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Wednesday, April 11, 2012

Reuters: Money: Spring is high season for travel scams

Reuters: Money
Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com
Spring is high season for travel scams
Apr 11th 2012, 20:28

Shadows are cast by people who walk on a terrace overlooking the Eiffel Tower in Paris April 11, 2012. REUTERS/Kevin Coombs

Shadows are cast by people who walk on a terrace overlooking the Eiffel Tower in Paris April 11, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/Kevin Coombs

By Mitch Lipka

Wed Apr 11, 2012 4:28pm EDT

(Reuters) - When it comes to large migrations of people during the U.S. spring break and summer vacations, the travel scams can come from most any angle. College students and families are targeted. So are grandparents back home.

"There's a scam for every demographic," says John Breyault, vice president of the National Consumers League.

In Florida, one of the nation's traditional spring break destinations, consumer officials are used to getting a surge in complaints. "As you can imagine, most of the scams around spring break actually start long before the customer packs for the trip," says Sterling Ivey, spokesman for the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services. Then the problems continue when they get where they're going.

"We often see complaints during this time of year related to travel companies or sellers of travel who have been promoting destinations or vacation experiences that the consumer eventually find less appealing than advertised," he says.

More than 7,000 complaints were lodged with the Better Business Bureau against travel bureaus and agencies in 2011 - making that one of the top complaint categories.

Gearing up for the typical warm-weather surge in travel and travel-related scams, several attorneys general, along with Western Union and MoneyGram - two main conduits for wiring cash - are warning consumers about scams they could face.

One scam that comes up repeatedly takes advantage of when a grandchild - typically a young adult - is away from home. An astute crook will look for tip-offs on social networks when someone who fits the profile is traveling - a reminder that revealing personal information can be used for no-good, says Kim Garner, senior vice president of global security and investigations with MoneyGram. Crooks can also easily obtain personal information from student IDs and driver's licenses left on beach blankets or bars in vacation spots.

"I don't think (consumers) realize the amount of time that bad guys can devote to this," says Garner, a former Secret Service agent. "Really, any information, especially that young adults and teenagers provide, is useful to these guys. These guys are relentless."

In the "emergency scam" or "grandparent scam," the fraudster will reach out to the grandparents of the young person who is away and either pose as the grandchild, someone close to them or someone in a position of authority asking for money to be wired to post bail or get them out of some dire situation.

Another scam that crops up more often during times when a lot of people are traveling comes in the form of an email (from an account that has been hacked) from a friend or relative who tells a woeful tale of either being mugged or otherwise losing all their money while on vacation. The punch-line, of course, is a request to wire money.

Instead of sending the money, Garner says, determine for yourself the authenticity of these communications. "Pick up the phone and call. Don't trust the email," she says. "If they don't answer, get the number of a friend who should be with them and contact them."

Tools that can be put in place to avoid problems caused by a gap in communication includng planning when to touch base as well as providing alternate contact information, including hotel phone numbers and cell numbers of companions. Also, overseas travelers can register with the State Department's Smart Traveler Enrollment Program, which can help travelers to be reached in the event of an emergency back home.

(Editing by Beth Pinsker Gladstone)

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Reuters: Money: U.S. money market assets fall for six weeks: iMoneyNet

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U.S. money market assets fall for six weeks: iMoneyNet
Apr 11th 2012, 20:25

Traders including Jeff Silver (quik) keep an eye on the market in the S&P 500 pit at the Chicago Mercantile Exchange September 19, 2008.

Credit: Reuters/John Gress

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Reuters: Money: Stern Advice: Apple is bigger than my brain

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Stern Advice: Apple is bigger than my brain
Apr 11th 2012, 19:26

A man looks at his Apple iPad in front an Apple logo outside an Apple store in downtown Shanghai March 16, 2012. REUTERS/Aly Song

A man looks at his Apple iPad in front an Apple logo outside an Apple store in downtown Shanghai March 16, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/Aly Song

By Linda Stern

WASHINGTON | Wed Apr 11, 2012 3:26pm EDT

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - By various accounts, Apple Inc. is now bigger than Spain, Portugal and Greece (combined), or the entire retail sector of the U.S. economy, or 13 Warren Buffetts. What are we to think about that?

First, a disclosure. In my two-person household are three Apple laptops, two Apple desktops, two iPhones, one iPod, two healthy iTunes accounts, a fair amount of iPad lust, and 200 shares of Apple stock, purchased by my husband roughly two decades ago, and making up a large share of his retirement account.

He would have had 400 shares, but - as he frequently reminds me - I talked him into selling 100 shares (pre-split) back when it was selling for an eye-popping $65 a share, a price I thought was frighteningly high. It is selling today for about $628 a share.

So, (1) No sane person would take buy or sell advice from me; and (2) I have a vested interest in everyone plowing more and more into this company until it's worth more than every other company put together, or I can convince my husband to sell more. However, that isn't the point of this column.

Rather, it's to offer some perspective on this gorilla of Wall Street and the people who own it. And to warn individual investors that, even if they don't live in an iCult ashram like mine, they may own Apple stock.

That's because the most commonly held mutual funds have been plowing cash into Apple, and when a company gets that big, it can dominate even a diversified mutual fund portfolio.

And so, a few points to consider.

- You may already be an Apple shareholder, according to data compiled by Lipper, a Thomson Reuters company. For example: Do you own PowerShares QQQ Trust, Series 1? That's an exchange-traded fund that is sold as an inexpensive proxy for the whole of Nasdaq. As of March 31, Apple made up 17.5 percent of that fund; so, if you had $20,000 in that ETF, you were sitting on $3,500 of Apple stock. Of course, since then, Apple has gained about 3 percent, while most other stocks have fallen.

Other popular funds that hold a lot of Apple are Fidelity Contrafund (ironic, right?), with 9.46 percent of its March 31 portfolio in Apple; Vanguard Growth Index Fund, with 6.13 percent; and Fidelity Growth Company Fund, with 7.9 percent of the portfolio. And if you own the whole market, as proxied by the Vanguard Total Stock Market Index Fund? On March 31, $26.80 of every $100 you had in the fund was in Apple.

- Institutions dominate the stock, holding 69.1 percent of all Apple shares, according to Nasdaq data as of the end of March. Big pension funds, investment companies and more are all invested in Apple. More than half of the 1,848 institutions which claim to own Apple bought even more shares in the first quarter.

Apple pessimists say the fact that everybody seems to own the stock is a good argument for selling it. Lest we forget, in 1999, Microsoft reached a $619 billion market capitalization, and it's now worth a shade less than $255 billion. The once-popular bull market Wall Street adage holds, "Trees don't grow to the sky." At its 1999 peak, Microsoft was selling at $58.38 a share; a year later, its share price was $21.69 (and today, it's at about $30.36).

- Some people still think the company is reasonably priced. At 12.5 times estimated forward earnings, Apple is roughly in line with the NASDAQ and cheaper than the Dow Jones Industrials, which sports a forward PE of roughly 14.25 now. Indeed, Apple could keep on rising. At least two analysts - Piper Jaffray's Gene Munster and Brian White of Topeka Capital Markets - are predicting a $1,000 share price for the company.

- But naysayers have a point, too. They look at the death of Steve Jobs, the problematic labor conditions in China where most Apple equipment is made, the antitrust lawsuit filed against Apple and others by the Justice Department claiming collusion on e-book prices, increased competition from other smartphones, tablets and streaming video services, and say the company's easiest earnings days are behind it.

- Don't forget the dividend. Apple recently said it would pay shareholders $2.65 a share each quarter just to hang on to its stock. That's roughly 1.6 percent a year, and almost four times the average yield on 6-month certificates of deposit now, according to Bankrate.com figures. Of course, if all of those mutual funds, ETFs, pension funds and my husband decide they've had enough of Apple, you may wish you had your cash in the bank instead.

(The Stern Advice column appears weekly, and at additional times as warranted. Read more of Linda Stern's work at blogs.reuters.com/linda-stern)

(Editing by Bernadette Baum)

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Reuters: Money: Hedge fund Viking to rely more on junior managers

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Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com
Hedge fund Viking to rely more on junior managers
Apr 11th 2012, 20:17

By Svea Herbst-Bayliss

BOSTON | Wed Apr 11, 2012 4:17pm EDT

BOSTON (Reuters) - Hedge fund superstar Andreas Halvorsen is putting more trust in his junior portfolio managers.

Halvorsen, who runs the $16.7 billion Viking Global Investors, told clients on Wednesday that he recently upped the aggregate credit lines for a quartet of fund managers by 31 percent to $7.2 billion. The move comes less than a month after James Parsons, one of Viking's most senior managers, left the firm.

"Our next four most experienced portfolio managers, Paul Enright, Ning Jin, Hani Sabbagh and Scott Zinober, are at the center of idea generation," Halvorsen wrote, adding that the with more money to spend the group will now be able to "optimally size most of these ideas themselves." They will now directly control almost 60 percent of the Viking Global Equities fund.

He also raised the credit lines for the next three portfolio managers to $1.5 billion from $1 billion, or 6 percent of the flagship fund.

Reuters obtained a copy of the letter.

The moves will free up the firm's most experienced portfolio managers and the firm's co-chief information officers, Tom Purcell and Dan Sundheim, to focus on "our very best ideas and scale them appropriately," the letter said.

As for himself, Halvorsen, a former Norwegian Navy SEAL who got his start under industry titan Julian Robertson, said he would spend more time on allocating capital. "(I) expect this to continue as we balance a limited supply of capital with the demand from a highly accomplished team."

Viking, which has one of the $2 trillion hedge fund industry's best records, with an average annual return of 18.2 percent since its 1999 launch, bested most of the industry last year and got off to a solid start this year. In 2011 the Viking Global Equity fund gained 7.6 percent, when funds on average dropped 5 percent. It rose 5.4 percent in the first three months of 2012, roughly matching the nearly 5 percent gain of rivals.

Invesco Limited, Priceline.com, LyondellBasell Industries and Apple, long-time favorites of the hedge fund community, were among the firm's best performers, Halvorsen said in the letter.

However, Halvorsen, like some other managers, said he may have been too timid during the first quarter.

Short positions, or bets against stocks, in the information technology, financial and materials sectors all hurt the portfolio as the stock market rallied amid hopes that the worst of Europe's debt crisis was over and that U.S. economic growth would rebound.

"Our short positions partially offset the profits from our longs," he wrote, adding "we are disappointed by the lack of meaningful short winners.

Halvorsen also assured investors that his managers are as committed to delivering top returns as ever even after the firm has faced a number of high-profile departures in the last years. "We are confident that those we have asked to step up will do so and that new opportunities will come to other Vikings in the future," he wrote.

Before Parsons left in 2012, David Ott, who co-founded the firm with Halvorsen, departed in 2010 and Dris Upitis, who had also been a management committee member, resigned in early 2011. Several analysts have also left in the last year.

(Editing by Steve Orlofsky)

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Reuters: Money: Getting the most from your financial-aid package

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Getting the most from your financial-aid package
Apr 11th 2012, 17:48

By Kathleen Kingsbury

BOSTON | Wed Apr 11, 2012 1:48pm EDT

BOSTON (Reuters) - In recent weeks, Eva Chung's family watched with pride as acceptance letters arrived from all seven of the colleges to which she applied.

But some of that initial euphoria has worn off as financial aid award letters followed.

"Reality set in on how much this is going to cost," said Rosemarie Chung, Eva's mother. "We did anticipate more help. And, of course, her first choice so far was the least generous."

Getting into college can be tough. Getting a good aid package can be even tougher. Most families don't pay the full sticker price, and there are strategies for getting the most generous aid package possible.

"April is the time to ask for more, and do it as soon as possible," said Barry Sysler, a Pennsylvania-based college and financial aid consultant. "You lose leverage once you've accepted enrollment on May 1."

UNDERSTAND YOUR AWARD

About 82 percent of all first-year students receive some type of financial aid, according to the latest statistics from the U.S. Department of Education. But too often, parents assume that all elements in a financial aid award letter are free money, which rarely, if ever, is the case.

It is important to distinguish between a gift â€" such as scholarships or grants â€" and "self-help" that needs to be paid back, which includes loans and work-study.

Felicia Gopaul, a certified financial planner and college consultant, tells families that after they've maximized all the grant and scholarship aid, they should use federal loans because they offer competitive, fixed interest rates. These include Stafford loans for students and Parent Loan for Undergraduate Students (PLUS) loans for parents.

Also consider whether a Stafford loan is subsidized or unsubsidized. Interest does not accrue for subsidized loans while you are in school at least half-time or during future deferment periods.

The Free Application for Federal Student Aid's (FAFSA) calculation of Expected Family Contribution is the best estimate for how much aid you can anticipate, but it is not uncommon to be awarded less.

Also, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau offers an interactive, online tool called Financial Aid Comparison Shopper. ( here )

ROOM FOR NEGOTIATION

The good news is that financial aid packages â€" whether they include scholarships, loans or work-study â€" aren't necessarily set in stone. Especially for families with special financial hardships, colleges are willing to listen and reconsider.

Nearly all institutions allow families to "appeal" financial aid decisions, some in formal processes but more often on an ad hoc basis. But first, families need to do some homework, and review the results of their FAFSA application, said Joe Bagnoli, dean of admission and financial aid at Grinnell College in Iowa.

"Errors are made, and identifying them can change your package," he said.

Whenever possible, set up a face-to-face meeting.

"Financial aid officers want to meet with you, that's their job," said Don Betterton, who worked in the admissions and financial aid office at Princeton University for 30 years. "Going in person can add that personal touch they need to make a decision in your favor."

Be sure you're talking to the right person. Need-based appeals are generally handled by the financial aid office, Betterton said, while the head of admissions often has discretion in his budget to increase merit aid for top candidates.

If a face-to-face meeting is impossible, write a letter rather than calling. Include awards or accomplishments a student has garnered since applying.

If you're making a need-based appeal based on unforeseen circumstances such as a job loss or sudden medical expenses, provide schools with documentation, including receipts. Consumer debt is almost never considered a hardship.

Asking for a specific amount can also be more persuasive.

"Make it a reasonable offer," Betterton said. "Two thousand dollars is a reasonable amount to ask for; $20,000 isn't."

And don't be afraid to show one school more generous packages you've received from others.

"If the student's second-choice school has offered a significantly greater amount of aid, explain this in the letter to add some leveraging power," said Scott Weingold, co-founder of the Ohio-based College Planning Network. "Just be sure not to come off too aggressive - no one likes to be threatened."

PLAN FOR FOUR YEARS, NOT ONE

Often when a child is off to school for the first time, parents forget to multiply their expected costs by four.

"You want to get reassurances from colleges that you can count on the same generosity all four years of attendance," said Ron Ramsdell, founder of Minneapolis-based College Aid Consulting Services.

Aida Mirante, director of financial aid at Salve Regina University in Newport, Rhode Island, said students need to know what is required of them to keep their aid, such as maintaining a minimum grade point average or working during school or summer.

In subsequent years, families should always notify institutions if financial circumstances change, such as a second or third child heading off to college.

Under worst-case scenarios, when the money simply isn't there, parents must be prepared to guide their child toward another school.

"There are many great options out there," Sysler said. "No college is worth financial ruin."

(The author is a Reuters contributor. The opinions expressed are her own.)

(Editing by Jilian Mincer, Chelsea Emery and John Wallace)

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