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Newsletter February 2008
TAX & LEGAL
Congress grants a temporary break in the AMT.
What is the AMT?
Just before adjourning for the year, Congress passed an important piece of legislation for many tax payers the Tax Increase Prevention Act of 2007, Commodities are the raw materials used to create the products consumers buy, from food to furniture. Commodities include energy
products such as oil and gasoline, metals such as fold and silver, and agricultural products such as cattle sand soybeans. There are also soft
commodities, which are commodities that cannot be stored for long periods of time, such as coffee and sugar?
Investor interest in commodities has soared in recent years. To invest in commodities, one can invest in futures and options contracts on
commodities, which are traded on exchanged around the world or, in the case of most investors, mutual funds than invest in the these
futures and option contracts.
One of the biggest attractions of investing in commodities is the potential for diversification. Commodities tend to react to changing economic fundamentals in ways that are different from stocks and bonds. As an example, consider what happens when inflation is rising.
Stocks and bonds tend to perform badly. Rising inflation lowers the value of the future dollars received from stock and bond investments because those future dollars will be able to buy fewer goods and services than they would today. On the other hand, commodities tend to benefit from rising inflation, because as demand for goods services increases, the prices of those goods and services usually rises as well, as do the prices of the commodities used to produce them.
Commodities are particularly popular today because they have outperformed the general U.S. equity market in recent years, with the Dow Jones AIG Commodities Index returning an average annual 16.23%, 12.92% and 14.26% over the one-, three- and five - year periods ending
12/31/07. During the same periods, the S&P 500 Index, which is widely considered representative of the U.S. equity market in general,
returned 5.49%, 8.62% and 12.83%, respectively.
Pas performance is no guarantee of the future results, so it is hard to predict the direction of any market. It is possible that there still upside
potential in commodities. Part of the reason for the asset class's solid performance increasing demand from China, India and other
emerging-market countries that need oil, steel and other commodities to support manufacturing and infrastructure development is unlikely
to change anytime soon.
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