pay off one of my smaller student loans!"

8. Made an Extra Mortgage Payment

David Bakke of Money Crashers used his tax refund to chip away at debt: "The best thing that I ever 'bought' with my tax refund is making an extra payment on my mortgage," Bakke said. "I started doing this several years ago and continue to do so to this day."

9. Bought a Mountain Bike

"The best thing I ever bought with my tax refund was a Trek mountain bike," said Jon Dulin, founder of Money Smart Guides. "It was a holdover from the prior season so I got a deal on it. That was about five years ago, and I still ride it a few times a week, as long as there isn't snow on the ground. ... It was a great buy because it helps to keep me healthy and spend some quality time with my friends."

10. Paid Cash for a 1996 Saturn SL

"The best thing I've purchase with my tax refund was our green 1996 Saturn SL," said Jacob, who founded site Cash Cow Couple with wife Vanessa. The couple jokingly refers to the car, which cost $1,700, paid in cash, as "The Green Machine," due to its verdant hue and continued reliability. "After graduating from college, we decided to take a different path than most," Jacob said. "Instead of buying new cars with our new jobs, we sold our previously owned cars to pay off student loan debt. We then decided to share this old Saturn to save on automobile expenses."

11. Took a Last-Minute Trip to Las Vegas

A decent-sized tax refund can be the room in your otherwise tight budget to splurge on something fun and memorable, as was the case with Nelson Smith from Financial Uproar. Doing so can replenish your financial discipline and help you avoid feeling deprived as you strive toward financial goals like saving for retirement or paying off debt. "Although I do try hard to not get a tax refund -- because the last thing I want to do is give the government an interest-free loan -- I found myself with a hefty tax refund last year due to bad planning on my part," Smith said. "Much fist shaking occurred. So I made the best of it and decided to take a quick trip down to Vegas. The weather was great, and I scored a terrific deal on a hotel room. Take that, Uncle Sam."

12. Paid Off Debt and Saved for Retirement

Another approach taken by John Schmoll of Frugal Rules is to apply the extra tax refund money to the most urgent financial needs each year, from paying off debt to saving for retirement or funding an upcoming family vacation. "I've always been fairly boring with any tax refund we've received as a family," he said. "When we were paying off debt, any funds we received were just applied towards the debt or put into savings. We've been debt-free for a number of years though so if we receive any sort of tax refund we usually put the majority of it towards retirement savings with a little bit of it being put towards our vacation fund."

13. Funded Christmas Festivities

Brian Fourman of personal finance blog Luke1428 sets aside some of his tax refund each year to help cover Christmas gifts. But last year, this fund led to a surprise trip with his family. "Last September, my wife and I gave our kids a choice: Either have Christmas as usual with each of them receiving gifts or go on a trip," Fourman said. "To our surprise, they chose to skip the individual presents and go on the trip."

Fourman and his family headed to South Florida. One of his favorite memories -- holding a giant python at a Miami zoo -- and has had a lasting impact. "My kids are still talking about our experiences," Fourman said. "Using our tax refund to fund that trip and build those memories was the best thing we could have done."

14. Paid Down $80,000 in Debt in Three Years

"The best thing my wife and I have ever bought with our tax refunds was actually a reduction in our debt," said Lance of Money Manifesto. "We used our tax refunds at the time to get us closer to paying off over $80,000 of my wife's student loan debt, which we completed paying off in just under three years from her graduation." Paying their debt off in just three years probably saved Lance and his wife thousands of dollars in interest, a great return on investment for their tax refund.

15. Enjoyed a Concert

AJ Smith of SmartAsset said the best things she ever bought with her tax refund were concert tickets. "My husband, my best friend and I took a road trip to see our favorite musicians in concert," Smith said. "It was an unforgettable weekend (I'm sure Jay-Z and Kanye would agree!)."

This story originally appeared on GOBankingRates.com.

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

5 Apps and Sites That Can Kill Facebook

$
0
0

Filed under: , ,

Pistons Clippers Basketball
Mark J. Terrill/AP Ashton Kutcher -- with Mila Kunis at a Los Angeles Clippers game -- is big into lifecasting.
There has never been a social platform as big as Facebook (FB). It kicked off 2015 with a whopping 1.39 billion active monthly users, and 890 million of them are on the site on an average day.

However, it can never get too complacent. Disruptors get disrupted, and there may come a day when another hot site or app does to Facebook what it did to MySpace. In fact, that very disruptor may already exist. Before you spend more time fleshing out your Facebook profile or posting on the walls of friends, let's assess some of the new players that are starting to gain in popularity.

1. Pinterest

The social image bookmarking site is familiar to most online users, and last month it raised money in a financing round that places its value at a cool $11 billion. This is nearly three times what Pinterest was worth just 18 months ago.

Pinterest makes sharing visual content cool, and while the same can be said of a site like Imgur, Pinterest is also a viable social platform on its own. Folks share Imgur images on Facebook, but Pinterest online boards are shared on Pinterest itself.

2. Tinder

Facebook might be a place for your grandmother to keep tabs on you these days, but in its incarnation it was a place for Harvard coeds to see what their fellow students looked like and were up to.

That hasn't necessarily changed. A lot of people on Facebook wind up hooking up with friends or friends of friends through the site, making it a stealth dating site for anyone on the prowl. With many approaching Facebook as a free dating site, it's been a challenge for premium online dating sites to get noticed. However, that also opens the door for free dating apps, including Tinder, that turn getting paired up into a swipe-happy diversion.

3. LinkedIn (LNKD)

LinkedIn is the largest of the companies on this list. It trades publicly with a $33 billion market cap. The career-oriented social networking site has more than 300 million users, and while that's less than a quarter of Facebook's audience, it's a well-to-do crowd that advertisers and corporate recruiters crave.

LinkedIn has been making the most of its scale. It has seen the number of job listings on its site soar tenfold to 3 million by the end of last year. Facebook could have nipped this in the bud. It could have easily added a layer of filter to its hub to serve white-collared pros. It didn't, and now LinkedIn has all but carved out this juicy market all to itself.

4 and 5. Periscope and Meerkat

Periscope and Meerkat are the final two names, and it's easy to lump them together since they are both fast-growing platforms for live video streaming. Meerkat and Twitter's (TWTR) Periscope let folks stream live video that can be shared at the moment and archived to be played shortly after that.

Celebrities including Madonna and Ashton Kutcher are flocking to the "lifecasting" trend, and the more time that folks spend building out lists of friends or interesting people to follow, the less time they have to be on Facebook. This is shaping up to be the year of live streaming, and Facebook won't be able to ignore Periscope and Meerkat.

Motley Fool contributor Rick Munarriz has no position in any stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool recommends and owns shares of Facebook, LinkedIn, and Twitter. Try any of our Foolish newsletter services free for 30 days. Check out our free report on one great stock to buy for 2015 and beyond.

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

Is My 401(k) Safe - Or Is It Betting on Uber, Other Startups?

$
0
0

Filed under: , , ,

Uber Headquarters
Eric Risberg/AP

By Hal Bundrick

Your retirement security likely depends on that mysterious investment machine known as the 401(k). There are a lot of moving parts in that thing, and most of us have only a vague idea of how it works.

Somehow, we put money in, and the machine invests in tiny slivers of ownership and loans of hundreds of companies. Hopefully, great companies like Apple (AAPL), Netflix (NFLX), Google (GOOG) and Bristol-Myers Squibb (BMY).

But some investors may be surprised to learn that their 401(k) might also be making bets on the likes of SpaceX, Snapchat, Airbnb, Uber and Pinterest. Big players in the retirement plan industry -- like T. Rowe Price (TROW), Fidelity and BlackRock (BLK) -- have all bought into tech startups, through special syndicate deals that allow them exclusive access to such privately held companies.

Should You Be Worried or Thrilled?

Peter Fisher, managing partner of Human Investing in Lake Oswego, Oregon, says perhaps a little of both. "The participant, hopefully, should be investing in something that is what they thought they were investing in," he said.

"So, if you're going to put a fund that has a bunch of startup stuff, or venture capital, or non-publicly traded stuff, or thinly traded stuff -- in your 'safe box' -- shame on you. But if this is something that is in a specialty category, I think it could be a huge opportunity for some people that don't have access to that sort of thing. As long as it's communicated the right way."

Though Fisher's firm is a passive investment advocate, preferring index funds to actively-managed funds, he thinks there is a place for such portfolio sweeteners: "Do I think these types of investments should be considered? Certainly. Absolutely."

Joe Lucey, a financial planner in St. Louis Park, Minnesota, says it's often not the particular stock that's the problem, it's how much of it you own. "The ability to own some of the startup companies is probably not something that I'd have a problem with, but on the other hand, oftentimes we'll see employees that have company stock in publicly traded companies -- everything from Target to 3M -- where all of a sudden they end up having all of one company's stock in their 401(k)," Lucey says. "So whether or not it's a startup company or a Fortune 1000 company, if [investors] aren't well-diversified, that can always cause problems or concerns."


A Sprinkling of Startup Exposure in Your Retirement Plan

As for the Uber holdings in your 401(k), they are likely to be a very thin slice. Fidelity says the crowd-sourced taxi service comprises less than a 1 percent share of its mutual funds. But don't think the shares are held in just the company's Contrafund or other tech-leaning mutual funds. Uber was the biggest winner in the Fidelity Blue Chip Growth Fund during the last quarter of 2014. Yes, the Blue Chip fund. Blue chips are the benchmark of quality on Wall Street, represented by the 30 stocks of the Dow Jones industrial average (^DJI).

But Uber is far from a blue chip stock. Fidelity says it's an "out of benchmark" holding. "Not all of the names we invest in are blue-chip companies -- some are companies that we believe have blue-chip potential down the road," said Fidelity's quarterly fund review.

Transparency

Mutual fund names alone obviously provide few clues on what they're investing in. Yet mutual funds can allocate up to 15 percent of their holdings in private companies and other illiquid securities. Investors need to uncover the facts and see where their retirement money is really being invested.

Lucey admitted that the online tools available to the average 401(k) investor often don't drill down to that level of detail. Instead, he recommended 401(k) investors take the initiative to find out what the specific holdings are in their retirement plan -- by asking the plan administrator. He suspects few consumers will make such an effort.

Fisher's firm uses Morningstar technology, integrated with a participant's 401(k) account, to provide just that kind of investment transparency. "With a push of a button, they can run a cross-section report on all their holdings," he said. "They can see, 'OK, I own 2.12 percent of Apple across the three mutual funds that I own.' The firm uses the analytic tools to advise 401(k) participants for company clients who sign up for the service.

Though minor holdings in tech start-up stocks may not be a problem for the great majority of retirement investors, Lucey said there is one challenge many saving-oriented consumers face. "A lot of consumers are taking far more risk in their 401(k)s," he said.

Last year would be a good example. The S&P 500 (^GSPC) was up 13 percent, so those investors that are focusing their portfolio in the top 500 S&P indices may think they get 500 companies that represent a fully diversified portfolio, but yet they are exposing themselves to unrecognized risk by not diversifying across all asset classes, Lucey said, by adding some international investments, bonds and what have you. In short, having exposure to a startup is not terrible as long as your holdings are hedged accordingly.

Keeping Priorities Straight

Still, investors suffer a dangerous sort of amnesia of losses in past years and are inclined to go bold. "Nobody liked what their portfolios did in 2008, (but) we're seeing clients coming into our office back to the level of risk that they were at right before the last correction," Lucey said.

"The 401(k) investor should worry about, first and foremost, whether they're doing their part in creating a plan to defer enough for retirement, based on the life they want to live at some point down the road," Fisher said.

This story originally appeared on MainStreet. Hal M. Bundrick is a certified financial planner. Follow him on Twitter @HalMBundrick

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

Automatically Turn Tax Refund Into an IRA or Savings Bond

$
0
0

Filed under: , ,

closeup view of 100 dollar us savings bonds; Shutterstock ID 1622532; PO: DF treasury  america; banking; bond; cash; ee; hundred
John Clark/Shutterstock
By MoneyTips

As much fun as it is to hold your tax refund check in your hands and rub them together with glee, direct deposit is a simpler and faster method of receiving your refund. It may be safer as well. Not only will you be spared the possibility of someone stealing your check out of the mail, you will also be less tempted to spend it.

However, there is an even better way to avoid spending your refund. You can have it directly deposited into an individual retirement account or purchase U.S. savings bonds with it. Some institutions may allow you to directly deposit your refund into other types of accounts such as 529 College Savings Plans or mutual funds.

Form 8888: Allocation of Refund

IRS Form 8888, Allocation of Refund, allows you to split your refund into a maximum of three direct deposit accounts. You will need to supply the account number and routing number for each account. Verify the routing numbers with your financial institutions. Do not simply copy the routing numbers from your checks.

Tax refunds may be applied toward traditional, Roth, or SEP-IRA accounts, but not SIMPLE IRAs. The IRA administrator will supply the routing number and the proper account number to use. It may not be your standard account number; some have to be modified to fit the IRS standard format. You will also need to know whether to designate the account as "checking" or "savings."

Do not forget that this contribution counts against IRA limits, which are $5,500 for tax year 2014 ($6,500 if you are over 50 years old). If you want to apply this contribution to 2014 (covered by this year's form), the deposit must be received by the typical filing deadline of April 15th, and you must let your custodian know that you wish to apply the contribution to the previous year. Otherwise, it will be considered to be a contribution in 2015.

Turning Your Refund Into Bonds

Part II of Form 8888 allows you to purchase Series I U.S. savings bonds in $50 increments up to $5,000 without registering on TreasuryDirect.gov, where all other bonds must be obtained. These bonds are the only remaining paper bonds that can be bought. All other savings bond sales are handled and stored electronically.

One benefit of this paper bond purchase is the ability to buy bonds beyond the $10,000 limit per year that applies to electronic bond sales. If you have a large enough refund and other available funds, you could purchase up to $15,000 in bonds by this route -- $10,000 electronically and $5,000 in paper bonds.

Bonds can be registered as single owner, co-owner, or beneficiary bonds. Beneficiary bonds are popular purchases by parents for their children (or grandparents for grandchildren).

There are a few limitations and concerns with Form 8888. You cannot use Form 8888 if there is also a Form 8379 (Injured Spouse Allocation) involved, or if you are filing an amended return. You can make IRA deposits or buy savings bonds, but you cannot use direct deposit to do so. Generally, a joint refund cannot be direct-deposited to an individual account. Be sure to check the account status before setting up the direct deposit.

If you made a math error filling out your refund amount, any additional amount will be added to the last account on the list. Any decreases will be taken from the last account, and so on from the next-to-last account until the total is correct.

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

These Stores Could Be Expanding to a Mall Near You

$
0
0

Filed under: , ,

Athleta
JeepersMedia/Flickr
By Krystina Gustafson

As familiar retailers like Walgreens and American Eagle turn out the lights at underperforming stores, a new set of familiar and not-yet-familiar names are ready to take their place at U.S. shopping centers. They're retailers that have succeeded online, in Europe and with other concepts.

"If you understand your market, then you can have a very niche product, and it can be very profitable," said Andrew Nelson, chief economist at Colliers International commercial real estate firm. "It's a good way of expanding the brand without just expanding their store count to the point of unprofitability. Take a look.

1. F21 red

Forever 21 -- which built its reputation on offering chic styles for low prices -- in May launched a new concept, dubbed F21 red. These stores are focused on items that carry the company's entry-level prices, including camisoles for less than $2. A spokeswoman for Forever 21 said the company currently has five "red" stores in the U.S. and one in Germany, with plans to open 37 more by the end of the year.

2. Six:02

Since launching its Six:02 women's concept in 2012, Foot Locker has grown its store count to 15. The retailer is tapping into the locations, which are considered an evolution from its Lady Foot Locker banner, to help reach its goal of $10 billion in sales by 2020. There are planned openings for 20 more stores under the nameplate this year.

3. Lululemon men's

Over the holidays, Lululemon doubled down on its growing men's business by opening its first menswear-only store, in Manhattan. Although the company does not have plans for another men's shop, the unit's comparable-store sales rose 16 percent in the fourth quarter. "We are seeing the potential for expanded store footprints, particularly as we have a growing men's business," CFO Stuart Haselden said on the company's earnings call in March.

4. Ivivva

Also under the Lululemon umbrella is ivivva, the athletic apparel firms's answer to the youth market. The company opened 10 ivivva stores last year, ending the fourth quarter with 22 stores and 37 showrooms (showrooms sell only key styles and aren't open the whole week). The company plans to open 20 more ivivva stores in 2015.

5. Theory+

As sales continue to rise in athletic wear, fashion-forward brands are also hopping on board. One of those names is Theory, which launched its Theory+ activewear collection last year. The company opened its first location dedicated solely to the label earlier this month in Seoul. The second Theory+ open in April in Los Angeles.

6. Zara Home

Affordable fashion label Zara is ripe for expansion in the U.S. The retailer's parent company Inditex plans to open more than a dozen Zara stores in 2015, including Las Vegas, Boston and Chicago. Although these plans don't call for the company's Zara Home concept to break ground in the U.S., shoppers are keeping their fingers crossed. The retailer currently operates more than 400 stores around the globe under this nameplate, but it's only available online in the U.S. so far.

7. Lou & Grey

After first testing these standalone stores in the fall, Ann ended 2014 with five freestanding Lou & Grey stores around the U.S. The specialty apparel retailer plans to further build out its loungewear concept, formerly known as Loft Lounge, by testing roughly five locations in 2015. It will also launch a standalone e-commerce site, which is scheduled to debut in the summer. "The freestanding [stores] have provided a great environment for refining the Lou & Grey concept real time, and importantly, they have been successful in attracting clients who are new to Ann Inc," CEO Kay Krill said on the company's earnings call in March.

8. The Fisher Project

Eileen Fisher, which produces 20 percent of its garments in New York and Los Angeles, channeled L.A.'s coastal vibe for its new store concept, The Fisher Project. Now open for almost a year, the label targets a younger shopper than the private company's namesake brand.

9. Athleta

Gap-owned Athleta is proof that spinoff concepts can, indeed, deliver. After acquiring the online athletic wear firm in 2008 -- and launching its first store three years later -- the brand feted its 100th store opening in December. Gap plans to open 20 Athleta stores in 2015.

10. & Other Stories

H&M has set a goal to open 400 stores in 2015. But it isn't limiting this growth to its main label. Among other brands in the company's stable are higher-priced labels & Other Stories and COS, which both broke ground in the U.S. last year. & Other Stories launched during spring 2013 and has 23 stores, mostly in the larger European cities, including London and Milan. By fall, it will have four more locations open in Europe.

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

JPMorgan 1Q Profit Jumps 11%

$
0
0

Filed under: , , , ,

Earns JPMorgan Chase
Mark Lennihan/AP
By KEN SWEET

NEW YORK -- JPMorgan Chase said Tuesday that its income rose 11 percent in the first quarter, helped by strong results in the bank's currency, commodities and fixed-income trading business.

The largest U.S. bank by assets earned $5.45 billion after payments to its preferred shareholders. That compares to a profit of $4.89 billion a year earlier. On a per-share basis, the bank earned $1.45, compared with $1.28 a year earlier.

The average estimate of financial analysts surveyed by FactSet was $1.39 a share, which typically exclude one-time items. Net revenue at the bank was $24.1 billion, compared with $23.2 billion in the same period a year earlier.

Wall Street analysts widely expected banks to report higher trading revenue this quarter, and JPMorgan met that expectation. Net revenue at the bank's corporate and investment bank rose 8 percent to $9.58 billion, helped by volatility in currency and fixed income markets. Higher volatility typically means more commissions for banks because investors trade more. Trading revenue was $5.67 billion, up from $5.2 billion a year earlier.

The bank's consumer bank division, which includes Chase, its credit cards, mortgages and auto loans, also reported gains. Revenue in that unit rose to $10.7 billion from $10.5 billion.

Chase originated $24.7 billion in mortgages in a quarter, a jump from $17 billion the same period a year earlier. The rise in mortgage volume is notable since winter is typically a slow time for home buying.

JPMorgan also had $687 million in pre-tax charges for legal expenses in the quarter.

Shares of JPMorgan (JPM) were up 1 percent in early pre-market trading.

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments


Retail Sales Rebound, Post Largest Gain in a Year

$
0
0

Filed under: , , , ,

Shoppers In Midtown East Ahead Of Retail Sales Figures
Craig Warga/Bloomberg via Getty Images
By Lucia Mutikani

WASHINGTON -- U.S. retail sales rose in March for the first time since late last year as consumers stepped up purchases of automobiles and other goods, suggesting a sharp slowdown in economic growth in the first quarter was temporary.

The Commerce Department's fairly sturdy report Tuesday together with other data showing producer inflation crept up last month should keep the Federal Reserve on track to start raising interest rates later this year.

A rebound in retail sales in March provides evidence that the U.S. economy is pulling out of a soft patch seen at the start of the year.

"A rebound in retail sales in March provides evidence that the U.S. economy is pulling out of a soft patch seen at the start of the year. The improvement in retail sales after the weakness seen at the turn of the year adds to the likelihood of policymakers voting to hike rates this year," said Chris Williamson, chief economist at Markit in London.

Retail sales increased 0.9 percent in March. That was the largest gain since March last year and snapped three straight months of declines that had been blamed on harsh winter weather.

U.S. stock index futures fell after the data, while prices for U.S. government debt rose. The dollar was weaker against a basket of currencies.

Retail sales excluding automobiles, gasoline, building materials and food services rose 0.3 percent after dropping 0.2 percent in February. The so-called core retail sales correspond most closely with the consumer spending component of gross domestic product.

Last month's jump in overall retail sales should ease fears of sustained weakness in the economy after an unusually snowy winter undercut activity early in the year. Labor disruptions at normally busy West Coast ports, a stronger dollar and softer global demand also have constrained growth.

Data on trade, consumer spending, manufacturing and home building have suggested the economy grew at a sub-1.5 percent annual rate in the first quarter.

Producer Prices Rise

In a separate report, the Labor Department said its producer price index for final demand increased 0.2 percent last month, with rising prices for goods accounting for more than half of the increase. The PPI had declined 0.5 percent in February.

In the 12 months through March, producer prices fell 0.8 percent, the biggest year-on-year decline since the revamped series started in 2009, after sliding 0.6 percent in February.

Low inflation and signs of a sharp slowdown in economic growth in the first quarter have prompted most economists to push back their expectations for the first Fed rate hike to either September or October from June. Others believe the U.S. central bank will only tighten monetary policy in 2016.

The Fed, which has a 2 percent inflation target, has kept its key short-term interest rate near zero since December 2008.

A key measure of underlying producer price pressures that excludes food, energy and trade services rose 0.2 percent after being unchanged in February. Core PPI was up 0.8 percent in the 12 months through March.

Retail sales last month were buoyed by a 2.7 percent rise in automobile sales, the biggest increase since March 2014. Sales at clothing stores increased 1.2 percent. Receipts at building material and garden equipment stores advanced 2.1 percent, the largest rise since July 2013.

Sales at restaurants and bars were up 0.7 percent.

There were also increases in sales at furniture stores and sporting goods and hobby shops. However, sales at electronics and appliance stores slipped as did receipts at online stores.

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

Prescription Drug Spending Jumps as Orders Set Record

$
0
0

Filed under: , , ,

Pharmacist Filling Prescription
Getty Images
By LINDA A. JOHNSON

TRENTON, N.J. -- U.S. spending on prescription drugs soared last year, driven up primarily by costly breakthrough medicines, manufacturer price hikes and a surge from millions of people newly insured under the Affordable Care Act.

Spending rose 13 percent, the biggest jump since 2001, to a total of $374 billion, according to a report released Tuesday by the IMS Institute for Healthcare Informatics. After accounting for population growth and inflation, the increase equaled 10 percent.

A record 4.3 billion prescriptions were filled in 2014, many of them for inexpensive generic pills going to patients now insured through Medicaid in states that expanded eligibility for the government health program for the poor and disabled. The number of prescriptions covered by Medicaid rose by nearly 17 percent, and that increase accounted for 70 percent of growth in the number of prescriptions filled at retail pharmacies. Another sign of the Affordable Care Ac's impact was that prescriptions paid for in cash, normally filled by uninsured people, declined 5.5 percent.

The higher spending, though, was mostly due to the many recent drugs with eye-popping price tags: tens of thousands of dollars for a year or course of treatment.

Last year saw an unusually high 42 novel medicines launched, 18 for rare diseases, those that affect fewer than 200,000 Americans. Ten of the new drugs were designated as breakthrough therapies, for conditions including multiple sclerosis, various cancers and hepatitis C.

"2014 was a remarkable year," Murray Aitken, executive director of the IMS Institute, told The Associated Press. "We're probably not going to see it again."

Altogether, spending on prescription medicines in the U.S. rose by $43.4 billion last year, including about $10 billion due to price increases and $20.3 billion spent on prescriptions for new drugs.

That included a combined $11.3 billion spent on just four new medicines for hepatitis C, a liver-damaging virus so tough to eliminate that until recently, patients had to endure flu-like symptoms and other awful side effects for nearly a year, yet barely 60 percent were cured.

The new hepatitis C treatments cure upward of 90 percent, usually in 12 weeks. However, they carry list prices of $84,000 or more for a course of treatment.

One of them, Sovaldi, was launched at the end of 2013 yet was the top-selling drug last year. It brought maker Gilead Sciences Inc. $7.9 billion.

"Sovaldi is a record-breaker in so many ways," Aitkin said, yet Gilead's successor drug launched last fall, Harvoni, has already surpassed it in sales.

Specialty medicines -- drugs for complex, chronic and often expensive disorders including hepatitis C -- last year accounted for a full third of prescription spending. That's a likely harbinger of even higher prescription spending in years in the future.

The 2014 spending growth was somewhat restrained by insurers' efforts to hold down their costs. More and more insurance companies have been shifting patients into plans that include high copayments for medicines, as well as large deductibles that must be met before insurance coverage kicks in.

IMS said that led to more prescriptions being abandoned at the pharmacy counters by patients who couldn't afford their portion of the cost. That ultimately resulted in 8.4 million fewer prescriptions being filled at retail pharmacies in 2014, compared to 2013, by patients who were commercially insured, either through their employer or a new health exchange plan.

The IMS figures are based on list prices for brand-name drugs, though wholesalers usually get discounts and rebates amounting to about 6 percent. Generic drugs, which are often as much as 90 percent cheaper than the brand-name drugs they copy, don't come with such large markdowns.

Last year, there were far fewer new generic drugs than in recent years, so generics reduced spending by only $11.9 billion, compared to the peak level of $30.7 billion in 2012.

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

Can't Pay Your Income Taxes? Here Are Your Options

$
0
0

Filed under: , , , ,

Can't Pay Your Taxes? Here's What to Do

By Matt Bell

If it looks like it'll be difficult to pay all the federal income taxes you owe, here are your options, along with some key facts you need to know. (It's a different question if you don't have enough to pay your taxes.)

There are two distinct aspects involved in paying taxes: filing your return and paying it. Not filing your return on time and not paying what you owe come with different ramifications. It may surprise you to know that if you don't file your return on time, even if you can't pay all that you owe by April 15, you'll face the biggest penalty.

Failing to file on time and not paying all that you owe by the due date will cost you a monthly penalty of 5 percent of your tax bill plus interest. However, if you do file on time, or request a filing extension by midnight on April 15, the penalty drops to half of 1 percent plus interest. So, at the very least, file your return or request an extension by April 15. Paying as much as you can by the filing deadline will lower your costs as well, since the late payment penalty is based on a percentage of what you haven't paid.

A Variety of Options

Next, you'll have to come to an agreement on how to pay the rest of what you owe. Don't let this slide. Uncle Sam may look friendly, but he has some collection tactics available to him that most other creditors don't. This could be garnishing your wages, taking money from your bank accounts, or slapping a lien on your property. Don't let things get to that point. Instead, explore the following options:
  • Short-term extension: If you think you can pay all of what you owe within 120 days of April 15, apply for an online payment agreement. You can also call the IRS at 800-829-1040 for more information. There is no up-front fee for a short-term payment extension. However, a late-pay penalty (half of 1 percent of the balance owed per month) and interest will be charged. Still, that should amount to less than what you'd be charged with a longer-term payment agreement.
  • Long-term extension: If you can't pay what you owe within 120 days, you may be eligible to pay your tax bill in monthly installments over the course of up to 72 months. There is a fee of $120 to establish an installment agreement, or $52 if you agree to have your payments automatically deducted from your bank account. While you'll still have to pay interest, if you filed your return on time, the monthly late-pay penalty will be half of 1 percent of what you owe. If you owe the IRS $50,000 or less (including penalties and interest), you should be able to set up the online payment agreement. If you owe more than $50,000, you'll need to complete Form 9465 and supply the IRS with a Collection Information Statement (Form 433-F).
  • Temporary delay: If your circumstances are such that you can't pay any of what you owe, and you're not sure when you'll be able to, the IRS may temporarily delay collection until your financial condition improves. However, your debt will grow because penalties and interest will accrue until you come up with the full amount. During the temporary delay, the IRS will continue to review your ability to pay. The government may also place a lien on real estate or other property you own. Contact the IRS at 1-800-829-1040 for more information about requesting a temporary delay.
  • Offer in compromise: If you can't afford an installment agreement, you could offer to settle your tax debt in one lump sum totaling less than what you owe. Whether you'll qualify depends, in part, on your income, expenses, assets and the IRS' assessment of your ability to pay. Be forewarned: Relatively few offers in compromise are accepted. There is also a non-refundable $186 application fee, and most applicants have to make an up-front, non-refundable partial payment when they apply. So, make sure you feel confident about meeting the requirements. You'll need to demonstrate that situation is such that you will never be able to pay back everything you owe. Details are in the IRS' Offer in Compromise booklet.
More Ideas -- and One to Avoid

If you are having a difficult time resolving an IRS tax dispute, contact the IRS Taxpayer Advocate Service. This is an independent organization within the IRS designed to provide free help to people whose tax issues are causing financial difficulty.

You may be tempted to turn to a private company for help in settling your tax debt for less than you owe through an offer in compromise, but beware. Such companies often charge steep up-front fees, and there are some unscrupulous players in this field.

For more guidance on what to do if you can't pay your tax bill, read What-Ifs for Struggling Taxpayers on the IRS web site.

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

Pantry Items That Double as Cleaning Products -- Savings Experiment

$
0
0

Filed under: ,

Pantry Items That Double as Cleaning Products
No kitchen is complete without a well stocked pantry, but did you know that a lot of the items in there can also help clean your house? Here are some of the surprising uses.

If you want to rejuvenate your scuffed-up wooden countertops and furniture without the pricey wood polish, just grab a bag of walnuts. Simply take a few nuts out of their shells and run them firmly across small scratches. Let it sit for five minutes to let the natural oils from the nuts absorb into the wood. Then polish it off with a soft cloth to reveal like-new finish.

As for the persistent odors in your fridge, try a little vanilla extract. Believe it or not, this common ingredient can easily get rid of those stubborn smells. Simply soak two to three cotton balls with 1 tablespoon of vanilla extract and leave it in the refrigerator overnight. Not only will the odor be gone the next day, but you'll have a nice, fresh scent there instead.

Lastly, if you have any thin-necked bottles or vases with some hard-to-clean spots inside, a little uncooked rice can go a long way. To start, place a handful in the bottle. Then add a small amount of dish soap and fill it up about halfway with water. Cover the top and shake it up. Empty, rinse and repeat, if needed. If your bottle or vase has a stubborn white film inside, try adding vinegar instead of the soap. It will clean it right off.

Use these easy tricks to make the most of your pantry items. You can clean your home while saving a few bucks, too.

View Poll

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

Market Wrap: Stocks End Higher After Bounce in Oil Prices

$
0
0

Filed under: , , , ,

Financial Markets Wall Street
Richard Drew/AP
By Noel Randewich

NEW YORK -- The Dow and S&P 500 ended higher Tuesday, helped by energy stocks and March-quarter earnings reports that topped modest expectations following worries about a strong dollar.

Shares of Exxon Mobil, Chevron and other energy companies followed crude higher after a forecast that U.S. shale oil output in May would record its first monthly decline in more than four years. The S&P 500 energy index jumped 1.77 percent.

Norfolk Southern (NSC) dropped 4.18 percent to $100.49 a day after it forecast a surprise drop in its first-quarter earnings and revenue.

A strong dollar, cheap oil and poor weather in the eastern United States in recent months have investors bracing for a difficult March-quarter earnings season.

This may be one of most hated earnings seasons I remember.

First-quarter profits for S&P 500 companies are seen falling 2.9 percent, according to Thomson Reuters (TRI) data. On Jan. 1, analysts had been looking for growth of 5.3 percent.

Those lowered expectations mean that companies can now more easily impress investors, said Art Hogan, chief market strategist at Wunderlich Securities in New York.

"This may be one of most hated earnings seasons I remember," Hogan said. "We've taken those three negative headwinds and plowed them as far as we can into the worst-case scenario."

Shares of JPMorgan Chase (JPM) rose 1.6 percent after the biggest U.S. bank by assets reported a better-than-expected quarterly profit.

The Dow Jones industrial average (^DJI) rose 59.66 points, or 0.33 percent, to end at 18,036.7. The Standard & Poor's 500 index (^GSPC) 500 gained 3.41 points, or 0.16 percent, to 2,095.84 and the Nasdaq composite (^IXIC) dropped 10.96 points, or 0.22 percent, to 4,977.29, with Apple down 0.43 percent.

Chevron (CVX) shares gained 2.2 percent and Exxon (XOM) rose 1.5 percent.

Nokia Oyj is in talks to buy Alcatel-Lucent, a deal that would combine the telecommunications industry's two weakest players.

U.S. shares of Nokia (NOK) fell 4.09 percent to $7.96 while Alcatel (ALU) rose 13.33 percent to $4.93.

Earnings Season

Companies expected to report this week include GE (GE), Philip Morris International (PM) and Bank of America (BAC).

The dollar was down 0.7 percent against a basket of major currencies, leaving it with a gain of nearly 10 percent so far in 2015. A stronger dollar tends to hurt profits for U.S. multinationals.

Advancing issues outnumbered declining ones on the NYSE by 1,910 to 1,120, for a 1.71-to-1 ratio on the upside; on the Nasdaq, 1,426 issues fell, and 1,289 advanced for a 1.11-to-1 ratio favoring decliners.

The benchmark S&P 500 posted 5 new 52-week highs and 1 new low; the Nasdaq composite was recording 74 new highs and 32 new lows.

About 5.8 billion shares changed hands on U.S. exchanges, below the 6.1 billion daily average for the month to date, according to BATS Global Market

What to watch Wednesday:
  • The Federal Reserve Bank of New York releases its survey of manufacturing conditions in New York state at 8:30 a.m. Eastern time.
  • The Federal Reserve releases industrial production for March at 9:15 a.m.
  • The National Association of Home Builders releases housing market index for April at 10 a.m.
  • The Federal Reserve releases its Beige Book survey of regional economic conditions at 2 p.m.
  • The Treasury Department releases international money flows data for February at 4 p.m.
Earnings Season
These selected companies are scheduled to release quarterly financial results:
  • Bank of America (BAC)
  • Kinder Morgan (KMI)
  • U.S. Bancorp (USB)
  • PNC Financial Services Group (PNC)
  • Delta Air Lines (DAL)
  • Netflix (NFLX)
  • Progressive (PGR)
  • SanDisk (SNDK)
  • Watsco (WSO)

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

Viewing all 9760 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images