Gary E. Miller

About Gary E. Miller

Gary has been continuously serving clients in the area of finance and investments for over 30 years. Currently he provides services to clients as a fee-only Certified Financial Planner® and manages their investments on a day to day basis.

Consistency Is a Virtue for Financial Advisors

Does anyone remember Elaine Garzarelli? Henry Kaufman? Martin Zwieg? These were widely quoted market gurus of the '70's and '80's who got one or two predictions right, then became media darlings. None were successful actually handling real money for real people. Consistency is an under appreciated virtue in my business. Trusted Financial Advisors values this virtue.

"Whitney's Fund Said to Drop 11% as Office Put on Market"
By Max Abelson Dec 21, 2014 6:36 PM PT
Dec. 22 (Bloomberg) –- Meredith Whitney, who started a hedge fund after becoming one of Wall Street’s most famous analysts, is facing tough times. Bloomberg’s Max Abelson reports on “In The Loop.” (Source: Bloomberg)
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By |2018-07-02T10:43:25-07:00December 22nd, 2014|Financial Commentary - Public|0 Comments

“Before the Advice, Check Out the Adviser”- Article

A Thorough and Comprehensive overview of the Balkanized world of financial advice that leaves consumers exposed to predatory practices.

Before the Advice, Check Out the Advisor

Let us use this occasion to underscore that Trusted Financial, in all its dealings acts as a Fiduciary, seeking to represent the needs of and best interests of its clients. We are a Registered Investment Advisor, which as discussed in this article must act as Fiduciary and we are Certified Financial Planners which also holds us to this high standard.

By |2018-07-02T10:43:25-07:00October 25th, 2014|Learn How We Make Investment Decisions|0 Comments

Today’s Eisenhower Economy

Emerging from the scariest Recession (note the capital “R”) in three generations, America seems to be enjoying a well- mannered economic recovery the likes of which were probably last seen in the 1950’s. Let’s summarize the good news, for those of you too impatient to read this entire blog post:

  1. Low inflation -- should continue
  2. Low interest rates -- little risk of a sharp rise
  3. Rising employment -- New jobs are being created at the rate of over 200,000 per month
  4. Good consumer confidence -- people are spending on cars, remodeling, dining out and vacationing again
  5. Buoyant stock market
  6. Buoyant housing market
  7. Buoyant retail sales
  8. Complacency - there does not appear to be a likelihood of some great social upheaval as in the 1960’s and 1970’s
By |2018-07-02T10:43:25-07:00October 6th, 2014|Financial Commentary - Public|0 Comments

Correlation Between Fracking & Ground Water Contamination?

September 22, 2014

The National Academy of Sciences has published a study seeking to establish a link between the process of hydraulic fracturing and intrusion of methane into ground water.

To quote a summary of the study:
“Noble gas data appear to rule out gas contamination by upward migration from depth through overlying geological strata triggered by […]

By |2018-07-02T10:43:25-07:00September 22nd, 2014|Oil and Gas Industry|0 Comments

Big Day & Week for Kinder Morgan Investors

This energy transportation company was the financial headline du jour on Monday August 11. The company is really a “family” of companies all under the oversight of Richard Kinder who once was CFO at Enron, which became a House of Fraud after his departure. Over the past 18 years he has overseen the growth of his company from a handful of natural gas pipelines to what is now the third largest energy company in the world. We have invested our clients capital in one or more of the Kinder Morgan entities since early 2004, enjoying average annual returns in the double digits with steadily rising dividends all along the way.

By |2018-07-02T10:43:25-07:00August 14th, 2014|Financial Commentary - Public|0 Comments

Sell in May and Go Away

“Sell in May and Go Away” is the common wisdom of equity traders, and after 36 Summers in this industry, I agree that for traders, this is useful advice. My desire is to emulate the success of value investors who are nearly all long term position holders, so selling in May, just because the Summer is often challenging for stock valuations, does not carry much weight with me.  This year was a little different. Oil prices have been rocketing, the dollar collapsing and the political climate in Washington is unlikely to tolerate further monetary stimulus by our Federal Reserve bank.  So beginning about a month ago, I became less tolerant of client equity holdings that failed to hold important technical support (yes, I use charts too).  We reduced a long time holding of a forest products company and a major player in software, thus raising client cash from a level of virtually zero to about 6% of portfolio values.

By |2018-07-02T10:43:35-07:00June 4th, 2011|Financial Commentary - Public|0 Comments

Year End Roundup

Year End Roundup

The quarter ending December 31, 2010 was a blowout for stocks and commodities, so it may be difficult to recall that stocks suffered a mid-year bear market - a loss of 16% between April and August. This was spawned by a few factors, fears about a financial collapse of European banks and even nations the most prominent. Sentiment was not helped by the Administration’s coordinated attacks on a prominent Wall Street bank, part of a transparent effort to garner support for sweeping financial regulatory reform struggling in Congress. Then there were the incessant calls for a “double dip” recession from perennially bearish economists, who it seems were dead wrong. Your performance since inception has exceeded that of most asset classes, especially stock, which suffered two mammoth bear markets over the past decade: a decline of about 45% during the Tech Wreck a (2000 to 2002) plus another plunge over 50% during the Banking Crisis of 2007 to 2009.

By |2018-07-02T10:43:36-07:00January 14th, 2011|Financial Commentary - Public|0 Comments
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