Financial Speculation & Reading the Signs

Financial Speculation Is Generally Not To Be Encouraged

First Published Date: May 17, 2009

As a child, a lot of your early reading practice comes from signs. There is only so long you can get away with walking on the grass in direct defiance of a sign before the groundskeeper asks you, often quite forcefully “Can’t you read?” and points to the sign in question. The meaning of the “Wet Paint” sign is often learned in a manner more practical than academic, and results in the need for one’s parents to buy a new pair of trousers. But we learn from these signs and we learn to look out for them. As we get older, the signs change in a practical sense – sticking to speed limits, age restrictions at clubs and so forth – and also in a figurative sense.

We are in a global recession as things stand. As much as some of us will have seen it coming, there will be many more who did not. It is hard to blame them, as there were very few messages coming from a high level saying “Look out – there’s a recession afoot”. Lots of us were busy doing something else and didn’t see the sign until it was too late. In order to avoid compounding our mistakes, the most important thing we can do is be more careful about looking for signs and ensuring we understand them. The problem with economic signs is that they are not plastered everywhere that we might spend money, quite unlike the road signs that adorn every intersection. We need to be actively seeking them out.

Being aware of the financial situation at home and abroad takes work. Some of it may be outright boring. There are, many of you will agree, only so many stories about x industry in y country that you can read before the only letters you see are clusters of zzz – it does not help that economic news is treated by so many in one of two ways. Either it is delivered in a solemn baritone with countless abbreviations that make sense only to investment bankers, or it is dumbed down to insulting levels on news broadcasts and in newspaper articles that may as well be entitled “Finance for Cretins”. The average citizen is not, contrary to popular myth, a cretin. Nor are they a financial whiz kid. Hence the unsurprising lack of information that you feel you can use.

It is clear enough that now is a time when speculation is generally not to be encouraged. If you have a “can’t miss” prospect lined up then it would be positively rude not to investigate it further, but vagueness on how it will pay out, when it will pay out and why this is a certainty – or at least a probability – are the least you should be looking out for. Anything less and you need to proceed with extreme caution. At some point, the signs will change, and when they do there will be scope to take advantage of the new, encouraging signs. These will be things like employment levels rising, a boost in the travel industry or fresh investment coming to the local area. These are the kind of signs anybody should be happy to see.

To streamline and minimize blog maintenance, I will be discontinuing maintaining the Canadapersonalfinancewebsite.com website (however, I will still hold the domain). I will gradually move all articles from this site to A Dawn Journal. This article originally published on the above website on May 17, 2009.

Real Estate Property In Croatia

Shopping the Beachfront in Croatia

First Published Date: Nov 18, 2009

Have you noticed the turning fad to buy foreign vacation property is booming once again? One of the premiere hotspots is the Adriatic coastline of Croatia. If you have not checked out the realtor sites or the available properties then you should at least view some general pictures of this outstanding coast. It is absolutely beautiful and if the available prices are with in your ballpark it is a treat you cannot afford to miss. Not only is this Mediterranean country an interesting as well as beautiful vacation spectacular but the investment potential of owning real estate for personal or business ventures is looking to be very promising.

One may wonder why this magnificent country had not been available until recently. In the late 90’s, once the war had ended and the communistic government had fallen it became more open to foreign land purchases. The property was fairly inexpensive yet several down falls kept most investors at bay. Buying property could take almost 5 years to finalize the excruciating processes. Problems with original ownership ensued because of the original owners such as Serbs had left many properties abandoned after the war. These giving great grievances to those buying from faulty owners who had assumed residence and later tried to sale. The government now though is going to great lengths to make these land values more available.

Not only is the coastline of Croatia amazing but there are also 700 some plus outlying islands. Not all of these are available for sale, as some 300 plus are already owned under private sanctions. Many of Hollywood’s elite have snatched some of these islands already, giving the beautiful Islands and Croatian Coast a glitz of paradise. Many like to follow the trends of Hollywood only adding to the increasing value of this amazing country. Some areas such as the popular city of Dubrovnik are unavailable, in which you would be hard pressed to find properties. This area began soaring in popularity in 2000 and prices have been increasing every since.

However many of the remaining areas are still offering several available properties and lands for sale. The islands of course are made available first to the Croatian government for sanction or resale, so owning your own Mediterranean island may not be impossible but prospects are thinner than to purchase private properties from owners. Current property owners have the rights to sale to whom ever they enter into contract.

While researching your new vacation prospects, include that the Croatian country is soon to be joining the European Union and has been in process since it has been invited in 2005. This may change or alter the market and land availability, which in turn may also drive property prices sky high. If the opportunity presents itself to become a Croatian landowner, investor or vacationer, then it is best you seize the day.

To streamline and minimize blog maintenance, I will be discontinuing maintaining the realestateexpedition.com website (however, I will still hold the domain). I will gradually move all articles from this site to A Dawn Journal. This article originally published on the above website on Nov 18, 2009.

New Credit Card Rules

What New Credit Card Rules Mean

First Published Date: May 23, 2009

Finance Minister Jim Flaherty is unveiling new regulations which will force credit card companies to behave in a more transparent manner – including a strict disclosure policy on penalty fees and interest rates. The move, announced Thursday (May 21), is intended to bring an end to or at least limit the incidence of Canadian consumers becoming saddled with excessive interest payments on their cards. In the midst of a global recession, more consumers than ever are struggling with debt repayments, and in Canada as elsewhere, the banks are being blamed for this situation.

Short-term special offers regarding rates and fees have long been used as a way to persuade shoppers to take out credit cards – leading to even reluctant customers finally agreeing to go plastic, then finding out some way down the line that the special offers are not worth the paper they are printed on in many situations. The new transparency regulations are intended to give customers a better chance of spotting the worthless offers and only accepting a credit card that they will be able to benefit from in a substantive manner. The way of things up to now has been that customer obligations regarding the special offers are couched in the cardholder agreements using the old obfuscatory methods of small print and impenetrable jargon.

Among a comprehensive raft of legislation, Flaherty is also set to introduce an industry-wide 21-day grace period for interest on new purchases, so that if customers pay their balance in full by the due date they will not incur interest. Up to now this period has been practised by some banks but not by all, but the new legislation will make it a blanket rule. The limiting of certain business practices that are not beneficial to customers will form a major plank of the new legislation. This will also hit the banks who have recently shortened their purchase-to-payment interest-free period, a move already condemned by the Consumers’ Association of Canada.

The ideas are intended to give Canadian customers a bit more breathing room on monthly bills – meaning that customers who do not pay off their bill in full will no longer find themselves penalized by interest. A large majority of Canadian households do pay their bills off in full every month – estimates put this in the region of 70% of homes – but with belt-tightening becoming a competitive sport in most of the Western world there are a number who simply cannot.

Opinions on the moves seem to differ widely, with opposition critics having derided the minister’s measures as nothing more than an “information campaign” which will do little or nothing to protect customers who are already struggling. Others have dubbed the moves “weak” and suggested that the minister is actively seeking to favour  his “bank buddies on Bay Street”. Opposition proposals which have not been adopted included a cap on credit card interest at 5% above the prime rates enjoyed by commercial banks. The NDP, who suggested this move, say that the government’s latest move will “send working families into more debt”.

To streamline and minimize blog maintenance, I will be discontinuing maintaining the Canadapersonalfinancewebsite.com website (however, I will still hold the domain). I will gradually move all articles from this site to A Dawn Journal. This article originally published on the above website on May 23, 2009.

Mobilicity Customers: Time to Run From Rogers

Mobilicity – Now That’s Not Smart

First Published Date: June 29, 2015

Although the government keeps praising the recent Rogers-Mobilicity deal as a big WIN for Canadians, most of the Mobilicity customers would view it otherwise. There is a lot of talk about the “Spectrum” swap to make Wind Mobile nation’s fourth carrier to compete with the big three brothers. But for those 150,000 Mobilicity customers it’s a deal to gobble them up by the same giant they wanted to get rid of in the first place.

The drive behind Rogers buying Mobilicity is not because Rogers’ interest in Mobilicity’s existing clients, but because of the spectrum it can gets hands on. Regardless what the government says, it does not take a rocket scientist to understand that this deal means more control in Rogers’ hand and less competition.

If you need an example of what happens to those great monthly affordable plans after a big company buying a small competitor, you don’t need to look further than Telus buying Public Mobile. The affordable plans Public Mobile used to offer are all gone since the takeover and the same thing is bound to happen with Mobilicity very shortly.

When Mobilicity customers signed up with this small player offering affordable plans (although with a terrible signal), their main intention was to escape from a big brother and save some money. Some of the customers could not even afford to have a plan with a big brother and they had some relief subscribing to a new company which is not a part of the big brothers that have been monopolizing and terrorizing Canadian mobile markets ever since.

So what now? These unfortunate and stranded 150,000 subscribers are back to where they started and will be eaten alive by the same giant they were running away from. The only option that seems to remain open now is to run – again.

Real Estate Hotspot The Adriatic Coast and Montenegro

Adriatic Sea Dream

First Published Date: July 1, 2015

Who does not remember that it was only a couple of years ago when the Adriatic regions of what used to be called Yugoslavia was known for all the wrong reasons. All that we got from the media was generally about bloodshed and what came to be known as ethic cleansing. In a little while the former communist republic began disintegrating and small tribal units were seceding and becoming republics on their own, whether they had international support or not.

Talking about the region today and mentioning places like Montenegro you will elicit a completely new set of feelings, especially from people who are very keen on real estate. Every international investor you know about is jostling for a share of the former hotspot of the bloodbaths of modern Europe because people just discovered the golden coasts that been forgotten for years on end. After the years of war and destruction, reconstruction has begun in earnest and the focal point seems to be the Adriatic coast. There are all manner of developments already taking place and foreign investors are falling over themselves to build up the coastal are and right now it is littered with industrial investments and holiday resorts of the highest standards you can ever imagine.

What seems to have awakened the great interest may be the fact the several celebrities have toured the Adriatic sea coasts of the former Yugoslavia not just as tourists, but they have ended up buying a piece of the cake and you will be in for a surprise if you found who has property in this lovely coast. From film stars to rally champions and all the rest you can mention, the destination is the Adriatic Sea coast and Montenegro is real hot spot currently. You know what follows when famous people invade a place, the prices of property begin sky rocketing and this is what is happening in Montenegro right now. The ordinary Joe will be hard pressed to manage anything at this time. What with prices rising by up to 40% in just one year.

One of the hottest spots in Montenegro where the high and mighty are settling is known as Kotorska Bay, which is a scenic are that has mountains overlooking three sizeable bays and because of space and height limitations, the developments here are not allowed to go more than three storey high. The one thing that has also catapulted the developmental status of this enclave is the recognition by UNESCO to make it a world heritage site. The sandy beaches are always full of people and the cost of property is just not what you would expect of an area with history like this one.

And for those who would love to acquire built up properties, there is no shortage of apartments that have been put up overlooking the sea, where you stay as you enjoy the cool breeze of the evening. All that was lacking due to the bad history that the area went through just a few years ago, moneyed investors and developers are bridging the gap with so much zeal. The good news is that real estate lovers are not letting them down, seizing every available piece of lane or built up apartments.