• The Whole Foods Boycott
    Posted by on August 19th, 2009 at 12:48 pm

    Earlier this week, Whole Foods (WFMI) CEO John Mackey wrote an op-ed in the Wall Street Journal against President Obama’s health care reform ideas. Some Whole Foods customers are responding with a boycott.
    The opinion expressed was Mr. Mackey’s, not the policy of Whole Foods. I find it deeply unsettling that customers are willing to boycott a company due to the personal political opinions of its CEO.
    The irony lost on the boycotters is that Whole Foods’ customers operate in a market where they’re free to boycott Whole Foods and go to a different store. This is exactly the same principle that critics of health care reform are trying to make.

  • Ewwwwww
    Posted by on August 19th, 2009 at 12:18 pm

    Madoff’s lover goes overboard with TMI:

    He sometimes blinked his eyes uncontrollably, leading her to nickname him “Winky Dink” when she disclosed her affair to some close female friends.
    At the Willard, Weinstein wrote, she learned one of his many secrets that they discussed by telephone a few days later.
    “Bernie had a very small penis,” she wrote. “Not only was it on the short side, it was small in circumference. That he was now pointing it out to me was telling. It clearly caused him great angst. I wanted to be careful how I responded. Men and their penises have a strange and unique relationship.”
    Still, she said: “I liked this man and didn’t want to emasculate him. His tiny penis hadn’t prevented me from climaxing.”
    “On the bright side,” she concluded, because of its size, “oral sex would be a breeze.”

    Insert prison joke here.

  • The first thing we do, let’s kill all the bankers
    Posted by on August 19th, 2009 at 10:17 am

    Imagine a world without bankers.

    Enter Zopa, a website that describes itself as a place “where people meet to lend and borrow money … sidestepping the banks”. The idea is pretty simple. Someone who has money to spare goes online, says how much he’s ready to lend and at what rate of interest – and waits for would-be borrowers to take him up on his offer. If both sides are happy – and Zopa stands for the negotiating term “zone of possible agreement” – then the deal goes ahead. Quite a few of them, as it happens: Zopa has now facilitated £50m worth of loans, from one ordinary Briton to another.
    The theory is that everyone benefits, the lender enjoying a much higher rate of return than he would from a regular savings account, and the borrower paying off his debt at a much gentler rate of interest. That’s not difficult, says Zopa, when the high street banks are being so stingy towards savers and so demanding of borrowers. Current deals on Zopa are running somewhere between 8% and 10%, while savers would be lucky to earn more than a few points in interest and borrowers can be looking at charges in the teens or higher.

  • “It beats the heck out of any certificate of deposit”
    Posted by on August 19th, 2009 at 10:14 am

    Where are some investors placing their money?
    Tax liens.

    Private investors step in and buy tax liens, paying governments upfront all or part of the value of the taxes. The investors then get the right to foreclose on the properties, taking priority over mortgage lenders, and to charge interest rates as high as 18 percent on the unpaid taxes.
    “It beats the heck out of any certificate of deposit,” said Howard Liggett, executive director of the National Tax Lien Association.
    Because the sales occur in a patchwork of cities and counties across more than two dozen states, there are no figures tracking the number of tax-lien sales nationwide. The liens that are sold come from cases in which homeowners pay taxes to the local government, not through their lenders. But Mr. Liggett, whose group represents tax-lien investors, said they generated about $10 billion every year.
    In 2006, Lucas County began selling off its overdue tax certificates to a New Jersey company named Plymouth Park Tax Services, a subsidiary of JPMorgan Chase. It also operates under the name Xspand.
    The company, once run by the former governor of New Jersey, James J. Florio, was sold to Bear Stearns and then absorbed into JPMorgan after Bear’s collapse last year. Today, Plymouth Park is one of the largest players in the tax-lien business.
    Plymouth Park has filed more than 1,000 foreclosure actions against delinquent taxpayers, more than any single mortgage lender in the county. But it says that it has only foreclosed on 56 of those filings.

  • Eaton Vance’s Earnings Fall But Top Expectations
    Posted by on August 19th, 2009 at 9:57 am

    It’s still been a good year for the asset management stocks. Eaton Vance (EV) is up over 40% for us. Reuters reports:

    Asset manager Eaton Vance Corp said fiscal third-quarter net income fell 37 percent compared with a year ago as fees decreased.
    For the three months that ended July 31, Boston-based Eaton Vance reported net income of $31.2 million, or 26 cents per share, down from $49.6 million, or 40 cents a share in the same period a year ago. Revenue fell 19 percent to $228 million.
    Analysts surveyed by Thomson Reuters on average had expected the company to earn 28 cents per share, and revenue of $224.5 million for the quarter.
    Revenue and net income rose compared with the quarter that ended April 30, 2009, however, as did assets under management. Eaton Vance managed $143.7 billion in assets as of July 31, up from $127.2 billion in the previous quarter. The increases were similar to those at other asset managers that have benefited from rising stock markets.

  • Investor Quiz
    Posted by on August 18th, 2009 at 2:46 pm

    Guess what company went from concept to $1 billion in sales in three years?

    Read more…

  • How Bad Is Inflation in Zimbabwe?
    Posted by on August 18th, 2009 at 2:39 pm

    At one point last year, prices were doubling.
    Every day.

  • RIP: Rose Friedman
    Posted by on August 18th, 2009 at 1:19 pm

    Rose Friedman passed away yesterday at the age of 98.
    “The only person known to have ever won an argument with Milton.” – President George W. Bush
    Friedmans.jpg

  • PPI Is Lowest on Record
    Posted by on August 18th, 2009 at 10:35 am

    Today’s PPI report shows that wholesale prices have dropped by 6.8% over the last year. That’s the lowest on record.
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    So is deflation a threat? Matthew Lynn says that fears of deflation are vastly overblown.

    In other words, there were plenty of deflationary years. Yet over that period, the U.K. became the greatest economic power in the world: Its relative decline only started once inflation took hold. Deflation didn’t stop the Industrial Revolution, one of the most sustained times of economic creativity ever seen.
    Likewise, a 2004 study by the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis looked at the data on deflation across 17 countries over 100 years. It found that although the Great Depression of the 1930s was linked with falling prices, that wasn’t true of any other historical period. There was, it said, “virtually no evidence” that deflation caused a depression.
    Why should it? We are constantly told that deflation is bad because it makes consumers hold off from buying things, thinking they will be cheaper tomorrow. But that is just silly.

  • The Biggest Thing Since E-mail
    Posted by on August 18th, 2009 at 10:17 am

    Jim Cramer pounds the table for Smart Phones:

    As big and as game-changing as the personal computer and the Internet were, I believe the mobile Internet—the integration of voice, data, video, and storage in one handheld device—will be more lucrative than both. Maybe both put together. That may sound far-fetched now, but these devices, chock-full of applications and hardware that have begun to rival those of personal computers, have finally realized the elusive holy grail. As any twentysomething, or even middle-schooler, knows, once you procure a smartphone, you can throw away pretty much every publication, every guide, every television, every camera, every music device, heck, every gizmo you have, save your toaster oven. You just don’t need ’em anymore.
    It’s not just the dazzling technology that’s driving things. It’s the size of the market and the speed at which companies and consumers are getting onboard. It took a half-dozen years and a host of competitors like Dell, Gateway, and Compaq to produce personal computers cheap enough to entice the masses. Thanks to the substantial subsidies offered by Verizon, Sprint, AT&T, and T-Mobile in their endless battles for market share, Americans are buying up smartphones and calling plans much faster than they bought PCs.
    And the U.S. market is tiny versus the overseas arena. Beijing alone just committed $40 billion to build a smartphone network that will cover the whole nation, and the big telephone companies in China plan on subsidizing the phones with the same zeal as the American firms—obviously with millions more customers. Currently, there are as many as 4 billion cell-phone users worldwide, but only 12 percent use smartphones. Given the superiority of the product and the aggressive pricing, I expect we will see a total replacement of dumb phones with smart ones rather quickly. You’re talking about a market that could grow eightfold in just a few years.