Thursday, February 7, 2008

Caffinated Valentine

Does your Valentine love coffee as much as you do or maybe more? Well forget the Victoria's Secrete teddy or the dozen long stem roses. Entice your special someone with coffee and chocolate from Peet's Coffee & Tea.


Delight your valentine with an elegant box of Michael Recchiuti Belgian-style chocolates and a 1/2 pound of Peet's Reserve Kona coffee. This online exclusive gift comes in a gift box for only $49.95 plus S&H.


Saturday, February 2, 2008

Coffee Stocks To Watch

I love watching the stock market. Actually I'm pretty addicted. Have you ever said, "If only I had a ton of money to invest in the stock market, I'ld be rich." Well, in the last 3 weeks I've made a few hundren-thousand dollars in "fantasy" money playing the stock market. No joke!

Here are a few of the coffee stocks that I've invested in with pretend money. Check them out for yourself. These were purchased on Thursday morning (Jan. 31st).

Company Purchased Currently

Starbucks $18.28 $19.22
Green Mountain $35.82 $38.66
Krispy Kreme $2.75 $2.89
Carabou $2.64 $2.86
Peet's $21.89 $22.98
McDonalds $51.78 $54.22

Total Profit with 5000 shares of each = $38,350.00 in two days. I made another $40K on Dicks, Under Armour, Reebok and Walmart, not to mention almost $50 on Yahoo!

Wednesday, January 30, 2008

Howard Schultz for President

Howard Schultz is as big a dreamer as they come. When Howard Schultz purchased Starbucks for $4 million dollars on August 15, 1987 it was a small chain of coffeehouses in Seattle, Washington. Nothing more. Nothing less. Howard Schultz said his goal was to open a store in Portland, Oregon. A few decades later, there are 11,000 stores in 37 countries with approximately 35 million customer visits every week! And for what it’s worth, Starbucks opens 5 new stores every day 365 days a year.

I love the way Schultz describes the moment in his autobiography, Pour Your Heart Into it:

"This is my moment, I thought. If I don’t seize the opportunity, if I don’t step out of my comfort zone and risk it all, if I let too much time tick on, my moment will pass. I knew that if I didn’t take advantage of this opportunity, I would replay it in my mind for my whole life, wondering: What if?"

On June 26, 1992, Starbucks’ stock went public. It was the second most active stock traded on the NASDAQ and by the closing bell, its market capitalization stood at $273 million.

When Mr. Schultz took over as CEO a few weeks ago the stock rose to over $20. Obviously it not the nearly $40 range from over a year ago, but it shows some positive momentum. Today we're hearing about changes, store closing and refocusing, and investors are responding with caution. My uneducated opinion says Starbucks will bounce back and continue to move forward.

Howard Schultz, you have my vote!