Teri Hatcher has insisted that a Desperate Housewives film would be amazing. The comments will be exciting news for fans of the hit TV show, who would welcome a movie version of the show in their millions. …read more
Source: The Christian Post
Teri Hatcher has insisted that a Desperate Housewives film would be amazing. The comments will be exciting news for fans of the hit TV show, who would welcome a movie version of the show in their millions. …read more
Source: The Christian Post
By The Huffington Post News Editors
Soap star Jesse Metcalfe, 34, is arguably best-known for playing Eva Longoria‘s hunky pool boy on “Desperate Housewives,” which is what makes his recent home purchase a little bit of a downer.
He and fiancee Cara Santana became the proud owners of a 2,362-square-foot Spanish-style home with five bedrooms — but alas, no pool.
The property had been listed at about $1.6 million andTrulia put the sales price of the couple’s new home at $1.43 million. The home transferred title on Feb. 28 and Metcalfe sold his Beverly Hills Post Office area home for $2 million, Trulia reports.
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By The Huffington Post News Editors
NEW YORK — Eva Longoria hasn’t slowed down since “Desperate Housewives” signed off after eight seasons last year. In fact, the actress says the word “lazy” isn’t in her vocabulary.
“There are days when I relax but it won’t be a full day. It usually means I’m gonna clean out my closet. That’s relaxing for me. Or I’m gonna cook a full meal for my family and friends,” Longoria, who will be 38 on Friday, said in a recent interview.
Filed under: Stock Picks, Market News, Entertainment Industry, People, Investing
Rachel Fox played Kayla Scavo, Felicity Huffman‘s scary stepdaughter, on “Desperate Housewives.” Five years later, at the ripe old age of 16, she has finally come clean about her addiction … to investing.
The stock market has become a favorite hobby for Fox, so much so that she has started a blog — the catchy “Fox on Stocks” — where she dishes investing advice, lessons on using stop-limit orders, and specific stock picks (both long and short).
So far, she’s achieved results many pros would envy: Fox’s returns have beaten the S&P 500 — she allegedly made a 30.4 percent gain last year, compared to the S&P’s 13 percent.
Is it just dumb luck, or does this teenager know something that you don’t?
Play Money Then, Real Money Now
Fox credits her mother for first sparking her stock market passion. She taught her to invest using play money as a child. Now she’s investing with real money, which means real, tangible gains and losses. Even at a young age, she’s not without her share of Wall Street horror stories.
Fox’s worst stock buy, she says, was made on the advice of a family friend at a Thanksgiving dinner. The $2 stock was apparently destined to hit $10, but instead dwindled into a penny stock.
A much better result came when she shorted iconic jeweler Tiffany (TIF) immediately before the company’s disappointing Jan. 10 earnings call, after which the stock dropped from $63.12 to $59.49. She knew the stock was going to dip, she says, because she was paying attention to the company’s financial expectations.
Turns out Tiffany had lowered its outlook before it released earnings. By acting at exactly the right moment, Fox was able to swoop in and gobble up some sweet returns as a result.
High Risk, High Rewards
Clearly, this is one teenager who does her homework. Every day, Fox pores over the financial news sites and annual reports. Like her idol, Warren Buffett, she says she ignores the sensational white noise of day-to-day news feeds.
She has also given a lot of thought to what her individual investing strategy is. And while she has been successful so far, that doesn’t mean her strategy is right for other investors. In short, Fox likes to day-trade. After all, she can afford to take risks; she is a young, successful actress who likely has little in the way of debt right now.
Last year, Fox made a remarkable 338 trades. Not only would the fees (and potential taxes) associated with this high number of transactions hurt an investor’s overall returns, but the risks involved could easily exceed the tolerance of an average investor, burdened by student loans, bills, and a mortgage or rent payments.
On her blog, Fox is candid about the dangers inherent in …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance