Wednesday, October 5, 2011

Um, that's what books are for

So, I'm just going along with my day when I read a facebook post about the Too Big To Fail banks getting bigger. In the comments to that post, someone posted a book title that sounded interesting to me. I search for the book at my local library; no dice. Went to Amazon, $15 for an "updated" version (the original book was written in 1871. I have found most "updated", "abridged", "edited", etc. versions of classic finance books to pale in comparison to the original authors intent and words); um nope. So, since it is no longer under copy write protection, I find it as a downloadable PDF book at the authors own named site (who knew that someone who died 114 years ago could have their own web site. Technology from the grave.) Anyway, I start to read some of the reviews for this particular book. Six five-star reviews and one one-star review. I always like to know why someone doesn't like a particular book, so I clicked on the one-star review. I quote "was too distant from my beliefs to lend any true credence to the author's arguments." Ok, I can understand you not liking the book or the conclusions the author makes, but to disparage the authors arguments because they don't line up with your own beliefs is to me, very egotistical. Books are there to challenge us, to teach us, to shape past ideas into new ideas. If you don't like the authors hypotheses, then point out the flaws. What you don't do is say that since the author, who died in 1897, doesn't agree with me then his arguments are invalid. Blindness does not only come from not seeing with the eyes but also from not opening up the mind.


FYI - The book I downloaded was an edited and abridged version. :) But it was free!


FYI Dos - The book is called "Progress and Poverty". The author, Henry George.

Thursday, April 28, 2011

Zucker Love

So I just finished reading Accidental Billionaires and started The Facebook Effect. Both books deal with that great timesuck, Facebook.com. Now I don't spend much time on facebook (check in once every few weeks???), but I am fascinated by the narrative of its founding and its incredible growth. Both books address the founding of the company, Accidental Billionaires in depth, The Facebook Effect superficially and both books introduce us to Mark Zuckerberg. Thats about all they have in common. I have yet to read two books about the same subject that diverge in such a degree on what, where, why and how things happened. Accidental Billionaires (from now on AB) went into depth on the beginnings of the company in that eponymous college dorm room and the characters who helped M.Z. start the phenom that is facebook. The Facebook Effect (from now on TFE) introduced us to the people facebook would like to credit with its founding. That is the crux of what is wrong with TFE. While AB seems to produce a more well rounded view of the founding of facebook, TFE is all about the Zucker Love. For example, did you know that an early strategic treatise on the direction and future facebook offerings, written by M.Z., has the "weight" of Michelangelo's notebooks?  Neither did I until TFE told me so (I nearly packed it in right there as I rolled my eyes and laughed out loud at the absurdity of that statement. FYI - Mark Zuckerberg's handwriting is "beautiful", roll my eyes some more). While AB reads like the movie script that it turned into, TFE is 384 pages of public relations / Zucker Love dribble. I will be the first to deny any and all writing talents ascribed to me, but TFE reads like a high school essay (including high school like snide remarks) at times and insults its readers with overt explanations of obvious conclusions at others. Do we really need to know that Shawn Parkers girlfriend was kind enough to let him stay in an extra room while some construction debris was cleaned up. NO!

In conclusion, both books have their issues and biased views, but TBE goes overboard with its Zucker Love while AB is definitely anti Zucker Love. Both books deal with the founding story, but only TFE goes past that founding story and takes us up to 2010 (while keeping up the Zucker Lover throughout). So I'll leave it to you dear readers which book you like better, Zucker Love or Anti Zucker Love. I know which way I'm leaning.

Monday, April 18, 2011

Turning 40

Over the weekend a blessed event took place in our household (shophold???). We had a birthday. 40 wonderful time units. See the one year anniversary post here.


















Yes the KTM turned 40 hours this weekend. Good times were had by all except that the rear tire decided to get flattened by something.

Paper Slips and Electronic Blips

So, after looking back through my latest posts I've decided that maybe I will only post once a month. I know, I know how will you go on with life with me posting fascinating finance facts only once a month, but don't worry, I have faith that you will endure.

Anyway, so today Standard and Poor's put the United States government on notice that its run away spending has not gone unnoticed. By cutting the USA's credit outlook to negative, S&P basically stated that they think the USA has a 1 in 3 chance of being downgraded (credit wise) in the future. This means that if the USA can borrow at a hypothetical 3% today with its AAA rating, in the future, that interest rate may climb to a hypothetical 3.5%, all things being equal. This doesn't sound like much of a difference, but multiply those additional 50 basis points by trillions of dollars of debt and you begin talking about real money.

What I find fascinating is that the cost of insuring US debt rose to ~95 basis points. Who is selling this insurance? AIG ;). Who is buying? If you need to cash in on this insurance, there is nobody on earth who can honor these CDS agreements. You see, if the US government defaults ("all" US government debt is priced in US dollars that the US government can print at will), then the world has crashed and paper slips and electronic blips will mean nothing. I'm exaggerating slightly, but only slightly. I guess the tin foil hat crowd could be right and we do have aliens among us. The aliens could sell the insurance and honor the agreements since their economic system should be uncorrelated to the earths finances. But, that assumes that they haven't been here long enough to become fully invested in the US / Greece / Japan / Ireland / Portugal / Spain / England / France / etc. by buying the massive amounts of debt that have spilled off the printers machines. Kang and Kodos, I beseech thee to forgive our mis-spending ways and allow us three cups of drool instead of two. All hail our Rigellian overlords. VOTE KODOS!!!!

Monday, March 14, 2011

Sobering Thoughts

Its been awhile since I last posted something and for that I apologize. (I have written things but did not post them for a variety of reasons) Anyway, with the events in Japan growing more desperate with every passing hour, my thoughts have turned toward the differences in cultures. Haiti experiences a massive destabilizing event much like Japan has just experienced and still, after close to 14 months, has debris piled in the streets.  Will Japan still have tsunami debris choking roads and building lots after 14 months? I would wager that would be a emphatic no. If the coast of California was hit by the type of wave Japan was hit by, would debris be piled on the streets after 14 months?  I would bet on yes.  Why, you may ask, do I think that in the land of the free and brave, junk would still be piled on the streets of LA after 14 months?  Its taken 10 years to dig a hole at ground zero in NYC, several buildings were to be completed by now but have yet to be started, and the Port Authority has gone through 3 or 4 directors in that time.  Would California be any different?  We are passing from an industrious country with the will and desire to get it done, to a country that needs a new study on the impact of everything and anything all the time.  One day we will be faced with something along the lines of what Japan has experienced. Will we stand up and clean up or will we study the problem till our deaths consume us?

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

He Made It!!!!

Whoooo! that was close. Mr. Emanuel made it on the ballot for the Chicago mayoral race. A day after he was kicked off the ballot for allegedly not actually living in Chicago for the mandated 1 year before the election, Mr. Emanuel's appeal has been heard and a judge has declared that the ballots must carry Mr. Emanuel's name until the appeal is ruled upon. This seems fair to me.  But what happens when Mr. Emanuel wins the election. Hummmmmm. The 2000 election all over again.

Monday, January 24, 2011

I didn't know Apple was based in Chicago

Bloomberg story about Rahm Emanuel's ouster as a candidate for Chicago Mayor.  At the very bottom it lists Steve Jobs as donating $50k to his election fund.  David Geffen donated $100k.  Since Mr. Jobs has left the day to day running of Apple to others, I guess he could now want to live in Chicago.  Personally, I would be in Hawaii / Australia / Vietnam / Indonesia / Maldives / any other place but cold and windy Chicago.  But apparently Mr. Jobs wants to live in Chicago so thats why he donated $50k for Chicago's mayoral race.  Do I think Mr. Jobs and Mr. Geffen care about Chicago city politics? NO! But having the former chief-of-staff of the sitting President become Mayor of Chicago, the current Presidents "home town", on your $50k could definitely open white house doors for any ideas you may have.

And don't worry. I'm sure Mr. Emanuel will get his shot at the highest office in Chicago. This is Chicago Illinois we're talking about. Hint hint. Wink wink. Graft graft. Bribe bribe.    ;)

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Too Fast for Me

Does google.com still offer the best search results?  Is bing.com surpassing the almighty Google? (ok so Bing is the almighty Microsoft, but it's still the underdog)  Should we now only put one space after a closing sentence punctuation?  Whoa the questions I ask and then read about.  FYI, google.com's search results are being spammed up like Yahoo's became.  Is Google the next Yahoo? Is bing.com the next google.com? Should I put one space or two after this sentence? Who knows?

I was around for the birth of the wide variety type of internet.  I remember being amazed by the vast amounts of information that I could get from the web.  I remember printing out hundreds of pages on race vehicle dynamics from a site that had diagrams, formulas, small pictures, stories, and examples, worried that the site might disappear  the next week like many sites I had found previously had seemed to do. I remember going from 12.4(?) to 28.8 to 56.6k speeds and being astounded by what the increased bandwidth could do, let alone the speed when trailrunnings work installed a ISDN line into our home. WOW!!!  So its with a little reluctance that I see the relevance of websites, and all the info contained there in, being relegated to a 2nd class structure of information delivery. First personal blogs, then Facebook, and now Twitter have become the defacto(sp?) delivery "device" for information. I'm not dissing, as it were, on Facebook and Twitter, but I do quietly long for the days of more than 140 character information streams. Many interesting bloggers are getting bored and reducing their posts, while their readers are now checking on so and so's Facebook/Tweet status. Oh well, it must mean I'm getting old.

What do these two paragraphs have in common you may ask? Well, its the speed of change. I have gone from researching junior high class reports with the use of a paper encyclopedia, to having the worlds information at my fingertips. I have seen the substitution of two spaces after a sentence to only one space. And the search giant who defined a new generation of internet info gathering, has now become the hunted whale, still formidable, still swimming, still destroying Ahab's boat, but now with a few spears piercing its skin and a new boat closing in. I have more to say, but you probably didn't get past the first 140 characters. :)

Monday, January 17, 2011

Holidays Shmalidays

I love general holidays in the US.  No, its not that I get to stay home from work (what work?).  Its the flood of announcements that come gushing from the PR departments throughout corporate america.  Today's big announcement?  Steve Jobs is stepping back from the day to day operations of Apple to focus on his sketchy health.  What does this announcement by Apple have anything to do with the holiday you may ask?  Only that if it was a normal trading day, Apple stock would be pummeled and the general market would most likely end lower.  Releasing this announcement on a holiday allows people to step back, assess the situation and hopefully make a rational decision about the company and not the man running it.  Of course you can still trade the market on a "off" day by using futures, but who's counting.  My totally unsolicited and purely theoretical theory is that Apple will sell off Tuesday morning and then flatten when all the bandwagoneers are through jumping.  The stock will then climb higher but will not reach its current level for ........ oh I don't know, 6 months. ;p

Speaking of press releases, whatever your thoughts on Wikileaks (I will not be giving my opinion on Wikileaks at this time), I'm surprised that Bloomberg does not have this story on its front page as of 10:45am.  Does this mean I need to go to Yahoo Finance to get my finance fix.  Even my "home town" news channel has the story on its front page.  Please tell me its not so Bloomberg!  Hummmmmm, maybe Mayor Bloomberg is on the "list" and doesn't want his news organization spreading the story that there is a "list".  Big Corporate Media conspiracy theorists converge!  Maybe Steve Jobs is on the "list" too? :)  Cheers!

PS -SARCASM ALERT!!!!- Just found this pop up at the top of Bloomberg.  Really the same people screaming that a barrel of oil is as rare as a pink striped hippo are now saying don't worry, there's no need to increase the production of oil, supplies are above the five year average.  Its a good thing they're being paid all that money to talk their book and run our country. (and finally one more set of parenthesis - No I don't buy into the idea that GS is a vampire squid out doing the Lord's work for the enrichment of the leisure class while enslaving the workers of this once proud and prosperous nation.  Or at least I don't believe all of that ;)  )  SARCASM ALERT ENDED!!!!

Thursday, January 13, 2011

What do you Know ....... dovetailing

As soon as I posted the last post, I came across and article about Brazil's Real appreciation against the dollar.  Never have I had my last two posts nicely dovetail into one another.  Cheers!

OK, so I need a new closing phrase other than the oft used "Cheers".  People do know that that show left the air over a decade ago :p

Tilt

I have been visiting a new site called Financial Times Tilt, or Tilt Financial Times.  Basically its a emerging market  financial site (did you really think it would be anything but a financial or motorcycle site???) with news from the front lines of the different emerging markets.  News and analysis not filtered through New York.  Supposedly. ;)

As of last Tuesday you could get a Tilt Pro account for free.

Right now I think I have a mild migraine.  Only the third or fourth one I have ever had.  :(  Should I twitter and facebook this fact?????

Monday, January 10, 2011

The FED goes to Crazy Town

Great discussion and stories about the basic question of "What is money?".  This is a topic I have thought about quite a bit lately.  Is money physical?  Is money psychological?  Is money real?  When and where does money end?  Is money trustworthy?  Is money "magical"?  Download it in MP3 format to listen on your iPod thingy while you run, or walk, or ride a bike, or drive your car, or ski, or take a hike, or .......

 By the way the FED got within pennies of "spending" all of the mandated $1.2 Trillion buying MBS's.