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Tired of the Wall Street Roller Coaster?
Diversity Into Real Estate!
My broker says....
Have you had enough with the Wall Street "roller coaster"?
DOWN 288 points in 2 days!
Diversifying your investment portfolio is a key strategy to success
in building wealth. For all the reasons we've been emphasizing that
this market transition is an ideal time for buyers, investor prospects/clients
should really be evaluating the benefits of moving some investment
dollars from stocks/bonds to real property. Stable interest rates,
flexibility with price negotiations, long term increases with equity
and value and favorable tax benefits all make real estate investing
a great alternative for those who have been "beat-up"
on Wall Street....
See the Honolulu Advertiser article below and let me know when
you are ready to put your investment dollars to work for you!

Posted on: Friday, July 14, 2006
Stocks in free-fall as worries increase
By Christopher Wang
Associated Press
NEW YORK — Stocks plunged for a second straight session yesterday
as Wall Street battled a storm of negative factors — record
oil prices, interest rate jitters and a slowing economy. The Dow
Jones industrial average dropped almost 167 points, bringing its
two-day loss to 288.
Oil prices hovered above $78 a barrel, sustained in part by concerns
the intensifying violence in the Middle East could disrupt supplies.
Merrill Lynch warned that higher lending rates and gasoline prices
would likely pressure consumer spending at Wal-Mart Stores Inc.
Markets are worried the world does not have enough reserves to
offset a sudden cutoff from a major oil-producing country. There
are also jitters about the hurricane threat to U.S. production nearly
a year after Hurricane Katrina devastated New Orleans. All this
at a time of growing global demand.
"Getting to $80 and beyond this summer seems quite inevitable,"
said Victor Shum, an energy analyst in Singapore.
The rise in oil prices came as fighting between Israel and Lebanon
intensified, explosions hit Nigerian oil installations and a diplomatic
standoff dragged on between the West and Iran over its nuclear program.
Many on Wall Street worried that the day's headlines signaled a
worst-case scenario. Continued gains in energy prices could prompt
the Federal Reserve to keep lifting interest rates to contain inflation,
but the recent spate of downbeat earnings news suggested that economic
growth was already moderating. Investors fear higher rates in a
cooling economy could lead to a recession.
Broader stock indicators declined. The Standard & Poor's 500
index lost 16.31, or 1.3 percent, to 1,242.29; the Nasdaq composite
index dropped 36.13, or 1.73 percent, to 2,054.11, its lowest level
since last October.
Declining issues led advancers by more than 3 to 1 on the New York
Stock Exchange.
Bonds edged higher, with the yield on the 10-year Treasury note
dropping to 5.08 percent from 5.1 percent late yesterday. The U.S.
dollar fell against the Japanese yen; gold prices climbed to about
$660 an ounce.
Although consumers and businesses have so far appeared to weather
the persistently high price of oil, an uneasy start to second-quarter
earnings has investors nervous about a potential downturn. Analysts,
however, have insisted that the economy remains sturdy and that
the market's pessimism is overdone.
In economic news, the Labor Department said the number of first-time
applications for jobless benefits rose 19,000 to 332,000 last week,
a possible sign of an impending slowdown in the economy. Analysts
had forecast a 7,000 increase.
Wall Street's decline yesterday pulled down overseas markets. Japan's
Nikkei stock average slid 0.99 percent; Britain's FTSE 100 dropped
1.63 percent, Germany's DAX index slumped 1.96 percent, and France's
CAC-40 was lower by 1.81 percent.
On the NYSE, volume of 1.78 billion shares topped the 1.49 billion
shares that changed hands yesterday.
© COPYRIGHT 2006 The Honolulu Advertiser, a division of Gannett
Co. Inc.
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