Monday, March 26, 2012

XXX Financial Planning

This all started because I am ridiculously immature and I’ve spent a good check of my spare time studying for a securities license exam.

Earlier this week my company had an all employee meeting, which happens about once a quarter.  The president and CEO of the company touched on the areas of the country where we were under represented.  He identified these as our “under-penetrated markets.”

My first reaction was to realize that I have an under-penetrated market of own.  And, that was about the time I mentally undertook the following script:


INT.  OFFICE – DAY


Over an INTERCOME:

MS. DIANE (OS)
Why don’t you bring your long straddle in here, Michael?

MICHAEL
Actually, I’ve been feeling a little bearish recently.

MS. DIANE (OS)
Well, I’m bull enough for the both of us, so get in here already!


INT.  MS. DIANE’S OFFICE – DAY

MICHAEL Enters:

MS. DIANE
Finally!

MICHAEL
I was identifying under-penetrated markets throughout the midwest.

MS. DIANE
Why don’t you come over here?  I’ll show you either my aggressive investment strategy or my horizontal spread.

MICHAEL
I think you need to take advantage of the cooling off period, because I think you’re too heavily invested in back-end loaded securities.

MS.  DIANE
I’m sorry.  When I see a hot issue with a firm quote, I just can’t help myself.

MS. DIANE starts to undress.


Here are a few financial terms to that I used above, and a few others that I just think are fun to say:

Adjusted gross income – Earned income plus net passive income, portfolio income, and capital gains.

Aggressive investment strategy – A method of porfolio allocation and management aimed at achieving maximum return.  Aggressive investors place a high percentage of their investable assets in equity securities and a far lower percentage in safer debt securities and cash equivalents, and they pursue aggressive policies, including margin trading, arbitrage, and option trading.

Asset-backed security – One whose value and income payments are backed by the expected cash flow from a specific pool of underlying assets.  Pooling the assets into financial instruments allows them to be sold to investors more easily than selling them individually.  The process is called securitization.

Back-end load – A commission or sales fee that is charged when mutual fund shares or variable annuity contracts are redeemed.  It declines annually, decreasing to zero over an extended holding period – up to eight years – as described in the prospectus.

Bear market – A market in which prices of a certain group of securities are falling or are expected to fall.

Cash market – Transactions between buyers and sellers of commodities that entail immediate delivery of and payment for a physical commodity.

Catastrophe call – The redemption of a bond by an issuer owing to disaster (e.g., a power plant that has been built with proceeds from an issue burns to the ground).

Chinese wall – A descriptive name for the division within a brokerage firm that prevents insider information from passing from corporate advisers to investment traders who could make use of the information to reap illicit profits.

Cooling-off period – The period (a minimum of 20 days) between a registration statement’s filing date and the registration’s effective date.  In practice, the period varies in length.

Double-barreled bond – A municipal security backed by the full faith and credit of the issuing municipality as well as by pledged revenues.

Firm quote – The actual price at which a trading unit of a security (such as 100 shares of stock or five bonds) may be bought or sold.  All quotes are firm quotes unless otherwise indicated.

Horizontal spread – The purchase and sale of two options on the same underlying security and with the same exercise price but different expiration dates.

Hot issue – A new issue that sells or is anticipated to sell at a premium over the public offering price.

Naked – The position of an option investor who writes a call or a put on a security he does not own.

Naked call writer – An investor who writes a call option without owning the underlying stock or other related assets that would enable the investor to deliver the stock should the option be exercised.

Naked put writer – An investor who writes a put option without owning the underlying stick or other related assets that would enable the investor to purchase the stock should the option be exercised.

Sales load – The amount added to a mutual fund share’s net asset value to arrive at the offering price.

Stripper well – An oil well that produces fewer than 10 barrels per day.

Two-dollar broker – An exchange member that executes orders for other member firms when their floor brokers are especially busy.  Two-dollar brokers charge a commission for their services; the amount of the commission is negotiated.

Thursday, March 22, 2012

Reason 213 Why I Shouldn't Have Kids

I just got upset about the fact that I my house plants want to be watered at least once every other week.

Can you imagine what would happen if I had kids that expected to be fed and changed several times a day?  Yeah, I know.  It'd be a disaster!

Why then are my younger siblings* betting that I'm going to be the next one to pop out a rugrat?  Probably because they think it'd be hilarious!

We'll see who has the last laugh.**



*Who will be 29, 28, and 27 this year.^

^Yes, I did that in reverse order.  Because I have to count backward from my own age.+

+Maybe this should have been titled Reason 4,209 Why I'm the Worst Sister EVER...

**In the last two minutes I've come to terms with the fact that I'm a bad sister and can't recall random facts like people's ages at the drop of a hat.  You know what?  I'm okay with it.

I'm so okay with my role as a bad sister that I'd have no problem making those bitches watch the video of me pooing all over a table while strangers have their hands in my junk, and a cantaloupe tares open my pink parts.  If this shit ever goes down, I'd make them watch it repeatedly and in slow motion.

And, I'd do it while nursing in plain sight.

Sunday, March 4, 2012

Huh. So, I'm like a Piñata?

Yeah, maybe I am a little beat up,* but that's not what I mean when I liken myself to a piñata.  What I mean is that I'm full of candy and booze,^ just like how piñatas should be.

The weird thing is that I'm more drunk now - home, alone, with my cats~ - than I was in Vegas last week. 

All things considered I want to count Vegas as a win, but considering 1) I consumed less than five alcoholic beverages the entire four days I was in Nevada, 2) I came out $3 "ahead"+, 3) the most "action" I saw in Vegas was on a dance floor in the Paris casino and came in the form of an ass slap from a drunkard who had previously been rejected by my friend, AND a very large black man's warm, soft junk resting on my thigh as he tried to cross the dance floor, ** and 4) the hundreds of dollars I spent on food.^^

I had AMAZING food.  I had good food.  And, I had acceptable food.

When all was said and done I was just excited not to be in Oregon, which is probably why I'm planning my next two trips out of this hipster oasis.~~  I can only hope that it's sooner than later.***



*I totally have a bruise on my right wrist the size of a thumb that makes me look like an abused woman.  The strange thing is that I have no idea where it came from.

^Best.  Weekend.  Ever.

+I lost $2 on slots and won $5 at Casino War.  Granted, I spent less than 15 minutes gambling the entire tie I was in Nevada and promptly turned around and reinvested my $3 winnings in the casino in a form of a Diet Pepsi - I'll take every little win I can get.

~Living every teenage lesbians dream.  Too bad that I'm not a lesbian, right?

**I'm still not sure if this one was on purpose, due to the packed dance floor, or cut short thanks to my robot.  We may never know.

^^Now you know my weakness - food.  Also, my traveling companions all know my weakness for cheese.++

++I.  Love.  Cheese.

~~I just want to get out so, so badly.

***So, I get drunk, wake up with all sorts of strange bruises, and not feel ashamed.  Again.