Archive for April 30th, 2008

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odometerBack in 2004 a lawyer in Arkansas found out that his odometer wasn’t calculating mileage correctly on his Honda minivan. His tests found out that the odometer was off by 5%, so for each 100 miles his minivan would rack up 105 miles. This may seem like small change, but as Bankrate.com points out, even a 5% error can end your new car’s warranty up 1000 miles early! The problem only gets worse when you’ve a automobile with a 100,000 mile warranty.

The last time you want to be without a warranty is when your automobile rolls over 100,000, especially not when you really have 5,000 miles left on your warranty. At this point in your car’s life it is much more likely to need pricey repairs which would have normally been covered under warranty. You’ll appreciate having checked out the calibration of your odometer when your engine or transmission goes out at 100,007 miles.

Finding out if your odometer is quietly eating away at your warranty is really simple, just grab a friend and head to your closest federal highway. All you need to do is measure your odometer against the mile markers, use some of your mathematical skills and viola, you know how far off your odometer is. Bankrate has several steps to take in the event your odometer is skimming cash from your wallet. Thankfully most odometers are personal controlled, and can be fixed at your local dealer.

When we bought our most recent vehicle we made sure that the car didn’t have any odometer fraud, but we didn’t even think to check that it was recording correctly. It looks like we have a project for our next road trip, especially since we bought a power-train warranty with the automobile.

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Not at all surprising, the Federal Reserve has announced it cut its benchmark federal funds rate by a quarter percentage point, to 2%. Further, it also signaled it would pause the recent policy of rate cuts as it removed some language that was previously present in the statements regarding downside risks to economic growth.

Despite the move being fully expected, especially after today’s GDP report showed the economy hasn’t contracted and that inflationary pressures weren’t as high as presumed, the stock market reacted positively and Dow Jones Industrial Average topped 13,000 for the first time since January. Superior than expected results from General Motors (NYSE: GM) and Procter & Gamble (NYSE: PG) also added to the positive sentiment.

While the Fed slowing the pace of its rate cuts, if not pausing them altogether, might usually be considered as negative for stocks, it seems investors took the positive news that the economy may need less bolstering more into consideration this time. Sure, the housing sector, the credit crunch, consumer spending and the labor market were noted by the Fed as weak, under stress or requiring help, but the statement also mentioned that the easing policy to date “should help to promote moderate growth over time.” And that is what the market might be reacting to mostly.

As we’ve seen the last few weeks, the market has been on a steady upward trend. Being forward looking, if investors believe the measure taken by the Fed so far and in the future will succeed, we may yet see this trend continue.

Update 3:25 PM: The initial reaction to the news has reversed its course by now and the Dow, which has topped 13,000 briefly earlier is now up only 27 points. The Nasdaq composite and the S&P 500, which have originally joined the initial rally are now in the red. Perhaps the pause isn’t being accepted as well after all, especially with more and more economists warning the economy is still in a bad shape, inflationary pressures still high and that all that could definitely affect corporate profits.

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