Posts Tagged ‘etf’

Big Business in America Controlled by Wall Street – With your Money

Tuesday, January 12th, 2010

Public companies first and foremost have to answer to their shareholders. If public companies don’t, then their shareholders will abandon ship.

Many Americans primarily hold stock through Mutual Funds and Exchange Traded Funds. This fact is proven by the percentage of ownership of companies by Institutional & Mutual Fund companies. Let’s take a look at the Dow Industrial 30 and their percentage of ownership by Institutional & Mutual Fund companies (as of 1/12/2010, information gathered from Yahoo Finance).

Company : % Owned by Institutional & Mutual Fund companies
3M : 68%
Alcoa : 68%
American Express : 80%
AT&T : 57%
Bank of America : 63%
Boeing : 60%
Caterpillar : 70%
Chevron : 63%
The Travelers Companies : 87%
DuPont : 65%
Exxon Mobil : 48%
GE : 50%
Cisco : 70%
Hewlett Packard Company : 77%
Intel : 65%
IBM : 61%
Johnson & Johnson : 65%
J.P. Morgan : 72%
Kraft : 57%
McDonalds : 71%
Merck : 80%
Microsoft : 63%
Pfizer : 59%
Wal-Mart : 37%
Disney : 67%

Out of the Dow 30 stocks only 2 (Exxon Mobil at 48% and Wal-Mart at 37%) have under 50% ownership Institutional & Mutual Fund companies. Over 93% of the Dow Industrial stocks have 50% or greater ownership by Institutional & Mutual Fund companies. Many of the Institutional & Mutual Fund company owners where the same for the Dow 30 stocks.

The above data shows that most individual investors have chosen to hold stock in the Dow Industrial 30 stock through Exchange Traded Funds and Mutual Funds. But who has the real shareholder control over these companies? Do you have shareholder voting rights as a fund holder with these stocks in it? The answer is no. The fund manager makes the decision for you, theoretically for the best interest of the fund holder. One thing is for sure, Wall Street hold the vote and therefore the control.

Wall Street nearly collapsed the US economy last year with their excessive risks. What type of risks are they forcing these companies to take?

No Longer a Buy and Hold Stock Market – What?

Monday, March 30th, 2009

So it seems like the consensus of Wall Street professionals is that we cannot just buy and hold stocks or mutual funds (for the short term). Apparently stocks are trading more on momentum and less on fundamentals.


So basically we are now being told that this market has very little to do with the fundamentals and everything to do with speculation right now. Now if you have a 5 to 10 or 20 year outlook then this is a cheap market according to Wall Street. Keep in mind if the market goes down another 50% from here, then the market would need to go up 100% just to get back to where you started from.

If fundamentals are really not playing a factor and it is all about speculation then aren’t we really just gambling with our money? At least if I go to a casino the rules are the rules and they can’t change in the middle of the game. Is the real goal of investing in the stock market to roll the dice?

Look at the products that being introduced into this market. I especially have noticed the increased popularity of “ultra” short or long Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs). On any given trading day these products typically show up on the most active securities list. These products promise a multiplier effect on the sector, index or commodity that you are investing (betting?) in. If you are Long Financials with an ETF “ultra” fund 3x, then if the Financials go up 2% the ETF is suppose to go up 6% (vice versa on a down day). Does this product sound like an investment?

Investors make stocks grow for the long term because they typically”buy and hold “stocks. Does this market seem like it is mostly made up of investors or speculators?