Author Archives: Scalper1

IBM Cements Security Standing With Redoubled Check Point Alliance

Tech giant IBM ( IBM ) is solidifying its cybersecurity standing by deepening ties to No. 1 pure player Check Point Software Technology ( CHKP ) to pool research and integrate systems, the companies were scheduled to announce Thursday. It’s the most recent in a series of IBM moves to publicly step-up its cybersecurity initiatives. In 2015, IBM drew in $2 billion in cybersecurity sales , just 2.4% of total revenue. But that dollar mark easily topped total sales for Palo Alto Networks ( PANW ), Proofpoint ( PFPT ), Fortinet ( FTNT ) and FireEye ( FEYE ), and 12% year-over-year growth outstripped that of Symantec ( SYMC ) and Check Point. By combining forces, IBM and Check Point aim to thwart what the United Nations estimates is the $445 billion cybercrime underworld. Check Point’s and IBM Security’s researchers will be free to cross company borders to discuss threat data. And several Check Point applications will be folded into IBM technology, Check Point’s vice president of security services, Avi Rembaum, told IBD. The alliance redoubles an 18-year relationship between IBM and Check Point. IBM manages security offerings for clients across the globe, and those implementations sometimes include Check Point products. The two companies have partnered in that regard for the past 18 years. Thus, IBM is keenly apprised of Check Point’s software. Under the new accord, Check Point will further school IBM on its tech. “Tightening the relationship means we’ll be giving IBM very deep guidance around exactly what fields they should be looking for and how systems integrate,” Rembaum said. The new alliance centers on four main keys. Check Point and IBM will combine research forces to create “a gigantic pool of security researchers,” Rembaum said. Doing so will expand the potential threat intelligence-gathering net, but also lend credibility to potential discoveries. “When we conduct research, it’s nice to have another leading organization with which we can provide notes,” he said. “It’s helpful to have a pool of researchers to validate assumptions. . . . When two sources say it’s true, it makes it more relevant and more critical.” But what’s more compelling is the integrated threat-prevention and analytics technologies, Rembaum says. Check Point will fold its SmartConsole application into the IBM Security App Exchange for integration with IBM’s Security QRadar Intelligence Platform. Together, the systems can tackle the entire security gamut — analyzing, blocking and mitigating attacks. The integration also means that a customer can operate within an IBM space but still access Check Point functions, Rembaum said. IBM customers will also be allowed to manage Check Point Mobile Threat Prevention within IBM’s MaaS360 enterprise-mobility management system, a software used to remove malicious apps and do quick security rollouts. Mobile is “the most critical space” for customers to protect, he said. “(Smartphones) are an always-on and always-connected vehicle for employees,” he said. “And they operate outside the corporate security perimeter.” The expanded alliance also allows IBM to manage Check Point’s entire suite of products for clients, Rembaum said. Check Point will expand the number of tools IBM supports. “So IBM can be there in lockstep with us when we offer services,” he said.

Avoiding Unnecessary Risks In Firefighting And Investing

By Roger Nusbaum, AdvisorShares ETF Strategist Over the President’s Day weekend, I saw a big chunk of the movie Backdraft. This is the 1991 firefighting movie with Kurt Russell, Billy Baldwin and Robert De Niro. I was not involved with firefighting back then, so I don’t know how unrealistic the fire ground scenes were, but I can tell you that firefighting has changed dramatically versus how it was portrayed in the movie. There were a couple of different scenes where the crew went into burning buildings where there were no people believed to be, including some sort of chemical facility. There is a phrase in firefighting; risk a lot to save a lot, risk a little to save a little, risk nothing to save nothing. There is no empty building that is worth more than a firefighter’s life, going into a burning chemical factory (with no breathing apparatus mind you) is a totally unnecessary risk. The idea of suitable risk is obviously an important part of investing. About eight months ago I was on CNBC with the bear case for a newly IPO’d stock that I would describe as being a trendy gadget. The gadget itself is pretty neat and I have no doubt about the gadget’s ability to do what it is supposed to; my wife wants to get one. My main thesis was that from the top down the risk associated with buying a very expensive stock that produces a faddish item that had already enjoyed tremendous growth in sales before the IPO was simply unnecessary given how late we were in the market cycle. There was no attempt to predict what the market would do but six years into a bull market is late based on past market cycles. After five or six years or longer of rising markets it makes sense to avoid added risk or volatility in the portfolio. While there can be no absolutes it is a good bet that Giant Soda with 40 straight years of dividend increases is less volatile and less risky than Social Media Gadget Dot Com with a PE of 100 (neither Giant Soda or Social Media Gadget Dot Com are real companies). If there is a time to take on added volatility and risk, and for some investors this is totally unnecessary at any time, it would not be after years of a rallying market but when participants are most fearful after a large decline with media questioning why even own stocks. While most people know that buying low is the right thing to do, actually doing it is very difficult. An investment plan is unlikely to be derailed by being unable to pull the trigger in this manner but can be derailed by succumbing to greed at the market’s high and buying too much stock in a company that makes a trendy gadget. The one from my CNBC visit is down 46% from its first day of trading and down 68% from its peak. Even if it had gone up it would have been an unnecessary risk for most investors. The bigger point here is about probabilities. These things are obvious and plainly stated but are often lost in a forest for the trees type of perspective on markets and investing. Disclosure: I/we have no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it. I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article. Additional disclosure: To the extent that this content includes references to securities, those references do not constitute an offer or solicitation to buy, sell or hold such security. AdvisorShares is a sponsor of actively managed exchange-traded funds (ETFs) and holds positions in all of its ETFs. This document should not be considered investment advice and the information contain within should not be relied upon in assessing whether or not to invest in any products mentioned. Investment in securities carries a high degree of risk which may result in investors losing all of their invested capital. Please keep in mind that a company’s past financial performance, including the performance of its share price, does not guarantee future results. To learn more about the risks with actively managed ETFs visit our website AdvisorShares.com .

Common Mistakes Most Investors Make

Individuals are consistently promised that investing in the financial markets is the only way to financial success. After all, it’s so easy. Financial pundits across the country state that one simply buys a basket of mutual funds and they will make 8, 10 or 12% a year. On a nominal basis, it is true that if one bought an index and held it for 20 years, they would have made money. Unfortunately, for most, it has not worked out that way. Why? Because no matter how resolute people think they are about buying and holding, they usually fall into the same emotional pattern of buying high and selling low . Investors are human beings. Human beings naturally want to be in the winning camp when markets are rising and seek to avoid pain when markets are falling. As Sy Harding says in his excellent book ” Riding The Bear ,” while people may promise themselves at the top of bull markets that this time they’ll behave differently : no such creature as a buy and hold investor ever emerged from the other side of the subsequent bear market .” Statistics compiled by Ned Davis Research back up Harding’s assertion. Every time the market declines more than 10% (and “real” bear markets don’t even officially begin until the decline is 20%) , mutual funds experience net outflows of investor money. Fear is a stronger emotion than greed . The research shows that it doesn’t matter if the bear market lasts less than 3 months ( like the 1990 bear ) or less than 3 days ( like the 1987 bear ). People will still sell out, usually at the very bottom, and almost always at a loss. The only way to avoid the “buy high/sell low” syndrome – is to avoid owning stocks during bear markets. If you try to ride a bear market out, odds are you’ll fail. And if you believe that we are in a new era where Central Bankers have eliminated bear market cycles, your next of kin will have my sympathies. Let’s look at some of the more common trading mistakes to which people are prone. Over the years, I’ve committed every sin on the list at least once and still do on occasion. Why? Because I am human too. 1) Refusing To Take A Loss – Until The Loss Takes You When you buy a stock, it should be with the expectation that it will go up – otherwise, why would you buy it? If it goes down instead, you’ve made a mistake in your analysis. Either you’re early, or just plain wrong. It amounts to the same thing. There is no shame in being wrong, only in STAYING wrong . This goes to the heart of the familiar adage: “let winners run, cut losers short.” Nothing will eat into your performance more than carrying a bunch of dogs and their attendant fleas , both in terms of actual losses and in dead, or underperforming, money. 2) The Unrealized Loss From whence came the idiotic notion that a loss “on paper” isn’t a “real” loss until you actually sell the stock? Or that a profit isn’t a profit until the stock is sold and the money is in the bank? Nonsense! Your portfolio is worth whatever you can sell it for, at the market, right at this moment. No more. No less . People are reluctant to sell a loser for a variety of reasons. For some, it’s an ego/pride thing, an inability to admit they’ve made a mistake . That is false pride, and it’s faulty thinking. Your refusal to acknowledge a loss doesn’t make it any less real. Hoping and waiting for a loser to come back and save your fragile pride is just plain stupid . Realize that your loser may NOT come back. And even if it does, a stock that is down 50% has to put up a 100% gain just to get back to even. Losses are a cost of doing business, a part of the game. If you never have losses, then you are not trading properly. Take your losses ruthlessly, put them out of mind and don’t look back, and turn your attention to your next trade . 3) More Risk It is often touted that the more risk you take, the more money you will make. While that is true, it also means the losses are more severe when the tide turns against you. In portfolio management, the preservation of capital is paramount to long-term success. If you run out of chips, the game is over. Most professionals will allocate no more than 2-5% of their total investment capital to any one position. Money management also pertains to your total investment posture. Even when your analysis is overwhelmingly bullish, it never hurts to have at least some cash on hand, even if it earns nothing in a ” ZIRP ” world. This gives you liquid cash to buy opportunities and keeps you from having to liquidate a position at an inopportune time to raise cash for the ” Murphy Emergency :” This is the emergency that always occurs when you have the least amount of cash available – Murphy’s Law #73) If investors are supposed to “sell high” and “buy low,” such would suggest that as markets become more overbought, overextended, and overvalued, cash levels should rise accordingly. Conversely, as markets decline and become oversold and undervalued, cash levels should decline as equity exposure is increased. Unfortunately, this is something never addressed by the mainstream media. 4) Bottom Feeding Knife Catchers Unless you are really adept at technical analysis, and understand market cycles, it’s almost always better to let the stock find its bottom on its own, and then start to nibble. Just because a stock is down a lot doesn’t mean it can’t go down further. In fact, a major multi-point drop is often just the beginning of a larger decline. It’s always satisfying to catch an exact low tick, but when it happens it’s usually by accident. Let stocks and markets bottom and top on their own and limit your efforts to recognizing the fact ” soon enough .” Nobody, and I mean nobody, can consistently nail the bottom tick or top tick . 5) Averaging Down Don’t do it. For one thing, you shouldn’t even have the opportunity, as that dog should have already been sold long ago. The only time you should average into any investment is when it is working. If you enter a position on a fundamental or technical thesis, and it begins to work as expected thereby confirming your thesis to be correct, it is generally safe to increase your stake in that position. 6) You Can’t Fight City Hall OR The Trend Yes, there are stocks that will go up in bear markets and stocks that will go down in bull markets, but it’s usually not worth the effort to hunt for them. The vast majority of stocks, some 80+%, will go with the market flow. And so should you. It doesn’t make sense to counter trade the prevailing market trend. Don’t try and short stocks in a strong uptrend and don’t own stocks that are in a strong downtrend . Remember, investors don’t speculate – ” The Trend Is Your Friend .” 7) A Good Company Is Not Necessarily A Good Stock There are some great companies that are mediocre stocks, and some mediocre companies that have been great stocks over a short time frame. Try not to confuse the two. While fundamental analysis will identify great companies, it doesn’t take into account market, and investor, sentiment. Analyzing price trends, a view of the ” herd mentality ,” can help in the determination of the “when” to buy a great company which is also a great stock. 8) Technically Trapped Amateur technicians regularly fall into periods where they tend to favor one or two indicators over all others. No harm in that, so long as the favored indicators are working, and keep on working. But always be aware of the fact that as market conditions change, so will the efficacy of indicators. Indicators that work well in one type of market may lead you badly astray in another. You have to be aware of what’s working now and what’s not, and be ready to shift when conditions change. There is no ” Holy Grail ” indicator that works all the time and in all markets. If you think you’ve found it, get ready to lose money. Instead, take your trading signals from the ” accumulation of evidence ” among ALL of your indicators, not just one. 9) The Tale Of The Tape I get a kick out of people who insist that they’re long-term investors, buy a stock, then anxiously ask whether they should bail the first time the stocks drops a point or two. More likely than not, the panic was induced by listening to financial television. Watching ” the tape ” can be dangerous. It leads to emotionalism and hasty decisions. Try not to make trading decisions when the market is in session. Do your analysis and make your plan when the market is closed. Turn off the television, get to a quite place, and then calmly and logically execute your plan. 10) Worried About Taxes Don’t let tax considerations dictate your decision on whether to sell a stock. Pay capital gains tax willingly, even joyfully. The only way to avoid paying taxes on a stock trade is to not make any money on the trade. If you are paying taxes – you are making money…it’s better than the alternative.” Steps to Redemption Don’t confuse genius with a bull market. It’s not hard to make money in a roaring bull market. Keeping your gains when the bear comes prowling is the hard part . The market whips all our butts now and then. The whipping usually comes just when we think we’ve got it all figured out. Managing risk is the key to survival in the market and ultimately in making money. Leave the pontificating to the talking heads on television. Focus on managing risk, market cycles and exposure. STEP 1: Admit there is a problem … The first step in solving any problem is to realize that you have a problem and be willing to take the steps necessary to remedy the situation. STEP 2: You are where you are … It doesn’t matter what your portfolio was in March of 2000, March of 2009 or last Friday. Your portfolio value is exactly what it is rather it is realized or unrealized. The loss is already lost and understanding that will help you come to grips with needing to make a change. STEP 3: You are not a loser … You made an investment mistake. You lost money. It has happened to every person that has ever invested in the stock market and anyone who says otherwise is a liar! STEP 4: Accept responsibility … In order to begin the repair process, you must accept responsibility for your situation. Continue to postpone the inevitable only leads to suffering further consequences of inaction. STEP 5: Understand that markets change … Markets change due to a huge variety of factors from interest rates to currency risks, political events to geo-economic challenges. Does it really make sense to buy and hold a static allocation in a dynamic environment? The law of change states : that change will occur and the elements in the environment will adapt or become extinct and that extinction in and of itself is a consequence of change . Therefore, even if you are a long-term investor, you have to modify and adapt to an ever-changing environment otherwise, you will become extinct. STEP 6: Ask for help … Don’t be afraid to ask or get help – yes, you may pay a little for the service but you will save a lot more in the future from not making costly investment mistakes. STEP 7: Make change gradually … Making changes to a portfolio should be done methodically and patiently. Portfolio management is more about ” tweaking ” performance rather than doing a complete ” overhaul .” STEP 8: Develop a strategy … A goal-based investment strategy looks at goals like retirement, college funding, new house, etc. and matches investments and investment vehicles in an orderly and designed portfolio to achieve those goals in quantifiable and identifiable destinations. The duration of your portfolio should match the “time” frame to your goals. Building an allocation on 80-year average returns for a 15-year goal could leave you in a very poor position. STEP 9: Learn it…Live it…Love it … Every move within your investment strategy must have a reason and purpose, otherwise, why do it? Adjustments to the plan, and the investments made, should match performance, time and value horizons. Most importantly, you must be committed to your strategy so that you will not deviate from it in times of emotional duress. STEP 10: Live your life … The whole point of investing in the first place is to ensure a quality of life at some specific point in the future. Therefore, while you work hard to earn your money today, it is important that your portfolio works just as hard to earn your money for tomorrow.