Investing
Moderator: Peak Moderation
Investing
Hi
We all have different ways of safeguarding our assets and preparing for the inevitable. I know there a few people on here with various investments - wondering if anyone is interested in sharing? I'm coming from the position of having a bit of cash, no room to store anything and filling time with training etc. so that's covered.
Personally I have a long position in the following, not too worried if they come down in the short-term, but they are all posting record profits, apart from the speculatives and have great fundamentals:
60% cash. Euro.
25% physical gold and silver - not concerned if there is a major pullback because these have doubled in value since I bought them.
15% Shares:
Energy:
LDK Solar - silicon plant due to come on line this yr
Renesolar (SOL)
Suntech (STP) - thin film solar
Evergreen Solar (ESLR) Ribbon string technology
Applied Materials (AMAT) Solar thin film
Axt Inc (AXTI) Semi conductor - gallium manufacturer - thin film solar
Western Geopower (WGP) - canadian geothermal - highly speculative
GEX: Renewal energy fund
Miners:
Gold Canyon Resources (GCU) - Massive gallium reserves in Canada
Aquarius Platinum (AQP)
Southern Copper Corp (PCU) - Mine a lot of polymetals in addition to Copper
Nova Gold (NG) - Canadian Gold Miner with huge reserves
Thompson Creek (TC) - Molybdenum miner with large reserves
Agriculture:
John Deere (DE) - Play on biofuel, irrigation etc.
Agrium (AGU) - Fertiliser manufacturer
Water:
Powershares (PHO) - Infrastructure and water play
Pharma:
Bioquell (BQE) - cost effective, fairly low-tech treatment for MRSA in hospitals
I know a lot of you see systemic financial breakdown as rendering these irrelevant, but it's money I am happy to risk in the medium term, and even in the 1930's some stocks gained.
We all have different ways of safeguarding our assets and preparing for the inevitable. I know there a few people on here with various investments - wondering if anyone is interested in sharing? I'm coming from the position of having a bit of cash, no room to store anything and filling time with training etc. so that's covered.
Personally I have a long position in the following, not too worried if they come down in the short-term, but they are all posting record profits, apart from the speculatives and have great fundamentals:
60% cash. Euro.
25% physical gold and silver - not concerned if there is a major pullback because these have doubled in value since I bought them.
15% Shares:
Energy:
LDK Solar - silicon plant due to come on line this yr
Renesolar (SOL)
Suntech (STP) - thin film solar
Evergreen Solar (ESLR) Ribbon string technology
Applied Materials (AMAT) Solar thin film
Axt Inc (AXTI) Semi conductor - gallium manufacturer - thin film solar
Western Geopower (WGP) - canadian geothermal - highly speculative
GEX: Renewal energy fund
Miners:
Gold Canyon Resources (GCU) - Massive gallium reserves in Canada
Aquarius Platinum (AQP)
Southern Copper Corp (PCU) - Mine a lot of polymetals in addition to Copper
Nova Gold (NG) - Canadian Gold Miner with huge reserves
Thompson Creek (TC) - Molybdenum miner with large reserves
Agriculture:
John Deere (DE) - Play on biofuel, irrigation etc.
Agrium (AGU) - Fertiliser manufacturer
Water:
Powershares (PHO) - Infrastructure and water play
Pharma:
Bioquell (BQE) - cost effective, fairly low-tech treatment for MRSA in hospitals
I know a lot of you see systemic financial breakdown as rendering these irrelevant, but it's money I am happy to risk in the medium term, and even in the 1930's some stocks gained.
Life's too short
- RenewableCandy
- Posts: 12777
- Joined: 12 Sep 2007, 12:13
- Location: York
Not sure to be honest. I recently moved to Ireland so that's why it's euros. I think the euro will come under a lot of strain over the back end of this year because Germany is starting to slow and Ireland, Spain, Italy, Portugal are at the edge of a fairly scary looking precipice.
You could search for a currency ETF, which you could invest in via a stockbroker. Currency trading is very risky because so many factors come into play. There is talk on the fringes that some of the poorer performing euro counties may end up dropping out of the euro to gain control of fiscal policy, which would have a devasting effect on the euro.
You could search for a currency ETF, which you could invest in via a stockbroker. Currency trading is very risky because so many factors come into play. There is talk on the fringes that some of the poorer performing euro counties may end up dropping out of the euro to gain control of fiscal policy, which would have a devasting effect on the euro.
Life's too short
Some of the solar companies I listed above manufacture components that are bought by solar manufacturers. AMAT manufacture thin-film production equipment and are quite cheap at present because their profits are being pushed by demand destruction for LCD tv's etc. But solar is providing an ever-increasing proportion of their profits.
Life's too short
- emordnilap
- Posts: 14815
- Joined: 05 Sep 2007, 16:36
- Location: here
Welcome.grinu wrote:Not sure to be honest. I recently moved to Ireland so that's why it's euros.
It's as good a place to be as some others and much better than most! North, south, east, west?
I experience pleasure and pains, and pursue goals in service of them, so I cannot reasonably deny the right of other sentient agents to do the same - Steven Pinker
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- Posts: 157
- Joined: 24 Nov 2005, 11:09
- Location: Suffolk
i-shares timber & forestry etf (Ticker symbol WOOD) may be worth a look though this one seems to be in a downward trend at present.RenewableCandy wrote:Do Solar Century have shares? Or come to that the various other firms who make all that marvellous kit that PS-ers buy?
Are there any forestry shares?
i-shares global clean energy etf (INRG)
Lyxor world water etf (LWAT) for another long term possibility.
I'm thinking about dipping my toe back in the investment waters but that's all I'm doing at the moment...just thinking.
- RenewableCandy
- Posts: 12777
- Joined: 12 Sep 2007, 12:13
- Location: York
Thanks...will have to scrape some savings together, mind...Norfolk In Chance wrote:i-shares timber & forestry etf (Ticker symbol WOOD) may be worth a look though this one seems to be in a downward trend at present.RenewableCandy wrote:Do Solar Century have shares? Or come to that the various other firms who make all that marvellous kit that PS-ers buy?
Are there any forestry shares?
i-shares global clean energy etf (INRG)
Lyxor world water etf (LWAT) for another long term possibility.
I'm thinking about dipping my toe back in the investment waters but that's all I'm doing at the moment...just thinking.
You could mix it up a bit with some Yen and Swiss Francs if that's worrying you.grinu wrote:Not sure to be honest. I recently moved to Ireland so that's why it's euros. I think the euro will come under a lot of strain over the back end of this year because Germany is starting to slow and Ireland, Spain, Italy, Portugal are at the edge of a fairly scary looking precipice.
At the moment I'm 90% deposit account (Euros) and 10% in a mixed commodities fund - done very well (so far!). If Spanish banks show any signs of getting into trouble - none have so far - it's sock under the bed time! ( actually thats not where it will be, but do you think I'd tell you lot?)
- emordnilap
- Posts: 14815
- Joined: 05 Sep 2007, 16:36
- Location: here
- emordnilap
- Posts: 14815
- Joined: 05 Sep 2007, 16:36
- Location: here
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- Posts: 32
- Joined: 30 Jul 2007, 12:34
- Location: Bristol
Earlier this year I put money into Euros, commodities (HSBC), extraction (JPMorgan), ethical (Jupiter) and renewables (Triodos).
It's a bit early to say whether it was worth the effort rather than just keeping the money in cash. The Jupiter Ecology fund has started to go down. I think (hope) the government's new rush for renewables is good news for the Triodos fund.
I played it safe recently with the proceeds of my flat sale and put it into cash. I don't see us facing hyperinflation in the next couple of years but the government if the govenment keeps bailing out failing banks that's likely to erode the value.
Still toying with buying gold but they're not yet accepting it as payment in my local hight street.
It's a bit early to say whether it was worth the effort rather than just keeping the money in cash. The Jupiter Ecology fund has started to go down. I think (hope) the government's new rush for renewables is good news for the Triodos fund.
I played it safe recently with the proceeds of my flat sale and put it into cash. I don't see us facing hyperinflation in the next couple of years but the government if the govenment keeps bailing out failing banks that's likely to erode the value.
Still toying with buying gold but they're not yet accepting it as payment in my local hight street.