Thursday, March 12, 2009

Buy and hold investing guru 34 yr old sells all he has


TOBIN GRIMSHAW/STAR FILE PHOTO
Derek Foster, author of 'Stop Working, Here’s How You Can' and 'Money for Nothing and Your Stocks for Free' holds son Kennedy as he poses with his wife Hyeeun Park and Connery Foster near their home in Wasaga Beach.
'I don't think we're close to bottom'
March 12, 2009

Business Columnist

Thanks to a healthy stock portfolio, Derek Foster retired when he was 34 years old.

He later wrote and self-published three books about buying and holding stocks for the long term.

Despite heavy losses in his retirement portfolio, Foster believed that stock markets would recover soon.

Today, he's more pessimistic.

In early February, he sold everything he owned in his online brokerage account – $472,000 worth of stocks and income trusts – and moved into cash.

"I think we're in for more pain," he says when explaining his abrupt about-face.

"My strategy was to buy quality dividend-paying stocks and hold them through thick and thin.

"I held on all last year, but I've been doing lots of research and I don't think we're close to the bottom yet."

Foster admits he bit the bullet and disposed of some holdings at a loss.

"I bought Rogers at around $40 in the summer and sold it for a little more than $34 last month," he says.

"I bought Algonquin Power (an income trust) at $8 to $9 a share years ago. The distribution was cut and the price fell to under $2.50.

"I bought over 30,000 shares at this price and sold them in early February for $2.68 a share."

What caused his change of heart? Why did the poster boy for holding stocks turn so gloomy?

Foster, an engineer by training, has lived on annual income of about $36,000 from his stocks since he retired four years ago. This will not be a short recession, in his view.

"There is massive debt that has to be repaid and boomers are at the stage where they shift from spending to saving," he says.

"The economy will be very slow for quite some time."

Valuations were lower when the stock markets crashed in the 1930s and later in 1973 to 1974, he points out.

The dividend yield on the Dow Jones industrial average fell to 6 per cent before, but is at 4 per cent today.

The total market value of stocks fell to 50 per cent of the gross domestic product before, but is at 70 per cent today.

The price-to-earnings ratio of stocks fell to the single-digit range before, but is still in double digits now.

Will he go back to work to support his four children and stay-at-home wife?

No way, he swears.

He's selling put options on stocks he'd like to own – essentially, bidding to buy companies as their share price sinks.

This strategy – outlined in his latest book, Money for Nothing and Your Stocks for Free – gives him an extra margin of safety and higher dividend yields because of lower stock prices.

He's not trying to make bets about the stock market's direction, but is just hoping to preserve his nest egg.

"The move into cash saved me a little over $70,000 as of last Monday – though probably less with the rebound in the last two days."

The stock market boom from 2003 to 2008 was overdone, he now admits.

"How can a guy retire at age 34? I'm the biggest contrary indicator. It shouldn't happen that way."

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Pocklington arrested in California




BRENT JANG

Globe and Mail Update

March 11, 2009 at 4:22 PM EDT

Former Edmonton Oilers owner Peter Pocklington has been arrested on bankruptcy fraud charges in California, U.S. court filings show.

Mr. Pocklington will be formally charged Wednesday afternoon with filing false bankruptcy declarations, as well as making false oaths and accounts in bankruptcy.

He faces up to 10 years in a federal prison, U.S. Attorney spokesman Thom Mrozek said in an interview.

FBI agents took Mr. Pocklington, 67, into custody after executing search warrants at his residence in the Palm Springs region.
Peter Pocklington
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He filed for personal bankruptcy in California last August, just two days after a raid on his previous residence, initiated by a plaintiff in a civil lawsuit. His net worth is listed in his bankruptcy filing at $2,900 (U.S.) and personal liabilities at $19.7-million.

In his declaration, he submitted that his net worth included $200 in his wallet, a $500 watch, a $500 set of golf clubs, $300 of clothing and shoes, $450 in appliances and furnishings, $450 worth of personal goods seized and $500 worth of memorabilia, trophies and art.

Mr. Mrozek said the discrepancy between the assets and liabilities listed raised concerns that Mr. Pocklington wasn't disclosing all of his assets.

“Court documents also allege that Pocklington, in an effort to partially satisfy a court judgment against him, gave a creditor a piece of art, a rug and a desk that were collectively worth approximately $80,000 and were located in one of his storage lockers,” according to a statement issued by the U.S. Attorney's office.

Mr. Pocklington and his wife, Eva, vacated their exclusive Vintage Club condo in Indian Wells, Calif., last fall. They decided instead to rent half of a bungalow duplex at a golf development, the Lakes Country Club, in nearby Palm Desert.

“The indictment alleges that Pocklington failed to disclose to the bankruptcy court two bank accounts at Palm Desert National Bank [PDNB] for which he has sole signature authority, as well as the contents of the two storage units in Palm Desert. In the seven months immediately preceding a September 2008 hearing in his bankruptcy case, Pocklington allegedly wrote a series of checks on a PDNB account in the name of ‘Dempsey Investment Corp.,' an entity that he failed to mention in the bankruptcy petition,” the U.S. Attorney's office said.

Court filings in a civil case show that a bankruptcy trustee is seeking to recover money from Mr. Pocklington and potentially seize whatever is still in his possession, notably five Stanley Cup rings.

Born in London, Ont., he gained national prominence when he signed Wayne Gretzky, then 17 years old, to the Edmonton Oilers in 1978. The Oilers, in the World Hockey Association at the time, joined the National Hockey League one year later.

But Edmontonians were angered in 1988, when Mr. Pocklington sold Mr. Gretzky to the Los Angeles Kings.

Government-owned Alberta Treasury Branches forced Mr. Pocklington to sell the Oilers in 1998, and the rest of his business empire later crumbled.

The Pocklingtons settled year-round in California in 2002.

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