Thursday, June 11, 2009

Automobile Accident Law

Contents

Unfortunately, at some time in our lives, most of us will experience an automobile accident. When you are in a car accident, even if you are not injured, there are certain things that you should and should not do.

If you are involved in personal injury litigation arising from a car accident, you will benefit from consulting a personal injury lawyer.

Stay At The Scene

If you are involved in an accident involving injury, or substantial damage to property, stay at the accident scene until the police tell you that you can leave. If you have any question about whether the damage caused by the accident is substantial, err on the side of caution -- when the law requires you to wait for the police, leaving the scene of an accident can result in driver's license sanctions and even criminal charges.

Safeguard The Injured

If somebody is injured, and you are trained in administering first aid, try to help. Do not move an injured person. Have somebody call the police to report the accident. The person who contacts the police should tell the police that people are injured, if possible also providing the number of injured persons, so that enough emergency personnel respond to the scene. If you are on the roadway, turn your flashers on, or use flares to warn approaching traffic of the accident.

Obtain Information

In any accident, you should obtain the following information about:

  • The other driver: Name, address, driver's license number, insurance information, and license plate number.

  • Witnesses: Name, address, and telephone number.

  • Police officers: Ask the police officer's who investigate the traffic scene to provide you with a business card, with the "incident number," so that you can obtain an accident report. Most officers will provide this information to you, even if you don't ask.

  • The location: You may wish to take notes about where the accident occurred, the road conditions, speed limits, traffic control devices, the weather, and the lighting.

  • The accident: You may wish to take notes about how the accident occurred, such as the direction of travel of the vehicles involved in the accident, and what the cars were doing at the time of the collision.

Be aware that if litigation results from the accident, you may have to share your notes with somebody that you are suing, or somebody who is suing you.

Do Not Admit Fault

Even if you think you are at fault, do not admit liability. There may be factors which you don't know, which played a role in the accident, and it may turn out that the other driver was more at fault than you.

Do not make statements to anybody at the accident scene, except for the police. When you speak to the police, tell them only the facts of what happened. Let the officers draw their own conclusion from the facts.

Get Medical Care (See a Doctor)

If you are in a state such as Michigan, where no fault insurance law covers medical treatment necessitated by an automobile accident, and don't seek medical care, you may later find that you are unable to obtain "no fault" benefits for your injuries - your insurance company may argue that your injuries arose from something that happened after the accident.

If you are injured in the accident and sue the other driver, you may similarly find that the other driver argues that your injuries were not related to the accident.

Also, the "adrenaline rush" from the accident can mask your symptoms -- a physical examination may reveal an injury that you do not yet feel.

Tell the doctor if you have any loss of memory, headache, blood or fluid in your ear, dizziness, tinnitis (ringing in the ears), disorientation, nausea, confusion, or any other unusual physical or mental feeling. Many people hit their heads, or suffer brain injuries in automobile accidents, and don't realize that they are injured -- it is best to be safe, by reporting your symptoms so that the doctor can rule out the possibility of a concussion or brain injury.

If you wish to hire a personal injury lawyer, you may find this article on "How To Hire A Personal Injury Lawyer" to be helpful.

Catastrophic Personal Injury Cases

The purpose of this article is not to suggest that injuries that are not "catastrophic" do not justify substantial compensation. Instead, the purpose of this article is to highlight the long-term effects that can be associated with particularly severe injuries, and the importance of obtaining quality legal representation for those injuries.

By "catastrophic," I mean to refer to injuries which require significant medical treatment, and which usually have a long-term or permanent effect on an injured person's life. Some injuries are catastrophic, but with good medical attention the injured person can make a good or excellent recovery. Others cause permanent disability, significant suffering, and may substantially shorten an injured person's lifespan.

It is often a good idea to seek specialized legal assistance with catastrophic injury cases. For example, some personal injury attorneys have a much better understanding of closed head injuries or burn injuries than others. A catastrophic injury can necessitate a lifetime of medical care, or repeated reconstructive surgeries. It is helpful to have an attorney who understands the treatment and recovery process. A severely burned child may require repeated surgeries to accommodate growth, in addition to various cosmetic surgeries. A child with a bone fracture that affects a growth plate may face difficult bone-stretching procedures, and may never have normal use of an affected limb. If an attorney understands the long-term effects of an injury, the attorney will be better able to argue for just compensation. If you wish to hire a personal injury lawyer, you may find this article on "How To Hire A Personal Injury Lawyer" to be helpful.

When a person suffers a spinal cord injury, the person may face a life of disability and dependency. An active person can suddenly become an invalid, with injuries that cannot be treated by even the most advanced medical treatments. While there is always hope of a future medical advance which will ameliorate or even cure spinal cord injuries, at present medical science is limited. A parent whose child suffers a brain or spinal cord injury may suddenly find that the child requires full-time care. A brain injury may cause a personality change, causing a spouse, parent or child to suddenly seem like a different person.

One of the true tragedies of life is that many people are catastrophically injured, but cannot recover adequately for their injuries. Legislatures throughout the country have imposed caps on "non-economic" damages, which can be ridiculously low. Ironically, studies indicate that huge jury verdicts are rare, and that most injury victims are undercompensated. By misrepresenting the exceptional case as the norm, insurance companies have successfully protected their wealth at the expense of society's most vulnerable injury victims.

The worst and most dangerous drivers often carry the lowest possible amount of insurance that the law allows, or carry no insurance at all. Few people would voluntarily allow themselves to suffer even a simple fracture of a bone, even for tens of thousands of dollars. The amount of suffering that results from living a lifetime with disfiguring scars, or with a spinal cord or brain injury, is inconceivable. Our society really should do more to take care of its own -- to make sure that people who suffer catastrophic injuries do not effectively lose their right to a reasonably normal life, just because an insurance company successfully lobbied for damages caps on personal injury or malpractice actions.

If you or a loved one face recovery from a catastrophic injury, seek assistance from an attorney who has experience with your type of injury, and who knows how to find every possible source of recovery. Even if you don't have a legal cause of action, an attorney may be able to assist you in obtaining government benefits.

Car Accident Lawsuits

Contents


Despite significant safety improvements in automobile and in the design of roads, car accidents remain quite common. It is likely that any given person will be involved in at least one serious automobile accident during his or her lifetime. This article explores when a car accident may result in litigation.

If you are involved in a car accident, you may benefit from reviewing these suggestions about what to do after a car accident, and from consulting a personal injury lawyer.

Litigation After Car Accidents

Not every car accident will result in litigation. Where nobody is injured or injuries are minor, it may be possible to resolve all claims for medical care and property damage directly with the drivers' car insurance companies. The greater the damage or injury that results from a car accident, the more likely it is that a lawsuit will follow.

Causes of Car Accidents

There are a wide variety of possible causes for automobile accidents, including:

Driver Error - The most common cause of car accidents is driver error. Common errors which contribute to accidents include failure to yield the right of way, following too closely, driving at excessive speeds, unsafe passing, and disregard of traffic control devices.

Distractions - When the driver's attention becomes diverted from the road, the chances of an accident increase. Distractions may occur from outside of the car, such as when something at the side of the road draws a driver's attention. Distractions also occur inside cars, such as where the driver attempts to read or put on makeup while driving, change CD's in the CD player, dials a cellular phone, or attempts to parent an upset or unruly child.

Intoxication - Motorists whose ability to drive is impaired as a result of the consumption of alcohol or drugs are more likely to cause car accidents.

Bad Weather - Sometimes, bad weather conditions will contribute to an accident by interfering with visibility, diminishing traction on the road surface, or otherwise making it more difficult to drive a car. A driver should take the effects of the weather, such as strong cross-winds or slippery roads, into consideration when driving. Sometimes the weather will cause an unexpected hazard, such as black ice or flash flooding, which may not be detected by a driver until it is too late to avoid the hazard.

Road Design - A poorly designed roadway, intersection, or means of controlling traffic can at times cause or contribute to an accident. Poorly placed and poorly designed road signs or barriers can cause unnecessary injury when vehicles collide with them. At times, such defects will result in liability by the governmental agency responsible for the design and maintenance of the roadway, although governmental immunity may apply.

Road Conditions - The conditions of a roadway can be bad for a number of reasons, including weather, poor design or maintenance, or the presence of objects or debris on the roadway. Such factors can cause or contribute to accidents.

Vehicle Defects - At times an accident will result from a defect with a driver's vehicle, such as a tire blowout, brake failure, or other mechanical failure. Sometimes the injuries suffered in an accident will be made worse by a design or manufacturing defect with a vehicle, such as a design defect which makes an SUV more susceptible to rolling over in an accident or a gas tank more likely to ignite in a collision, or a manufacturing defect which causes a seatbelt to fail or an airbag to deploy improperly.

Most automobile accident litigation involves two vehicles, with a driver or passenger from the first vehicle claiming that the driver of the second vehicle caused the accident through negligent driving. Sometimes the litigation will involve the driver and passenger of a single vehicle, with the passenger claiming injury as a result of the driver's negligence. At times, litigation will be against a governmental agency which is alleged to have failed to properly design or maintain a roadway or intersection. Car accident litigation may also include a product liability claim against the manufacturer of a vehicle or part of a vehicle, alleging a design or manufacturing defect which contributed to the accident. A claim might also arise against a mechanic or service center whose work left a vehicle in a hazardous condition.

Special Issues

Special issues can arise in automobile litigation which make it more difficult to litigate a car accident claim, which make additional parties potentially liable for injuries, or which must be considered during the course of litigating a case. Special issues arising from the accident itself include:

Hit-and-Run Accidents: Where the driver who causes an accident fails to stop at the accident scene, it may be difficult for the victim of the accident to later identify the at-fault driver so as to bring a lawsuit.

Car-Pedestrian Accidents: Where a motor vehicle collides with a pedestrian, the pedestrian will often suffer catastrophic injury. Pedestrians often have difficulty making claims against drivers, with accidents frequently attributed to the conduct of the pedestrian.

Car-Motorcycle Accidents: Motorcycle drivers are susceptible to serious injury, even in collisions which would be relatively minor had they occurred between cars. Some suggest that motorcyclists suffer from a predisposition by juries to blame them for causing an accident, even where the driver of a car was clearly negligent.

Car-Bicycle Accidents: Bicyclists are vulnerable to serious injury when hit by cars, and are aslo susceptible to having drivers open car doors in front of them - a hazard which can cause them to be caterpaulted over the car door in a collision. Drivers often report that they did not see the bicyclist until after the collision, or that they misjudged the bicyclist's speed. Some bicyclists engage in very hazardous actions, such as ignoring traffic signals or riding on the wrong side of the road, making an accident much more likely. The most severe and lasting injuries to bicyclists tend to be head injuries, so helmet use is encouraged.

Bus Accidents: Bus accidents can be quite serious, given the size and mass of a typical bus, and the fact that passengers are usually unrestrained. Special issues can arise in accidents involving school buses, and in the context of loading and unloading passengers.

Semi Truck / Tractor-Trailer Accidents: The drivers of "big rigs" are subject to state and federal regulation, governing how many hours a day they can drive, how much sleep they are to get each night, and the condition and maintenance of their trucks. Drivers typically get paid by the mile driven, and thus have a strong incentive to ignore rules which limit their driving time. Obviously, when a semi truck causes an accident, the consequences to any smaller vehicle and its passengers can be devastating.

After-Market Vehicle Modifications: Where a vehicle has after-market modifications, such as being raised or lowered, having powerful or tinted headlights or foglights intalled, or window tinting, those modifications may affect both the safety of the vehicle for its occupants and the hazard posed by the vehicle to other drivers.

Accidents Caused by Road Debris: Where road debris causes an accident, whether in the form of objects or parts which have fallen off of vehicles, or debris that is kicked up from the roadway and collides with another vehicle, it can often be difficult to determine who was at fault for the presence of the debris on the road. States may also limit liability based upon how long the debris was on the road.

Special issues which may affect liability include:

Governmental Immunity: States may limit an injury victim's ability to sue when the driver of the vehicle that causes an accident is a governmental employee who is working at the time of the accident, or where the accident involves a government-owned vehicle.

Owner Liability: Where the driver of a vehicle has the owner's permission to operate that vehicle, many jurisdictions will hold the owner jointly liable for injuries caused by the driver's negligent operation of the vehicle.

Employer Liability: Where an employee is driving a vehicle "on the job", or as the lawyers might say "within the course and scope of employment", the employer may be jointly liable for injuries caused by the employee's negligent driving conduct.

Cellular Phone Usage: In a number of states, courts are increasingly receptive to the argument that where a driver who causes an accident is talking on a cellular phone, the call was work-related, and the driver's employer expects employees to handle work-related phone calls while driving, the employer may share liability for an accident caused by the employee.

Insurance Coverage

The insurance problems car accident victims have with insurance coverage typically fall into three categories:

Uninsured Driver - Where the at-fault driver is uninsured, it can be difficult for a person who is injured in a car accident to obtain appropriate compensation. Where the injured person is uninsured, states are increasingly modifying their laws to limit the uninsured accident victim's right to sue for pain and suffering damages. Many drivers carry "uninsured motorist coverage" through their own automobile insurance policies, so that they have a source of compensation in the event that the other driver fails to carry insurance or cannot be identified.

Underinsured Driver - Similar to the uninsured driver, some drivers carry inadequate insurance coverage, often at the minimum level required by state law. Many states have very low insurance requirements, which unfortunately means that some of the worst drivers on the road carry inadequate coverage due to the high cost of insurance which results from their bad driving records. Some carinsurance companies offer underinsured motorist coverage, so drivers can protect themselves in the event that they are in an accident caused by somebody who carries inadequate coverage.

Insurance Company Bad Faith - When people make claims with their insurance companies, they sometimes run into difficulty with the insurance company's refusal to negotiate the claim fairly. For example, an insurance company may refuse to offer fair value for a "totaled" car. In "no fault" states, where drivers insure for their own accident-related medical care, it can involve the improper denial of coverage or reimbursement by the insurance company.

Statute of Limitations

Anybody who is considering bringing a legal claim as a result of a car accident should note that their ability to pursue their claim will be limited by the statute of limitations of the jurisdiction where the accident occurred.

If you wish to hire a personal injury lawyer, you may find this article on "How To Hire A Personal Injury Lawyer" to be helpful.

Automobile Accident Law

Contents


Unfortunately, at some time in our lives, most of us will experience an automobile accident. When you are in a car accident, even if you are not injured, there are certain things that you should and should not do.

If you are involved in personal injury litigation arising from a car accident, you will benefit from consulting a personal injury lawyer.

Stay At The Scene

If you are involved in an accident involving injury, or substantial damage to property, stay at the accident scene until the police tell you that you can leave. If you have any question about whether the damage caused by the accident is substantial, err on the side of caution -- when the law requires you to wait for the police, leaving the scene of an accident can result in driver's license sanctions and even criminal charges.

Safeguard The Injured

If somebody is injured, and you are trained in administering first aid, try to help. Do not move an injured person. Have somebody call the police to report the accident. The person who contacts the police should tell the police that people are injured, if possible also providing the number of injured persons, so that enough emergency personnel respond to the scene. If you are on the roadway, turn your flashers on, or use flares to warn approaching traffic of the accident.

Obtain Information

In any accident, you should obtain the following information about:

  • The other driver: Name, address, driver's license number, insurance information, and license plate number.

  • Witnesses: Name, address, and telephone number.

  • Police officers: Ask the police officer's who investigate the traffic scene to provide you with a business card, with the "incident number," so that you can obtain an accident report. Most officers will provide this information to you, even if you don't ask.

  • The location: You may wish to take notes about where the accident occurred, the road conditions, speed limits, traffic control devices, the weather, and the lighting.

  • The accident: You may wish to take notes about how the accident occurred, such as the direction of travel of the vehicles involved in the accident, and what the cars were doing at the time of the collision.

Be aware that if litigation results from the accident, you may have to share your notes with somebody that you are suing, or somebody who is suing you.

Do Not Admit Fault

Even if you think you are at fault, do not admit liability. There may be factors which you don't know, which played a role in the accident, and it may turn out that the other driver was more at fault than you.

Do not make statements to anybody at the accident scene, except for the police. When you speak to the police, tell them only the facts of what happened. Let the officers draw their own conclusion from the facts.

Get Medical Care (See a Doctor)

If you are in a state such as Michigan, where no fault insurance law covers medical treatment necessitated by an automobile accident, and don't seek medical care, you may later find that you are unable to obtain "no fault" benefits for your injuries - your insurance company may argue that your injuries arose from something that happened after the accident.

If you are injured in the accident and sue the other driver, you may similarly find that the other driver argues that your injuries were not related to the accident.

Also, the "adrenaline rush" from the accident can mask your symptoms -- a physical examination may reveal an injury that you do not yet feel.

Tell the doctor if you have any loss of memory, headache, blood or fluid in your ear, dizziness, tinnitis (ringing in the ears), disorientation, nausea, confusion, or any other unusual physical or mental feeling. Many people hit their heads, or suffer brain injuries in automobile accidents, and don't realize that they are injured -- it is best to be safe, by reporting your symptoms so that the doctor can rule out the possibility of a concussion or brain injury.

If you wish to hire a personal injury lawyer, you may find this article on "How To Hire A Personal Injury Lawyer" to be helpful.

Assault and Battery

Contents


Introduction

In the context of criminal law, "assault and battery" are typically components of a single offense. In tort law, "assault" and "battery" are separate, with an assault being an act which creates fear of an imminent battery, and the battery being an unlawful touching. Assault and battery are intentional torts, meaning that the defendant actually intends to put the plaintiff in fear of being battered, or intends to wrongfully touch the plaintiff. The wrongful touching need not inflict physical injury, and may be indirect (such as contact through a thrown stone, or spitting). This article describes the law of assault and battery as it is commonly applied, although the law may vary in any specific jurisdiction.

Assault

An assault invoves:

  1. An intentional, unlawful threat or "offer" to cause bodily injury to another by force;
  2. Under circumstances which create in the other person a well-founded fear of imminent peril;
  3. Where there exists the apparent present ability to carry out the act if not prevented.

Note that an assault can be completed even if there is no actual contact with the plaintiff, and even if the defendant had no actual ability to carry out the apparent threat. For example, a defendant who points a realistic toy gun at the plaintiff may be liable for assault, even though the defendant was fifty feet away from the plaintiff and had no actual ability to inflict harm from that distance.

Battery

A battery is the willful or intentional touching of a person against that person’s will by another person, or by an object or substance put in motion by that other person. Please note that an offensive touching can constitute a battery even if it does not cause injury, and could not reasonably be expected to cause injury. A defendant who emphatically pokes the plaintiff in the chest with his index finger to emphasize a point may be culpable for battery (although the damages award that results may well be nominal). A defendant who spits on a plaintiff, even though there is little chance that the spitting will cause any injury other than to the plaintiff's dignity, has committed a battery.

Privilege

In order to be liable for an assault or battery, the defendant must lack privilege to assault or batter the plaintiff. The following are examples of "privilege":

Consent

Where a defendant has the plaintiff's consent to commit an act of assault or battery, the plaintiff may not later bring a lawsuit. The most typical context for consent occurs in sports. The intentional foul in basketball, or the tackle in football, are an anticipated part of the game. While it may be possible for certain conduct to be so far outside the realm of what is reasonable to nonetheless give rise to a tort - for example, chopping an opposing player off at the knees in a football game, an action which is known to have a very high probability of causing serious and even crippling injury - rule violations which are part of standard play are unlikely to support a legal action. Consent also exists in the context of authorized medical or surgical procedures.

Police Conduct

A police officer is privileged to apply the threat of force, or if necessary to apply actual force, in order to effect a lawful arrest. A defendant who suffers injury as the result of reasonable force exerted by the police to effect a lawful arrest will not be able to sustain a lawsuit against the arresting officers for assault or battery.

Self-Defense

A person who is assaulted may use such reasonable force as may be necessary, or which at the time reasonably appears to be necessary, to protect himself or herself from bodily harm. An act of self-defense must ordinarily be proportionate to the threat. That is, if you believe a person is going to spit on you, depending upon the context it may be reasonable to push the person away, but it would not be reasonable to hit the person with a baseball bat.

A plaintiff may be expected to withdraw from the threat, if possible, before engaging in forcible resistance. However, if the plaintiff is in his own home and the defendant is not a member of the plaintiff's household, a plaintiff will typically not be required to further withdraw from the threat once the plaintiff has retreated to his own home.

Defense of Others

Defense of others is similar to self-defense, and usually occurs in the context of one family member protecting another. Some jurisdictions permit a defendant to assert defense of others, even where the defendant is mistaken as to the existence of a threat, as long as the mistake is reasonable. Other jurisdictions do not permit this defense unless there was an actual threat or battery against the other person.

Voluntary (Mutual) Combat

Where the plaintiff voluntarily engages in a fight with defendant for the sake of fighting and not as a means of self-defense, the plaintiff may not recover for an assault or battery unless the defendant beat the plaintiff excessively or used unreasonable force. If two people voluntarily enter a brawl, it is unlikely that either will be able to sue the other. However, if one falls, and the other takes advantage of the situation by kicking him and causing injury, that act may well be considered to be an excessive use of force which would support a cause of action.

Defense of Property

Many jurisdictions allow the use of some amount of threat or force by a person who is seeking to protect his own property from theft or damage. In most jurisdictions, there is no privilege to use force that may cause death or serious injury against trespassers unless the trespass itself threatens death or serious injury. Please note that there are some jurisdictions with extraordinarily broad laws, permitting the use of significant and even deadly force to prevent the theft of property. (Leaving aside the moral issues of using physical force to defend property, be sure that you know your local laws before applying force in such a situation.)

Discipline

Some people are legally authorized to apply physical restraint or battery in order to discipline others. For example, in most jurisdictions, parents are legally authorized to apply reasonable physical discipline upon their children. In some jurisdictions, school teachers are permitted to apply a certain level of physical restraint or discipline against students. The staff of a mental health facility may have legal authority to apply reasonable restraint to prevent a patient from causing harm to himself, to others, or to property.

Merchant's Privilege

Most jurisdictions grant merchants the right to apply reasonable force to detain shoplifters, or other persons who the merchant reasonably believes are attempting to steal the merchant's property.

Provocation

Words alone, no matter how insulting or provocative, do not justify an assault or battery against the person who utters the words.

Sunday, June 7, 2009

Farm Capital Company



Other Future Payments

Settlement Capital will look at and review other future payment obligations not listed on our website. We are looking for guaranteed payment streams that are backed by high credit obligors.

Farm Capital Company, L.L.C is an affiliated company. Farm Capital Company may be able to purchase or make loans secured by certain agricultural subsidies.

Lottery Cash Option



Lottery
Settlement Capital offers lottery winners the choice to sell their long-term payment streams in exchange for a lump sum payout, giving them opportunity to make the most of their winnings now, while allowing them to prepare wisely for the future.

For the lucky few who do win, there's a bit of a learning curve that comes with such a huge financial windfall. For example, anyone choosing to receive an incremental payout should know that their winnings will usually be rolled into an annuity and paid out to them over a 20-25 year period. If the winner considers the historical rate of inflation (even at the present and low rate or 3-4%), the rising cost of living and withholding taxes, which have steadily increased in some states over the last few years, he or she may decide that investing a lump sump payout now might be preferable for them in the long run.

In fact, a lump sum payout invested or applied wisely can overshadow the original amount of the winnings by the end of the original 25-year payout period!

There are many reasons why an individual might want to sell their lottery payments. Each situation is unique and will be reviewed to insure we are meeting your best interest. We will custom tailor a purchase plan to meet your current financial needs. Our flexible buying options allow us to buy either a portion of each payment, a portion of the payment stream, or all of the payments.

SCC provides the best value and customer service in the industry with a choice of payment options, flexible buying power and agent support. For more information or to receive a free quote,

Single Premium Annuity Financing



Settlement Capital Corporation has been purchasing annuity payments from individuals for over 18 years. We do not sell insurance products or fund annuities for individuals rather we help you receive liquidity from your future annuity payments. Our reputation in our industry is second to none.
Our Annuity Buy-Out program is designed to help annuitants reach their maximum value for their future annuity payments in order to meet their current financial needs. The annuities were a great investment at the time of the purchase, but circumstances often change to where individuals need access to their own money. Annuitants have had access to this, yet our services have been difficult to find until no.
With the help of agents and broker-dealers, we are determined to help educate the millions of people about their right to gain access to their future annuity payments through our Annuity Buy-Out program.
Settlement Capital is here to assist those individuals who may need access to a portion or all of their future annuity payments. Individuals have the ability to sell all or just a portion of their future payments. Here is how the process works:
1. Contact Settlement Capital to receive a free no obligation quote.
2. Once the annuitant is ready, we will send out a Contract.
3. Once the contract is returned, our underwriting staff will analyze the information to ensure the transaction is in the annuitant’s best interest and meets all the state, federal and corporate requirements.
4. Next, we will begin contact with the annuity provider to ensure compliance with our contract.
5. Once the insurance company complies and we have the required documents, funding can occur within 5 to 10 days.
SCC provides the best value and customer service in the industry with a choice of payment options, flexible buying power and a Best Price Guarantee. For more information or to receive a free quote, complete our free quote request form

Structured Settlement Factoring



In 1988, Settlement Capital Corporation developed the secondary market for structured settlement payments by recognizing and meeting the financial needs of holders of long-term contracts. Since that pivotal transaction SCC has retained its leadership position by relying on its experience and knowledge to create the most effective and efficient operations, develop the most coveted relationships within the legal and insurance industries and spearhead the legislative efforts to regulate the industry. With its envied and special relationships with financial institutions on Wall Street, SCC has unmatched financial resources that insures SCC’s customers get the industries most competitive pricing.

Considering Settlement Capital’s experience, knowledge, relationships and financial strength, SCC offers customers, brokers, attorneys, agents, financial advisors and consultants the opportunity to work with the industry leader in the secondary market for Since that pivotal transaction SCC has retained its leadership position by relying on its experience and knowledge to create the most effective and efficient operations, develop the most coveted relationships within the legal and insurance industries and spearhead the legislative efforts to regulate the industry. With its envied and special relationships with financial institutions on Wall Street, SCC has unmatched financial resources that insures SCC’s customers get the industries most competitive pricing.
SCC provides the best value and customer service in the industry with a choice of payment options, flexible buying power and a Best Price Guarantee. For more information or to receive a free quote, complete our free quote request form

How to Buy Structured Settlements

How to Buy Structured Settlements

Buying a structured settlement can help those who have a long wait when they are in desperate need of cash. Some settlements can be worth hundreds of thousands of dollars or even millions, but that means nothing when it can take years before the full amount is paid in one tiny increment after another.

To understand how structured settlements works, will allow you to understand why some people choose to use them instead of accepting a monthly paycheck. A buyer chosen by the settlement owner will contact the insurance company on their behalf. They will agree to accept the accountability of the finances and they will buy the structured settlement. They will take a percentage and pass on a lump sum check to the seller.

The structured settlement is not always in the best interest of the seller due to immediate money woes. The settlement may offer monthly payments for a few months, years or even for life. When that person dies, the money will often move onto their family members and other beneficiaries. Other settlements will end when the seller dies.

Why Buy Structured Settlements?

There are many reasons that someone will decide to sell, while others will choose to buy structured settlements. Crushing needs in the form of overdue bills and lack of paycheck due to injury is a top choice. Instead of watching as their car is towed away by a bill collector, they can get a settlement and take care of all the bills until they can get back to work.

They may simply decide to get the money so that they can take care of the finances on their own instead of accepting one small fee at a time. With the lump sum, the seller is able to invest the money and watch it grow over time instead of falling flat with inflation if they chose to accept a monthly payment. The lump sum and investing can be a fall back plan for their retirement as financial difficulties are befalling many families in today’s economy.

What Are the Repercussions of Buying Structured Settlements?

When someone chooses to buy structured settlements, they have to understand that this is one case in which all sales are final. They cannot change their minds at a later date and try to get their money back. One the decision is made; there is nothing that they can do. They will now have to accept the monthly payments that seller did not want. As an investment, buy structured settlements is not a wise way for an individual to spend their money. It can be different for a company who specializes in buying structured settlements.

Another downside to consider when you buy structured settlements is that it has no long term value. With inflation, you actually stand to lose money over time. Think about the baby boomers who talk about the fact that soda used to be ten cents or a phone call was five cents. That same dollar will not mean much in another decade or two. Take all of these things into consideration before you decide to buy structured settlements. There is no going back once the deal is done.

How to Sell a Structured Insurance Settlement

How to Sell a Structured Insurance Settlement

When you’re dealing with an insurance company, it can take a long time before you win your structured insurance settlement, and it can also take a while before the money is sent to you and your family. Whether it is a car accident or a problem with your home, these delays can cause havoc in your household, and your need for fast cash can rise to desperate levels.

Unfortunately, most people are unaware that instead of heading off to the bank for a loan or the cash checking place for a payday loan, they can try to get access to the lump sum of the structured insurance settlement. The small downside is the fact that you get a little less than what you would receive if you simply stuck with the monthly payments, but depending on your need of the money, most families are willing to lose a percentage in favor of the full sum.

Lump Sum Vs Monthly Payments

Before you decide to take on the lump sum, you have to sit down and figure out if it will be worth it in the long run. Will your need of money be short term, or can you begin losing things such as your car or even your home if specific bills are not paid?

Remember that once you go through with it and get the lump sum, your monthly payments will be finished, and you can no longer depend on that monthly check that used to arrive in the mail box.

With the settlement, you can handle all of your basic and momentary needs to deal with any recent issues that have arrived. Your family’s immediate security will be dealt with and you can prevent further action from any bill collectors who may be calling.

If you are deciding to sell, you should do so as soon as possible. Although the money is sent to you monthly, over time inflation will get you less money the longer you wait to take a lump sum. So to reap the full benefits you have to decide as soon as you can, instead of waiting a while and getting a lot less than you would have in the beginning.

Start the Settlement Process

To begin the process of selling your structured insurance settlement, you will first have to find a buyer. Once you have met with one or more buyers, find out what they can offer. and pay attention to all of the information that they will provide for you. They should let you know, that the money you receive from the structured insurance settlement will not be the full amount that was originally offered by your insurance company. This will show the honesty of the people you will be working with.

Before you sign on the dotted line, make sure that you have checked with a few different buyers to get the best deal that you possibly can. Also get an attorney to look over all the paperwork before you close the deal. A chat with a financial planner should also be on the list, especially if you want help on how to invest some of your new savings.

Get Cash for Structured Settlement Payments

Get Cash for Structured Settlement Payments

Too many people are unaware that they can change their minds and get cash for structured settlement payments instead of sticking to a monthly plan. It may be a bit time consuming at first, as you research and try to learn what you need to do, but it is also very easy to complete and depending on your current situation, it could end a lot of headaches and get you cash that you need immediately.

Why do you need a buyer?

When you get cash for structured settlement payments, you are making an agreement with another buyer or company. They will get the monthly payments and you will take one sum to settle everything with the insurance company.

You will need a buyer because they are the ones who will give you the money in exchange for the monthly payments. The only problem with getting cash for structured settlement payments is that you will get a little less if you take the lump sum. If you go with monthly payments, you will usually get the full settlement. How much money you get will depend on the buyer. Remember that they are trying to make a profit in a deal as well. Juggle a few offers and see who can give you the best one.

However, the fee usually does not matter if you need the money urgently. Instead of waiting years to get the full amount, you will get the lump sum from the buyer and you can move on with your life. You may need to take care of bills that piled up after your accident, and the settlement can help you to deal with this issue before damage is done to your credit.

For others, the need for money may not be urgent, but they may want to put the money into investments for their future or for their kids. A good investment planner can help you place the money into accounts that will work for you overtime. This could not have been done if you were still taking monthly increments instead of getting cash for structured settlement payments. At the end of the day, the money, all of it, is yours to do with it as you please.

Do Your Research on Cash Settlements

Before you rush out to make a trade, know what you’re getting into. You will be dealing with a lot of people and when money is in the mix, everyone is not always as honest as they should be. Don’t let yourself get taken advantage of and don’t sign things unless you can fully understand what you will be putting your signature on.

A buyer could make a verbal agreement with you to sell for $50,000. However, a simple mistake that can be accidental or deliberate can have you walking away with only $5,000, simply because you did not pay attention and did not have a lawyer and others with you to take care of business. Cash for structured settlement payments can be a great idea, but if you do it incorrectly it can also turn into a huge mistake.

Why Should You Sell Structured Insurance Settlement Payments?

monthly structured insurance paymentsWhy Should You Sell Structured Insurance Settlement Payments?

There are many reasons to receive a structured insurance settlement. You may have had an accident that will cause you to lose out on a paycheck. A family member may have died because of someone else’s negligence. However, once you receive the settlement, your problems do not disappear. You have to decide if monthly payments are good enough or you may have to consider whether or not you should sell structured insurance settlement payments.

Settlements can work well for some people but for others the need of finances may be so great that even when they sell structured insurance settlement payments, they may still need money to cover everything. When they combine bills, wages that were lost due to injury, college payments for the kids, and even the purchase of a house, you can still end up in the red.

For those who are lucky, they can leave the settlement procedures safe and sound and may only have to figure out what they want to do with the money. Regardless of the difficulties or lack thereof, monthly payments may just not work for everyone and their needs will force them to try to sell structured insurance settlement payments.

urgent bill payments Urgent Bills Need to Be Paid

Everyone has different bills that need to be paid and the totals will vary. A monthly payment cannot meet your needs if you have a huge backlog that needs to be paid off. Turning to someone to sell a structured insurance settlement may be one of the ways that you can pay the bills on time instead of taking the chance of losing your home or car. Along with the fact that the limit of the payments may not be enough for you to survive on, settlement payments can take years before you receive the entire amount and this is one reason that many decide to sell.

Injured and Out of Work

If your settlement is due to an accident or injury that puts you out of a job for a short time or long term, you are now dealing with bills and a loss of income. Depending on the injury, you may not be able to get back into the field of work that you have left due to ongoing pain, or you may no longer be able to keep up with a physically demanding job.

The decision to sell structured insurance settlement payments in this case will give you the immediate finances necessary to survive for a while as you try to rearrange your life to fit your recent physical aspects. For single person homes or families, this is very difficult if you are the sole bread winner. With no job in sight, and no income coming in, that monthly payment may just not be enough to keep everything running the way it used to. Even cancelling a few unnecessary items such as cable, internet, or satellite may still leave your household needs wanting.

Want to Invest Wisely

For those who are lucky and don’t have to worry about bills, to sell a structured insurance settlement may be a way for them to invest and save some money for their future or the future of their family.

There are many reasons that people should consider selling a structured insurance settlement. Whether you are out of work, have bills that are mounting, or want to invest your money, trading in your payments in exchange for a lump sum is a decision that you have to make for yourself.

Can you Negotiate

Structured Settlements-can You Negotiate?

What are these matters called structured settlements? Why do they exist and what are latent high points and cons? Structured settlements are also styled as periodical payments. They are laws that the general assembly assents to where the defendants desire that some or all of the payments awarded by a judge or jury are paid to the injured consumer over a protracted extent of term.

This means that the injured may not come by their settlement in a full sum. There were some advantages to receiving the cash this way. There were once unmistakable tax breaks that you established when you took repeated payments over a lump sum. You qualified for preferential treatment under Sections 104(a)2 and 130 of the Internal Revenue Code so you could pay less in taxes on your settlement.

The sale of the annuity allows you to gain straightaway recourse to the entire amount or a portion of the unused payments instead of holding back years to get the complete face amount. Selling your structured annuity allows you to do as you see fit with the money, without the impediment that is imposed by the annuity itself.

While annuities do facilitate an worthy role and often meet the payees’ troubles as originally proposed, they are changeless and unqualified to help you resolve an unexpected crisis or help you meet future shortages. As of now, more than thirty state governments have warranted that individuals should have recourse to this critical resource and now allow for transfers of the annuitant’s rights to take payments as long as it is in their foremost interests. Individuals in all fifty states now have availability to their structured annuity payments and can get cash for their structured settlement payments, and you can, as well. There are available tax benefits as well.

Structured settlements comport to meet the needs of both parties involved and give a boost to all the those involved come to an agreement that will successfully work for both. Payments are typically tailored to the individual plaintiffs needs. You should follow up together with your legal practitioner as well as the judge and the defendants registered representative to come up with structured settlements that work for yourself.

Sometimes this structured settlement that is regulated by the judge is all set to be paid through the securing of one or more annuities. These annuities will ensure your impending payments. You can adopt to have the structured settlements paid in almost any strategic plan that both parties concur to. For example, they might make payments in installments every year or monthly. Or they may make lump sum payments every prorated timeframe such as each 2nd quarter.

There are some situations where people need to negotiate their annuities and change them for liquid assets this moment. There are some companies that are legally franchised to provide these services and some situations where the judge will approve it for the consumer. For example, if you have a financial urgency and you need the money or part of the money promptly, the judge may consent for you to change in some or all of your annuities.

If you are contemplating selling your structured settlement, you need to look for legal and financial direction regarding this important concern. Come stop over to http://www.allsettlements.com to find out more.

Selling Structured Settlement Payments

selling insurance settlements Selling Structured Settlement Payments

When some people receive a structured settlement, they will often question if they should consider selling that settlement in exchange for one big payment. There is a lot to consider before they make a final decision, and a few people that you will have to deal with when the decision has been made.

Before you get started, be aware that everyone will not be able to sell structured a settlement. Economic problems can also make it a bad idea to sell, and you may be better off taking the monthly payments instead of going ahead with the sale.

Choosing a Settlement Plan

Factor in your health when you are making a decision about selling structured settlement payments. If you have an injury that deals with the actual settlement, you have to figure out if taking the payments while you cannot work would be better than getting a lump sum that you might spend and lose before you are able to work again.

Before you take a settlement, think of a plan that will continue to work for you in the future. For instance, taking a lump sum when you are selling structured settlement payments does not mean that you have to take all of it at one time. You can choose to take one sum and then have smaller sums delivered at specific times, periodically in the future. For an injured person, who is out of work at the moment, this might be the best plan to go with.

Speak With a Lawyer

A lawyer is someone that you absolutely have to work with when you’re considering selling structured settlement payments. There are many consequences that you could face if you don’t know the laws or the rules before you begin.

One problem that you could run into is the fact that it is illegal to sell a structured settlement in some states. Other states have a lot of rules that you have to follow before, during, and after a sale of a settlement. In some instances, you may have to go to court to deal with the settlement, while this step is not needed in other areas. You can also run into a company who originally agree to the sale, but they may later try to back out because of laws and other difficulties.

choose more than one buyer

Another reason for a lawyer is to get the most out of your settlement that you can. Everyone is not honest, and since you may not understand everything that is being said or written, you can easily find yourself signing paperwork that gives you a lot less money than you originally anticipated. A good lawyer will help you with the legalities and try to prevent you from getting ripped off from a settlement buyer.

One of the biggest tips that you should follow is to check around to more than one buyer. The price that a buyer gives you can seem great at the time, but if you don’t look to others before signing the deal, you may lose out on another buyer who was willing to pay just a little bit more. Selling structured settlement payments can be difficult and tedious, but if you follow all of the steps, you can walk away with a settlement that you can be happy with.

Should You Sell Your Structured Settlement?

advantages of structured settlementsStructured Settlements - Should You Sell Yours?

In recent years, it has become more common for victims of accidental injury who accept a settlement from the at-fault party to accept a structured settlement instead of a lump-sum payment. With a structured settlement, the injured party receives payments over an agreed-upon length of time - five years, ten years, or even a lifetime, rather than receiving payment up front in a lump sum.

There are advantages to this for both parties. The injured party may require constant medical care, and the regular payments of a structured settlement guarantee that income will be available to cover the medical expenses. For the paying party, the settlement can be paid by purchasing an annuity, which allows an upfront payment to accrue interest, thereby producing a larger long-term yield from a minimal investment. In many cases, a structured settlement is viewed as a win-win situation for both parties.

regular payments of a structured settlements

There are restrictions on structured settlements that may not suit everyone. Once you agree to accept a structured settlement, you cannot trade it back in for a lump sum payment, nor may you use it for collateral for a loan. What if you want to buy a home and pay cash? What if some other unexpected expense comes up and you simply do not have the cash available? Under certain circumstances, you may be able to sell your structured settlement to a third party.

There are companies that are interested in purchasing structured settlements for investment purposes. Perhaps one or more of these companies has already contacted you. They will agree to pay you a lump sum, in cash, in exchange for you signing over your future annuity payments to them. Be aware that any party that offers to buy your annuity is interested in doing so for investment purposes. They wish to make money on the transaction, and for them, that profit will be spread over the long time that it takes to receive all of the payments that constitute the settlement. Once you combine the factors of time, interest, inflation, and the buying party’s profit, you will find that the offer made to you will seem quite small. The amount you receive will be an amount equal to the present day value of the settlement, minus whatever sum the investors require for their profit on the transaction.

You should also know that some states prohibit the sale of structured settlements, that some insurance companies who handle the annuities prohibit sales to a third party, and that you will probably need to go to court to arrange the sale. In addition, there may be tax considerations involved in the sale, and the taxes due on large sums of money are not insignificant. If you are interested in selling your structured settlement, you will definitely want to discuss the sale with an attorney and a tax advisor beforehand.

While structured settlements are designed to benefit those who receive them, there are times when it may be desirable or necessary to sell them. If you are considering selling your settlement, make sure that you weigh all of your options carefully. Once you agree to sell, you cannot get it back.

Companies Buying Structured Settlements

Why Would A Company Want To Buy My Structured Settlement?

There are several structured settlement companies and corporates that purchase structured settlements and offer a lump sum in exchange. The simple reason for a company to purchase a structured settlement is that it represents a good investment deal. Structured settlement payments from lottery winnings, royalty payments, and insurance annuities are income-tax free and are secured by federal and state regulations.

Companies that purchase structured settlements are thus assured of a steady stream of income over a period of time which allows them to execute their growth plans in an assured manner. Alternatively the money can be invested by these companies where the principal continues to grow.

Corporates purchase structured settlements at a profit. This means that the amount which the seller receives is a discounted amount arrived at by factoring in the profit margins and bank interest rates. Also, by purchasing a structured settlement companies are able to obtain loans more easily. This is because of the secured nature of these settlements. The loan money can be used to pay off a large chunk of the lump sum. Thus, the company ends up paying very little out of its own pockets.

Structured settlements represent secured finances that help improve the market standing of a company which has a healthy effect on their businesses. They represent a safe business option for their partners because of their financial soundness. The more business they generate and prosper the less need these companies have for middle-men in their dealings with sellers of structured settlements. This allows them to offer the best rates to sellers by eliminating broker’s commissions.

The work involved in executing a structured settlement sale basically consists of marketing activity and working with the seller for acquiring court approval. Companies do not require diverting too many resources to this activity but the returns of the efforts are manifold. At any point in time, there are individuals who need cash for immediate use. By establishing a network through agents and by maintaining an online presence, structured settlement buyers can tap into a lucrative source of guaranteed and income that will last them for a long time.

Staying Rich in the New Normal

Investment Outlook

Balzac was on to something 200 years ago, but to be fair to modern day multi-millionaires, the only real way to accumulate wealth prior to the 18th century was to steal it, or tax it, I suppose, as was the case with kings and their royal courts. It was only with the advent of capitalism and annual productivity gains that entrepreneurs, investors, and risk-takers with luck or pinpoint-timing could jump to the head of the pack and accumulate what came to be recognized as a fortune. Still, the negative connotations persist. I remember a cocktail party in the early 80s where a somewhat inebriated guest engaged me in a debate about the merits of capitalism. “You’re filthy rich,” he said, which struck me as most unfair from a number of angles. First of all, he hadn’t seen anything yet, I thought, and second, I wasn’t quite sure where the “filthy” came from. Resentment that he’d missed out on my presumed good deal, I suppose, and in the process using a hackneyed phrase that was bitter and biting, yet had some context of historical sociological relativity. Still, he might have been on to something there – not about me, hopefully, because I’ve always felt that while PIMCO has prospered, it’s only because its clients have benefitted even more so – but about the developing sense of one-sided, perhaps off-sided wealth generation that was to dominate the next several decades. Granted, we had Bill Gates and Steve Jobs and other true capitalistic dynamos who benefitted society immeasurably. But growing percentages of fortunes were being made by those who could borrow or aggregate other people’s money. Because our economy was still in a relatively early stage of leveraging, those who borrowed money and used it to invest in higher-risk yet higher-return financial or real assets didn’t require a lot of skill, they just needed to be able to convince a bank or an insurance company to lend them some money. After that, the secular wave of leverage would be enough to multiply their meager equity many times over and carry them to a beach where a fortune awaited them much like a pirate’s buried treasure.

I remember as a child my parents telling me, perhaps resentfully, that only a doctor, airline pilot, or a car dealer could afford to join a country club. My how things have changed. Now, as I write this overlooking the 16th hole on the Vintage Club near Palm Springs, the only golfers who shank seven irons into the lake are real estate developers, investment bankers, or heads of investment management companies. The rich are different, not only in the manner intoned by F. Scott Fitzgerald, but also in who they are and what they do for a living. Whether some or all of them are filthy is a judgment for society and history to make. Of one thing you can be sure however: over the next several decades, the ability to make a fortune by using other people’s money will be a lot harder. Deleveraging, reregulation, increased taxation, and compensation limits will allow only the most skillful – or the shadiest – into the Balzac or Forbes 400.

Readers who are interested in such things as the Forbes annual list of hoity-toities will have noticed that more and more of them are global, not U.S. citizens. The U.S., in other words, is not producing as much wealth in proportion to the rest of the world. Its fortune-producing capabilities seem to be declining, which might suggest that its relative standard of living is doing so as well. If so, the implications are serious, not just for Donald Trump but for wage earners and ordinary citizens, as reflected in their income levels and unemployment rates. Stockholders, 401(k) investors, and yes, bond managers will be affected too. Last week’s furor over the possibility of an eventual downgrade of America’s AAA rating demonstrates that only too clearly. On the night of May 20, Standard & Poor’s announced a downgrade watch for the United Kingdom and since the U.S. and U.K. are Siamese-connected, financially-levered twins, the implications were obvious: the U.S. might be next. In the space of 48 hours, the dollar declined 2%, and U.S. stocks and long-term bonds were down by similar amounts. Such a trifecta rarely occurs but in retrospect it all made sense: a downgrade would cast a negative light on the world’s reserve currency, and since stocks and bonds are only present values of a forward stream of dollar-denominated receipts, they went down as well.

The potential downgrade, while still far off in the future in PIMCO’s opinion, seemed dubious at first blush. While country ratings factor in numerous subjective qualifications such as contract rights, military might, and advanced secondary education, the primary focus has always been on the objective measurement of debt levels, in this case sovereign debt, as a percentage of GDP. Yet, as shown in Table 1, both the U.S. and the U.K. entered the Great Recession with attractive ratios compared to such grievous offenders (and AA rated) as Japan.

Yet as the markets recognized rather abruptly last week, both countries seem to be closing the gap in record time. To zero in on the U.S. of A., its annual deficit of nearly $1.5 trillion is 10% of GDP alone, a number never approached since the 1930s Depression. While policymakers, including the President and Treasury Secretary Geithner, assure voters and financial markets alike that such a path is unsustainable and that a return to fiscal conservatism is just around the recovery’s corner, it is hard to comprehend exactly how that more balanced rabbit can be pulled out of Washington’s hat. Private sector deleveraging, reregulation and reduced consumption all argue for a real growth rate in the U.S. that requires a government checkbook for years to come just to keep its head above the 1% required to stabilize unemployment. Five more years of those 10% of GDP deficits will quickly raise America’s debt to GDP level to over 100%, a level that the rating services – and more importantly the markets – recognize as a point of no return. At 100% debt to GDP, the interest on the debt might amount to 5% or 6% of annual output alone, and it quickly compounds as the interest upon interest becomes as heavy as those “sixteen tons” in Tennessee Ernie Ford’s famous song of a West Virginia coal miner. “You load sixteen tons and whattaya get? Another day older and deeper in debt.” Pretty soon you need 17, 18, 19 tons just to stay even and that describes the potential fate of the United States as the deficits string out into the Obama and other future Administrations. The fact is that supply-side economics was a partial con job from the get-go. Granted, from the 80% marginal tax rate that existed in the U.S. and the U.K. into the late 60s and 70s, lower taxes do incentivize productive investment and entrepreneurial risk-taking. But below 40% or so, it just pads the pockets of the rich and destabilizes the country’s financial balance sheet. Bill Clinton’s magical surpluses were really due to ephemeral taxes on leverage-based capital gains that in turn were due to the secular decline of inflation and interest rates that at some point had to bottom. We are reaping the consequences of that long period of overconsumption and undersavings encouraged by the belief that lower and lower taxes would cure all.

The current annual deficit of $1.5 trillion does not even address the “pig in the python,” baby boomer, demographic squeeze on resources that looms straight ahead. Private think tanks such as The Blackstone Group and even studies by government agencies, such as the Congressional Budget Office, promise that Federal spending for Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid will collectively increase by 6% of GDP over the next 20 years, leading to even larger deficits unless taxes are increased proportionately. Collectively these three programs represent an approximate $40 trillion liability that will have to be paid. If not, you can add that present value figure to the current $10 trillion deficit and reach a 300% of GDP figure – a number that resembles Latin American economies such as Argentina and Brazil over the past century.

So the rather conservative U.S. government debt ratio shown in Table 1 will likely be anything but in less than a decade’s time. The immediate question is who is going to buy all of this debt? Estimates suggest gross Treasury issuance of up to $3 trillion this calendar year and net offerings close to $2 trillion – almost four times last year’s supply. Prior to 2009, it was enough to count on the recycling of the U.S. trade/current account deficit to fund Treasury borrowing requirements. Now, however, with that amount approximating only $500 billion, it is obvious that the Chinese and other surplus nations cannot fund the deficit even if they were fully on board – which they are not. Someone else has got to write checks for up to $1.5 trillion additional Treasury notes and bonds. Well, you’ve got the banks and even individual investors to sponge up some of the excess, but a huge, difficult to estimate marginal supply will have to be bought. The concern is that this can be accomplished in only two ways – both of which have serious consequences for U.S. and global financial markets. The first and most recent development is the steepening of the U.S. Treasury yield curve and the rise of intermediate and long-term bond yields. While the Treasury can easily afford the higher interest expense in the short term, the pressure it puts on mortgage and corporate rates represents a serious threat to the fragile “greenshoots” recovery now underway. Secondly, the buyer of last resort in recent months has become the Federal Reserve, with its publically announced and near daily purchases of Treasuries and Agencies at a $400 billion annual rate. That in combination with a buy ticket for over $1 trillion of Agency mortgages has been the primary reason why capital markets – both corporate bonds and stocks – are behaving so well. But the Fed must tread carefully here. These purchases result in an expansion of the Fed’s balance sheet, which ultimately could have inflationary implications. In turn, nervous holders of dollar obligations are beginning to look for diversification in other currencies, selling Treasury bonds in the process.

The obvious solution to both dollar weakness and higher yields is to move quickly towards a more balanced budget once a sustained recovery is assured, but don’t count on the former or the latter. It is probable that trillion-dollar deficits are here to stay because any recovery is likely to reflect “new normal” GDP growth rates of 1%-2% not 3%+ as we used to have. Staying rich in this future world will require strategies that reflect this altered vision of global economic growth and delevered financial markets. Bond investors should therefore confine maturities to the front end of yield curves where continuing low yields and downside price protection is more probable. Holders of dollars should diversify their own baskets before central banks and sovereign wealth funds ultimately do the same. All investors should expect considerably lower rates of return than what they grew accustomed to only a few years ago. Staying rich in the “new normal” may not require investors to resemble Balzac as much as Will Rogers, who opined in the early 30s that he wasn’t as much concerned about the return on his money as the return of his money.


William H. Gross
Managing Director


How to Find Great Stocks During a Boom or Doom Period

This weekend, I’ll be speaking at the Mt. Vernon Research/Investor’s Daily Edge “Boom & Doom” conference in South Florida. During my presentations, I’ll offer the attendees my top five stocks that I believe will fare well, no matter whether we’re in a depression or expansion. Now, it wouldn’t be fair to the paying customers if I give you those top five stocks here. But what I can do is provide you with the stockpicking method to my (some say considerable) madness…

A Fat Pipeline… And An Even Fatter Dividend

Several of the stocks are in the healthcare sector - my specialized area of expertise.

Not only do I cover that sector for Mt. Vernon Research, I also believe that owning the right healthcare stocks is crucial for having a well-balanced portfolio.

While President Obama’s goal to make healthcare affordable for every American is noble, it’s difficult to execute even in the best of circumstances.

And since he won the election, I’ve said that achieving this in the midst of a nasty recession and two wars is going to be even more challenging. I suspect the healthcare landscape isn’t going to see any dramatic changes over the next few years and I don’t foresee socialized medicine in the United States.

For that reason, one of my choices for the “Boom and Doom” portfolio is a large-cap pharmaceutical firm that boasts a deeper drug pipeline than its large-cap brethren. Run by a shrewd financial management team, the stock pays a safe and fat dividend. You’d need to buy a junk bond to find a yield this high.

Even if markets fall off a cliff, this stock’s dividend should help take away some of the sting.

Two Flourishing Small-Caps With Key Stock-Moving Catalysts

My other two healthcare picks are small-caps.

When I analyze small-cap healthcare stocks, I’m looking to find companies that have revolutionary products. And if those products have a reasonable chance of success, I’m willing to take on some additional investment risk.

That means when I put out a recommendation on a company’s stock, I need to be confident that it will at least double if my thesis proves correct.

The first company is working on a vaccine that not only has the potential to save millions of lives, but also billions of dollars in our healthcare system.

It has plenty of cash on its books (a very important variable when cash is scarcer these days) and is ahead of its competitors in the development of the vaccine. And while it’s a speculative position, it’s a company that should be rather immune to a “boom or doom” scenario. The bottom line is that if the vaccine works, the stock is going to blast off, no matter what the economy or Dow is doing.

My second small-cap pick is a tiny company that makes a new medical device that has no competition in a $1 billion market. Not only is its technology superior to others, the company is also in the process of signing up an exclusive distributor. Once that occurs, revenue growth should be off to the races. What’s more, this company is profitable, cash flow positive, has plenty of cash and no debt.

A Mega Moneysaver With Little Competition In A Critical Industry

The next two companies help others save money - a vital quality during difficult economic times.

The first one works in an industry that is arguably the most critical in the world - because without it, nobody would even be alive.

With water shortages already impacting millions of people all over the globe - and set to affect many millions (if not billions) more in the coming years, this small-cap firm is crucial, as it saves governments, utilities, and companies roughly 60% of the cost of addressing the problem.

This stock is perfect for a “Boom and Doom” portfolio, as water shortage problems can’t wait until the economy recovers or there is more money in government coffers. Water projects are essential and many of the large ones were funded before the credit crisis clamped down on capital.

And because this company not only help saves a ton of money on these critical projects and has little to no competition, you don’t get a better recipe for success than that.

A Massive First Mover In The Telecom World

My last recommendation enjoys such enormous “first-mover” advantage (i.e. the first company of its kind in a given field) that although it’s now starting to face more competition, it’s going to be difficult for rivals to grab market share.

The company is a key player in the telecommunications industry and boasts 9 of the 10 largest carriers as its customers. It’s active in over 100 markets around the U.S.

And it’s easy to see why it’s an attractive firm. Not only does it relieve its large telecom customers of logistical headaches, it also saves them huge wads of cash.

Already profitable and cash flow positive, with mountains of cash in the bank and a tiny amount of debt, the company’s growth trajectory looks like a hockey stick. And earnings are expected to grow 24% per year over the next five years.

Three Elements That Make Up The Perfect “Boom And Doom” Stocks

With the exception of the large-cap pharma firm, these companies all have three common denominators…

  1. Leading Position In Their Industries: They’re all way out in front of the competition, or have none at all.
  2. Rock Solid Balance Sheets: This is important, as it means if the doomsday scenario hits, I don’t have to worry about where they’re going to get the capital to keep the lights on. Moreover, healthy balance sheets will help the companies acquire rivals and accelerate growth when the opportunity arises.
  3. Game-Changing Technology: When these technologies catch on, the growth is often explosive - and so are the stock prices of the innovative companies that created them. And because it’s also often a reason why there is no competition, investors have the profits all to themselves.

If you’re attending the Mt. Vernon Research/Investor’s Daily Edge “Boom & Doom” conference, I look forward to meeting you and sharing more about these companies with you. If not, I invite you to sign up for the Xcelerated Profits Report instead. This is where you’ll get the names of all my small-cap picks, plus my healthcare and biotech recommendations on a regular basis.

Hoping your longs go up and your shorts go down.

Marc Lichtenfeld