Today, the market capitalization of Apple exceeded Google for the first time since Google went public. Both Companies are now valued at $185 billion. In 2007 Google had revenue of $16.6 billion and net profit of $4.2 billion. Apple had revenue of $24 billion and net profit of $3.5 billion. Since Google went public on 27 August 2004 their stock price is up 367% and Apple is up 1064% – both pretty good. I own Google and have it as the largest holding in the 12 stocks for 10 years portfolio.
Related: Buy Google – Stop Picking Stocks – Lazy Portfolio Results – Great Google Earnings
I figure it is pretty easy to figure out if I can afford something. Do I have cash available (my paycheck already has retirement funds etc. deducted before it shows up in my checking account)? I also have a separate saving account for medium term savings and a separate brokerage account for long term investing (and a Roth IRA). So the money in my checking account basically is how much I have to spend. If I have the money and want to spend it, I can afford it. If I don’t have the money, I can’t afford it. I can just save until I can.
There is a nice post, How to find out if you can afford something, that explores when that simple concept isn’t quite enough.
I made this mistake when I decided to start a saltwater aquarium. I found a great deal on the tank and some supplies on Craigslist, and went ahead and bought it. What I didn’t factor in was the costs of additional supplies, fish and ongoing maintenance. Turns out, saltwater aquariums are an expensive hobby. In hindsight, I wish I had done my homework a little more.
Good Advice. Related: Americans are Drowning in Debt – Too Much Stuff – Add to Your Roth IRA – Teaching Children About Money Matters
Fannie Mae (the quasi government mortgage giant) is raising fees for mortgages it buys. Banks and mortgage lenders often sell the mortgage to Fannie Mae shortly after completing the loan. Mortgages get more expensive – again
And Fannie doubled its “adverse market delivery charge” to 0.5%. That is an across-the-board fee assessed against every loan Fannie buys, according to a Fannie spokeswoman. Fannie first instituted the charge this spring.
…
The added fees will be passed on to borrowers and could mean quarter-point increases in interest rates.
…
Fannie will also eliminate buying Alt-A loans by the end of 2008. Alt-A loans, a category between prime and subprime, accounted for about 11% of the company’s loans during the last years of the boom. They have been used mostly by people who couldn’t or wouldn’t document their incomes, their assets or both. These buyers will find it harder to obtain financing once Fannie stops buying the loans.
According to Yun, however, the cutback in Alt-A will hurt people buying second homes to rent out or resell, rather than first time homeowners. “These are people who often rely on their good credit to buy investment properties putting little or no money down,” he said.
Related: Mortgage Rates Rising – Fed Funds Rate Changes Don’t Indicate Mortgage Rate Changes – Jumbo and Regular Mortgage Rates By Credit Score – Homes Entering Foreclosure at Record
Bankruptcies among seniors soaring
The average age for filing bankruptcy has increased and the rate of bankruptcy among those ages 65 and older has more than doubled since 1991, say researchers Teresa Sullivan of the University of Michigan, Deborah Thorne of Ohio University and Elizabeth Warren of Harvard Law School.
Expensive health care costs from a serious illness before a patient received Medicare and the inability to work during and after a serious illness are the prime contributors to financial crises among those 55 and older. But even among those 75 to 84 and receiving retirement, Social Security and Medicare benefits, the rates soared—from just 1.8 percent of all filers in 1991 to 5 percent in 2007.
Most Americans have two major assets: their homes and their retirement plans. And borrowing against those assets can present new risks when home values and stock markets decline, Sullivan and colleagues say. In some cases, older Americans trying to help children and grandchildren, borrow too much, putting themselves at risk.
Related: Boomers Face Retirement – Retirement Tips from TIAA CREF – Saving for Retirement
Example 30 year mortgage rates (from myfico.com – see site for current rate estimates). Previous posts on this topic: Feb 2008 – August 2007 – May 2007. Since the last post both jumbo and conforming mortgages rates are up (and are up most for high credit scores).
FICO score | APR Aug 2008 | APR Aug 2008 – jumbo | APR Feb 2008 | APR Feb 2008 – jumbo | APR Aug 2007 | APR May 2007 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
760-850 | 6.12% | 7.00% | 5.53% | 6.61% | 6.27% | 5.86% |
700-759 | 6.34% | 7.22% | 5.75% | 6.83% | 6.49% | 6.08% |
660-699 | 6.62% | 7.50% | 6.04% | 7.12% | 6.77% | 6.37% |
620-659 | 7.43% | 8.31% | 6.85% | 7.93% | 7.58% | 7.18% |
580-619 | 9.45% | 9.63% | 9.22% | 9.40% | 9.32% | 8.82% |
500-579 | 10.31% | 10.49% | 10.20% | 10.37% | 10.31% | 9.68% |
For scores above 620, the APRs above assume a mortgage with 1.0 points and 80% Loan-to-Value Ratio. For scores below 620, these APRs assume a mortgage with 0 points and 60 to 80% Loan-to-Value Ratio.
Since February the premium for jumbo loans has decreased to 88 basis points (from 108) for all credit scores above 620 (the combination of higher down payment and higher regular interest rates below 620 result in very little premium from Jumbo loans, under 20 basis points.
Related: 30 Year Fixed Rate Mortgage Rate Data – Learning About Mortgages – How Much Worse Can the Mortgage Crisis Get? – Real Free Credit Report (in USA)