Thursday, April 8, 2010

How NOT to Lose Cash - Buy Renters Insurance

I went to California in 2003 on a business trip. Debbie, Sherry and I had to work on a hospital to sell Term Life Insurance. We looked around for an affordable hotel, but all the rates were rather high and we were going to be in California for at least two (2) weeks or more. Instead of a hotel we found a furnish apartment to rent that had weekly rates. With the short term lease, they required a Renters Insurance policy. The policy would not only cover our contents, but the contents of the apartment and liability in case we caused any damage.

Apartment renters insurance was available through a few companies, so we got quotes from; Geico, Nationwide and State Farm. Nationwide was the cheapest, so we bought a policy and only paid for one month.

While we were staying there Debbie accidentally knocked over the television set that was in her bedroom. After reading the Renters insurance contract, we figured the liability section would cover the cost of a new set or repair without a deductible. The liability section stated that it would provide coverage for bodily injury or property damage which you or an insured under the policy are legally obligated to pay. We called the insurance company and made the claim.

One of the reasons we liked the apartment it had waterbeds, a nice change from your ordinary hotel bed. Unfortunately, a few days later, Sherry was using a knife to peel an apple and stuck the waterbed causing a slight leak. When we had taken out the Renters Insurance policy we asked the agent about an endorsement to cover waterbeds. Luckily the waterbed was repairable, so not only did we have a repair bill, we also had some minor water damage. The coverage was provided under; Optional Endorsements you may request for your policy.

Extension of Liability Coverage Endorsement-Waterbeds
The optional coverage pays for damage to property of others that results from sudden and accidental discharge of water from your waterbed. It does not pay for structural damage which results from a slow, gradual leak, the weight of the waterbed or damage to the waterbed itself.

I am sure glad we looked over the renters insurance contract before we purchased it. Other coverages that were included, but subject to a deductible were:

Personal Property Coverage
This policy will pay for the loss or damage to your property when caused by the perils listed below:
1. Fire and Lightning 2. Windstorm or Hail 3. Explosion 4. Riot or Civil Commotion 5. Aircraft 6. Vehicles 7. Smoke 8. Vandalism or Malicious Mischief 9. Burglary 10. Falling Objects. 11. Weight of ice, snow or sleet 12. Accidental discharge or overflow of water or steam from within a plumbing, heating, air conditioning, or automatic fire protective sprinkler or from within a household appliance. 13. Sudden and accidental tearing apart, cracking, burning, or bulging of a steam or hot water heating system, and air conditioning system, or an appliance for heating water. 14. Freezing of plumbing, heating, and air conditioning systems or automatic fire protective sprinkler system or of a household appliance. 15. Sudden and accidental damage from artificially generated electrical current 16. Volcanic eruption

But always remember to add the Replacement cost endorsement to your renters policy:
The Personal Property Replacement Cost Endorsement:

The Declarations Page will state that under “Additional Coverages” your policy has Replacement Value coverage.

Without acquiring this endorsment your personal property will be subject to Actual Cash Value (ACV) for a covered loss. ACV means the cost to replace an item with another item of similar kind and quality less an allowance for depreciation.


Replacement Cost coverage allows for payment of the loss at full cost to repair or replace the damaged item. Replacement cost is only paid when you purchase the replacement item within 180 days after the loss.

Loss of Use;
If you cannot live in your home as a result of a covered loss and you must temporarily live elsewhere, this coverage pays, for a specified period, for reasonable and necessary extra living expenses you incur over what you would have normally spent to maintain your standard of living if no loss had occurred.


Your Renters Insurance policy will have exclusions, along with other optional endorsements. Please read or review your policy with your insurance agent. We were glad we did. I couldn’t imagine our boss getting the repair bills with our expense reports. Our Renters Insurance policy probably saved our jobs.

Monday, April 5, 2010

Four Stocks That Seem Ready to Rebound

April 5 (Bloomberg) -- NutriSystem Inc. went on a starvation diet in the first quarter, losing 42 percent. I think it has an excellent chance of bulking back up in the next year.

Every quarter, I pick a few stocks that have been knocked down and that I think can not only recover, but go on to notch significant gains. I call these picks the Casualty List.

Such stocks appeal to me because a big part of what I try to do as a money manager is to buy good companies on bad news. Along with NutriSystem, on my list this quarter are Goodrich Petroleum Corp.,
Piper Jaffray Cos. and Coeur d’Alene Mines Corp.

These were lonely sufferers, because most stocks rose in the first three months of the year. Among the more than 2,000 U.S. equities with a market value of $500 million or more, 58 percent gained, 41 percent fell, and 1 percent were unchanged.

Only 7 percent of stocks fell more than 10 percent. It was among this group that I searched for bargains.
NutriSystem, a weight-loss company with headquarters in Horsham, Pennsylvania, plummeted 43 percent in the three months ended March 31 as the company reported mediocre earnings for the fourth quarter and made a tepid first quarter forecast.

In the fourth quarter, NutriSystem earned 9 cents a share, its worst showing since the same period in 2008. It is spending more heavily on advertising, with diminishing results.
I think these troubles will pass. A huge percentage of Americans want to lose weight, and NutriSystem is one of the few major programs for doing so in a systematic way. As the economy improves, I believe more people will be willing to pay for the company’s weight-control counseling and diet foods.

Rich and Thin
NutriSystem’s balance sheet is admirably svelte. It has $32 million in cash and cash equivalents, another $30 million in short-term investments, and a total of $170 million in assets. Total liabilities are only $42 million and the company has no borrowings, short-term or long-term.
Houston-based Goodrich Petroleum, which explores for and produces oil and gas, fell 36 percent in the first quarter. It announced a loss of $190 million in the fourth quarter of 2009, its third consecutive quarterly loss and by far the largest of the three.

The vast majority of the loss came from an impairment charge of $185 million. When you really dig into the nature of that charge, the news isn’t all bad.

The charge stems from shutting down certain wells as it changes from vertical to horizontal drilling and focuses its efforts increasingly on the Haynesville Shale formation. The area is a huge and promising natural-gas field in northwest Louisiana, extending into parts of east Texas and Arkansas.
In February, Walter Goodrich, the company’s chief executive officer, said that the Haynesville Shale had gone in a single year from being a negligible part of the company’s business to being 47 percent of its reserves and 42 percent of its fourth- quarter production.

Piper’s Fall
Piper Jaffray, based in Minneapolis, is an institutional broker and investment bank that conducts stock and bond offerings for medium-size companies. Its stock declined 20 percent in the first quarter.
Piper stock fell on 12 of the last 14 trading days in March. I am puzzled by the weakness. Piper reported a profit of $30 million for 2009, compared with a $183 million loss in the poisonous year of 2008.
My best guess is that Piper fell as shareholders locked in profits after the stock advanced 96 percent in the final nine months of 2009. The stock is selling for about $40, while book value (corporate net worth) is about $50.

Coeur d’Alene Mines, a silver and gold miner located in Coeur d’Alene, Idaho, tumbled 17 percent. Part of its decline stemmed from a mild drop in precious-metal prices since November.
A strengthening dollar generally hurts gold and silver prices (at least when measured in dollars). The U.S. currency was strong because of fears that Greece might default on its debt, which if true might adversely impact the entire European Union.

Non-Raging Bull
I am not a raging bull on precious metals, but I think gold is a decent bet for the next few years, as large U.S. deficits lead more investors to seek out hard assets. Silver might outperform gold, if for no reason other than that it has lagged behind gold for several years.

I don’t like Coeur d’Alene’s recent earnings pattern. It lost a penny a share in 2008 and lost 45 cents a share in 2009. What’s more, it had a checkered earnings history for years.

Yet there are several things that attract me to Coeur d’Alene. It has very little debt -- less than 17 percent of stockholders’ equity. And its stock is selling for only 64 percent of book value.

I can’t promise that all -- or any -- of these stocks will advance in the next three to 12 months. But I think they have been excessively punished for relatively minor sins. A bounce- back seems highly likely to me.
Disclosure note: I own Piper Jaffray shares personally and for my clients who have higher risk tolerance. I currently have no positions, long or short, in the other stocks discussed in this week’s column.
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--Editors: Steven Gittelson, Dick Schumacher.
To contact the writer of this column: John Dorfman at jdorfman@thunderstormcapital.com.
To contact the editor responsible for this column: James Greiff at jgreiff@bloomberg.net