MONEY ANGLES
by Andrew TobiasChapter 13:
JUNK MAIL
Free! 100 Shares of Stock in a Public Company
Seven hundred million trillion tons of junk mail are sent out across this
country every year. I get half of it.
Much of it would make me rich if only I would listen. "More explosive price action
ahead in low-priced stocks," reads one envelope. "No-risk triple bonus offer
enclosed!"
"Inside," reads another, "find out how $8,750 grew to $405,125 in
only 13 weeks!"
"Free!" reads a third, "Get 100 Shares of Stock in a Public Company with
This No-Risk Offer."
A hundred shares of stock free? Wow! I wonder which stock it is. General Foods? Hewlett
Packard? Sears? The letter doesnt say.
The way to deal with junk mail is not even to look at it. Anything that arrives with
less than twenty cents postage or a computer-generated address label gets tossed out
unopened.
Which is why advertising copywriters have begun reserving their most inspired moments
not for the messages printed inside the envelopes but for the messages outside. Somehow,
between the time that you bend your right wrist, claw-like, to clasp the top envelope in
the pile cradled in your left hand . . . and the time, a moment later, that you
flick that same wrist to send the envelope flying for the trashsomehow in that
moment a message of such urgency and intrigue must be conveyed as to stun you in
mid-flick.
Examples abound.
- From Mutual of Omaha: "If You Think $2 Doesnt Buy Much Anymore, Look
Inside
Youll Be Amazed!" (Amazingly, they were selling
insuranceand $2 didnt buy much.)
- From Mother Jones: "URGENT REMINDER ENCLOSED." (The deadline for
Christmas gift subscriptions was fast approaching.)
- From an address in Washington: "Ted Kennedy hopes youll throw this
away!!" (Out it goes.)
- Bulk-rate from The Honorable Ronald Wilson Reagan, President of the United
States." (Oh, that Ronald Wilson Reagan.) Wonder what he could want.
Out it goes.
- From the American Civil Liberties Union: "An Open Letter to President Reagan."
(Gosh! Letters from Reagan, to Reagan . . . Should I forward it?) Out it
goes.
- From International Living: "You can now earn up to $80,000 TAX-FREE by
living abroad . . ." (assuming you have the skills to earn $80,000 and dont
mind living abroad).
Some junk mail can be strangely personaland not just because of the strange ways
they stick your name, or variants thereon, into the advertising copy.
- From a doctor in San Antonio: "Are you over 40? [No.] You could be missing out on
the best sex of your entire life! [Really?] To find out why, see inside. [Well, it
cant hurt to look.]"
- From Ovation magazine, bulk rate, a "special invitation" from my
cousin Andre Previn. As it is the first and only communication I have ever had from my
spectacularly gifted cousin, verbal, visual or otherwiseIve never met
himand as my middle name is Previn (reallywere cousins
[and1998I still havent met him]), I am sorely tempted to open it.
Out it goes.
- From a company in Illinois: Do you have a system for getting organized that
works?" They have a wall-sized calendar.
A hazard in throwing all this out unopened is that you wont know what youre
missing. Take the envelope headlined: "Me? Sleep in a subway station?" Either
some wonderfully creative real estate developer had hit upon renovating unused subway
stations (in which case I was being offered a "great space, no view"), or this
was an appeal to aid New Yorks homeless. Well never know. And what are we to
make of: "Demand a nuclear-free New York!" Was New York planning to join the
arms race? Or was this about the Shoreham, Long Island, nuclear power plant? Youd
assume the latter, but judging from the fine printstill on the outside of the
envelopeyoud be wrong. It was about the stationing of missiles someplace
upstate, when, of course, everyone knows they should all be stationed up in Somebody
Elses state.
Junk mail can depress youwhat can you expect from an envelope marked
"Urgent" and sent from the World Mercy Fund?but theres actually
quite a lot of celebrating going on. The amazing Mutual of Omaha offer referenced above
was in celebration of Mutuals seventy-fifth anniversary. The Visiting Nurse Service
of New York was recently looking for $90 donations in celebration of its ninetieth
anniversary. A company selling quartz watches for just $2 ("this is not a
misprint") was doing soall this explained on the outside of the
envelope"to celebrate the 10 millionth watch sale of the famous New York
jewelry firm of Abernathy & Closther." Surely you know the firm.
I love the ones marked, Personal and Confidential down by my name, and Blk Rt
in the upper right. And, of course, I get a lot of animal mail. It is very hard to
resist.
"Inside: an urgent appeal to stop the killing of 6,000,000 animals . . . Open
At Once."
Six million animals? How endangered could they be if there are six million of them?
What are we talking herehogs? chickens? Oh, God . . . okay, Ill open it.
The appeal proved to be from the Kangaroo Protection Foundation. One might think this
largely an Australian issue, but apparently its all our fault for lifting the
ban on kangaroo skin importation. We did so, according to the letter, "under intense
pressure from the Australian government," which, democratically elected though it may
have been, obviously knows nothing about the wishes of the Australian people, who are, the
letter says, all furious over the kangaroo harvest.
The compromise I worked out with the KPFhaving opened these letters, one must
rationalize ones non-responsewas this: I would send no money, but neither
would I ever eat or wear anything even remotely marsupial.
Why should I? I have more than enough other delicacies available parcel post.
From the Collin Street Bakery: "What Bordeaux is to wine and Maine is to
lobster, Corsicana, Texas, is to fruitcakethe New York Times." The
bakerys so darn proud of that fruitcake, a four-color mouthful of it peeks out at
you through a Texas-shaped plasticene window. These are, furthermore, guaranteed fruitcakes
(I couldnt resist: I opened the envelope). If you or your friends have ever tasted
better, your money is refunded. Bob McNutt, Bill McNutt and Bill McNutt III stand behind
that promise, and Gene Autry and the Kuwait Oil Company are among the list of
Distinguished Clientele. Were talking serious fruitcake here.
And from Cheeselovers International (never mind how I get on these lists): "If you
find a 3-inch PINK SLIP in this envelope, you have won a diamond necklace in our
$1,000.00 Sweepstakes."
I dont wear jewelry, but that is only because Ive been waiting to win a
Cheeselovers International diamond necklace. I opened the envelope.
The letter begins: "Dear Cheeselover, Before you look at a single
cheesesearch through this envelope. If you find a 3-inch colored slip it may be your
lucky day. And if the colored slip you find is pink it means you have won a genuine
diamond solitaire necklace. To claim your prize, just follow the directions on the pink
slip. [The cheesewriter seems awfully confident that Ill find a pink slip.]
Thenonce youve calmed down (if you are a winner)look at our delicious
cheeses." (Special this month: the Creme de Menthe Cheese Ball, "the most
sophisticated cheese spread of all." Move over, Velveeta!)
Well, it did take me a while to calm down, let me tell you. Because naturally, like
everyone else who got this mailing, I found a pink slip. But I never bothered to claim my
free necklace (which cost $2 for shipping), because I had a feeling the diamond might be
kind of smaller than the one Id been dreaming of.
Actually, I was lucky to be offered a diamond necklace of any size. (Hey, fella, what
more do you want?) My August Cheeselovers letter had declared prominently across the
outside of the envelope: NOTICE OF REMOVAL. I risked being struck from their
mailing list if I didnt order some cheese. The next month I got an envelope that
said: "GOODBYE. This may be the last letter you receive from us." And
now, a month later still, and still having ordered no cheese, they were giving me a
diamond necklace.
The diamond, I discovered someplace in the mailing, was a 17-facet quarter-point stone.
Say, hey, Jose! A little calculation (there are 100 points in a carat, a carat is a fifth
of a gram, a gram is 3.5 hundredths of an ounce) produced a gem weighing nearly 18
millionths of an ounce. Diamond dust.
But if diamonds are not a great investment, and if getting them free for $2 apiece from
Cheeselovers International is not the best means of acquisition, theres no lack of
mail to tell you what is.
Heres an envelope that promises to tell "How you could have made
1,555%without being an investment expert!" Of course, the implication that
investment experts make 1,555% is almost as absurd as that by opening this envelope and
signing up for this service, you will, too.
The headline on the back reads: "How a $10,000 investment became more than
$165,000 since 1975!" A footnote beneath the text next to the chart on the
back of the envelope confesses that this was a "hypothetical" $10,000. But it woulda
grown to $165,000 if only this service had discovered and promoted its magic formula
back in 1975. There follows the SEC inspired disclosure that "Past results are not
necessarily a guarantee for equivalent future results"the understatement of the
ageparticularly since, in this case, the "past results" were hypothetical.
(You tell me what happened over the last ten or twenty years, and Ill construct a
sure-fire strategy that would have worked magnificently if only you had followed it. One
such involves buying stocks whenever a pre-merger NFL football team wins the Super Bowl,
and shorting them whenever an AFL team wins. As Professor Steven Goldberg has pointed out,
far more remarkable than this coincidental correlation would have been someones predicting
it. No one did.)
For $96 a year you get to see whether a strategy that would have worked over the past
eight years is the right one for the next eight. Whats more, theres "No
emotional involvement. No guesswork. No worry." Just follow the monthly advice. Like
connect-the-dots, only at the end youre rich. Whats more, if after two months
youre not pleased with the newsletter (how can you assess its performance after two
months?), you can get your money backless the $16 you paid for the first two issues
and any money you may have lost following its advice.
Or perhaps youd rather "Profit by Learning Politicians Dirty Little
Secrets," as another envelope invited ... "a Unique New Publication for the
Sophisticated Investor," just $275 a year. Isnt that great? Here you have
scores of sophisticated reporters for The Economist and the Wall Street Journal struggling
to come up with the occasional secret, and these two guys (two guys write it) come up with
a newsletter full of dirty little secrets month after month after month.
But why spend good money to get richhey, a dollars a dollarwhen the
very next envelope in the pile promises a free report on HOW TO ACHIEVE FINANCIAL
INDEPENDENCE IN THE NEXT THREE YEARS? I ache to open the envelope. Pressing real
tight, I can even see the words IRON-CLAD GUARANTEE showing through from the inside. But
you know my rule about junk mail. Out it goes.
Because really, if you sift long enough, you will eventually come upon an envelope that
will not only make you rich, like the others, and at no cost to you, like the one above,
but without your even having to open it. Like this one bulk mailed from
Howard Lake, Minnesota, emblazoned: "The Dow will pass 2300... Silver will hit
$95/oz . . . The prime rate will sink to 8% . . . Housing values will gain 30-50% . . .
all within 18 months!" The envelope goes on to promise "10 more profitable
forecasts for 1984-85 from the fastest-growing investment analysis service in
America," but the four on the outside of the envelope more than suffice. Just sell
everything else and buy silver.
Too easy? Nothing worthwhile comes free? Okay, go ahead and pay the subscription fee ($150,
The Money Advocate).
The rub comes when one of your $150 newsletters is saying one thing and another, the
other. (Or when both are saying the same thing and both prove wrong.) This happens all the
time.
Whos right? you wonderand, as if by telepathy, comes, bulk rate, a
buff and maroon envelope headlined just that way. "Whos right?" It
enumerates contrasting predictions by Howard Ruff and Harry Browne (gold will zoom; no it
wont); Vern Myers and James Blanchard (deflation is unstoppable; 30 to 35%
inflations around the corner); the Aden Sisters and Mark Skousen (golds going
to $4,000; dont hold your breath). Gee! All these preeminent experts,
strangely full of praise for each other and frequently touting each others pricey
monthly poop sheets"Whos right?"
"At last, you can find out! (see inside)."
One examines the envelope in hope of unmasking this arbiter of investment prediction,
this forecasters forecaster, this Edgar Cayce of international finance, but
theres no return address. So well never know who it is unless we open the
envelope, and you know the rule.*
[*One set of envelopes I do consistently open comes from American Expresss Travel
Related Services Company. I open them to see just how far the concept
"travel-related" can be stretched. No fewer than three such travel-related
offers came in one days mail not long ago. One was for a $540 Vidal Sassoon Infinity
Necklace (sorry, I get all my jewelry from Cheeselovers); another offered goblets engraved
with my name and crest; the third offered a dozen crystal paperweights, presumably to keep
my papers from flying all over while Im off traveling.]
Swamped by all this stuff? "Too bad, Tobias," reads the caption of a cartoon
showing through the window of an envelope designed to catch me in
mid-flick"I told you reading 43 newspapers would warp your
mind!" This would appear to be the beginning of a pitch for a news digest newsletter,
not to be confused with a newsletter digest newsletter, several of which solicit with
equal enthusiasm. The style of the cartoon is suspiciously like one that shows through the
window of another envelope, in which I am apparently in the midst of a tax audit.
"Tobias," says the auditor, "you should be proud to be a taxpaying
American." "I am! I am!" I apparently say, but a little balloon above my
head shows I am thinking I could be just as proud on half the taxes.
Personalized junk mail cartoons! Ill bet they dont have them in Russia.
Does this mean ten years from now well be watching cable TV and the cable box atop
our set will insert our names into the audio whenever the commercial broadcaster leaves a
coded blank? ("You deserve a break todayTobiasat McDonalds.")
And will that spell the end of junk mail as we know it?
These are heavier questions than I mean to ask or dare to answer. The question I should
addressno snap eitheris whether any of these financial newsletters can make
you money.
Some undoubtedly can. But which?
"Would you pay $5 per month to find out whose investment advice really
works?" asks an envelope. To which the sensible reply is, "No, but Id
pay $5,000 a month to know whose will." For theres the problem.
Its easy to find newsletters (or mutual funds or brokers or crapshooters)
whove had a great couple of years; not at all easy to judge which will.
The concept of a $135-a-year newsletter called the Hulbert Financial Digest,
which tracks the performance of a variety of other newsletters, is to find the ones with
the hot hands and climb on board while theyre hot; then deftly abandon ship (before
everybody else does) when their hands begin to cool. Never mind that most of your gains,
if you have gains, will likely be short-term and thus heavily taxed. Its
particularly important to bail out ahead of everyone else when a letter has developed a
following. When 5,000 of you go to sell 300 shares apiece of some $13 stockwell, 1.5
million shares may be more than the market can absorb in one day without the price
slipping a point or four. (Indeed, the hot hands get hotter, at least for a while, because
their recommendations are frequently, in the short run, self-fulfilling.)
One of the hottest hands over the past five years has belonged to Dr. Martin Zweig,
whose $245 Zweig Forecast is published every three weeks, with special bulletins
when conditions warrant and a hotline you can call for daily comment. Marty Zweig is a
smart and personable fellow. Whether paying him $245 a year will greatly improve
your lot in life I cannot say. On the back page of each newsletter, theres a listing
of his open positions (the things hes recommended you buy) along with the paper
profit or loss you would have made on each one. At the bottom of the list is a figure for
average profit: 12.9% in the most recent letter, although I dont believe it takes
into account brokerage commissions or taxes.
This figure doesnt attempt to include all the wonderful profits you may have
reaped from Dr. Zweigs past recommendationsonly the profit or loss on the
position he suggests you still hold. Its not a weighted average in any wayjust
the sum of sixteen profit and loss percentages divided by sixteen. Whats interesting
to me is the temptation Dr. Zweig must be under not to recommend sale of the first two
entries on his list, IBM, up 66% from where he recommended it in July 1982, and Walgreen,
up 98.5%. In fact, a footnote shows he sold half these positions at significantly
lower prices . . . but has not yet had the heart to recommend sale of the other half. In
part this may be because he thought IBM, even when it hit 130, was still cheap (he had
sold the first half at 83), and in partif hes humanbecause he hated to
see that winner removed from the top of his list in every subsequent issue of the
newsletter. Likewise Walgreen, which he had bought at 17. Half he sold at 25, but the
other half he recommended holding even when it hit 40. Was it really, at 40, one of the
sixteen best buys he could find for his subscribersor would it simply have been a
shame to have to drop it from his list? Without those two magnificent holdovers, IBM and
Walgreen, the average gain before commissions and taxes on the other fourteen open
positions in the issue of the newsletter Im looking at would have been 3%.
Its got to be a nightmare to have tens of thousands of people scrutinizing
every investment decision you make, so I sympathize with Dr. Zweig if he held onto IBM
and Walgreen to keep the back page of his newsletter looking good (and I have no proof
that he did). The nightmare is in part ameliorated by the $245 a year each of those tens
of thousands of onlookers tosses into the pot, but lets not begrudge The Zweig
Forecast that money. In 1981 and 1982 followers of Zweigs recommendations would
have gotten it back in spades and shovels and wheelbarrows. Zweig was great. In 1983 and
at least the early part of 1984, they could have done about as well as Zweig in a Sealy
Posturepedic. [Thats a mattress, kids.] However, for 1985 Zweigs
recommendations are likely to be extraordinarily good, as they were in 81 and
82; or else not so good, as they were in 83; or else kind of rotten, as they
were on rare occasion way back when. Who knows? The $225-a-year Option Advisor newsletter,
reports Hulbert in his digest, was up a spectacular 97.9% in the first quarter of
1984. On the other hand, it was down 93.4% in 1983. So, if youd invested $10,000
according to its recommendations in 1983, youd have been down to about $660 by the
start of 1984, and then that $660 would have doubled.
And how can we forget Joe ("I can never be wrong again") Granville, whose
market-shaking predictions you could have received for $250 a year, or, when he was really
hot, by watching the nightly news? Granville was great for a while, except that those who
stuck with his advice would ultimately have been taken to the cleaners. ("My
names Granville, not God," he eventually shrugged.)
Howard Ruff has a newsletter. Subscribe and you get a free LP, on which Howard sings
"If I Were a Rich Man," "Hymn to America," "I Walked Today Where
Jesus Walked," "My Way," "Climb Every Mountain" and The
Impossible Dream" . . . and/or copies of all Howards outdated hardcover books.
The newsletter is largely occupied with introducing additions to the Ruff family (he has
30 or 40 kids and grandkids), spurring readers to political action (he has his own
lobbying organ), and promoting new or affiliated newsletters. He has great skills as a
communicator and marketer, substantial skill as a singer and financial analyst.
He will start one newsletter with an anonymous, and possibly fabricated, letter so he
can defend free enterprise and the profit motive ("Dear Howard: Why are you always
trying to sell us other newsletters, coins, books and cruises? All you care about is
getting rich. Youre greedy"). He starts another by chewing out impatient
subscribers who wonder why gold and silver still havent gone up. The mystery
of it is that he actually has more than 150,000 fans paying $89 a year (and more) to cheer
him on.
Hes the misunderstood multimillionaire underdog, fighting valiantly against the
big bad Government, and the fact that his investment advice is sometimes good, sometimes
not so good, is almost beside the point. Its you and he against the establishment,
you and he against the Russians, you and he against the welfare cheats, you and he against
Congress (well, hes got a point there), you and he against promiscuity, you and he
against impatient, ungrateful subscribers.
You and he on exotic, arguably tax-deductible investment seminar tours. You and he
assuring his next book, Making Money, climbs onto the best-seller list, thereby
confirming his popularity and expertise. ("Buy the book sometime in the two weeks
beginning May 14," he offered 175,000 subscribers, and your newsletter subscription
will be extended at no charge.)
The investment letters I do like dont attempt to predict world events, the price
of gold or even the course of the stock market, but provide the kind of fundamental
analysis on overlooked or undervalued situations I dont have time to do. And even
then I dont have a great deal of confidence in them, because picking undervalued
stocks is a tough, tough game. Most people will be better off picking a seasoned mutual
fund that picks undervalued stocks, like Mutual Shares Corporation.
Generally, when asked where to look for sound investment ideas, I suggest a
subscription to Forbes. But thats no good because no one expects to get rich
fast reading Forbes. We want to believe theres a simple, worry-free
way to make 1,555% on our money.
And I dont blame us.
***
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