Posts Tagged ‘international markets’

How to determine which credit company you should choose March 17th, 2010

admin

There are no hard and fast rules to determine which businesses VCs and banks will support in a traditional MBO. Investment fashions are subject to change, whilst each financial institution will have its own particular investment policy. However, as a generalisation, VCs will consider a business that has the following attributes:

A reasonable asking price arrived at through an acceptale valuation method.

  • High growth potential, supported by a professionally produced business plan and a trading record that supports the financial projections.
  • In a high tech sector, such as medical and related industries.
  • Acceptable CEO supported by suitably competent and entrepreneurial management that is prepared to invest some of its own money in the buy-out.
  • The ability to borrow against its own assets.
  • Feasible exit strategy, preferably through a flotation or a secondary sale, within five to seven years.

Continue reading...


 

Minimizing credit risk is necessary November 24th, 2009

admin

74The developments in credit markets since 2000 have shown that a disciplined approach to minimize risk is necessary. This includes the determination of stop-loss marks which have to be defined on a caseby- case basis. Important is the volatility of the particular bond and the risk profile of the portfolio. Aportfolio with a high-yield benchmark will be able
to take the highest volatility but a buy-and-hold strategy is also not compatiblefor such a portfolio if a specific bond has to suffer a huge price loss.

The price mechanism of Fallen Angels and high-yield bonds requires disciplined stop loss marks. Fallen Angels tend to trade on very wide levels prior to a downgrade in high yield but a downgrade will usually induce another sell-off in the bonds so that a significant price fall will occur.

Besides fundamental facts, technical factors play an important role and current risk appetite of investors determines basically a floor for the Fallen Angel. If new buyers arise upswings in price can be significant, supported through positive credit news.

Continue reading...


 

Expand your business with web standards conformance. November 15th, 2009

admin

44Web standards allow you to increase the searchability of your financial sites. Google has been dubbed the greatest blind user out there on the web, because it (as well as other search engines) are particularly partial to indexing standards-compliant sites.

Break the “build, break, re-build” cycle. It is important to ensure forward compatibility of every website regardless if it concerns loans, real estate or money in general, with any new browser releases: your CSS-based financial site will be displayed accurately in future versions of today browsers. With table-based sites you never know what may happen. Along with the constant evolution of (standards compliant) browsers the performance of non-standards sites decreases. This phenomen is often described as “perpetual obsolescence”.

You can also save money by simplifying your design requirements. Compliant financial websites have an improved chance of rendering properly on all resolution and monitor sizes, while still maintaining design integrity that was originally intended for them.

Not only can you improve your income but also accquire some good publicity along the way. Creating an attractive, well-functioning and standards-compliant financial website is becoming the benchmark of good design and development of a successful company.

Continue reading...


 

The webstandards way of dealing with finances online November 6th, 2009

admin

There are some advisable practices that allow you to obtain a more flexible and reasoned approach to developing a financial website. This approach to financial content is based on standards devised by organizations such as the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C). These involve various concepts (that deal not only with money, loans and real estate), yet they all share the crucial idea of proper separation of presentation of financial data from structured content and from the behavior level of the user interface. These three levels are all potentially interconnected to the backend software running your financial website when they should not be. Modern, W3C standards advise the implementation of the three levels as follows, encompassing structured content, presentation, and behavior:

Structured Financial Content should involve valid HTML or XHTML (Extensible HyperText Markup Language) in order to mark up your content and forms (for example loan application forms). Such markup needs to be semantically built and entirely devoid of any presentation or behavior data.

Presentation of financial data should involve the use of Cascading Style Sheets (CSS). Style sheets contain all necessary presentation information for all your financial websites and applications. This presentation layer should never be incorporated directly in your CMS or application logic with the exception of references to the files, classes, and IDs.

Behavior: usually JavaScript (aka ECMAScript). Modern JavaScript has the ability to be implemented in an unobtrusive manner, using only external files and the W3C Document Object Model (DOM) instead of any kind of proprietary code. Moreover, it never contains any references to presentation of financial data directly, but instead gets and sets classes which point back to the CSS. While connected with the CMS or application layers of your money management software, no JavaScript should ever be inline or intermingled with this code directly.

Continue reading...