Greed and Capitalism

What kind of society isn't structured on greed? The problem of social organization is how to set up an arrangement under which greed will do the least harm; capitalism is that kind of a system.
- Milton Friedman

Monday, November 26, 2012

Goldman to Clients: Brace for Another 8% Drop in S&P — US Business News - CNBC

 The S&P 500 is set to fall another 8 percent by the end of the year, on top of the 7 percent decline seen since the year’s high reached in September, according to a new strategy note by Goldman Sachs.




“Uncertainty swirling around the “fiscal cliff” that must be resolved by year end, the pending jump in capital gains taxes at the start of 2013, and the debt ceiling that will be reached in late February, represent clear and present downside risks to the market in the near term,” wrote the analysts, headed by Chief U.S. Equity Strategist David Kostin.


Kostin said the fiscal cliff — a series of tax increases and spending cuts worth $600 billion due to hit the U.S. at the start of 2013 — will ultimately be avoided, but assigned only a 55 percent likelihood to the issue being resolved by the end of this year. A solution is dependent on Democrats and Republicans in Congress and the White House reaching agreement on how debt levels should be reduced.


 Kostin was more bullish on the S&P 500 over the medium-term, and forecast the index would end 2013 at 1,575 points, an increase of 16 percent on current levels.


 “The S&P 500 has near-term political risk but long-term policy support,” he said. “Although we believe investors will have an opportunity over the near-term to buy the S&P 500 at a level below today, portfolio managers with a longer-term horizon should consider increasing equity exposure.”

 Kostin highlighted that the S&P 500 fell 17 percent between July 25 and Aug. 8 last year, as the U.S. debt ceiling deadline approached. He said those declines had also created an attractive entry point.

"In retrospect, the sell-off created an attractive investment opportunity, given the S&P 500 has since rallied by 21 percent," he said.

On Monday, Michael Crofton, CEO of the Philadelphia Trust Co., told CNBC’s “Worldwide Exchange” that U.S. equity investors were waiting for further news on the fiscal deliberations before positioning themselves. 

“I do not think we go over the fiscal cliff, but I also do not think we are very close to a solution,” he said. 




—By CNBC.com’s Katy Barnato
© 2012 CNBC.com



Goldman to Clients: Brace for Another 8% Drop in S&P — US Business News - CNBC

 Link:  http://www.cnbc.com/id/49884080




Saturday, November 24, 2012

Investment Falls Off a Cliff - WSJ.com


U.S. Companies Cut Spending Plans Amid Fiscal and Economic Uncertainty







U.S. companies are scaling back investment plans at the fastest pace since the recession, signaling more trouble for the economic recovery.





U.S. companies are scaling back investment plans at the fastest pace since the recession, signaling more trouble for the economic recovery. Sudeep Reddy reports on Markets Hub. Photo: AP.





Motorola CEO Greg Brown warned Congress that inaction on the 'fiscal cliff' will undermine the U.S. economy; Intel announced the retirement of CEO Paul Otellini; Netpage's CEO Paul Morris joins Digits to discuss his new interactive app. Photo: Getty.

Half of the nation's 40 biggest publicly traded corporate spenders have announced plans to curtail capital expenditures this year or next, according to a review by The Wall Street Journal of securities filings and conference calls.

Nationwide, business investment in equipment and software—a measure of economic vitality in the corporate sector—stalled in the third quarter for the first time since early 2009. Corporate investment in new buildings has declined.

At the same time, exports are slowing or falling to such critical markets as China and the euro zone as the global economy downshifts, creating another drag on firms' expansion plans.





Corporate executives say they are slowing or delaying big projects to protect profits amid easing demand and rising uncertainty. Uncertainty around the U.S. elections and federal budget policies also appear among the factors driving the investment pullback since midyear. It is unclear whether Washington will avert the so-called fiscal cliff, tax increases and spending cuts scheduled to begin Jan. 2.

Companies fear that failure to resolve the fiscal cliff will tip the economy back into recession by sapping consumer spending, damaging investor confidence and eating into corporate profits. A deal to avert the cliff could include tax-code changes, such as revamping tax breaks or rates, that hurt specific sectors.

President Barack Obama called a number of business executives over the weekend, including Warren Buffett, Apple Inc. AAPL +1.74% Chief Executive Tim Cook and J.P. Morgan Chase's JPM +0.88% James Dimon, to promote his solution to the looming budget crisis. All sides in Washington, in a departure from a year of deep divisions, have pledged to work together and compromise to avoid going over the cliff.


"The whole world is looking for stability and clarity from the United States," said David Seaton, chief executive of Fluor Corp., FLR +1.01% a large engineering and construction firm. If uncertainty isn't removed, he said, "people will sit on their war chests of cash and return it to shareholders. You'll have a retarded growth trajectory."

Should the White House and Congress strike a deal to avoid the fiscal cliff, the economy could get a boost. "You might very well get a burst of pent-up demand coming at the start of next year," said Paul Ashworth, chief U.S. economist at Capital Economics, a consultancy.

"Given the timing of the drop-off in business investment," he said, "you have to think it's not just a coincidence with the timing of the fiscal cliff."

Unless the business investment slowdown reverses quickly, it could weigh further on growth prospects and the stock market.

Collectively, the members of the Standard & Poor's 500-stock index spent $580 billion on plants and equipment in 2011, according to calculations by the Journal from data supplied by S&P Capital IQ. Spending has run ahead of that pace throughout the year but has slowed in recent months. The latest retrenchment includes such household names as Wal-Mart Stores Inc., WMT +1.90% Ford Motor Co., F +1.65% Boeing Co., BA +0.81% Intel Corp. INTC +1.86% and Walt Disney Co. DIS +1.19%

During the 2007-09 recession, businesses cut back sharply on all kinds of spending. But investment helped propel the recovery, growing faster than the rest of the economy from the second half of 2009, once the recession ended, through the first half of this year. That helped many companies boost productivity and profits without adding new workers.

The Fiscal Cliff

If Congress doesn't reach a budget deal, the U.S. will see across-the-board spending cuts and tax increases for nearly everyone beginning in January 2013. Follow all of the Journal's coverage in The Fiscal Cliff stream .
Why Obama Is Pushing Higher Rates
Uneven Bite Limiting Deductions
Which State Takes Most Deductions?

The pattern changed in the third quarter, when business investment fell at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.3%, according to a preliminary estimate from the Commerce Department. The latest drop included a decline in investment in structures, such as buildings, at a 4.4% annual rate. Investment in equipment and software stalled after growing at a roughly 5% annual pace in the first six months of the year.

"We have really not seen tailwinds to the economy," said OfficeMax Inc. OMX +0.63% chief executive Ravi Saligram. "When that happens, American businesses focus on productivity. You always prepare for the worst and if things get better, that's great."

The slowdown in capital spending contrasts with a rebound in U.S. consumer spending and confidence, which has returned to a five-year high. Meanwhile, the latest survey by the Business Roundtable, which tracks expectations for sales and investment among its big-company CEOs, found the worst sentiment about the economic outlook in three years.

Consumers may be taking their cues from signs of stronger job growth, lower fuel prices and an improving housing market. Businesses, on the other hand, appear more worried about the future, as profit growth and the global economy slow and the outlook for U.S. government policies remains murky.

The mood appears better among small businesses than large corporations. A survey by the National Federation of Independent Business in October found an uptick in capital spending among small businesses. While overall sentiment among small businesses remains below its prerecession average, it has been resilient in recent months.

Snap-on Inc., SNA +0.17% which makes equipment for auto technicians, reports healthy investment among the 800,000 small businesses it serves across the U.S. "Their confidence is fair and reasonable," said Snap-on CEO Nicholas Pinchuk. "As you move up to bigger companies, their foresight becomes broader and their confidence starts to erode."

Slower global economic growth also is contributing to the investment slowdown. China for example, has reduced demand for coal and other minerals, slowing orders for earth-moving and other equipment from Caterpillar Inc. CAT +1.34%

At the start of the year, Caterpillar expected to spend $4 billion building and expanding factories in Illinois, North Carolina, Texas, China and Thailand, among others. Last month, Caterpillar said it wouldn't reach that target, and expects capital spending to fall next year.

In technology, Intel is facing lower demand for its semiconductors. Intel last month said it would shift idle factory space and equipment into producing its newest chips, reducing its capital spending this year to roughly $11.3 billion, from an earlier projection of $12.5 billion. Chief Financial Officer Stacy Smith told investors last month that spending could fall again next year.

Other technology companies buying less new equipment include Texas Instruments Inc. TXN +1.34% and Harris Corp., HRS +1.23% which has cut capital spending by 46% so far this year, to $44 million from $82 million. Apple said it planned to spend $10 billion on new stores and equipment in the current fiscal year ending Sept. 30, 2013, down from $10.3 billion in the 2011-2012 fiscal year.

Among the companies cutting capital-spending targets, the biggest concentration is in the energy industry, where natural-gas prices are near record lows.

Devon Energy Corp. DVN +0.64% spent $6.2 billion in the first nine months of this year, up 13% from the same period last year, with boosted spending on oil projects.

But capital spending next year will be "significantly less than 2012," particularly in acquiring new leases, Devon chief executive John Richels told analysts.

Write to Sudeep Reddy at sudeep.reddy@wsj.com and Scott Thurm at scott.thurm@wsj.com




nvestment Falls Off a Cliff - WSJ.com


http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887324595904578123593211825394.html





Friday, November 23, 2012

Learning to Love Volatility: Nassim Nicholas Taleb on the Antifragile - WSJ.com


Learning to Love Volatility


In a world that constantly throws big, unexpected events our way, we must learn to benefit from disorder, writes Nassim Nicholas Taleb.


Several years before the financial crisis descended on us, I put forward the concept of "black swans": large events that are both unexpected and highly consequential. We never see black swans coming, but when they do arrive, they profoundly shape our world: Think of World War I, 9/11, the Internet, the rise of Google.


In economic life and history more generally, just about everything of consequence comes from black swans; ordinary events have paltry effects in the long term. Still, through some mental bias, people think in hindsight that they "sort of" considered the possibility of such events; this gives them confidence in continuing to formulate predictions. But our tools for forecasting and risk measurement cannot begin to capture black swans. Indeed, our faith in these tools make it more likely that we will continue to take dangerous, uninformed risks.


Some made the mistake of thinking that I hoped to see us develop better methods for predicting black swans. Others asked if we should just give up and throw our hands in the air: If we could not measure the risks of potential blowups, what were we to do? The answer is simple: We should try to create institutions that won't fall apart when we encounter black swans—or that might even gain from these unexpected events.


Fragility is the quality of things that are vulnerable to volatility. Take the coffee cup on your desk: It wants peace and quiet because it incurs more harm than benefit from random events. The opposite of fragile, therefore, isn't robust or sturdy or resilient—things with these qualities are simply difficult to break.



Robert Maass/CORBISProtesters on the Berlin Wall in 1989.

To deal with black swans, we instead need things that gain from volatility, variability, stress and disorder. My (admittedly inelegant) term for this crucial quality is "antifragile." The only existing expression remotely close to the concept of antifragility is what we derivatives traders call "long gamma," to describe financial packages that benefit from market volatility. Crucially, both fragility and antifragility are measurable.

As a practical matter, emphasizing antifragility means that our private and public sectors should be able to thrive and improve in the face of disorder. By grasping the mechanisms of antifragility, we can make better decisions without the illusion of being able to predict the next big thing. We can navigate situations in which the unknown predominates and our understanding is limited.

Herewith are five policy rules that can help us to establish antifragility as a principle of our socioeconomic life.

Rule 1: Think of the economy as being more like a cat than a washing machine.


We are victims of the post-Enlightenment view that the world functions like a sophisticated machine, to be understood like a textbook engineering problem and run by wonks. In other words, like a home appliance, not like the human body. If this were so, our institutions would have no self-healing properties and would need someone to run and micromanage them, to protect their safety, because they cannot survive on their own.

By contrast, natural or organic systems are antifragile: They need some dose of disorder in order to develop. Deprive your bones of stress and they become brittle. This denial of the antifragility of living or complex systems is the costliest mistake that we have made in modern times. Stifling natural fluctuations masks real problems, causing the explosions to be both delayed and more intense when they do take place. As with the flammable material accumulating on the forest floor in the absence of forest fires, problems hide in the absence of stressors, and the resulting cumulative harm can take on tragic proportions.


Reuters

Rescue vehicles surround a US Airways plane after it crashed into the Hudson River in New York on Jan. 15, 2009.


And yet our economic policy makers have often aimed for maximum stability, even for eradicating the business cycle. "No more boom and bust," as voiced by the U.K. Labor leader Gordon Brown, was the policy pursued by Alan Greenspan in order to "smooth" things out, thus micromanaging us into the current chaos. Mr. Greenspan kept trying to iron out economic fluctuations by injecting cheap money into the system, which eventually led to monstrous hidden leverage and real-estate bubbles. On this front there is now at least a glimmer of hope, in the U.K. rather than the U.S., alas: Mervyn King, governor of the Bank of England, has advocated the idea that central banks should intervene only when an economy is truly sick and should otherwise defer action.

Promoting antifragility doesn't mean that government institutions should avoid intervention altogether. In fact, a key problem with overzealous intervention is that, by depleting resources, it often results in a failure to intervene in more urgent situations, like natural disasters. So in complex systems, we should limit government (and other) interventions to important matters: The state should be there for emergency-room surgery, not nanny-style maintenance and overmedication of the patient—and it should get better at the former.

In social policy, when we provide a safety net, it should be designed to help people take more entrepreneurial risks, not to turn them into dependents. This doesn't mean that we should be callous to the underprivileged. In the long run, bailing out people is less harmful to the system than bailing out firms; we should have policies now that minimize the possibility of being forced to bail out firms in the future, with the moral hazard this entails.

Rule 2: Favor businesses that benefit from their own mistakes, not those whose mistakes percolate into the system.


Some businesses and political systems respond to stress better than others. The airline industry is set up in such a way as to make travel safer after every plane crash. A tragedy leads to the thorough examination and elimination of the cause of the problem. The same thing happens in the restaurant industry, where the quality of your next meal depends on the failure rate in the business—what kills some makes others stronger. Without the high failure rate in the restaurant business, you would be eating Soviet-style cafeteria food for your next meal out.

Getty Images

A satellite image of Hurricane Sandy over the Atlantic Ocean on Oct. 28.

These industries are antifragile: The collective enterprise benefits from the fragility of the individual components, so nothing fails in vain. These businesses have properties similar to evolution in the natural world, with a well-functioning mechanism to benefit from evolutionary pressures, one error at a time.

By contrast, every bank failure weakens the financial system, which in its current form is irremediably fragile: Errors end up becoming large and threatening. A reformed financial system would eliminate this domino effect, allowing no systemic risk from individual failures. A good starting point would be reducing the amount of debt and leverage in the economy and turning to equity financing. A firm with highly leveraged debt has no room for error; it has to be extremely good at predicting future revenues (and black swans). And when one leveraged firm fails to meet its obligations, other borrowers who need to renew their loans suffer as the chastened lenders lose their appetite to extend credit. So debt tends to make failures spread through the system.

A firm with equity financing can survive drops in income, however. Consider the abrupt deflation of the technology bubble during 2000. Because technology firms were relying on equity rather than debt, their failures didn't ripple out into the wider economy. Indeed, their failures helped to strengthen the technology sector.

Rule 3: Small is beautiful, but it is also efficient.


Experts in business and government are always talking about economies of scale. They say that increasing the size of projects and institutions brings costs savings. But the "efficient," when too large, isn't so efficient. Size produces visible benefits but also hidden risks; it increases exposure to the probability of large losses. Projects of $100 million seem rational, but they tend to have much higher percentage overruns than projects of, say, $10 million. Great size in itself, when it exceeds a certain threshold, produces fragility and can eradicate all the gains from economies of scale. To see how large things can be fragile, consider the difference between an elephant and a mouse: The former breaks a leg at the slightest fall, while the latter is unharmed by a drop several multiples of its height. This explains why we have so many more mice than elephants.

So we need to distribute decisions and projects across as many units as possible, which reinforces the system by spreading errors across a wider range of sources. In fact, I have argued that government decentralization would help to lower public deficits. A large part of these deficits comes from underestimating the costs of projects, and such underestimates are more severe in large, top-down governments. Compare the success of the bottom-up mechanism of canton-based decision making in Switzerland to the failures of authoritarian regimes in Soviet Russia and Baathist Iraq and Syria.

Rule 4: Trial and error beats academic knowledge.

Things that are antifragile love randomness and uncertainty, which also means—crucially—that they can learn from errors. Tinkering by trial and error has traditionally played a larger role than directed science in Western invention and innovation. Indeed, advances in theoretical science have most often emerged from technological development, which is closely tied to entrepreneurship. Just think of the number of famous college dropouts in the computer industry.


Corbis

Thomas Edison was a prolific American inventor. Tinkering by trial and error has played a large role in Western innovation.

But I don't mean just any version of trial and error. There is a crucial requirement to achieve antifragility: The potential cost of errors needs to remain small; the potential gain should be large. It is the asymmetry between upside and downside that allows antifragile tinkering to benefit from disorder and uncertainty.

Perhaps because of the success of the Manhattan Project and the space program, we greatly overestimate the influence and importance of researchers and academics in technological advancement. These people write books and papers; tinkerers and engineers don't, and are thus less visible. Consider Britain, whose historic rise during the Industrial Revolution came from tinkerers who gave us innovations like iron making, the steam engine and textile manufacturing. The great names of the golden years of English science were hobbyists, not academics: Charles Darwin, Henry Cavendish, William Parsons, the Rev. Thomas Bayes. Britain saw its decline when it switched to the model of bureaucracy-driven science.

America has emulated this earlier model, in the invention of everything from cybernetics to the pricing formulas for derivatives. They were developed by practitioners in trial-and-error mode, drawing continuous feedback from reality. To promote antifragility, we must recognize that there is an inverse relationship between the amount of formal education that a culture supports and its volume of trial-and-error by tinkering. Innovation doesn't require theoretical instruction, what I like to compare to "lecturing birds on how to fly."

Rule 5: Decision makers must have skin in the game.

At no time in the history of humankind have more positions of power been assigned to people who don't take personal risks. But the idea of incentive in capitalism demands some comparable form of disincentive. In the business world, the solution is simple: Bonuses that go to managers whose firms subsequently fail should be clawed back, and there should be additional financial penalties for those who hide risks under the rug. This has an excellent precedent in the practices of the ancients. The Romans forced engineers to sleep under a bridge once it was completed.



Corbis  The opposite of trial and error is regimented, Soviet-style production. Here, workers at a Soviet bagel-making plant

Because our current system is so complex, it lacks elementary clarity: No regulator will know more about the hidden risks of an enterprise than the engineer who can hide exposures to rare events and be unharmed by their consequences. This rule would have saved us from the banking crisis, when bankers who loaded their balance sheets with exposures to small probability events collected bonuses during the quiet years and then transferred the harm to the taxpayer, keeping their own compensation.

In these five rules, I have sketched out only a few of the more obvious policy conclusions that we might draw from a proper appreciation of antifragility. But the significance of antifragility runs deeper. It is not just a useful heuristic for socioeconomic matters but a crucial property of life in general. Things that are antifragile only grow and improve under adversity. This dynamic can be seen not just in economic life but in the evolution of all things, from cuisine, urbanization and legal systems to our own existence as a species on this planet.

We all know that the stressors of exercise are necessary for good health, but people don't translate this insight into other domains of physical and mental well-being. We also benefit, it turns out, from occasional and intermittent hunger, short-term protein deprivation, physical discomfort and exposure to extreme cold or heat. Newspapers discuss post-traumatic stress disorder, but nobody seems to account for post-traumatic growth. Walking on smooth surfaces with "comfortable" shoes injures our feet and back musculature: We need variations in terrain.

Modernity has been obsessed with comfort and cosmetic stability, but by making ourselves too comfortable and eliminating all volatility from our lives, we do to our bodies and souls what Mr. Greenspan did to the U.S. economy: We make them fragile. We must instead learn to gain from disorder.





—Mr. Taleb, a former derivatives trader, is distinguished professor of risk engineering at New York University's Polytechnic Institute. He is the author of "Antifragile: Things That Gain From Disorder" (Random House), from which this is adapted.



A version of this article appeared November 17, 2012, on page C1 in the U.S. edition of The Wall Street Journal, with the headline: Learning to lovevolatility.







SOURCE:

Learning to Love Volatility: Nassim Nicholas Taleb on the Antifragile - WSJ.com

Lint: 
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887324735104578120953311383448.html





Thursday, November 15, 2012

Interview With Billionaire Frank Giustra



Published on Sep 3, 2012 by

http://cambridgehouse.com - Mining and entertainment mogul Frank Giustra in conversation with Cambridge House - August 28th, 2012. Topics include inflation, natural resources and wealth creation.

Category:

License:  Standard YouTube License



Source:
Full Interview With Billionaire Frank Giustra - YouTube


 LINK: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9o30gNfPq_k



Frank Giustra Bullish On Gold - Business Insider




Canaccord's Global Resource Conference happening in Miami at the moment featured a lengthy lunchtime chat with billionaire investor Frank Giustra where he said "he doesn't want to sound apocalyptic," but probably ended up scaring the bejezus out of the audience anyway.

In 2002 Giustra wrote a book called A Tarnished Dollar Will Put the Shine on Gold.

That was back when gold was trading below $300 and quantitative easing wasn't even a glint in Ben Bernanke's eye.

A decade later he's sticking to his guns:

"I don't know when and I don't know how high. But gold is going a lot higher.

"Gold is the bubble of all bubbles. It's the mother of all bubbles. It's the bubble people will go to when they've exhausted all other bubbles.

"Here's why: It is moveable. It is easily transferable across borders in times of crisis. It's a currency. It's liquid. It's easily tradeable.

"I'm a fan of all hard assets, but particularly gold. It's the largest part of my portfolio and it will continue to be until this cycle is over."


The reason for Giustra's confidence about the gold price – and gloom about the financial system – is all about US monetary policy.


While it started with the so-called Greenspan-put in the Nineties, Giustra said the Fed "crossed the Rubicon" when it first embarked on quantitative easing (in December 2008, when gold was worth $830 an ounce).

The Fed has already racked up close to $3 trillion and purchases of $40 billion a month for "at least the next 27 months" by the Fed's own calculations under open-ended QE3 will add another $1 trillion.

"Everyone is frozen with fear. Everyone is in cash," says Giustra.

"The only reason you haven't seen inflation – hyperinflation – yet" with all the cheap money flooding markets is because the velocity of money – the speed at which money changes hands in the economy – is at its lowest since 1959, when it was first measured:

"If it [velocity of money] stays that way, you won't get inflation. But the first whiff of inflation and things can pick up quickly."

Giustra says like in chess the Fed is in an "inescapable trap". It's been cornered by the queen, a rook and a bishop – a triple threat:

It cannot reign in the excess liquidity by raising interest rates because it will destroy what is only a fragile recovery.

With debt through budget deficits on its way to $20–$25 trillion, the US government will be the first in trouble if the Fed tries to normalize rates.

Thirdly, the Fed's own balance sheet is such that it could become insolvent – its debt:equity ratio is 51:1 with the bulk of its holdings in longer maturities which they won't find buyers for.

"It's the beginning of the end for the US dollar. I don't want to sound apocalyptic, but how else does this end? You have to be on the right side of this trade."

Giustra knows what he is talking about.

He made his money in a rare combination of two very different industries – gold mining and movie making. And he has a rare knack for timing the market.

Giustra started out at as mining industry dealmaker in the 1980s and got out when the market turned sour in the early nineties.

He then founded Lionsgate, today the biggest independent Hollywood studio.

By 2001 he was back in mining setting up among others Wheaton River which would morph into what is today the world's number two gold (Goldcorp) and silver (Silver Wheaton) companies with a combined market value of $48 billion.





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Frik Els is editor for MINING.com in Vancouver, BC.
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Frank Giustra Bullish On Gold - Business Insider

Link: http://www.businessinsider.com/frank-giustra-bullish-gold-2012-10

http://www.businessinsider.com/frank-giustra-bullish-gold-2012-10

Warren Buffett makes another bet on U.S. Real Estate


Housing is getting toward a bottom... but Buffett is known for being early...Maybe you are beyond hoping for an end to the suffering but just in case......



http://www.cnbc.com/id/49635038





Getty Images
Warren Buffett


Berkshire Bets on Housing Recovery


Warren Buffett, Berkshire Hathaway has made another bet on a recovery in the US housing market, agreeing to lend the conglomerate’s trusted brand to a new venture with Brookfield Asset Management.


Berkshire’s Home Services of America unit will be the majority owner of a network of franchised real estate agencies, which will begin to offer services next year under the name Berkshire Hathaway Home Services.


Brookfield will contribute a network of more than 53,000 individual estate agents responsible for $72 billion of residential real estate sales last year.

The group acquired the business last year from Prudential Financial, but did not retain the rights to the Prudential name, which are taken back as existing franchise agreements expire.


Mr. Buffett told CNBC this month that he remains bullish on the US economy, which he expects to continue “inching ahead” even as global growth slows.


The billionaire investor said Berkshire’s businesses have already begun to see a pick-up in demand related to improvements in the residential property market, and as a consequence he expects them to hire about 8,000 people in response this year.


The latest deal comes as Berkshire, a conglomerate with more than 70 different businesses, has positioned itself for a recovery in U.S. housing as
foreclosure rates decline and record low interest rates encourage buyers back into the market after six years of declining prices.



Home Services is the second largest full service residential brokerage firm in the US, the company said. Acquired with the Mid American utility company in 1999, it has been built by buying up real estate brokerages around the country.

Berkshire has also acquired a brickmaker and this month agreed to pay $1.5 billion for a portfolio of home loans from Residential Capital, the bankrupt mortgage lender.

Mr. Buffett’s optimism has also begun to be backed up by economic indicators. New home construction in the US surged in September to its fastest pace in more than four years, offering further evidence that the housing sector was regaining strength.

Housing starts rose 15 percent in September, to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 872,000 units, the fastest pace of growth since July 2008.

Brookfield acquired Prudential Real Estate and Relocation Services for about $100 million in December 2011, according to a financial disclosure. Brookfield, a real estate specialist with over $150 billion in assets under management, has retained the relocation business separate from the new venture.


Copyright 2011 The Financial Times Limited

Topics:Housing | Warren Buffett | North America | Economy (U.S.) | Banking | Consumers | Business
Sectors:Real Estate

More on FT.com
Berkshire’s Cash Pile Balloons to $40 Billion
Buffett Looks for Big-Ticket Acquisition
US Housing Starts Surge in September





Source:
Berkshire Bets on Housing Recovery - US Business News - CNBC

Link:
http://www.cnbc.com/id/49635038


Tuesday, November 13, 2012

Arunachalam Muruganantham: How I started a sanitary napkin revolution! - YouTube

This man barely speaks English but listen to him.  He makes some wise statements....basic needs supplied on a local basis, not by multinationals can be affordable for the poor people... solution provided.

 He is also funny.

He divides people into uneducated, little educated and 'surplus' educated.

He then asks the 'surplus educated' crowd,'What are you going to do for the society?'


He gave his design away on public domain and hopes to create 'an affordable sanitary pad movement' among the poor versus turning it into a corporate entity to make himself rich. 

He says chasing money results in boredom....











When he realized his wife had to choose between buying family meals and buying her monthly "supplies," Arunachalam Muruganantham vowed to help her solve the problem of the sanitary pad. His research got very very personal -- and led him to a powerful business model. (Filmed in Bangalore as part of the TED Global Talent Search.)


TEDTalks is a daily video podcast of the best talks and performances from the TED Conference, where the world's leading thinkers and doers give the talk of their lives in 18 minutes (or less). Look for talks on Technology, Entertainment and Design -- plus science, business, global issues, the arts and much more.
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Arunachalam Muruganantham: How I started a sanitary napkin revolution! - YouTube

 Link:  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zkQL7UJYDIY&feature=em-uploademail








Arunachalam Muruganantham: How I started a sanitary napkin revolution! - YouTube

Monday, November 12, 2012

Warren Buffett "Off the Cuff"


Warren Buffett's $46 billion net worth makes him the world's second-richest man. So while he certainly could afford multiple chefs, his own orange grove and all the Wheaties he wants, what does Buffett eat for breakfast? Ice cream. Haagen-Dazs to be exact. (And yes, Berkshire Hathaway owns Dairy Queen, not Haagen-Dazs.)

Buffett sat down recently with CNBC "Squawk Box" Co-Anchor Becky Quick for the premiere episode of "Off the Cuff," a series that will feature top leaders in candid interviews about life off the clock.

Buffett famously still lives in the Omaha house he bought for $31,500 in 1958 and drives a Cadillac he bought "about 6 or 7" years ago — adding that he's never really "had any great desire to have multiple houses... and multiple cars."

Flipping through his nearly empty appointment book, Buffett says his money does buy him one thing he values very much: his freedom. For him, freedom is the key to a happy life. His idea of a perfect day? Being alone with no interruptions so he can read and think.



And reading plays a big role in his happy life. Buffett says — besides the ice cream -- he starts every morning by reading a couple of newspapers (he reads five in total), starting with the Omaha World-Herald. (His company bought it late last year.)

Buffett also often jokes that he reads corporate annual reports with the same intensity that other men reserve for Playboy magazine.

Buffett tells Quick he has a pile of books by his chair. "I just keep going at them and I never get tired of reading." Most of those books are non-fiction — biographies top the list.

He's also a big fan of the Internet, using the web to find sometimes obscure information to make investment decisions. "The amount of time that it's freed up for other things is just incredible," says Buffett.

Okay, so this billionaire-many-times over must have at least one luxury item that he can't just live without, right? He fesses up: his private jet. It's "the only thing that I do that costs a lot of money" says Buffett.

Even though he loves the plane, Buffett says he would give it up — for the Internet. "I would gladly pay half my net worth just to have that kind of information available to me. They haven't figured out how to charge me what it's worth. That's one of the problems they've got."

The so-called "Oracle of Omaha" should have no problem ponying up the cash for all that data. But even as he's pledged to donate 99% of his wealth to charities like the Bill & Melinda Gates foundation, Warren Buffett should have plenty left over for the books he loves —and that breakfast ice cream.



 Source:  http://finance.yahoo.com/blogs/off-the-cuff/warren-buffett-213923494.html









Gentry Bros.Circus flyer

Although the circus reputation for exploiting animals is well earned, the posters are always fun to view.... this picture comes off a site dedicated to the history of the circus.  

Our blog attempts to point to the dignity of many of the same animals the circuses use in their shows.  That the animals are kept in deplorable conditions is just one of the many complaints against this kind  of animal based entertainment that we cannot agree with.  

Enjoy the poster as a time capsule picture of days one by....


Gentry Bros. flyer #1 (From Buckles)


Floyd and Howard King used this and other titles on their shows in the 1920's.
In this case they inexplicably mistook a few Ringling photos.


         Source:  Buckles Blog: Gentry Bros. flyer #1 (From Buckles)



Richard Duncan quote


“Total credit in the United States surpassed $1 trillion for the first time in 1964. Over the following 43 years, it increased 50 times to $50 trillion in 2007. That explosion of credit changed the world. ” 
 
–Richard Duncan, The New Depression
 
 
 
 

UCLA's new transparent solar film could be game-changer

One of the holy grails of solar cell technology may have been found, with researchers at UCLA announcing they have created a new organic polymer that produces electricity, is nearly transparent and is more durable and malleable than silicon.

Read more at: http://phys.org/news/2012-08-ucla-transparent-solar-game-changer.html#jCp

Transparent solar film

UCLA's new transparent solar film could be game-changer

August 21, 2012 by Dean Kuipers


As reported at PhysOrg:
One of the holy grails of solar cell technology may have been found, with researchers at UCLA announcing they have created a new organic polymer that produces electricity, is nearly transparent and is more durable and malleable than silicon. The applications are mind-boggling. Windows that produce electricity. Buildings wrapped in transparent solar cells... "

(A solar film) harvests light and turns it into electricity. In our case, we harvest only the infrared part," says Professor Yang Yang at UCLA's California Nanosystems Institute, who has headed up the research on the new photovoltaic polymer. Absorbing only the infrared light, he explains, means the material doesn't have to be dark or black or blue, like most silicon photovoltaic panels. It can be clear. "We have developed a material that absorbs infrared and is all transparent to the visible light."

"And then we also invented a new electrode, a metal, that is also transparent. So we created a new solar cell," Yang adds. Well, the metal is actually not transparent, Yang points out; it's just so small that you can't see it. The new polymer incorporates silver nanowires about 0.1 microns thick... 
Someday the strangle hold of oil will be broken... 
The applications are mind-boggling. Windows that produce electricity. Buildings wrapped in transparent solar cells. Laptops and phones ?- or even cars or planes ?- whose outer coverings act as chargers. It might even be sprayed on as a liquid. The promise of cheap and easy-to-apply site-generated solar electricity might now be a lot closer to reality. Of course, the idea of solar films and solar plastics is not new. The breakthrough to making a transparent film, however, came with isolating only one band of light in the spectrum. "(A solar film) harvests light and turns it into electricity. In our case, we harvest only the infrared part," says Professor Yang Yang at UCLA's California Nanosystems Institute, who has headed up the research on the new photovoltaic polymer. Absorbing only the infrared light, he explains, means the material doesn't have to be dark or black or blue, like most silicon photovoltaic panels. It can be clear. "We have developed a material that absorbs infrared and is all transparent to the visible light." "And then we also invented a new electrode, a metal, that is also transparent. So we created a new solar cell," Yang adds. Well, the metal is actually not transparent, Yang points out; it's just so small that you can't see it. The new polymer incorporates silver nanowires about 0.1 microns thick, about one-thousandth the width of a human hair, and titanium dioxide nanoparticles as an electrode. When in liquid form, it is as clear as a glass of water, and when applied to a hard, flat surface as a film it is meant to be invisible to the eye.

Read more at: http://phys.org/news/2012-08-ucla-transparent-solar-game-changer.html#jCp
game-changer August 21, 2012 by Dean Kuipers One of the holy grails of solar cell technology may have been found, with researchers at UCLA announcing they have created a new organic polymer that produces electricity, is nearly transparent and is more durable and malleable than silicon. Ads by Google Hotels in New York City - Reviews & Discounts at TripAdvisor - TripAdvisor.com/newyorkcity The applications are mind-boggling. Windows that produce electricity. Buildings wrapped in transparent solar cells. Laptops and phones ?- or even cars or planes ?- whose outer coverings act as chargers. It might even be sprayed on as a liquid. The promise of cheap and easy-to-apply site-generated solar electricity might now be a lot closer to reality. Of course, the idea of solar films and solar plastics is not new. The breakthrough to making a transparent film, however, came with isolating only one band of light in the spectrum. "(A solar film) harvests light and turns it into electricity. In our case, we harvest only the infrared part," says Professor Yang Yang at UCLA's California Nanosystems Institute, who has headed up the research on the new photovoltaic polymer. Absorbing only the infrared light, he explains, means the material doesn't have to be dark or black or blue, like most silicon photovoltaic panels. It can be clear. "We have developed a material that absorbs infrared and is all transparent to the visible light." "And then we also invented a new electrode, a metal, that is also transparent. So we created a new solar cell," Yang adds. Well, the metal is actually not transparent, Yang points out; it's just so small that you can't see it. The new polymer incorporates silver nanowires about 0.1 microns thick, about one-thousandth the width of a human hair, and titanium dioxide nanoparticles as an electrode. When in liquid form, it is as clear as a glass of water, and when applied to a hard, flat surface as a film it is meant to be invisible to the eye.

Read more at: http://phys.org/news/2012-08-ucla-transparent-solar-game-changer.html#jCp

The applications are mind-boggling. Windows that produce electricity. Buildings wrapped in transparent solar cells. Laptops and phones ?- or even cars or planes ?- whose outer coverings act as chargers. It might even be sprayed on as a liquid. The promise of cheap and easy-to-apply site-generated solar electricity might now be a lot closer to reality. Of course, the idea of solar films and solar plastics is not new. The breakthrough to making a transparent film, however, came with isolating only one band of light in the spectrum. "(A solar film) harvests light and turns it into electricity. In our case, we harvest only the infrared part," says Professor Yang Yang at UCLA's California Nanosystems Institute, who has headed up the research on the new photovoltaic polymer. Absorbing only the infrared light, he explains, means the material doesn't have to be dark or black or blue, like most silicon photovoltaic panels. It can be clear. "We have developed a material that absorbs infrared and is all transparent to the visible light." "And then we also invented a new electrode, a metal, that is also transparent. So we created a new solar cell," Yang adds. Well, the metal is actually not transparent, Yang points out; it's just so small that you can't see it. The new polymer incorporates silver nanowires about 0.1 microns thick, about one-thousandth the width of a human hair, and titanium dioxide nanoparticles as an electrode. When in liquid form, it is as clear as a glass of water, and when applied to a hard, flat surface as a film it is meant to be invisible to the eye.

Read more at: http://phys.org/news/2012-08-ucla-transparent-solar-game-changer.html#jCp
The applications are mind-boggling. Windows that produce electricity. Buildings wrapped in transparent solar cells. Laptops and phones ?- or even cars or planes ?- whose outer coverings act as chargers. It might even be sprayed on as a liquid. The promise of cheap and easy-to-apply site-generated solar electricity might now be a lot closer to reality. Of course, the idea of solar films and solar plastics is not new. The breakthrough to making a transparent film, however, came with isolating only one band of light in the spectrum. "(A solar film) harvests light and turns it into electricity. In our case, we harvest only the infrared part," says Professor Yang Yang at UCLA's California Nanosystems Institute, who has headed up the research on the new photovoltaic polymer. Absorbing only the infrared light, he explains, means the material doesn't have to be dark or black or blue, like most silicon photovoltaic panels. It can be clear. "We have developed a material that absorbs infrared and is all transparent to the visible light." "And then we also invented a new electrode, a metal, that is also transparent. So we created a new solar cell," Yang adds. Well, the metal is actually not transparent, Yang points out; it's just so small that you can't see it. The new polymer incorporates silver nanowires about 0.1 microns thick, about one-thousandth the width of a human hair, and titanium dioxide nanoparticles as an electrode. When in liquid form, it is as clear as a glass of water, and when applied to a hard, flat surface as a film it is meant to be invisible to the eye. Ads by Google Trusted Cloud Web Hosting - Free 14 day trial & up in minutes 100 MBps Free to Use & Low Fees - us.gmocloud.com/cloud-web-hosting Thin-film PV currently exists that can be applied to windows, but only on windows that can be tinted. Many buildings use tinted windows as a way to cut down infrared radiation and thus keep out excess heat. Because this new transparent fil

Read more at: http://phys.org/news/2012-08-ucla-transparent-solar-game-changer.html#jCp



 Source:
UCLA's new transparent solar film could be game-changer

 Link: http://phys.org/news/2012-08-ucla-transparent-solar-game-changer.html



Friday, November 9, 2012

Research - Concerns over “fiscal cliff” overblown: TD Economics - Article - investmentexecutive.com

Europe still poses greatest risk to financial markets

By James Langton |
While the U.S. fiscal situation has apparently captured market attention in the wake of the U.S. elections, it's not the only political risk out there, TD Economics says.
In a new report, TD suggests that concerns about the U.S. "fiscal cliff" are overblown. It expects that some sort of deal will be reached to avoid calamity, and yet, fiscal restraint will weigh on growth, it notes, which will keep U.S. economic growth in the 2% to 3% range next year.
"The financial market implication is that while uncertainty over how the fiscal cliff will be navigated around is likely to add to volatility in the near term, the ultimate resolution and the continued moderate economic growth environment implies a continuation of the lower-for-longer interest rate environment and renewed gains in equities," it says.
Yet, there are numerous political risks elsewhere, TD cautions, including the leadership transition in China, and the ongoing European fiscal crisis. Concern over Iran's nuclear program is also a political wild card, it says.
"From a financial market point of view, the greatest risks come from the socio-economic strains that are building in Europe from high and rising unemployment. The central issue is whether the governments can maintain their fiscal rebalancing in the face of these social pressures," it says. "The sad reality is that the financial crisis must continue because it is the catalyst that forces the political system to make progress towards a resolution."
"The main message for investors is that much has happened, and yet much remains the same," TD concludes. "Global financial markets are navigating a risk-filled environment, which is dominated by political risks. All-in-all, the risks are being managed relatively well, but there are periods when investors lose confidence or become fretful, causing gyrations in markets."





Research - Concerns over “fiscal cliff” overblown: TD Economics - Article - investmentexecutive.com

 http://www.investmentexecutive.com/-/concerns-over-fiscal-cliff-overblown-td-economics



Thursday, November 8, 2012

Quotes From a Brilliant Investor

 
By Michael B. Lewis




Let's be honest here, there are a lot of oft-repeated investing quotes that we're just plain tired of.

Don't get me wrong; here at the Fool, we often quote the wisdom of Warren Buffett, Peter Lynch, and Ben Graham. They've had some truly brilliant things to say, and their investing quips have a way of explaining investing concepts clearly to even the most novice investors.

But some of those quotes have simply been repeated too many times.

So today, I'd like to introduce you to an investor who is just as talented as those three, but who rarely makes headlines. He's built an empire that many equate to Buffett and Berkshire Hathaway  (NYSE: BRK-A  ) (NYSE: BRK-B  ) , and his more notable quotes give investors quick and useful lessons to invest better.

Below are five fantastic quotes from value investing legend and Fairfax Financial (NASDAQOTH: FRFHF) CEO, Prem Watsa.


5. "Predicting rain doesn't count, but building an ark does."
This quote is all about one of the most important investing lessons -- capital preservation. Many investors heap their focus on what will make them the most money. "Where is the next [insert hot-for-today company here]?" is a question I hear all too often.
But with two major stock market crashes in the past 15 years, we've seen the wisdom in building a defensive portfolio. Fairfax's Watsa has certainly shown how successful that approach can be. Starting in 2003, Watsa essentially shorted the United States by using credit default swaps betting against financials and the housing market, and he was right on, as his $341 million bet turned into $2 billion for Fairfax. Score one for the best offense being a good defense.

4. "Our earnings are lumpy. We have never had guidance in 23 years because we have ups and downs and take the long-term view. In 22 years, we have lost money twice, but our book value and equity has grown dramatically."
Value investors are not short-term investors. They care little for Wall Street's quarterly beauty contest because a quarter's worth of earnings typically doesn't tell you much when you plan on owning a company for the next 10 years.
Value investing is focused on building long-term wealth. They may not benefit from the skyrocketing tech stocks and the newest disruptive company (cough, Netflix  (Nasdaq: NFLX  ) , cough), but they still seem to outperform everybody else over the long run. Value investing is a strategy that lets you sleep well at night and keep CNBC off during the day.

3. "We put our heads down and worked hard and have gotten results. Once in a while we will talk if we have anything to say."
In a world of endless opinions and attention-hungry analysts, it's nice to see a group that doesn't care about getting on TV. Watsa is a recluse in the world of high-octane finance. The next time you see someone on CNBC giving you priceless advice, remember that if they spend all day in the studio, that's an awful lot of time they're not spending finding and researching investments.

2. "Why do roman bridges historically last for a long, long time? ...the people who designed the bridges had to stand underneath it before the traffic went on. So they made sure there was a massive margin of safety."

I don't have to explain this one much, folks. Margin of safety is the name of the game, or the name of your book if you're value-investing luminary Seth Klarman. The idea here is when you are building a portfolio, or looking at a company, you want to choose one that can handle 50,000 pounds (of risk) even if you only expect 10,000 pounds to drive across.

1. "Don't ever think that the [stock] market knows more than you do about the underlying business. That's the biggest mistake you can make."
Retail investors tend to put far too much faith in the market and "professional money managers." Don't automatically assume that because your stock sank 20% in a week that you did something wrong, or that your company is going down the tubes. In contrast to what business schools all over the world like to preach, markets are inefficient. Have the faith in your own judgment to ignore the movements of the market and Wall Street.

A value investor at work
Watsa used the guiding principles of Ben Graham's value investing to not only weather the recent financial crisis, but to profit from it. He was able to look through the mire that was the meltdown, and take large, profitable positions in companies such as Bank of Ireland (NYSE: IRE  ) . While many considered this move a risky bailout bet, Watsa saw the relative underlying balance sheet strength and has netted a 30%-plus return on his 9% stake in the company.

Against-the-grain investments like Bank of Ireland have helped Watsa compile a seriously impressive record. At Fairfax, he's been able to deliver an average of 25% compounded annual growth in book value over a 25-year period. That growth translated to a stock that debuted under $4 per share and currently trades close to $400.

Watsa may not be quite as entertaining to listen to as Buffett or Munger, but this is one smart man who proves that a little contrarianism and elbow grease go a long way in the world of investing.

Warren Buffett's long track record of success has made him one of the best investors of all time. With the Buffett at the helm, Berkshire Hathaway has grown book value per share at a compounded annual rate of 19.8% for nearly 50 years! Despite an incredible historical track record, investors have to understand the key issues to watch moving forward. 

To help investors, The Fool's resident Berkshire Hathaway expert Joe Magyer has created this premium research report on the company. Inside you'll receive ongoing updates as key news hits, as well as reasons to both buy and sell the stock. Claim a copy by clicking here now





 



 "There are two times in a man's life when he should not speculate: When he can't afford it, and when he can."

-Mark Twain


Source:
5 Fantastic Quotes From a Brilliant Investor

 LINK: http://www.fool.com/investing/general/2012/11/07/5-fantastic-quotes-from-a-brilliant-investor.aspx



The Quants

 The Quants
 

The Quants

How A New Breed of Math Whizzes Conquered Wall Street and Nearly Destroyed It
Patterson, Scott (Book - 2009)




"Beware of geeks bearing formulas." 
--Warren Buffett
 
 In March of 2006, the world's richest men sipped champagne in an opulent New York hotel. 
 
They were preparing to compete in a poker tournament with million-dollar stakes, but those numbers meant nothing to them. They were accustomed to risking billions. At the card table that night was Peter Muller, an eccentric, whip-smart whiz kid who'd studied theoretical mathematics at Princeton and now managed a fabulously successful hedge fund called PDT…when he wasn't playing his keyboard for morning commuters on the New York subway. 
 
With him was Ken Griffin, who as an undergraduate trading convertible bonds out of his Harvard dorm room had outsmarted the Wall Street pros and made money in one of the worst bear markets of all time. Now he was the tough-as-nails head of Citadel Investment Group, one of the most powerful money machines on earth. There too were Cliff Asness, the sharp-tongued, mercurial founder of the hedge fund AQR, a man as famous for his computer-smashing rages as for his brilliance, and Boaz Weinstein, chess life-master and king of the credit default swap, who while juggling $30 billion worth of positions for Deutsche Bank found time for frequent visits to Las Vegas with the famed MIT card-counting team.
 
 On that night in 2006, these four men and their cohorts were the new kings of Wall Street. 
 
Muller, Griffin, Asness, and Weinstein were among the best and brightest of a new breed, the quants . Over the prior twenty years, this species of math whiz --technocrats who make billions not with gut calls or fundamental analysis but with formulas and high-speed computers-- had usurped the testosterone-fueled, kill-or-be-killed risk-takers who'd long been the alpha males the world's largest casino. 
 
The quants believed that a dizzying, indecipherable-to-mere-mortals cocktail of differential calculus, quantum physics, and advanced geometry held the key to reaping riches from the financial markets. And they helped create a digitized money-trading machine that could shift billions around the globe with the click of a mouse. 
 
Few realized that night, though, that in creating this unprecedented machine, men like Muller, Griffin, Asness and Weinstein had sowed the seeds for history's greatest financial disaster. 
 
Drawing on unprecedented access to these four number-crunching titans, The Quants tells the inside story of what they thought and felt in the days and weeks when they helplessly watched much of their net worth vaporize -- and wondered just how their mind-bending formulas and genius-level IQ's had led them so wrong, so fast. 
 
Had their years of success been dumb luck, fool's gold, a good run that could come to an end on any given day? What if The Truth they sought -- the secret of the markets -- wasn't knowable? Worse, what if there wasn't any Truth? 
 
In The Quants , Scott Patterson tells the story not just of these men, but of Jim Simons, the reclusive founder of the most successful hedge fund in history; Aaron Brown, the quant who used his math skills to humiliate Wall Street's old guard at their trademark game of Liar's Poker, and years later found himself with a front-row seat to the rapid emergence of mortgage-backed securities; and gadflies and dissenters such as Paul Wilmott, Nassim Taleb, and Benoit Mandelbrot.
 
With the immediacy of today's NASDAQ close and the timeless power of a Greek tragedy, 
 The Quants is at once a masterpiece of explanatory journalism, a gripping tale of ambition and hubris…and an ominous warning about Wall Street's future. 
 
 
From the Hardcover edition.