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Archive for November, 2010

Stock Market Game: Students as Stock Selectors

November 29th, 2010 Nancy King No comments

The national office of the Stock Market Game program has compiled a list of the top performing stocks for the fall 2010 semester. These winning stocks were chosen by student portfolio managers in the states with the largest number of SMG teams (easiest way to compile the list). The following is the SMG list of the top five stocks with its brief description of each company:

Company Ticker        9/7/2010   11/22/2010    Increase
1. Motricity, Inc. MOTR         7.70            27.95            263%

Motricity, Inc.: This company enables wireless carriers such as Verizon, AT&T, Sprint and T-Mobile to offer the Web on the go. At the center of the company’s data services is the mCore Platform, allowing wireless subscribers to download ringtones, videos, wallpapers, and games. Congrats to the SMG students who uncovered its potential!

2. ZAGG Incorporated ZAGG          3.62            7.19              99%

ZAGG Incorporated: Your tech savy students may be very familiar with this company as it designs, manufactures, and distributes protective clear coverings and accessories for consumer electronic and hand-held devices worldwide.

3. Arctic Cat Inc. ACAT          8.11           14.88             83%

Arctic Cat Inc.: This Minnesota based company manufactures and markets about 20 types of all-terrain vehicles (ATVs) and over 50 snowmobile models. Think snow!

4. Exide Technologies XIDE            4.47           7.97               78%

Exide Technologies: A maker and recycler of automotive and industrial batteries for retailers and transportation manufacturers including Wal-Mart, NAPA, as well as Fiat and Toyota.

5. National Oilwell Varco Inc. NOV            39.55         60.65             54%

National Oilwell Varco Inc.: A worldwide leader in the design, manufacture and sale of equipment and components used in oil and gas drilling and production.



Happy Thanksgiving

November 25th, 2010 Nancy King No comments

It’s brunch with friends at Josephine’s at the top of the Sheraton and the Great Alaska Shootout basketball games this evening.

I’m glad the Pilgrims led the way.

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Eielson: The Stock Market Game in Alaska

November 24th, 2010 Nancy King 1 comment

Mrs. Sharon Ashlock the Business Education Teacher at Ben Eielson Jr./Sr. High School is using the Stock Market Game (SMG) program with her 8th grade Reach students and her 10th grade Study Skills students. Two of Mrs. Ashlock’s eight teams are in 2nd and 3rd place in the Middle School Division and another team is in 2nd place in the High School Division; these teams are also in 2nd, 3rd, and 4th place overall in Alaska. Congratulations to these students for their astute portfolio management. They have invested their virtual $100,000 in companies ranging from Netflex, Google, and Apple to Coke and McDonald’s. The top Eielson team, Team ZZ31, has outperformed the S&P 500 Index by 15.8 percent. Who says individual investors can’t outperform the S&P 500. This team currently owns 9 stocks and has sold 5 stocks to cut its losses. Semester after semester the top teams are those that sell stocks when they are down 5 to 6 percent and reinvest the proceeds. Success is more about cutting losses and owning a diversified portfolio than about picking the one big winning stock. Each SMG team in Alaska must own at least 5 investments during the semester, and no investment may equal more than 30 percent of the value of the portfolio at the time of purchase.

Ben Eielson Jr./Sr. High School’s 553 students attend the only combined jr./sr. high school in the Fairbanks North Star Borough School District. The students declare that even though they are the smallest high school in the district they are mighty; their school motto is “Small but Mighty and Proud.” Furthermore, they are part of the proud and mighty Eielson Air Force Base located 28 miles southeast of Fairbanks.

Eielson was created as part of Ladd Field (now Ft. Wainwright). Originally (1939), Ladd was the premier site in the United States for cold-weather testing of aircraft and equipment, but World War II changed that mission. Ladd Field became the strategic hub for fighters and bombers involved in the Thousand-Mile War against the Japanese in the Aleutian Islands and a strategic stopover for airplanes flying the Northern Route carrying Lend-Lease materiel to Europe. Because of the increased traffic and weather conditions, Ladd determined it needed an alternative landing strip. Thus, Eielson Air Force Base began operation in 1943 as Mile 26 Satellite Field.

Under the Lend-Lease Act from 1941 to 1945, the United States supplied France, China, the UK, and the Soviet Union with vast amounts of war materials. The Northern Route was used to ferry aircraft and supplies to Russia. U.S military pilots flew the planes from Great Falls,

Montana, to Ladd Field where Soviet pilots took over and flew the aircraft to Nome, Alaska, and on to Siberia. Brutal cold winter temperatures of minus 50 degrees, remote wilderness, and severe weather made these flights extremely hazardous and all too often deadly. By the end of the war 7,926 aircraft had traveled through Ladd and over the pole.

After the close of the war when military bases were being reorganized, Mile 26 Satellite Field was redesignated Eielson Air Force Base—January 1948. It was named in honor of Carl Ben Eielson a 1920’s pioneer in Interior Alaska aviation. In 1928 Ben Eielson and Australian explorer Sir Hubert Wilkins made the first flight over the polar ice cap. They flew a 2,200-mile non-stop route from Point Barrow, Alaska, to Spitzbergen, Greenland. Their flight was interrupted by an emergency landing due to severe weather; after waiting out the storm huddled in their plane for five days, they successfully took off on the third attempt and completed the flight’s last 100 miles. Eielson received the Distinguished Flying Cross and the 1928 Harmon Trophy for that aviation feat.  Eielson was killed in 1929 when he crashed in a storm about 400 miles northwest of Nome while trying to rescue passengers from an icebound ship at North Cape, Siberia.

From the 1943 to the present, Eielson Air Force Base has participated in Alaska and U.S military operations as the Army Air Forces Transport Command (June 1943 to November 1945), the Eleventh Air Force (November to December 1945), the Alaska Air Command (December 1945 to August 1990), and thePacific Air Forces (August 1990 to the present). Today, Eielson’s host unit, the 354th Fighter Wing (FW), provides RED FLAG-Alaska field training exercises for U.S. Forces. It uses Alaska’s more than 60,000 square miles of uninterrupted military training airspace—by far the largest supersonic training area in the nation. These 10-day air combat training exercises held three times a year are a realistic, multi-service, sometimes multi-national (Germany, Sweden, Canada, United Kingdom, India, Japan, New Zealand, Australia, Mongolia, Singapore) exercise in threat training. Eielson’s 18th Aggressor Squadron provides the threat. They are Pacific Air Forces’ only dedicated adversary squadron. It is their job to learn the flying styles and capabilities of enemy air forces and prepare and train U.S. combat pilots to outperform those adversaries. RED FLAG gives pilots and crews a realistic taste of combat, often their first, which significantly increases their chances for survival in actual combat. What a task!

While the 354th Fighter Wing is providing combat-ready forces through training and ‘war games’, their sons and daughters in two of Mrs. Ashlock’s classes are participating in the Stock Market Game as not just a ‘Game’ but as an education for life. They are learning about adverse and positive political, economic, and market forces.

Nancy King, Stock Market Game Alaska Coordinator—administered in Alaska by the Alaska Council on Economic Education.

U.S. Treasury & The Federal Reserve: Briefly, the Difference

November 20th, 2010 Nancy King No comments

The Department of the Treasury was established in 1789 by Alexander Hamilton to manage U.S. government revenues. Today the Department’s official mission is to “Maintain a strong economy and create economic and job opportunities by promoting the conditions that enable economic growth and stability at home and abroad, strengthen national security by combating threats and protecting the integrity of the financial system, and manage the U.S. Government’s finances and resources effectively.” Currently, Timothy F. Geithner is the Secretary of the Treasury.

The Federal Reserve System was established in 1913. The Federal Reserve System is also known as the Federal Reserve and the Fed. It is the bank of the U.S. government, the central bank of the United States, and the bank of banks. It provides financial services to U.S. banks, the U.S. government, and official foreign banks. The Fed is responsible for the nation’s monetary policy. It is charged with keeping inflation in check, protecting the value of our money, and maintaining a stable financial system. It ensures that lenders and borrowers have access to money and credit. Ben S. Bernanke is the Chairman of the Federal Reserve.

A separation exists between the U.S. Treasury and the Federal Reserve System. This separation prevents the Federal Reserve from printing money and handing it to the U.S. Treasury so the Treasury can pay its bills and debts. The Federal Reserve is not allowed to buy U.S. Treasury bills, notes, and bonds directly from the U.S. Treasury; that would merely shift the money from one pocket to the other.

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QE2: What, How, Why

November 17th, 2010 Nancy King No comments

QE2: The Term

QE2—no, I’m not talking about the famous luxury cruise ship, nor am I talking about the Queen of England. QE2 is the new buzz word for the Federal Reserve’s attempt to stimulate the economy by increasing the amount of cash in circulation. QE stands for Quantitative Easing—money easing. The 2 indicates this is the second time the Fed has used this technique. The first QE took place from December 2008 through March 2010; the Fed added $1.7 trillion to the economy. Did QE work the first time? Did the economy begin to grow? Did we have job growth? Over the coming 8 months the Fed will add $850 billion to the money in circulation—a newly created $600 billion plus $250 billion left over from TARP. Will QE2 boost business and employment?

QE2: The Process

How does the Fed (the central bank of the United States) use QE2 to place additional cash in the system to stimulate spending, borrowing, and expansion? The Fed introduces the money through our nationwide banks, the ones you and I use every day. No, the Fed doesn’t walk through a bank’s side door nor in its back door carrying a suitcase of dollars. The Federal Reserve is a bit more sophisticated than that. They use a three step process.

  • Step 1: The Fed creates the new money and adds it to its own checking account. The Fed is the only entity in the United States that can create money out of thin air. And how does it do this? It might chant, “Boil, boil, toil, and trouble,” as it stirs its caldron, or as it waves its magic wand, it might sing, 

“With just a wave of my magic wand, 
Your troubles will soon be gone, 
With a flick of the wrist, And just a flash, 
You’ll land a prince with a ton of cash,” or it might yell, “Full speed ahead. Keep the presses running,” as it prints the money. But in this electronic age, the Fed quietly fabricates the money with a few key strokes on its computer. Ooh, what happens if there is a slip of the finger and the Fed generates an extra billion dollars or turns a billion into a trillion.
  • Step 2: The Fed transfers the newly created money to banks. The Fed can’t simply credit each bank’s account with more money. It must buy something from the banks in exchange for the money it hands out. The purchase must be something the Fed can hold, without deterioration, and resell at a later time if it so chooses. For QE2, the Fed is buying U.S. Treasury bonds owned by the banks—bonds that mature in five or six years and a few that mature in 30 years. Reportedly, the banks are disappointed the Fed isn’t buying more long-term 30-year bonds; the banks want to get rid of these higher risk bonds. However, the Fed doesn’t want to take on that risk either. Too many 30-year bonds would leave the Fed exposed to losses when interest rates rise. They would be holding bonds that pay 4.2 percent when new bonds might be paying 6 or 7 percent.

To encourage banks to sell their short-term bonds, the Fed is offering to buy the bonds for a higher price than the banks paid for them. The increased price also lowers the bond’s yield. As the price of a bond goes up, its yield goes down. Many everyday interest rates are based on the yield of these bonds. A major goal of the Federal Reserve is to keep interest rates low. The Fed has already used its standard approach for keeping interest rates low to stimulate the economy, and unemployment remains at 9.6 percent.

    • Step 3: The banks start the money circulating in two ways. First, the banks lend the money to businesses so companies can expand and hire additional employees to get the economy moving again. Second, the lower bond yields may entice banks to move more of their investment capital into stocks. This demand will drive up the price of stocks and the market will rise. Other investors will follow. As the market continues to rise, individuals will feel wealthier and will begin to spend.

    QE2: Why

    Why is the Federal Reserve resorting to QE2? Previously, the U.S. government tried to stimulate the economy with the TARP monies through “shovel ready” projects and additional government hiring, but so far the economy has been uncooperative; unemployment remains at 9.6 percent. What are the hoped for and possible outcomes of QE2?

    Stimulate the economy by providing additional money for banks to lend

    The banks receive the newly created money from the Fed for a specific number of their U.S. Treasury bonds. Thus, the Fed creates additional money for loans. But, do banks lack the money to loan? Reportedly, banks are holding $1 trillion versus the normal $4 to $8 billion.

    Or is the issue a lack of demand for loans from creditworthy borrowers? Why aren’t creditworthy businesses borrowing and expanding? Perhaps it is because companies are uncertain about the future—taxes, consumer demand, government action, regulations on the horizon, and general economic conditions. Reportedly, non-financial corporations are holding nearly $837 billion is cash as of the second quarter of 2010.

    Why aren’t individuals borrowing and spending? Remember, 9.6 percent are out of work, people have seen the value of their 401Ks drop, and many are living in houses that are worth less the amount of their loans. They are uncertain what the future holds. Individuals are holding $8 trillion in cash and savings; furthermore, their savings increased 6.1 percent during the second quarter of 2010. Is there a lack of money in the system? Maybe there is a lack of money circulating. I, for one, am holding a significant amount of cash because of uncertainties—tax increases, a decline in the stock market, unrevealed effects of the health care bill, the possibility of Cap and Trade and its unknown effects. I may need my cash as cash. I’m holding it as a fear hedge against an unknown future. Did the Fed do any market research before it decided to implement QE2?

    Maintain low interest rates

    The Fed’s standard method of lowering interest rates—directly cutting them—has been exercised fully. The Fed is now resorting to its other tool, QE2. QE allows the Fed to adjust bond yields by choosing how much to pay for the bonds they buy from the banks—the more they pay, the lower the yield. The Fed feels it is important to keep interest rates low to encourage business and consumer borrowing. The interest rates are already at record lows, and the lack of borrowing and expansion continues. Is the lack of available loans at low interest rates the problem? Perhaps business and individuals are quietly waiting to see what happens? Companies and individuals seem reluctant to incur debt at this time.

    Boost the stock market

    Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernake has suggested that by adding money to the banking system, the banks will take the money they don’t loan and will use to buy stocks and corporate bonds rather than low interest U.S. Treasury bonds. Increased demand for stocks means increased stock prices. If the stock market goes up, it creates the impression the economy is recovering. If the economy looks like it is recovering, we will feel that we have more money and will begin to spend; that will lead to increased employment. The Fed is simply creating demand for stocks by keeping bond yields very low and by adding money to the system. If this occurs, investors should be aware that this demand for stocks may not be built on strong company fundamentals such as increasing sales and earning growth rates.

    Monetize the U.S. debt

    Monetizing the debt means the U.S. government buys its own debt. The Fed creates money out of “thin air” and buys the U.S. debt held by nationwide banks. This puts newly created money into circulation and keeps interest rates low—aka money easing—while decreasing bank-held U.S. debt. QE2—monetizing the debt—is the only method the Fed has left to use to stimulate this economy and keep interest rates low.

    Throughout history and around the world monetizing debt has been a “no-no.” What’s wrong with monetizing the debt? It devalues the currency; it devalues the dollar by putting extra dollars in circulation—dollars that come from a nonproductive event. Monetizing our debt does not raise our gross domestic product (GDP).The new dollars do not come from the production of a product or a service.

    When the dollar is devalued, each dollar buys less, which leads to inflation and often hyper-inflation. Governments find it difficult to control inflation and painful to wring high inflation out of the economy. All goods and services become more expensive and their prices keep going up. Inflation is particularly difficult for people living on fixed incomes.

    Globally, a weaker dollar—a less valuable dollar—makes our goods less expensive for other countries to buy. This may increase out exports which in turn may put more people to work in these industries—civilian aircraft, semiconductors, vehicle parts and accessories, industrial machinery, organic chemicals, telecommunications equipment, plastic materials, and medicinal, dental and pharmaceutical preparations. Yet, a devalued dollar makes everything we import more expensive—crude oil, cars, medicinal preparations, automotive accessories, cotton apparel.

    In Conclusion

    In the final analysis, the Fed anticipates that buying $600 billion of existing U.S. Treasury bonds from banks and paying for them with newly printed money will supply cheaper and additional loan resources for businesses, consumers, and home buyers. The Fed believes this will stimulate additional borrowing, spending, and growth. Also, the Fed hopes the lower interest rate and return on government bonds will push investors into stocks. The increased demand for stocks will drive the market higher and help us feel wealthier so we resume spending.

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    Veterans Day

    November 11th, 2010 Nancy King No comments

    Thank you for securing my freedom to vote and to disagree outloud.

    I had forgotten about Red Poppies in people’s lapels on Veterans Day. I miss seeing them.

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    Skagway: The Stock Market Game in Alaska

    November 5th, 2010 Nancy King No comments

    Welcome to the investors from Ms. DeMark’s Applied Math class who attend the high school at the Skagway City School . The Skagway school district consists of one K-12 school with an enrollment of 72 students of which 32 are high school students. Ms. DeMark is the math teacher for grades 8-12 and teaches all math classes from consumer math to calculus. She, like many other math teachers in Alaska and nationwide, uses the Stock Market Game program to enrich her math curriculum. SMG’s Math Behind the Market extends basic math skills, reinforces math knowledge, and provides test taking practice in a real-life type situation. In fact, Learning Point Associates conducted a rigorous, nationwide-randomized, controlled trial measuring the impact of the Stock Market Game and found that students who played the game scored significantly higher on mathematics tests than their peers who did not play the game. To view the full study click here. Teachers typically use the SMG once or twice a week to create a real world application for math. Ms. DeMark’s students are using math concepts, problem solving, and computation as they guide their investments that include stock in a Chinese seafood processor, a Japanese video game producer, a Canadian movie and TV production company, a biopharmaceutical company, and well-know companies such as GE, Johnson & Johnson, UPS, Dell, and Motorola.

    Skagway is a coastal town in Southeast Alaska—the panhandle of Alaska. It is at the north end of 

    the Lynn Canal. The Lynn Canal is a natural inlet waterway that connects Skagway and Haines at the north end and Juneau at the south end to the rest of the Inside Passage and the west coast ports in the lower 48.

    The Inside Passage and the Lynn Canal are a main route for shipping, cruise ships, and Alaska ferries. Because Skagway is the northern terminus of the Lynn Canal section of the Alaska Marine Highway and is a port of call for the Inside Passage cruise ships, its population of 875 plays host to nearly 900,000 tourists each summer.

    Skagway is also on the road system—one of only three Southeast Alaskan communities (Haines and Hyder). Skagway residences can take the Klondike Highway to Whitehorse in Yukon Territory, Canada, where it joins the Alaska Highway, the ALCAN Highway. If they turn left at Whitehorse, they can drive to Tok and be back in Alaska, then go north to Fairbanks or south to Anchorage. If they turn right at Whitehorse, they can drive through the southern part of Yukon Territory, on through British Columbia, and into the lower 48 states.

    The Skagway area was first inhabited by the Tlingit people. They hunted and fished and traded with other groups of people living along the coast and in the interior. Then during 1896 gold was discovered along the Klondike River near Dawson City in Canada’s Yukon Territory. Skagway became a terminus and staging area for gold miners making the 500 mile trek to the Klondike gold fields. In 1896 only a handful of people lived in Skagway. By 1898 the population had increased to 8,000, which made Skagway the largest city in Alaska. Lots of gold mining town history was lived and created in the three short years between 1897 and 1900. By 1900 the gold rush was nearly over and the Skagway economy had collapsed. Names and events such as Jack London, The Call of the Wild (Skagway is part of the setting), “Soapy” Smith, and the shootout on Juneau Wharf, have become part of our national historical lore. Today, tourists can visit the Klondike Gold Rush National Historical Park and ride the White Pass & Yukon Route railroad that hauled miner’s supplies as far as Whitehorse, and adventurous hikers can trek the 33 mile Chilkoot Trail which miners struggled up to reach the Yukon goldfields.

    Miners and Prospectors on the Chilkoot Trail

    The following is a modern-day runner’s description of the trail:

    The trail is like running through a museum. The history here jumps at you. The trail follows a river for a few miles with considerable climbing & descending over glacial moraines, around chasms and outcroppings. At about 16 miles you obtain the pass by climbing 1500’ in about 3/8 mile. The route is all roots, bogs, rocks, tundra and more rocks of every size & description in your very worst nightmare! Chilkoot Pass itself makes Wasatch’s “Chinscrapper” seem easy. I crossed so many streams, snowfields and rock fields it all blends into a memory of this being the most difficult physical feat I have ever attempted in less than a day. There is one 4 mile section where backpackers are advised to allow 10 hours. (this section took me 4 hours). During my run as I passed backpackers, they were jealous of my light fanny pack and my ease of negotiating the difficult terrain unencumbered as they were with their heavy packs. Once over the pass & into B.C. the trail tends to be downhill but still with many climbs around & over “stuff.” Rocks, snowfields & wet conditions from the rain & glacial runoff combine to make the going pretty slow. Of course there is the required reading of historical signs & taking breaks to soak in the wonder around you. The temperatures were 35-60 deg. & everything that can fall from the sky including brilliant sunshine, did. The winds were light except at the summit at Chilkoot Pass. There’s about 7000’ of climbing & 3000’ of descent. I carried minimal survival gear & relied on 8 packets of GU energy gels & 3 Cliff bars. I treated my water from the streams with iodine.

    Also, in modern-day Skagway

    The students in Ms. DeMark’s Applied Math class can learn about current publically traded railroads, mining corporations, and hiking equipment companies while they live in Skagway, the historical staging town for the Yukon Territory gold rush of 112 years ago.

    Nancy King, Stock Market Game Alaska Coordinator—administered in Alaska by the Alaska Council on Economic Education.

    Vote Today

    November 2nd, 2010 Nancy King No comments

    To locate where you vote, click here.

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