Search
Recommended Sites
Related Links






   

Informative Articles

Buying a Motohome – How to Avoid the Pitfalls to Optimise Your Value for Money
Buying a motorhome can have its on pitfalls. Overpricing, defective vehicles, disputed property and weak crafts are among the dangers of purchase. As the first step in your purchase, you will have to determine your needs as that will determine...

IT'S NOT MONOPOLY MONEY, DON'T RISK YOUR HOUSE ON IT!
What's the difference between an amateur and a professional? An amateur practices until he can get it right, a professional practices until he can't get it wrong. So, where are you going to get your investment information - from an amateur or a...

Life Insurance - Money Saving Top Tips
More and more people are buying life insurance online and the numbers seem to be doubling every two years. The reasons are clear. Prices are lower on the Internet and life insurance is fundamentally a simple insurance product. Despite the...

Make Money At Home The Easy Way!
Who among you can live without money? Isn't it impossible? Does it make a difference if you have a single cent or a bundle of green money in your pocket? Indeed, it does make a difference. Parents cannot buy the needs of their children, cannot...

OPM (Other People's Money)
You find a motivated seller who has a house he wants to get rid of badly. You can see that owning that house puts you in the position of making a lot of money. You are excited! Then an uncomfortable thought brings you back down to earth: “How can I...

 
It's Not All About the Money, But It Has Alot To Do With Investing


Sin and sorrow everywhere
People dying in despair
Happy Birthday to you; Happy Birthday to you.
When a kid, my grandfather gave me a crisp dollar bill for my birthday. It wasn't about the money; it was about him. As a kid, I also heard theological and monetary snipes at the church, "All the church wants is my money". This week, we are reminded that it is not all about the money; it is about the man.
Theological jargon ("sin") may not be germane to your conversations. However, sorrow always evokes loss, stirs questions about what matters, and tears become our vocabulary. So, what does this have to do with the stock market? Funny you should ask.
Every corporation (profit or nonprofit) portrays its leadership. Corporate boards and officers may hide for a while behind press releases and balance sheets, but revelation ultimately casts beams of light on the board room, the office suite, and the sacristy.
Forbes magazine maintains a "Corporate Scandal Sheet" It lists twenty-two New York Stock Exchange corporations under current indictment for accounting "imbroglios".
  • Their "sins" described: "...overstated results by inflating capital expenses and hiding debt"..
  • "Shredding documents...after the SEC (Securities Exchange Commission) launched an inquiry...."
  • "Boosted profits and hid debts totaling over $1 billion...."
  • "Overstated $100 million in sales...."

The sorrow? Abject disappointment for investors, pension recipients, company employees (mail room clerks, janitors), children, and tax payers. It is about the money.
Proxy season busies me with reading and voting on behalf of clients. Proxy votes give authorization to the directors to "elect", "approve", and "ratify". Shareholders submit proxy votes with confidence that the Board of Directors will act with integrity. Many don't.
During 2003, under John Paul II's direction, the Pope's charity authorized $69 million dollars in expenditures to help allay the "grave difficulties caused by tensions and conflicts" around the world. Congregants give with confidence that the Pope's Charity will act with integrity. He did.

About The Author

Ray Randall serves clients as a registered investment advisor with his firm, Ethos Advisory Services, Essex, Massachusetts http://www.ethosadvisory.com. He has wide experience within the financial services industry, writes a weekly newsletter for Ethos Advisory Services, and coordinates the developments at Echievements . Ray holds a Masters Degree from Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary, Hamilton, MA. You may email him or call (877-895-3756).
rayrandall@ethosasdvisory.com

Sign up for PayPal and start accepting credit card payments instantly.