Author Archives: hbcumoney

African America’s May Jobs Report – 10.2%

jobs

Overall Unemployment: 5.5% (5.4%)

African America Unemployment: 10.2% (9.6%)

Latino America Unemployment: 6.7% (6.9%)

European America Unemployment: 4.7% (4.7%)

Asian America Unemployment: 4.1% (4.4%)

Previous month in parentheses.

Analysis: Overall unemployment ticked up 10 basis points. Asian and Latino America saw drops of 30 and 20 basis points, respectively. European America unemployment rate has not changed for four consecutive months. African American unemployment rate spikes up 60 basis points and back into double digits.

African American Male Unemployment: 10.2% (9.2%)

African American Female Unemployment: 8.8% (8.8%)

African American Teenage Unemployment: 30.1% (27.5%)

African American Male Participation: 68.5% (68.7%)

African American Female Participation: 61.9% (61.9%)

African American Teenage Participation: 28.7% (27.2%)

Previous month in parentheses.

Analysis: African American male unemployment rises 100 basis points, while the participation rate drops 20 basis points. African American female unemployment and participation rate went unchanged. African American teenage unemployment rate spiked 260 basis points, while the participation rate rose 150 basis points.

CONCLUSION: The overall economy added 280 000 jobs in May. African America loss 88 000 jobs. Single digit unemployment rate for African America was but a short-lived dream. A rise in the labor force number and drop in the number of employed created the spike back into double digit unemployment rate. The labor force is at its highest in the past five months and 3.6 percent higher year over year indicating that African America is feeling more optimistic about finding employment. A sentiment that is in line with the rest of the country. Despite the job loss, African American employed numbers are still the second highest over the past five months and 5 percent higher year over year. The stability in African American female employment being the most vital to the community looks stable with participation rate and unemployment rate lacking the volatility that the male and teenage groups continue to experience. African America will need a rise of 64 000 jobs in June to push the unemployment rate back down to single digits.

HBCU Money™ Business Book Feature – The Bogleheads’ Guide to Investing

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The irreverent guide to investing, Boglehead style

The Boglehead’s Guide to Investing is a DIY handbook that espouses the sage investment wisdom of John C. Bogle. This witty and wonderful book offers contrarian advice that provides the first step on the road to investment success, illustrating how relying on typical “common sense” promoted by Wall Street is destined to leave you poorer. This updated edition includes new information on backdoor Roth IRAs and ETFs as mainstream buy and hold investments, estate taxes and gifting, plus changes to the laws regarding Traditional and Roth IRAs, and 401k and 403b retirement plans. With warnings and principles both precisely accurate and grandly counterintuitive, the Boglehead authors show how beating the market is a zero-sum game.

Investing can be simple, but it’s certainly not simplistic. Over the course of twenty years, the followers of John C. Bogle have evolved from a loose association of investors to a major force with the largest and most active non-commercial financial forum on the Internet. The Boglehead’s Guide to Investing brings that communication to you with comprehensive guidance to the investment prowess on display at Bogleheads.org. You’ll learn how to craft your own investment strategy using the Bogle-proven methods that have worked for thousands of investors, and how to:

  • Choose a sound financial lifestyle and diversify your portfolio
  • Start early, invest regularly, and know what you’re buying
  • Preserve your buying power, keeping costs and taxes low
  • Throw out the “good” advice promoted by Wall Street that leads to investment failure

Financial markets are essentially closed systems in which one’s gain garners another’s loss. Investors looking for a roadmap to successfully navigating these choppy waters long-term will find expert guidance, sound advice, and a little irreverent humor in The Boglehead’s Guide to Investing.

HBCU Money™ Dozen 6/1 – 6/5

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Did you miss HBCU Money™ Dozen via Twitter? No worry. We are now putting them on the site for you to visit at your leisure. We have made some changes here at HBCU Money™ Dozen. We are now solely focused on research and central bank articles from the previous week.

Research

Saudi Arabia May Become The Saudi Arabia Of Solar l Clean Technica http://dlvr.it/B6SSbc

Millennials bring consumer shopping tactics to corporate buying l CIOonline http://trib.al/Y0GDTxl

Census shows the four countries that are acting as safe havens for African elephants l New Scientist http://ow.ly/NV5Hn

Drums in the deep: Listening to meteorites hitting Mars will tell us what’s going on inside l New Scientist http://ow.ly/NUyKe

It’s time for Apple to redefine the iPad l Macworld http://dlvr.it/B6LSBm

“Stealth” Woman-Owned Startup Nails Tesla Battery For Hybrid-Electric Buildings l Clean Technica http://dlvr.it/B6Hthp

Federal Reserve, Central Banks, & Financial Departments

Does the Taylor rule say to raise rates? Depends in part on the natural real interest rate l St. Louis Fed http://bit.ly/1KJ4ReD

Which countries use the #internet the most? l World Economic Forum http://wef.ch/1dLzRAv

#Africa’s top 10 #tourism-ready countries l World Economic Forum http://wef.ch/1FARLf8

U.S. spends more on #healthcare per person than any other country, but #lifeexpectancy ranks 43rd l SF Fed http://bit.ly/1I6mfJW

Librarians: Check out personal finance & economics lessons that complement children’s books l Econ Lowdown http://bit.ly/1B8tKey

Why is Infant Mortality Higher in the U.S. than in Europe? l NBER http://bit.ly/1KGuWLy

Thank you as always for joining us on Saturday for HBCU Money™ Dozen. The 12 most important research and finance articles of the week.

The HBCU Money™ Weekly Market Watch

Our Money Matters /\ June 5, 2015

A weekly snapshot of African American owned public companies and HBCU Money™ tracked African stock exchanges.

NAME TICKER PRICE (GAIN/LOSS %)

African American Publicly Traded Companies

Citizens Bancshares Georgia (CZBS) $9.00 (1.12% UP)

M&F Bancorp (MFBP) $4.51 (3.63% DN)

Radio One (ROIA) $3.90 (0.26% UP)

African Stock Exchanges

Bourse Regionale des Valeurs Mobilieres (BRVM)  273.47 (0.86% UP)

Botswana Stock Exchange (BSE)  10 577.27 (0.01% UP)

Ghana Stock Exchange (GSE)  2 369.44 (4.80% UP)*

Nairobi Stock Exchange (NSE)  163.78 (N/A)

Johannesburg Stock Exchange (JSE) 51 694.25 (0.72% UP)

International Stock Exchanges

New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) 10 979.33 (0.19% DN)

London Stock Exchange (LSE)  3 711.10 (0.78% DN)

Tokyo Stock Exchange (TOPIX)  1 667.06 (0.41% DN)

Commodities

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HBCU Money™ Business Book Feature – The Power of the Past: Understanding Cross-Class Marriages

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In an era in which class divisions are becoming starker than ever, some individuals are choosing to marry across class. The Power of the Past traces the lives of a subset of these individuals – highly-educated adults who married a partner raised in a class different from their own, primarily between those from blue- and white-color backgrounds. Drawing upon detailed interviews with spouses who revealed the inner workings of their marriages, Jessi Streib shows that crossing class lines is not easy, and that even though these couples shared bank accounts, mortgages, children, and friends, each spouse was still shaped by the class of their past, and consequently, so was their marriage.

Streib reveals what was rarely apparent to the husbands and wives she interviewed. The class of their past did not only matter in determining the amount of money they had as children or what job their parents went off to each morning; It also mattered in more subtle ways, by systematically shaping their ideas of how to go about their daily lives. Upwardly mobile spouses who grew up in blue-collar families learned to take a laissez-faire approach to the world around them: they preferred to go with the flow, make the most of the moment, and avoid self-imposed constraints. Their spouses, who grew up in professional white-collar families, however, wanted to manage the world around them: they organized, planned, monitored, and oversaw. Living with a spouse who was born into a different class means navigating these differences – differences that appeared across nearly every aspect of their lives, from how they manage their finances, to how they manage their time – both at home and on vacation – to ideas about how their children should be raised.

The Power of the Past illustrates that when individuals are raised in different classes, merged lives do not lead to merged ideas about how to lead those lives. Individuals can come together across class lines, but their enduring class characteristics cannot be left behind.