Posts Tagged ‘Stock Market’

Harvey Rowen Interviewed for Servcorp Spotlight Newsletter

Wednesday, January 18th, 2012

Last month Starmont’s Harvey Rowen was interviewed by Servcorp and highlighted in their monthly newsletter!  Servcorp is the company Starmont leases their San Francisco office from at 555 California Street.  This office has made it much easier for our Clients to meet with us and through Servcorp Starmont has access to offices in Irvine, CA and New York allowing for convenient places for us to meet with Clients on both coasts.

Here is the interview…Harvey shares his personal history as well as his perspective on the advice business – Read on and Enjoy!

Client Spotlight
This month, our feature client is Harvey Rowen. He is the CEO andFounder of Starmont Asset Management. One of the things I most admire about Mr. Rowen is his dedication to his clients. Being an Asset Management company, the economy has been rough on his industry, but he constantly strives to keep all his clients financially secure and happy. Mr. Rowen is currently a full-time Executive Suite client at our 555 California Street center, and working with him has not only been an exciting experience, but he is also someone I can look up to. I asked him some questions so we could get to know him a little better:

Tell me a little bit about yourself. 

Born, Chicago, Ill.  (more…)

Client Communications: When Will Investments Start to Go Up?

Wednesday, November 30th, 2011

November 28, 2011

To Our Valued Clients

As the attached chart shows, in the past 115 years there have been four secular bull (up) markets in the United States, and four secular bear (down) markets, as measured by the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA).

A secular bull market is a long term upward trending market, where each successive high point is higher than the previous one.

Conversely a secular bear market is a long term downward trending market, where the trend does not rise above the previous high.

According to the attached chart, the four secular bull markets lasted 43 years in total, while the four secular bear markets lasted 72 years. Yet the cumulative return for the secular bull markets was 1,601.06%, while the cumulative return for the longer lasting secular bear markets was 4.05% (through December 2010).  For that reason the DJIA over that period of time has gone from about 50 to over 10,000.

(more…)

Remedy For Advisors On The Roller Coaster

Tuesday, November 1st, 2011

Starmont’s Vivian Groman was once again a contributor to the Women Advisor Forum with this month’s blog post.  In her post Vivian provides advice to other advisors on how to support Clients through the markets’ volatility.  At Starmont, we serve our Clients by providing sound investment advice and the personal relationship that support Clients through any market condition or life experience.

Read Vivian’s Blog Here

Client Communications: Third Quarter Reports

Wednesday, October 26th, 2011

October 25, 2011

To Our Valued Clients

Here are your Third Quarter Reports.

The Quarter to Forget, an October to Remember (so far)

As we told you in our October 7th e-mail, the third quarter produced the worst results for stocks and bonds since the market meltdown in the Fall of 2008, wiping out 2011 gains and putting returns solidly in the red as of September 30th.

The good news is that October has been a very strong month and returns for 2011 have returned to the black, or are close to it, as I write this in the last week of October.  If this week is decent, your Schwab October statements will bring a smile to your face and some joy to your heart.

Europe and Congress: Full of Promise but Resolution Still Elusive

Just as fear of a European meltdown and some troubling economic data about the pace of GDP growth and unemployment caused the terrible third quarter, the belief that European leaders now are serious about solving that problem and some solid U.S. earnings reports and resultant low p/e ratios, have caused the October rally.

In order for the rally to continue (more…)

Invitation: What’s Driving Your Investment Performance?

Wednesday, October 12th, 2011

Find Out What’s Driving Your Investment Performance  – Has Fear Replaced Reason?

We are experiencing unprecedented volatility in the financial markets. As you watch your investment performance, your stomach may be queasy from what feels like a never-ending rollercoaster ride! And the volatility continues with no apparent reprieve.

Many seasoned market analysts would say that this cycle of volatility is largely driven by headlines and will most certainly end. These analysts think that fundamentals (reasonable analysis), and presumably more predictable times, will once again prevail over the financial markets. Others disagree and claim the market has shifted from what has historically driven performance to what is being called the “new normal,” a normal that most of us will not necessarily like.

Please join us for a discussion with Starmont’s Harvey Rowen and Steve Cassriel, Vice President at Dodge and Cox Funds, a firm which has been investing on behalf of investors like you for over 80 years. Steve will talk about the role of fundamental investing-why and when he thinks fundamentals will prevail and value based investing will once again drive the markets.

 See more details below…

WHEN

Conference Call  – through your phone or PC with slides

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

12:30 PM TO 1:30 PM (Pacific)

RSVP

To register and receive webinar call-in instructions email Suzanne Monaco at smonaco@starmont.com

(more…)

Client Communication:Déjà Vu All Over Again

Monday, October 10th, 2011

October 7, 2011 

To Our Valued Clients, 

The last few years have been very volatile. In reporting to you on where we are today, I thought that it might be helpful to review where we have been over this wild ride, how Starmont has been able to preserve and grow your assets during this time, and what we plan to do going forward. 

How We Got To Where We Are

In 2007 Starmont became concerned with the write downs US banks were taking on the mortgage backed bonds they carried on their books. Our concern was that those write downs could lead to failed banks and to a serious disruption in our country’s financial system and markets.

In December 2007 we started to sell down the equity funds held in our Clients’ portfolios. We continued selling through June 2008. We invested the proceeds of the sales primarily in bond funds.

In September 2008 Lehman Brothers filed for bankruptcy, Merrill Lynch sold itself to Bank of America, and the U.S. government “invested” $80 billion in AIG.

The result was a panic in the financial markets, (more…)

Client Communication: Portfolio Adjustments

Wednesday, September 21st, 2011
September 20, 2011 

To Our Valued Clients, 

We finished trimming equity allocations last week, as we said we would do in our previous e-mails. 

It was a good week for equities, mostly because of positive news out of Europe, but the outlook is still cloudy-at best. 

Vivian and I went to a PIMCO conference last week.  They are still on the “bumpy road to a new normal” theme, and the new normal is not positive.  Their current forecast for the next 3-5 years: 

  • –One or more members of the European Union will default or restructure their debt, causing dislocations across the financial markets;
  • –The United States will deal with its debt problem through a combination of austerity (driven by Congressional Republicans) and inflation (driven by the Fed).  Neither is good for the stock and bond markets;
  • –The Emerging Countries (led by China, and including India and Brazil), will continue to grow, but at slower rates as they try to contain inflation in their economies.

While PIMCO is not necessarily right, (more…)

Client Communication: Debt Ceiling Status

Friday, August 19th, 2011

July 27, 2011

To Our Valued Clients,

With a week to go until the United States government runs out of cash, there is still no resolution concerning the debt ceiling.

I said in an earlier communication (all of which you can find on the Starmont website, www.starmont.com) that Congress would resolve this on August 1, which is this coming Monday. I’m sticking to that, notwithstanding the seeming lack of progress to date.

As things go unresolved, however, some Clients are getting anxious and have decided to hedge themselves against the possibility that the debt ceiling will not be raised. For those Clients we are raising some cash by making sales in their IRA accounts (no capital gains taxes) to raise up to $250,000 per IRA account. We are holding the cash at the Charles Schwab Bank, and $250,000 is the FDIC limit for IRA accounts.

The cash can be used in various ways, depending on what happens with the debt ceiling legislation:

(more…)

Client Communication: Market Update

Friday, August 19th, 2011

August 4, 2011

To Our Valued Clients,

Global equity markets were pretty ugly today. But since you have a diversified portfolio and bonds are holding their own, and since many of you raised cash in advance of the debt ceiling vote, you did not do nearly as badly as the Dow being down 500 points today would lead you to believe.

Indeed, if you have a portfolio that is 20% in domestic stocks, 12.5% in developed international stocks, 12.5% in emerging markets stocks, 45% in bonds and 10% in cash, your portfolio is down around 2.4% for the day. Not a great day, but not down the 5% represented by the Dow decline.

Why the sell off?

(more…)

Advisors Should Honor Gender Differences

Thursday, August 4th, 2011

Starmont’s Vivian Groman quoted.  Read a recent article about how advisors can be mindful of gender differences . 

Advisors: Clients’ Gender Clue to Understanding Financial Behavior

Click to Read General & Research/Outlook Disclosures