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When It’s Time to Sell Your House

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There’s no denying that selling your house can be a stressful decision. Many factors may have led you to this point. You might be ready for something bigger or need something smaller. You might have an amazing new job in an amazing new city. If it’s a question of sizing up or sizing down, you won’t be pressured to sell within a set amount of time. On the other hand, if you need to start your new job in three months, the pressure will be on to sell as quickly as possible. Knowing how to navigate the ins and outs of the real estate market takes a little ingenuity, but with the right resources – including a competent real estate agent – you’re sure to be looking at a “SOLD” sign in your front yard before too long.

Timing Is Everything

Well, timing may not be everything, but it’s important. If you’re not pressured to sell your house quickly, consider yourself lucky. Feel free to skip ahead to the next section. If, on the other hand, you’re faced with a pressing situation, like a new job that requires you to relocate, you’ll need to act quickly and efficiently to get the ball rolling.

As soon as you even suspect that a transfer or relocation may be possible, get in touch with a real estate agent and hammer out details like what a reasonable asking price might be. If the relocation does, indeed, happen, you’ll be that much further along in the process, and listing your house will just mean filling out some paperwork and keeping the place picked up for showings.

As a new employee about to relocate, you’re well within your right to contact your new employer to request a deferment of your start date by a few months. If your new job is set to start in the middle of the winter, for example, you’d be much better off waiting a few months to relocate to try to sell your home when the real estate market is at its peak in the warmer months.

Wait for the Warm Months

People buy houses when it’s nice out, not when there’s snow and ice on the ground. Showing a house with a lush, green front yard and trees full of leaves is a boon to real estate agents everywhere. When the sun is shining and the grass is green, potential buyers have an easier time imagining their new life in the house.

There’s no getting around the fact that winter is a terrible time to put your house up for sale. Viewers will traipse in and out with slush covered boots, the trees are bare, and everything is gray and overcast. If you can wait for the warmer months, you absolutely should. Also, potential buyers are much more open to discussing how much things like property taxes, home insurance policies, and general upkeep will cost them when they can hear birds chirping and brooks babbling.

A Special Note About the Current Real Estate Market

If you can avoid selling your house right now, you should. With property values at record lows, the current market is nowhere close to being in the seller’s favor. Upside-down mortgages (when the balance of the mortgage exceeds the value of the property), short sales (when a seller is forced to sell the house for less than the balance of the mortgage), and foreclosures are an increasing reality. Buyers certainly have the upper hand in the current real estate market, and can make demands that, even just four or five years ago, would have been considered insulting to the seller.

This doesn’t mean that all hope is lost, though. If you still decide that you want to sell your home, prepare yourself to be patient, and hold off listing until the weather and time of year are on your side. Needless to say, the best time to sell is when you can, at the very least, recoup your initial investment on the property. Give yourself as much time as possible, which will prove to be the most important factor to selling successfully.


Canadian Dollar Suffers from U.S. Slowdown!

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Have you ever seen someone make a mistake and not only do they suffer for it but someone else does as a result also? Well, this is exactly what’s happening to Canada right now.  

You see, most of last year, you could say that the Canadian dollar was falling because of falling commodity prices. Since Canada exports so many widely used commodities like oil and lumber, when prices fall, so do their profit margins. It costs them about the same amount to produce the product but what they can get for it in the market is determined by where those commodities are trading at the time.  

USD/CAD Pushes Towards 1.30 Once Again!

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Last Year the Commodities Crash Killed the Canadian dollar. This Year it’s the U.S. Economic Crash that’s Killing Them! 

So that was what hurt them much of last year. Now we roll into 2009, and they get killed by another dynamic: the increasing slowdown of the U.S. economy! 

For three months in a row now, the U.S. economy has shed around 600,000 jobs or more back to back! The unemployment rate seems to be going somewhat parabolic at this point. It jumped from 7.6% previously to 8.1% now.  

On top of this, to buffer the blow of the slowdown, Canada’s central bank had to lower interest rates once again (to 0.50%) which put it at the lowest their interest rates have EVER been! 

While this is a dynamic that will eventually be good for their economy, it hurts their currency right now for sure.  

They also stated that they may implore “Quantitative Easing”. What the heck is that? Well, in simple terms it means that they will print money out of thin air and load up the banks with so much excess cash that they are more likely to lend money and thus spur economic growth.  

While that may eventually give their economy a boost, it kills their currency. Why? Look at it this way. Anytime something becomes more abundant, it becomes worth less. Anytime something becomes scarce, it becomes more valuable. (This is why a Corvette in the 1960’s may have gone for $3,000 then and would sell for $30,000 to $60,000 today. These days, they are scarce…yet they weren’t back then).  

So when the market is flooded with more money (Canadian dollars), that money gets devalued and is worth less. Therefore it takes more (Canadian) dollars to buy the same amount of goods.  

The U.S. is Printing Money too, but Right Now they are Saved Because they are the World’s Reserve Currency (and thus a “Safe Haven”). 

Now, you may say but isn’t the U.S. doing the same thing? After all, their economy is slowing down. They are printing money too.  

I would say, while I won’t deny that point, the U.S. dollar presently benefits from what is called the “safe haven bid”. What does that mean? It means that investors all over the globe are running to the safety of the U.S. dollar because it’s the world’s reserve currency right now.  

In other words, if there’s one currency on the face of the earth that you are most likely to keep and continue to use, it’s the one that most of the goods are priced in all over the world. For example, gold, oil, wheat, soybeans, lumber, etc. are all priced in U.S. dollars.  

Therefore in crazy times like this, it enjoys the benefit of being the world’s reserve currency. However, once the global economy finally does return to normal, then this “benefit” will suddenly go away and the dollar will just have to stand on its own fundamentals once again. We all know that once that happens, the buck doesn’t have that much to stand on. Therefore, the “dollar party” may come to an end ONCE the global economy normalizes.  

In the mean time, Canada’s currency (and economy) will continue to suffer as the U.S. lays off more workers and continues to slow down. Remember, they derive about 79% of their exports from the U.S. That’s huge! In fact, it’s so huge…it’s the largest trading relationship between two countries according to Canada’s trade department.  

This really is huge, because the U.S. hasn’t had three back to back months of layoffs this big since they started keeping records on it back in 1939. So from at least as far as our records go back, this has never happened on this scale before! 

So when you add all of this up, you come up with the fact that the U.S. dollar has a high probability of continuing to rise against the Canadian dollar. So with that said, I think you may find the USD/CAD rate to break the 1.30 barrier in the coming weeks to months.  

Therefore, if you would like to take advantage of this situation and profit from the pressure on the Canadian dollar, then take these three steps: 

  1. Get Educated about Currencies and What Makes them go up and down: You can get your an online education here that comes with live instructors that are there to answer your questions.
  2. Get a FREE demo account here that comes with REAL TIME quotes and charts. This way you can learn how to place trades before risking one cent of your money in the currency market.
  3. Then once you’ve gotten educated over the course of 8-10 days in your course and you are familiar with your demo trading station, then open up your live trading account here. If you start with a micro account, then I would suggest putting in $300 to $2,000 in the account. Start small. If you choose to start with a mini account, then you might fund your live account with $2,000 to $10,000. Start with enough capital to be practical while trading only 1-2 lots per trade at first.

Sean Hyman is today’s guest writer, he is the head instructor at MyWealth.com  
 


120 Billion Reasons to Sell the Yen!

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This past year, one of the few financial instruments in the world was headed to the moon. Which one was that? The yen!

Yeah, the carry trade unwound which caused money to flow away from high yielding currencies and back into low yielding currencies like the yen.

Investors became risk adverse with their money. They poured it into things that had been beaten down for years because it seemed to be a safe place to run to. Thus the yen was a huge beneficiary during this ultimate “fear factor”.

However, recently I started talking to you about a possible turn coming in the yen and that the yen party was about to come to an end soon.

Things go from “Bad to Worse” in Japan

Since then, things in Japan have continued to unravel. They’ve had a 12 percent slide off in their GDP. The yen has risen 23 percent against the dollar which is killing their exporters. Toyota, Sony and Honda are all either doing layoffs or are about to do layoffs. In fact, Honda has even mentioned that if the yen stays at 100 to the dollar or under, that they may be forced to move some of their operations out of Japan. So this is serious stuff!

If that we’re enough, when the Japanese Finance Minister showed up at the latest G-7 meeting in Rome, he was accused of being drunk and unable to properly participate due to his inability to understand the questions being posed to him.

This caused him to have to step down from power just days later. This makes several finance ministers that Japan has gone through in just a short time. Governmental instability is never good for a currency. So these were all of the reasons lately that have surfaced as to why the party may be ending for the yen (in particularly against the U.S. dollar).

120 Billion Reasons to Sell Short the Yen and Stop Shorting Other Asian Currencies!

But now there’s a new reason to close out any long positions in the yen and to reverse course by shorting it.  Why? 13 Asian nations announced on the 22nd of this month that they were forming a $120 billion currency pool in order to defend their currencies.

This is a powerful alliance as these countries team up together. This should send a building wave of confidence across these Asian countries as they see governments teaming up and banding together for the support of their own currencies.

Japan, China and South Korea will provide about 80 percent of the funds for the pool and the other 10 countries will fund the remainder.

While many of these currencies have weakened significantly and funds may have to be used to buy their currencies, the Japanese could always use any extra resources to sell their strong currency.

With these countries banding together in such a strong, united way…it shows that the story may be about to change. Formerly in 2008 and up until now, you’ve had most of these currencies across Asia weakening unduly and the yen having an unreasonably high strength.

I think you are going to see this tide turn. These things happen like ships turning and not like speed boats. However, I think the yen is starting its turn even now and it won’t be long before these other Asian currencies start to strengthen once again.

I also think this massive currency pool could help to prevent another Asian contagion like happened in 1997-1998 as many of the Asian countries used of most all of their foreign reserves trying to defend their currencies and had to finally turn to the IMF for help.

It was a horrid problem that ended up causing a ripple effect all around the world. So they are being very preemptive this time around in trying to stop something like this before it gets that far.

USD/JPY “Prepares for Takeoff” on Yen Weakness!

Therefore, I think the sentiment is going to shift away from a strong yen while other currencies finally start to strengthen. You will likely see the yen weaken across the board but I’m most confident in the prospects for the USD/JPY exchange rate going up overall throughout the remainder of the year due to this new vote of confidence and also due to all of the previous problems plaguing Japan.

At the end of the year, I think you will find that the USD/JPY is back up over 100 and headed higher. This will help Japan’s economy, especially its exporters that are such household names here in America.

So get ready for more yen weakness and dollar strength against it. Also, it won’t be long before other Asian currencies start to strengthen as the yen starts to weaken.

Today’s Guest Writer is Sean Hyman the head instructor over at www.mywealth.com


6 Things Credit Card Companies Would Rather You Didn’t Know

The credit card industry has been booming over the past few decades. Why not? They offer a service that many love to utilize. American’s have utilized it to a tune of about 70 Billion dollars at last check. But, what a deal. Buy now, pay later. No money, no problem. Well, I guess that depends on how you look at it. Or, perhaps from which side of the fence that you stand on. From the credit card companies side of the fence, it is awesome. From the consumer’s side, it can be a little frightening. Don’t get me wrong, credit cards can be a great thing. They are the future. I see a day when cash will not be utilized at all, where all transactions are made on plastic. And although the bottom line is that credit card companies will always have the upper hand, that does not mean that credit cards cannot be a successful financial enterprise for the consumer, as well.

Knowledge is the key to success. The more you know about your credit cards, credit scores and how to play the game, the better your odds of success. Here are 6 things credit card companies would rather you didn’t know.

  1. 1. Some credit cards come with a Universal Default Clause. This is where it becomes vitally important that you read the small print. This clause simply states, that if you are late on your payment, your interest rate can automatically rise as high as 30%. Here is the kicker. Even if you are late on another credit card, not even with the same company, with this clause, they can still raise your interest rate. Do not use cards with this clause. If you can, transfer your credit to a card that does not have a Universal Default Clause.
  2. 2. Do not be lead to believe that all you have to do is make your minimum monthly payment. This will normally only cover 1% or 2% of your balance. With interest and fee’s, a $1000 debt could literally take years to pay off. It is always better to pay off your balance monthly, or do so as close as you can.
  3. 3. Proven fact. Those who purchase with credit cards, buy more. Consumers tend to double their purchases when using a credit card. Think about it. If you go to the mall with cash, you will be more reluctant to use it all up. But with a credit card, no problem, it won’t cost you a penny today. Treat your credit card like cash.
  4. 4. Do not max out your credit card. Ever. Always try to spend no more that 50% of your credit limit. Whenever you cross that 50% margin, you credit score can go up. Creditors frown on maxed out credit cards.
  5. 5. Do not be fooled by all the credit card rewards programs. You will pay for them in one way or another. Avoid these, or do not bank your choice of a credit card on them. You will be better off in the end.
  6. 6. If you are not happy with your credit card, you can call your credit card company and seek a better deal. If you feel your interest is to high, give them a call. If you think the fee’s are to high, or your payments are to steep, give them a call. It is in their best interests to deal with you, or risk losing you to a card that offers you more.

Know your card. Read the fine print. Never cancel a card, it hurts your score. Simply cut it in half and use another. Education is your best tool. Make your payments, be responsible, and you can enjoy your credit cards without a mountain of debt.

* * *

Debbie Dragon is a writer for CreditorWeb.com, where she writes about credit cards, credit card offers and general personal fnance.


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