Friday, May 25, 2018

Facebook and Google are already facing lawsuits under new data rules

Europe's sweeping data protection law came into force on Friday. And legal experts say big tech companies are already violating the new rules.

Facebook (FB) and its subsidiaries Whatsapp and Instagram, as well as Google (GOOGL), are facing lawsuits for failure to comply with the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).

The companies could face billions of dollars in fines if European regulators agree they failed to comply.

"We're looking for big companies that really willfully violate the law, that kind of try to ignore it and try to get away with it," said Max Schrems, an Austrian lawyer whose NGO, None of Your Business, filed the lawsuits.

The complaint against Facebook was filed with Austrian data regulators, Google with French regulators, WhatsApp with German regulators and Instagram with Belgian regulators as soon as the law went into effect at midnight.

From Friday, European data regulators can impose fines of up to 4% of global annual sales each time the companies run afoul of the new law.

"There is no grace period," James Dipple-Johnstone, the deputy commissioner of the UK's data protection authority. "We will be looking at the algorithms they use to profit off data to make sure they are fair," he added.

Schrems has been fighting Facebook over data protection for almost a decade. His earlier lawsuit successfully challenged Facebook's ability to transfer data from the European Union to the United States.

The next battleground with the company is GDPR.

According to Schrems and other legal experts, Facebook is breaking a GDPR rule intended to prevent companies from hoovering up sensitive information like political opinions, religious beliefs, ethnicity and sexuality without their users' consent.

Michael Veale, a Technology Policy Expert at University College London, said that even if users' completely remove sensitive traits from their profiles, Facebook can still glean information such as sexual orientation by analyzing their behavior on the platform and other websites.

"Facebook has trackers on 40% of websites that are visited in the world," Veale said. "So really, Facebook can infer things from the great amount of data it has about you from across your mobile devices and apps that also send data to Facebook. The law forbids Facebook from making these inferences without explicit consent."

Testifying in front of the European Parliament leaders on Tuesday, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg insisted his company would follow the new regulations.

"We have made our policies clearer, our privacy settings easier to find and introduced better tools for people to access, download, and delete their information," Facebook's Chief Privacy Officer Erin Egan said in a statement emailed to CNNMoney.

Egan also said the company is building a new tool called "Clear History" which will allow users to "see the websites and apps that send us information when you use them, clear this information from your account, and turn off our ability to store it associated with your account going forward."

The suit against Google alleges that users of the company's Android software are forced to turn over personal data to use an Android-powered mobile device.

The lawsuit alleges this "forced consent" amounts to a violation of GDPR, which guarantees individuals the right to consent when companies want to collect and process their personal data.

Google told CNNMoney it is committed to complying with the new law.

Schrems says the new rules are tough enough to prevent the kind of data scraping that Cambridge Analytica before the 2016 U.S. election. He's taking legal action to ensure GDPR is properly enforced.

"If we enforce the properly, we can actually get a balance in this digitalized age," says Schrems. "In the end, you should be able to use Facebook without worrying 24/7 about your data," he added.

Thursday, May 24, 2018

Pay Your Mortgage Early or Invest?

If you own a home, chances are good you have a mortgage. Making mortgage payments can be a source of frustration for homeowners, some of whom will decide to pay off a mortgage early.

While owning your home free and clear seems attractive, it's important to consider whether paying off your mortgage early is actually a good financial decision. There's lots to consider, including the psychological benefits of being debt-free, along with the consequences to your net worth if you make the choice to pay down your mortgage quickly.

Read on to find out if prepaying your mortgage is the right goal or whether you'd be better off in the long term if you invested instead.�

Home with sold sign in the front yard

Image source: Getty Images.

8 reasons you should prepay your mortgage

Prepaying your mortgage is a huge financial decision that requires weighing all the pros and cons. First, let's take a look at why prepayment might be your best bet.�

Prepaying your mortgage gives you peace of mind:�Owning your home free and clear means you won't have to worry about foreclosure if you can't make mortgage payments. You may feel more confident about your overall financial situation if a lender no longer has a claim to your home.� You may be more motivated to become debt-free:�If you hate being in debt, you may be willing to sacrifice and reduce spending to get your mortgage paid off quickly. If you're not as excited about investing, you may spend extra money instead of budgeting carefully. You're better off paying extra on a mortgage than wasting money on frivolous things. You'll save on interest:�You can save a lot of money by prepaying your mortgage. If you have a $300,000, 30-year mortgage with an interest rate of 4.5%, you'd pay around $1,520 monthly. If you increased your monthly payment to�$1,820, you'd save almost $80,000 in interest and pay off your loan eight years and six months before the scheduled payoff date.� You have a guaranteed return on investment:�When you prepay your mortgage, you always save on interest -- so you'll always get a return on investment. You don't have to hope your investments perform well. You'll have more equity in your home:�When you pay down your mortgage, you build equity. If you must move, you won't have to worry about your home being worth less than you owe. If you're underwater on your home, you can't sell it unless you bring cash to the table -- at least not without ruining your credit by getting the bank to agree to a short sale.� You'll reduce your cost of living: Your�monthly mortgage payment is likely your biggest bill. If you eliminate it, you can live on far less. This gives you the flexibility to take a lower-paying job, leave the workforce to raise your kids, or retire earlier since expenses are lower.�� You can eliminate private mortgage insurance:�If you had a down payment of less than 20%, you're probably required to pay private mortgage insurance (PMI). PMI pays the bank if your home is foreclosed on and sells for less than you owe. PMI typically costs around .5% to 1% of the original mortgage loan. On a $300,000 loan, that could total $250 per month or $3,000 per year. If you've paid down your mortgage and your loan balance totals 80% or less of the value of your home, you can ask your lender to get rid of PMI. Home equity gets special protections:�In most states, at least some equity in your home is protected if you go bankrupt, have creditor claims against you, or need to qualify for Medicaid to pay for a nursing home. While 401(k)s, IRAs, and other specialized retirement accounts also generally receive some special protections, cash investment accounts don't.� 8 reasons you shouldn't prepay your mortgage

Now that you've considered some of the key reasons why prepaying your mortgage could be a good idea, it's important to evaluate the considerable downsides. Here are eight big reasons why paying down your mortgage faster than required may not be the best financial move.

There's an opportunity cost:�Every dollar devoted to paying extra on your mortgage is $1 you can't use for another financial goal. Since you have a limited amount of money, paying more on a mortgage that has a low interest rate may not make financial sense. This is especially true if you fail to take advantage of other opportunities, such as contributing to a 401(k) with an employer match.� Your return on investment is low:�While you earn a guaranteed return on investment by prepaying your mortgage, your return on investment is low because mortgage interest rates are low. If your mortgage rate is 4.5%, your rate of return from prepaying your mortgage is just 4.5%. By contrast, the S&P 500�has produced annualized total returns (including dividends) close to 10%, which is significantly higher. Your home is not a liquid asset:�Selling your home is time-consuming, difficult, and costly, which makes it hard to get money out of your house if you need it to meet financial needs. There are many more-liquid investments available that can be sold quickly if necessary.� You'll lose tax breaks for mortgage interest:�Many taxpayers claim a tax deduction for mortgage interest. However, tax reform in 2017 resulted in new limitations on deducting interest for some borrowers while significantly increasing the standard deduction. If you'll be claiming the standard deduction instead of itemizing, losing this deduction won't be a factor for you.� You could miss out on tax breaks for retirement savings:�If you prepay your mortgage instead of maxing out�tax-advantaged savings accounts, you miss out on tax savings. If you paid an extra $5,500 per year toward your mortgage instead of contributing $5,500 to a 401(k) or IRA, you'd miss out on a $1,210 tax break if you're in the 22% tax bracket.� You'll still owe on your home:�Many people want to prepay their mortgage to own their homes free and clear. However, even if you no longer owe the bank, you still owe property taxes. While your property taxes are likely much lower than annual mortgage payments, you never truly eliminate the risk of losing your home if you can't keep up with obligations. Your assets won't be very diversified:�Sinking more of your money into your home means you'll be heavily invested in real estate. If your home declines in value, this will have an outsize impact on your net worth if you don't have money invested in other assets, since extra cash went to bigger mortgage payments.� Inflation reduces the savings from prepaying your mortgage:�If you have a fixed rate mortgage, your mortgage payments stay the same for the life of the loan. If your monthly payment is $1,500 today, it'll be $1,500 in 25 years. But $1,500 in 25 years is worth the equivalent of just $942 in today's dollars, assuming a 2% inflation rate. Your mortgage effectively costs less over time, and future savings from prepaying interest must be discounted based on inflation. If you take a 30-year $300,000 mortgage today and pay off your loan 8 1/2 years early, the $80,000 you'll save in interest comes more than 21 years in the future, so you effectively save less than $49,000.� How will your net worth be affected by prepaying your mortgage?

While being debt-free is a laudable goal, it's important to look at the big financial picture. You're better off having a small amount of debt and a lot of money than having no debt but no savings either. So, before you decide to prepay your mortgage, think about how this will impact your net worth.�

Let's say you have a $300,000, 30-year fixed rate mortgage at a 4.5% interest rate, like the example above. If you pay $1,820 per month instead of $1,520, you pay almost $80,000 less in interest and pay off your loan in 21 years and six months. But, during that time, you've paid an extra $3,600 in mortgage payments each year.

What if you instead invested $3,600 annually for 21 years, putting the money into an IRA or 401(k) and earning 7% on your investments? You'd have $161,514. This is more than double what you'd save in mortgage interest -- so you'd end up with a higher total net worth even though you're still in debt.��

After 21 years of payments, you'd owe $134,783 on your $300,000 mortgage if you never made an extra payment. If you decided you really wanted to be debt free, you could take your $161,514, pay off the $134,783 mortgage balance, and have $26,731 left over.

And this doesn't even factor in tax breaks for investing or paying mortgage interest. Making $3,600 investments in a 401(k) or IRA would give you a $792 tax break in the 22% tax bracket. Assuming you got the same break each year, that's $16,632 over 21 years. And, since you'd pay almost $80,000 less in interest, you'd lose around $17,600 in tax savings by not paying that interest if you deducted the full amount and were taxed at 22% each year you claimed the deduction.

What about the fact a mortgage provides a guaranteed return on investment?

One of the best arguments for paying extra on your mortgage is the guaranteed return on investment. However, the return is low compared to what you make by investing. You could invest fairly conservatively and still end up earning a higher rate of return than current mortgage rates -- especially when factoring in tax breaks.

Investing can also provide a guaranteed return from an employer match, if you're eligible. If your employer matched a $3,600 annual 401(k) investment over 21 years, your employer would give you $75,600 in free money, which almost covers the $80,000 in extra interest paid on your mortgage. When you add in tax breaks for investing in a 401(k), you'd end up better off even if your entire 401(k) was kept in cash.

Three things to do before prepaying your mortgage

While the rational thing to do is invest instead of paying off your mortgage early, people aren't always rational and you may want to prepay your mortgage despite the math.�

Before you do, there are a few things you absolutely must do first:

Take full advantage of an employer match for your 401(k):�If you don't invest at least enough money to get your match, you're giving up free money.� Pay off high-interest consumer debt:�Credit card debt, personal loan debt, and car loan debt charge higher interest than mortgages, and you can't deduct the interest. Pay these debts off first before paying extra on your mortgage. You'll still be working toward becoming debt-free, but will save more in interest and get a better return on your money.� Build an emergency fund:�Once you've paid extra on your mortgage, getting money back out of your house is difficult and requires you to refinance or take a home equity loan -- both of which carry costs. You don't want money needed for an emergency to be inaccessible when your car breaks down or another financial disaster strikes.�

Until you've done these three things, you do not have "extra" money to pay toward your mortgage.

Ways to prepay your mortgage

If you've decided to pay off your mortgage early, you have a few options. You could:

Make biweekly mortgage payments:�Most people get paid biweekly, but make just one mortgage payment per month. If you pay half a mortgage payment with each paycheck, you'll make 26 half payments, or 13 payments total instead of 12. The downsides are that not all mortgage lenders process biweekly payments and there are sometimes fees to do this.� Pay extra with your regular payments:�You can simply add extra money to each payment you make.� This is easy and flexible because you aren't locked into paying more than the minimum. But, if you're not disciplined enough to voluntarily add extra money with each payment, your plan to pay your mortgage early may not come to fruition.� Refinance to a shorter-term loan:�If you've taken out a 30-year mortgage and refinance to a 15-year mortgage, you can often lower your interest rate and reduce the time to pay off your loan. The big downside is you're locked into higher payments. If you can't make them, you're at risk of losing your home.�

While there are benefits to maintaining flexibility in your payment plan, this flexibility makes it harder to stick to your goals.�

Avoiding prepayment penalties

Before you start your prepayment plan, it's important to determine if there's an added cost associated with paying your mortgage early: prepayment penalties. Some lenders impose a penalty for paying off a mortgage before its designated repayment date, to protect their profits on the loan and to prevent buyers from refinancing right away.�

Not all mortgages have prepayment penalties, and these penalties work differently from lender to lender. Penalties may be imposed on a sliding scale based on the length of time you've had the mortgage, such as a 3% penalty if you've had the loan for just a year compared with a 2% penalty if you've had the loan for two years or more. Penalties could also be a flat fixed fee for repaying the loan at any time before the designated payoff date; could be equal to a percent of the interest owed; or could equal a percentage of the remaining balance.

The only way to tell if you'll need to pay a prepayment penalty is to review your mortgage loan paperwork or ask your lender. If you'll have to pay a fee to prepay your loan, this is a big argument against prepayment since it makes the "return" on paying off your mortgage even lower.

What decision is right for you?

The right choice on whether to pay off your mortgage early depends on your short- and long-term goals, your risk tolerance, and whether you think you'll be disciplined about investing.

If you're fired up to prepay your mortgage and willing to devote more effort to accomplishing that goal than to investing, you could end up with a higher net worth in the end. Just be sure you understand the opportunity cost and realize you may have been better off investing rather than focusing on becoming debt-free.�

Tuesday, May 22, 2018

Facebook Inc (FB) COB and CEO Mark Zuckerberg Sold $83.7 million of Shares

COB and CEO of Facebook Inc (NASDAQ:FB) Mark Zuckerberg sold 457,000 shares of FB on 05/18/2018 at an average price of $183.23 a share. The total sale was $83.7 million.

Facebook Inc is the world's largest online social network. Its products are Facebook, Instagram, Messenger, WhatsApp, and Oculus. Its products enable people to connect and share through mobile devices and personal computers. Facebook Inc has a market cap of $534.03 billion; its shares were traded at around $184.49 with a P/E ratio of 30.50 and P/S ratio of 12.20. Facebook Inc had annual average EBITDA growth of 63.50% over the past five years.

CEO Recent Trades:

COB and CEO, 10% Owner Mark Zuckerberg sold 457,000 shares of FB stock on 05/18/2018 at the average price of $183.23. The price of the stock has increased by 0.69% since.COB and CEO, 10% Owner Mark Zuckerberg sold 660,000 shares of FB stock on 05/16/2018 at the average price of $184.81. The price of the stock has decreased by 0.17% since.COB and CEO, 10% Owner Mark Zuckerberg sold 440,000 shares of FB stock on 05/11/2018 at the average price of $185.58. The price of the stock has decreased by 0.59% since.COB and CEO, 10% Owner Mark Zuckerberg sold 677,000 shares of FB stock on 05/09/2018 at the average price of $179.26. The price of the stock has increased by 2.92% since.COB and CEO, 10% Owner Mark Zuckerberg sold 436,530 shares of FB stock on 05/04/2018 at the average price of $175.26. The price of the stock has increased by 5.27% since.

CFO Recent Trades:

CFO David M. Wehner sold 9,522 shares of FB stock on 05/16/2018 at the average price of $183.61. The price of the stock has increased by 0.48% since.

Directors and Officers Recent Trades:

Director Jan Koum sold 1,263,806 shares of FB stock on 05/16/2018 at the average price of $183.45. The price of the stock has increased by 0.57% since.COO Sheryl Sandberg sold 55,000 shares of FB stock on 05/14/2018 at the average price of $186.98. The price of the stock has decreased by 1.33% since.Chief Technology Officer Michael Todd Schroepfer sold 38,043 shares of FB stock on 05/08/2018 at the average price of $178.13. The price of the stock has increased by 3.57% since.VP and General Counsel Colin Stretch sold 16,500 shares of FB stock on 05/02/2018 at the average price of $174.3. The price of the stock has increased by 5.85% since.VP Bus. & Marketing P'ships David B. Fischer sold 5,138 shares of FB stock on 04/25/2018 at the average price of $160.07. The price of the stock has increased by 15.26% since.

For the complete insider trading history of FB, click here

.

Monday, May 21, 2018

'Bad Blood' explores the culture inside disgraced startup Theranos

Theranos CEO Elizabeth Holmes was once lauded as the youngest self-made female billionaire. But her net worth was revised down to nothing after a journalist started digging into the technology behind her blood testing startup.

In a new book out Monday, that journalist -- Wall Street Journal investigative reporter John Carreyrou -- sheds light on what went on behind the scenes of the disgraced company.

The book, "Bad Blood: Secrets and Lies in a Silicon Valley Startup," focuses on understanding the culture at Theranos and the tyrannic leadership that steered the startup to its one-time valuation of $9 billion.

Theranos aimed to create cheaper, more efficient alternatives to traditional blood tests using its proprietary technology. But after Carreyrou, a Pulitzer Prize winning reporter, called into question its technology and testing methods in 2015, the company voided two years of blood tests. In May 2018, the SEC charged Theranos with "massive fraud" involving more than $700 million.

The company remains the subject of an ongoing criminal investigation by the Department of Justice.

Following interviews with more than 150 people, including 60 former Theranos employees, Carreyrou paints the picture of what it was like working for Holmes. She was said to have unrealistic expectations, according to Carreyrou, when it came to the startup's blood testing technology and its workers, requiring engineers to work around the clock to speed up development.

"This was an incredibly ambitious woman. She wanted to be the second coming of Steve Jobs. It was an 'ends justify the means' situation. Perhaps she thought [Bill] Gates and Jobs faked it until they made it so why not her too?" Carreyrou told CNNMoney.

elizabeth holmes bad blood

After dropping out of Stanford University in 2003, Holmes started Theranos at age 19. She was known for wearing black turtlenecks, a nod to Jobs, and for her ability to attract a who's who of powerful investors and board members. Her squad included two billionaire executives, a top Silicon Valley venture capitalist, and a member of President Donald Trump's cabinet.

Holmes ignored warning signs from employees who raised red flags about the technology's effectiveness prior to introducing it to patients. Holmes expected complicity in elaborate lies, such as staging a fake laboratory to impress Vice President Joe Biden. Those who pushed back or tried to level with her were typically asked to leave the company.

"There's no question in mind that she knew there was a risk that she was putting patients in harm's way," Careyrou said. "The problem was Elizabeth channeled the Silicon Valley culture and way of operating for what was not a traditional tech business -- it was a medical technology business."

According to Carreyrou, employees constantly felt like they were under surveillance. Holmes' administrative assistants connected with Theranos employees on Facebook to report back what others were posting.

"Elizabeth demanded absolute loyalty from her employees and if she sensed that she no longer had it from someone, she could turn on them in a flash," said Carreyrou.

In the book, he writes that firing someone often meant building a dossier on the person to "use for leverage."

"Bad Blood" also examines the role and power exuded by Theranos' former COO Ramesh "Sunny" Balwani. Balwani is an elusive character. A Google search on the executive turns up few results.

Twenty years her senior, Balwani was Holmes' closest confident; the two also had a romantic relationship that was concealed from her board. Balwani is said to have "spawned a culture of fear with his intimidating behavior," Carreyrou writes. When he let employees go, employees would say, "Sunny disappeared him."

Carreyrou wrote Balwani treated employees as his "minions." Dozens of them were Indian citizens on H-1B visas, a popular work visa used in the tech industry to employ highly-skilled foreign workers. Because H-1B visas are tied to an employer, this kept workers on these visas particularly afraid of speaking up. "It was akin to indentured servitude," Carreyrou wrote.

Efforts to maintain secrecy at the company ran deep, he said. Employees -- and anyone who entered Theranos' office -- were required to sign non-disclosure agreements. "We can change people in and out. The company is all that matters," one engineer featured in the book recalls Holmes saying.

Carreyrou said Holmes has "steadfastly refused" to do an interview with him for years. They have never met.

His first expose on Theranos ran in the Wall Street Journal in October 2015, and his coverage is responsible for cracking open and exposing the startup.

"I have very good reason to believe that criminal indictments of Holmes and Balwani are not far away," Carreyrou said.