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How Will the S&P 500 Close in the Future?

You all know what time it is! It's time to parse the option trader tea leaves and guess where the options market thinks we are headed in the near to somewhat not near future. As always, we are taking options data from Yahoo, and using contracts which trade more than .5% of the daily volume to make our targets. We're also using the ticker SPY (a S&P 500 ETF) as our proxy for the S&P - all numbers you see are multiplied by 10 to get the conversion to actual closing prices.

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The DQYDJ Weekender, 7/28/2012

Olympics and blog warfare!

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Mortgage Interest Deduction Usage by Tax Bracket

About a month ago, my colleague Cameron penned an article about the Mortgage Interest Deduction - namely, whether it is a good idea or not. For an itemizing taxpayer in the 25% bracket, he pointed out, "The bank receives 4.0% interest, the homeowner pays 3.0% and the taxpayer is left footing the 1.0% difference." Right - and the bank ends up pocketing the subsidy.

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Taxing Fat Citizens and the Health Care Bill

The multi-payer system sets up the incentive for those without their own insurance to be unhealthier. Car accident deaths increased after the seatbelt law was instituted. When I finally have to foot some of the bill, do I still want to see Americans wolfing down their Wendy’s?

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The DQYDJ Weekender, 7/21/2012

Thoughts and prayers go out to all of the victims (and their families and friends) of the shooting in Aurora, […]

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The Roth IRA Loophole for Absurdly High Contributions (And No Income Limits)

I know the title sounds like I'm about to sell you some snake oil, but bear with me for a second here. Some bloggers have discussed the inherent unfairness of the Roth IRA's contributions - namely, being capped at $125,000 for a single filer and $183,000 for a joint filer in 2012. Other have discussed the backdoor IRA - building on a 2010 rule change which allowed people of any income to convert IRAs (and other eligible accounts) to Roth IRAs. We're going to bypass both of those and talk about how you can contribute over $30,000 to your Roth IRA - with the only requirement being that you have access to a 401(k) with certain features. Read on...

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How Much Would Your IRA Be Worth if You Invested As Much as Mitt Romney?

In a case of great timing, DQYDJ's article guessing how Mitt Romney has so much money in his IRA is now the third most popular article on the site! While I hold no belief that this situation will continue past November of this year, I think that, in the moment, it's interesting to ask how a retail investor (read: the rest of us) might have fared had we contributed as much as the Romney family must have during Mitt's 24 year stint in the public sector (whew). So, how much out-performance did Mr. Romney achieve?

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The DQYDJ Weekender, 7/14/2012

Welcome Len Penzo Readers!

It's a person and a site. If you have no idea what I'm talking about, click here.

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Price Discrimination - and the Economics of Smaller Magazines.

In the pilot episode of NBC's self-referential 30 Rock, the new boss accurately stereotypes a member of middle management after meeting her just thirty seconds before.
Parody? Undoubtedly. Is it a thing? Yes, it's a thing.

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The DQYDJ Weekender, 7/7/2012

So we've got a nifty new political status indicator to roll out to you next week. It's actually a bit early to know anything with any decent amounts of certainty about the upcoming elections in the old USA, but I want to have this in place soon. Oh, expect more political articles when the race heats up. Make sure to complain loudly in the comments section!

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