Friday, July 30, 2010

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NYT Blogger Who Knocked Fox <b>News</b>&#39; Audience Diversity Has the Same <b>...</b>

This of course, played into the "Fox is racist" meme, and, not surprisingly, Stelter's words were re-Tweeted many times (and also inspired several media blogs to further discuss Fox News' lack of diversity). ...

Malaysian politician charged with graft - Arab <b>News</b>

At no time will Arab News attempt to alter the core meaning of a comment. 3. Reject the message, edit the message when the moderators judge it to be a personal attack, defamatory (or potentially defamatory), abusive, incite hatred or ...

<b>News</b> Quiz | July 30, 2010 - The Learning Network Blog - NYTimes.com

See what you know about the news of the day. ... A 'View' of Obama. 6 Q's About the News | Why do you think the president decided to appear on "The View"? A guest post by our college intern, Carrie Montgomery. July 30 ...



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NYT Blogger Who Knocked Fox <b>News</b>&#39; Audience Diversity Has the Same <b>...</b>

This of course, played into the "Fox is racist" meme, and, not surprisingly, Stelter's words were re-Tweeted many times (and also inspired several media blogs to further discuss Fox News' lack of diversity). ...

Malaysian politician charged with graft - Arab <b>News</b>

At no time will Arab News attempt to alter the core meaning of a comment. 3. Reject the message, edit the message when the moderators judge it to be a personal attack, defamatory (or potentially defamatory), abusive, incite hatred or ...

<b>News</b> Quiz | July 30, 2010 - The Learning Network Blog - NYTimes.com

See what you know about the news of the day. ... A 'View' of Obama. 6 Q's About the News | Why do you think the president decided to appear on "The View"? A guest post by our college intern, Carrie Montgomery. July 30 ...


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Alaska's Sarah Palin, Sidewalk Art by NineInchNachosIV































Tuesday, July 27, 2010

foreclosure investing



Hard to say who the worst member of Congress is. But there are few short lists that would exclude narrow-minded and extremist Minnesota religious fanatic Michele Bachmann. However, today isn't about Bachmann. You want Bachmann, you go to DumpBachmann; no one does it better. At the time of the 2008 election, Bachmann was just as odious as she is today. Blue America didn't get involved in that race though because her opponent simply seemed... "better than Bachmann." That standard is too low for us.


And today we're going to meet state Senator Tarryl Clark (below in the comments section), a hard working leader with a proven track record who would be a great candidate whether she were running against Michele Bachmann, or just some garden variety Republican.


People say this suburban/exurban district mostly north of the Twin Cities is too red for a Democrat. But that isn't true. Bush won it in 2004 with 57% and 4 years later McCain took 53% but, the district has also voted to elect Amy Klobuchar to the Senate-- and against Mark Kennedy, the kook who represented the district before Bachmann. And in the 15th senatorial district near St Cloud, the part Tarryl represents-- and which was a GOP bastion before she came along-- the vote totals in that 2006 race were very interesting. Because she knows what it means to work hard and work smart, and with a very committed Wellstone-style of campaigning, Tarryl outpolled everyone on the ballot:


Clark 15581 (56.30%)

Klobuchar 14980 (53.45%)

Pawlenty 14307 (51.1%)

Wetterling 13082 (46.81%)

Bachmann 12542 (44.88%)


MN-06 has the most devastating unemployment rate in Minnesota and the worst foreclosure crisis in the state. But Bachmann has neither understood nor been sympathetic to her constituents finding themselves in a jam because of the vicissitudes of an economy buffeted by disastrous conservative ideological experimentation. She has not only not contributed to finding solutions to these very real problems, she has tried to capitalize of politicizing them.


Tarryl's reaction, as a state legislator, has been the exact opposite. Instead of running around the country and ranting and raving at tea parties, she proven herself an effective leader for the people she represents, working to secure the funds to upgrade the facilities at Saint Cloud State University, working to ensure Central Minnesota’s nursing homes are paid fairly, working to establish a special law enforcement unit to fight gang activities in Central Minnesota.


Tarryl’s been a champion for issues including early childhood and higher education, health care, serving veterans, protecting Minnesotans from predatory lenders, and investing in the local communities that make America strong. Because of that her colleagues elected her to serve as the Senate’s Assistant Majority Leader. Bachmann's colleagues have recognized her as a clown and have tasked her with going on Fox to stir up divisiveness and animosities.


Tarryl’s record of results on reducing unemployment:


• Created 22,000 jobs with last session’s bonding bill


• Helped small businesses add new jobs with Angel Investor Tax Credits


• Authored the Central Minnesota Bioscience Initiative to bring jobs in the biotech industry into the 6th district


• Authored economic development bill that improved workforce development (job training) and expanded the Small Business Growth Acceleration Program, and entrepreneur and small business development grants.


Tarryl’s record of results on reducing foreclosure:


• Authored legislation to protect seniors from predatory lenders and reverse mortgages


• Helped families in keep their homes with the MN Subprime Borrowers Relief Act


• Authored legislation to reduce the burden of property taxes on middle class families


Tarryl is the newest member of the Blue America family. If you can volunteer for her campaign, there's a sign up form here and if you can help the campaign financially, she's on the Blue America endorsed candidates list.





















That's so this year. What's that? Silly Bandz? Twilight? As Mark Cuban writes on his blog, "Location check in is so 2010." Cuban explains that he just invested in a company that, through video footage, determines how many people are in a given area at a time, ostensibly for security and traffic-pattern analysis. For now anonymity is given to crowd members, but Cuban wonders if adding facial recognition software would allow locations to forego checkin applications because "we would already know you are there." Sound a little like Minority Report? TechCrunch thinks so. "It sounds like a future we're inevitably headed toward."


Behind the scenes at Gilt Groupe. In an interview with the Wall Street Journal, Alexis Maybank shares the story of how she and co-founder Alexandra Wilkis Wilson built Gilt Groupe, the online flash sales site for men's and women's luxury fashions. The company, founded in 2007, reported $170 million in revenue last year and now boasts three million members who shop for designer brands at up to 70 percent off retail prices. Maybank talks about the challenges of getting the word out there, signing up initial designers, and raising VC as a woman. She explains to the Journal that "it's an old boy's network, and that's intimidating for a lot of women. So when explaining fashion to a bunch of men in khaki pants and blue button-down shirts, their response was always 'Oh, let me see if my wife thinks if this is a good idea.' But it worked."


Our annual 30 Under 30 list. They're running innovative companies, they're building communities, they're setting trends, they're giving back--and they're all under 30. Here's this year's winners, from Sprouter, to Agile Sports, to The Man Registry. Did we miss anyone? Let us know in the comments.


Foursquare is prowling for a partnership. Yet another 30 Under 30 winner is making headlines this morning as it attempts to snag a whale of a partnership. Foursquare, the game/ social network that recently raised $20 million in Series B funding, claims it is in talks with Google, Yahoo and Microsoft about deals involving their location-based data (via GigaOM). While the novelty of being the mayor of your local mall might gradually wear off it can still be a useful tool to make money for your business. Also, this type of partnership is what catapulted Twitter to profitability.


Facebook's co-founder on the Facebook movie. When you're trying to revolutionize social networking while you're still at Harvard, you're probably not thinking about how Aaron Sorkin might portray your life in a feature film six years hence. In SocialBeat, Facebook co-founder Dustin Moskovitz, gives his take on the silver screen adaptation. In short: it overplays the sex and booze. "It is interesting to see my past rewritten in a way that emphasizes things that didn't matter . . Other than that, it's just cool to see a dramatization of history. A lot of exciting things happened in 2004, but mostly we just worked a lot and stressed out about things; the version in the trailer seems a lot more exciting, so I'm just going to chose to remember that we drank ourselves silly and had a lot of sex with coeds," writes Moskovitz, who is currently working on a productivity startup Asana, backed by Benchmark Capital and Andreessen Horowitz. As for Zuckerberg, he adds, "At the end of the day, they cannot help but portray him as the driven, forward-thinking genius that he is."


What financial reform means for angel investing. In a guest post at VentureBeat, Scott Walker, CEO of a law firm that specializes in entrepreneur representation, breaks down the impact of the financial regulation bill on angel investing. The verdict: it's a mix of good and bad.  


Renting a room to save a home. Today's BusinessWeek explains how San Francisco-based startup AirBnB is helping homeowners escape foreclosure. The site allows people from 142 countries to rent out empty rooms and pull in a little extra income. One New Yorker tells BusinessWeek, "This has been our stimulus package...we were going to lose our house." Founders Brian Chesky and Joe Gebbia say they got the idea for the company when they were cash-strapped, themselves. After renting out space in their own home, they decided to turn the idea into a business, enlisting the help of their friend Nathan Blecharczyk. All three founders made it onto our 30 under 30 list this year, having seen a tremendous amount of growth since the site launched just two years ago.


More from Inc. Magazine:


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Family: NATO Recovered Body of Missing US Sailor Justin McNeley in <b>...</b>

(July 27) -- NATO has recovered the body of one of the two US servicemen who disappeared in Afghanistan last week, the international force said today, and the military pressed the search for his comrade who's believed to have been ...

Fwix Aggregates Hyper-Local <b>News</b> for Nearby and Relevant Stories

Fwix is a news aggregation service focused on dishing the dirt on hyper-local news stories to help you stay on top of what's happening right in your backyard. Fwix is available both in the US and select countries abroad.

Fox <b>News</b> Audience Just 1.38% Black

Fox News may be the undisputed ratings champion in cable news, but not among black viewers. The New York Times' Brian Stelter tweeted that, according to Nielsen Media Research, Fox News has averaged just 29000 black viewers in primetime ...



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Family: NATO Recovered Body of Missing US Sailor Justin McNeley in <b>...</b>

(July 27) -- NATO has recovered the body of one of the two US servicemen who disappeared in Afghanistan last week, the international force said today, and the military pressed the search for his comrade who's believed to have been ...

Fwix Aggregates Hyper-Local <b>News</b> for Nearby and Relevant Stories

Fwix is a news aggregation service focused on dishing the dirt on hyper-local news stories to help you stay on top of what's happening right in your backyard. Fwix is available both in the US and select countries abroad.

Fox <b>News</b> Audience Just 1.38% Black

Fox News may be the undisputed ratings champion in cable news, but not among black viewers. The New York Times' Brian Stelter tweeted that, according to Nielsen Media Research, Fox News has averaged just 29000 black viewers in primetime ...


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Monday, July 26, 2010

why internet marketing




















Your business has accumulated an e-mail list, but you have no idea how to connect those e-mail subscribers to your Facebook page, your Twitter followers and other social networks. You’re looking for a relationship with those customers, maybe something more than responses to your marketing e-mails. Enter Flowtown.com.

Co-Founder Ethan Bloch started his first business at 13, using IRC (Internet Relay Chat – the grandfather of Twitter and Instant Messaging) to directly market the products from his electronics ecommerce site. Ethan offered Playstation and Dreamcast accessories during the summer of 1999, and was successful competing on price for 6 months. Then suddenly, he lost all his customers because someone had created a similar website with better prices. Bloch learned at that moment about the value of creating customer relationships.

Fast-forward 10 years, and Bloch, formerly the host of the Internet video show WSYK (What Should You Know) and his cofounder Dan Martel, a Canadian long-time entrepreneur, launched the company. Flowtown is simple tool that allows you to run a list of e-mails and obtain the connected accounts on Facebook, Twitter, StumbleUpon, LinkedIn and more than 40 other networks. You can then communicate with the people from your list on those networks as well.

Additionally, you can learn your list’s demographics, geographic characteristics, and the subscribers’ influence ranking.  “We reached out to these influencers directly via Facebook,” said Meaghan Edelstein, Social Media Director of Smashyn.com. “We said 'We see you’re a customer who has purchased before and we’d love to hear what you think, and we’d encourage you to like and link to our customer’s page on your own page.' Everyone that we reached out to did this - quickly.”

Another feature Flowtown enables is parsing your incoming e-mail subscribers, to see if they meet certain criteria, and flagging them.  (Flowtown can be integrated with e-mail services iContact, MailChimp and Campaign Monitor as well as form creator Wufoo.). So if a person with a million Twitter followers joins your list, you will find out about it when it happens.

“We push these demographic stories into these mail tools – so they can help you create segmented lists based on gender, age, location and social network.”

How would you start such a communication without making your customers feel like you were spamming them on Social Networks? Edelstein told me that her firm used Flowtown for their client Natural Skin Shop.

“With our first outreach, the client increased the "Likes" on their Facebook Page by over 50%.  Further, we sent out a campaign to all the customers who were on Facebook asking them to post on the Fan Page wall why they love Natural Skin Shop. In less than 24 hours around 200 posts from customers showed up on the wall. Twitter followers increased as well but not by as much. However, the number of people who purchase products from natural Skin Shop via Twitter has increased significantly.”
What kind of return on investment did they achieve? Flowtown can cost a few dollars a month plus about 4.5 cents to import each user. Bloch says “If you can get one influential person to blog about you, it should generate more marketing attention than the $450 you would spend on Flowtown for  importing 10,000 users.”

Bloch emphasizes that “Connecting with customers on Social Networks shouldn’t replace your e-mail marketing efforts – rather it should compliment them. If you’re a bakery in the MidWest, you might send e-mail news once a month. What Flowtown will do is help you understand what you should be saying, and to whom, since now you know a lot more about your subscribers.”

Additionally, if you analyze your list and see you have a lot of Facebook users but few are on Twitter, you know where to concentrate your social outreach efforts.

The way small businesses connect to customers is changing, and Flowtown seems like a useful tool in a marketer’s up-to-date arsenal. What are you using to find and connect with customers? Share your tips below.



















Top Stories of the Week




  • Antivirus Product Testing is Changing, Whether Vendors Like it or Not

  • Why We Check In: The Reasons People Use Location-Based Social Networks

  • Facebook Snags the Guy Who Built Google's Chrome OS

  • Google Me a "Facebook Killer"? Place Your Bets!

  • Chrome Surpasses Safari in U.S.


More coverage and analysis from ReadWriteWeb




Real-Time Web



  • Yahoo Search Suggestions Go Near Real-Time

  • Web Apps With Push Notifications: W3C Begins Work to Make it Happen

  • New Google News is More Personal and Spontaneous


More Real-Time Web coverage. Don't miss the next wave of opportunity on the Web supported by real-time technology! Get ReadWriteWeb's report, The Real-Time Web and its Future.



Augmented Reality




  • Qualcomm Launching SDK for Vision-Based AR on Android this Fall


More Augmented Reality coverage




Augmented Reality for Marketers and Developers: Our Newest Research Report


We're pleased to announce ReadWriteWeb's latest premium report, Augmented Reality for Marketers and Developers: Analysis of the Leaders, the Challenges and the Future. This report will help you develop a sophisticated understanding of Augmented Reality (AR), the mobile and Web technology that places data on top of a user's view of the physical world. The research included will help you decrease your AR development time to market by learning from the first wave of early adopters. AR offers a new marketing and product paradigm for a high impact, high value customer experience. More than 1,000 AR campaigns were kicked-off last year and we expect to see many more in 2010. In this report, we profile key AR development companies, their campaigns as well as development lessons learned. For more information or to buy the report, visit here.



Mobile Web




  • Kindle App for iPhone, iPad Now Does Audio and Video

  • Despite Glitches, iPhone 4 is Apple's Biggest Launch Ever

  • Footfeed Jumps into the Check-in Aggregation Game


More Mobile Web coverage




Internet of Things



  • Kuniavsky's Orange Cone: Designing Read-Write Web-Created Things


More Internet of Things coverage




Check Out The ReadWriteWeb iPhone App


We recently launched the official ReadWriteWeb iPhone app. As well as enabling you to read ReadWriteWeb while on the go or lying on the couch, we've made it easy to share ReadWriteWeb posts directly from your iPhone, on Twitter and Facebook. You can also follow the RWW team on Twitter, directly from the app. We invite you to download it now from iTunes.





ReadWriteStart


Our channel ReadWriteStart, sponsored by Microsoft BizSpark, is dedicated to profiling startups and entrepreneurs.




  • Top 5 Reasons Why Your Startup Needs an API

  • GitHub Introduces Organizations, Makes Managing Code Repositories Easier

  • YouPhonics Launches Music Collaboration Tool




ReadWriteCloud


Our channel ReadWriteCloud, sponsored by VMware and Intel, is dedicated to Virtualization and Cloud Computing.



  • Alcatel-Lucent Acquires Programmable Web - Well-Known Source For APIs

  • How to Connect an Office Building to an Activity Stream

  • The Cloud Can Save Us Billions...But Can We Afford it?



ReadWriteEnterprise


Our channel ReadWriteEnterprise is devoted to 'enterprise 2.0' and using social software inside organizations.



  • Antivirus Product Testing is Changing, Whether Vendors Like it or Not

  • Scheduling App Doodle Now Features Calendar Integration

  • Cisco Entering Tablet Market with Android-Based Device



ReadWriteBiz


Our channel ReadWriteBiz is a resource and guide for small to medium businesses.



  • InDinero Launch Gives Small Businesses Real-Time Financial Tool

  • Essential Tools For SEO on a Budget



Enjoy your weekend everyone.



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Francine Hardaway: <b>News</b> Died This Week

But both the news and journalist Daniel Schorr died this week. Schorr died peacefully after a long and productive life. The news, however, was murdered. Unworthy commentators destroyed news.

Fox <b>News</b> Audience Just 1.38% Black

Fox News may be the undisputed ratings champion in cable news, but not among black viewers. The New York Times' Brian Stelter tweeted that, according to Nielsen Media Research, Fox News has averaged just 29000 black viewers in primetime ...

This Week&#39;s Health Industry <b>News</b> - Prescriptions Blog - NYTimes.com

More earnings reports from health insurers and drug companies, as well as agency hearings on medical devices.



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Sunday, July 25, 2010

why internet marketing









Top Stories of the Week




  • Antivirus Product Testing is Changing, Whether Vendors Like it or Not

  • Why We Check In: The Reasons People Use Location-Based Social Networks

  • Facebook Snags the Guy Who Built Google's Chrome OS

  • Google Me a "Facebook Killer"? Place Your Bets!

  • Chrome Surpasses Safari in U.S.


More coverage and analysis from ReadWriteWeb




Real-Time Web



  • Yahoo Search Suggestions Go Near Real-Time

  • Web Apps With Push Notifications: W3C Begins Work to Make it Happen

  • New Google News is More Personal and Spontaneous


More Real-Time Web coverage. Don't miss the next wave of opportunity on the Web supported by real-time technology! Get ReadWriteWeb's report, The Real-Time Web and its Future.



Augmented Reality




  • Qualcomm Launching SDK for Vision-Based AR on Android this Fall


More Augmented Reality coverage




Augmented Reality for Marketers and Developers: Our Newest Research Report


We're pleased to announce ReadWriteWeb's latest premium report, Augmented Reality for Marketers and Developers: Analysis of the Leaders, the Challenges and the Future. This report will help you develop a sophisticated understanding of Augmented Reality (AR), the mobile and Web technology that places data on top of a user's view of the physical world. The research included will help you decrease your AR development time to market by learning from the first wave of early adopters. AR offers a new marketing and product paradigm for a high impact, high value customer experience. More than 1,000 AR campaigns were kicked-off last year and we expect to see many more in 2010. In this report, we profile key AR development companies, their campaigns as well as development lessons learned. For more information or to buy the report, visit here.



Mobile Web




  • Kindle App for iPhone, iPad Now Does Audio and Video

  • Despite Glitches, iPhone 4 is Apple's Biggest Launch Ever

  • Footfeed Jumps into the Check-in Aggregation Game


More Mobile Web coverage




Internet of Things



  • Kuniavsky's Orange Cone: Designing Read-Write Web-Created Things


More Internet of Things coverage




Check Out The ReadWriteWeb iPhone App


We recently launched the official ReadWriteWeb iPhone app. As well as enabling you to read ReadWriteWeb while on the go or lying on the couch, we've made it easy to share ReadWriteWeb posts directly from your iPhone, on Twitter and Facebook. You can also follow the RWW team on Twitter, directly from the app. We invite you to download it now from iTunes.





ReadWriteStart


Our channel ReadWriteStart, sponsored by Microsoft BizSpark, is dedicated to profiling startups and entrepreneurs.




  • Top 5 Reasons Why Your Startup Needs an API

  • GitHub Introduces Organizations, Makes Managing Code Repositories Easier

  • YouPhonics Launches Music Collaboration Tool




ReadWriteCloud


Our channel ReadWriteCloud, sponsored by VMware and Intel, is dedicated to Virtualization and Cloud Computing.



  • Alcatel-Lucent Acquires Programmable Web - Well-Known Source For APIs

  • How to Connect an Office Building to an Activity Stream

  • The Cloud Can Save Us Billions...But Can We Afford it?



ReadWriteEnterprise


Our channel ReadWriteEnterprise is devoted to 'enterprise 2.0' and using social software inside organizations.



  • Antivirus Product Testing is Changing, Whether Vendors Like it or Not

  • Scheduling App Doodle Now Features Calendar Integration

  • Cisco Entering Tablet Market with Android-Based Device



ReadWriteBiz


Our channel ReadWriteBiz is a resource and guide for small to medium businesses.



  • InDinero Launch Gives Small Businesses Real-Time Financial Tool

  • Essential Tools For SEO on a Budget



Enjoy your weekend everyone.



Subscribe to Weekly Wrap-up


You can subscribe to the Weekly Wrap-up by RSS or by email below.



RWW Weekly Wrap-up Email Subscription form:












Amanda Palmer sells $15,000 worth of merch in three minutes; you probably can't, but that's OK






Awesome, copyfighting punk diva Amanda Palmer put her latest indy EP (the magically titled Amanda Palmer Performs the Popular Hits of Radiohead on Her Magical Ukulele) up for sale direct to her fans, along with a wide collection of limited edition merch.


Three minutes later, she had sold $15,000 worth of music and objects containing or celebrating music (vinyl records, various deluxe packages). As of this writing, practically everything else has sold out.


This model doesn't work for everyone. But it's worked for Palmer and various others, repeatedly. Just as not every artist can succeed in the studio, or can succeed touring, or can succeed performing covers, or can succeed performing original materials, not every artist can do this.


But the fact is that every commercially successful artist is basically a fluke. Most artists -- even those who've attained "success" in the form of a deal with a major publisher/label/etc -- do not find commercial independence there, and it has always been thus. As someone who helps support his family with his arts-related income, I'm here to tell you, if your kids want to pursue the arts, they should have some other marketable skill to fall back on (or chances are they'll fall back on you!).


And yet, what Palmer is doing is fascinating, because it involves spending less capital to reach smaller, more specialized audiences who willingly part with larger sums, from which Palmer gets to keep the lion's share. That looks a lot less like the old winner-takes-all model in which you get 100 or so acts who can fill a stadium and get rich, and a bunch of also-rans living on bread and water. In Amanda's model, individual artists gross much smaller amounts, but net much larger amounts, because they're not supporting a whole supply chain of execs, marketing people, giant buildings, trucks full of vinyl, radio DJs, etc.


What's more, she's made this work repeatedly, and there's every indication that it will work for her again.


Now, if your plan is to do what Amanda is doing in order to keep yourself in room and board, you will probably fail. But that's nothing new: practically everyone who set out to earn a living the old record-label way also failed (failed to get a deal, or, with a deal, failed to earn a living from it). The important thing here is that this can work, and work at least as well as the old system -- without demanding that the entire internet be surveilled, without making war on fans, without buying corrupt laws, or turning artists into sharecroppers.


That's a fine thing indeed.


Fan Feeding Frenzy: AFP's New EP FTW

(Thanks, PeaceLove)

Small Business <b>News</b>: The Social Media Trend | Small Business Trends

Social media as a small business tool is definitely no fad. Look at how social media, from blogs to Twitter to Facebook, has changed the way businesses operate,

Arizona Wildfire Burns More Than 10000 Acres Outside Flagstaff

(June 22) -- A fast-moving wildfire that has charred more than 10000 acres outside Flagstaff, Ariz., is 10 percent contained, and hundreds of residents have been ordered of out their homes, officials say. The Schultz fire began Sunday ...

Colorado <b>News</b>: The Week In Review (VIDEO, PHOTOS)

It's been a wild week for Colorado politics, as major developments the three most-watched statewide primaries have changed the face of the races and brought national attention to Colorado. We've recapped some of the week's biggest ...


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Thursday, July 22, 2010

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EXCLUSIVE: Brad Pitt To Star In &#39;World War Z,&#39; Paramount Options <b>...</b>

While chatting up "World War Z" author Max Brooks at the booth for comic publisher Avatar Press, the writer confirmed to MTV News that the adaption of his novel about the zombie apocalypse is not only moving forward, but Brad Pitt is ...

Website users give BBC <b>News</b> redesign grief (and anger, and <b>...</b>

Josh Halliday: The BBC News website aims to engage with its users – who are leaving thousands of complaints – as its new look beds in.

Tina Dupuy: Of Junk Food and Junk <b>News</b>

Watch your average for-profit 24-hour station for one hour. It's all high-fructose hyperbole all the time.



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EXCLUSIVE: Brad Pitt To Star In &#39;World War Z,&#39; Paramount Options <b>...</b>

While chatting up "World War Z" author Max Brooks at the booth for comic publisher Avatar Press, the writer confirmed to MTV News that the adaption of his novel about the zombie apocalypse is not only moving forward, but Brad Pitt is ...

Website users give BBC <b>News</b> redesign grief (and anger, and <b>...</b>

Josh Halliday: The BBC News website aims to engage with its users – who are leaving thousands of complaints – as its new look beds in.

Tina Dupuy: Of Junk Food and Junk <b>News</b>

Watch your average for-profit 24-hour station for one hour. It's all high-fructose hyperbole all the time.


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Wednesday, July 21, 2010

personal finance money management





59 Responses to “Corporate America’s Pile-O-Cash”







  1. Barry Ritholtz Says:



    July 12th, 2010 at 6:16 am

    Thank you Invictus — thought provoking stuff .








  2. Sonic Charmer Says:



    July 12th, 2010 at 6:38 am

    Is it possible that you’re setting up a distinction without a difference?


    Business leaders say they’re not spending due to economic/political uncertainty. You’re saying No, it’s the lack of aggregate demand!


    Could not the latter be related to, indeed go hand in hand with, the former?








  3. dougc Says:



    July 12th, 2010 at 7:06 am

    I agree 100%, to paraphrase someone “don’t waste a crisis, they should be used to promote your agenda”, obviously CEO’ s want their taxes to remain low. Corporations don’t expand their business based upon the marginal rates or capital gain taxes on employees. they expand to meet needs. Rich people have a habit of claiming all problems can be solved by lower tax rates, Rational people look at the results of Boy Bush and Clinton on employment gains and deficits and see the results of lowering tax rates.








  4. KentWillard Says:



    July 12th, 2010 at 7:20 am

    Factory utilization is still low. House vacancies are high. Commercial real estate vacancies are high. Consumer debt to income is high. And the high dollar will slow US exports. Why on earth would most US businesses want to invest in labor, real estate, or capital equipment I’m such an environment? It has nothing to do with political perception and everything to do with economic reality.


    It is also frighteningly like Japan of the past two decades. Low interest rates. Private debt replaced by public debt. A series of plunges in equity and real estate prices. Firms saving massive amounts of money and hiring temp rather than full time permanent employees. And years of deflation.








  5. Mike in Nola Says:



    July 12th, 2010 at 7:35 am

    The fact that consumer spending is 70% of GDP is one of out biggest problems. That was being propped up by unproductive activity in the housing bubble and by the big spenders who make money trading pieces of paper.


    R&D and plant improvements are neglected to please CNBC readers who are trained to react to a one cent surprise in earnings even when it comes at the cost of five cents next year because the company laid off key people to make those earnings.


    An example of the opposite thinking I heard about yesterday was MSFT’s xbox. It gets no respect because it spends huge amounts on R&D, with not everything making money, but some making long term big money. MS spent several billion developing and marketing the xbox for the past five years, always losing money on it. Many, including me, thought they were crazy. Well, it appears that the income stream for that one product has risen to over $1B this year and will likely grow more and have a fairly long tail, resulting in substantial future profits that would not have occured without the initial investment.


    We have no long-term way out of this trap without starting to actually make things again instead of trading goods and services around, with the goods coming from outside the US.








  6. rktbrkr Says:



    July 12th, 2010 at 7:44 am

    Maybe because US is so weighted towards services and it’s the Chinese who make the capital investments to build stuff to fill Walmart. Maybe US corps are keeping their powder dry because they anticipate more hard times ahead – not profligate like individuals and governments.


    Is there any breakdown of the corporate hoarding by business type? I’m thinking big oil and the big tech cos are sitting on a lot of this money








  7. antisthenes Says:



    July 12th, 2010 at 7:48 am

    For a man so proud of his ability to rationalise, you certainly do fall for some terrible old tautologies and fallacies when you get all macroeconomic on us.


    Sure, PCE is ~70% of GDP – -but only because GDP is largely defined to capture end consumption in the first place! That’s like saying 50% of the clothing I put on my feet are socks, so the rest of my wardrobe is irrelevant!


    If you compare the $10 trillion or so personal expenditure number (actually a meaningful amount lower if we throw out fantasy-land ‘imputations’ and stick to cold, hard cash components) with ALL the other spending that goes on in the economy you’ll find it comes to less than 30% of the sum, the difference being all those highly critical – and highly DISCRETIONARY – business outlays that get cancelled out of the GDP but which are responsible for moving all the goods and services up and down a multi-layered, divided-labour, specialized-function, ADVANCED economy – and generating all the non-government out-of-thin-air revenues and incomes which will be used to buy them.


    Not only is Biz spending not just the NET inventory adds and NET investment which the BLS & BEA fixate upon, but all the other cost-of-sales and SG&A stuff (which a business analayst, above all people, should be aware exists!).


    In here is where you find the real variability in the economy, with most of the rest being no more than its distant – and often muted – echo.


    Come on, BR, use that penetrating intellect of yours and stop parroting Mainstream Macro 101 to your readers, they deserve better.








  8. HEHEHE Says:



    July 12th, 2010 at 7:49 am

    The more realistic presumption is that corp insiders know we are headed for another downturn and they will need that cash to operate. Nobody with a half a brain believes in this “recovery”. Why do you think they’ve been dumping shares into the stock market rally like fishermen bailing water out of a boat with a hole in it? They aren’t stupid. In the next year look for another collapse like in 2008. The cash on those balance sheets will be eaten through; you’ll have another stock market collapse or two; and Benny Bernanke will annouce QE II which will result in another stock market rally and a another round of secondary stock offerings by corps and ensuing amazement by addle brained political pundits at the amount of cash on corporation balance sheets.


    Did I miss anything?








  9. HEHEHE Says:



    July 12th, 2010 at 7:55 am

    And you wonder why they never caught Madoff:)


    “Hundreds of Federal Agents Fall Victim to Ponzi Scheme”


    http://www.aolnews.com/crime/article/hundreds-of-fbi-dea-and-ice-agents-fall-victim-to-ponzi-scheme/19547371








  10. dead hobo Says:



    July 12th, 2010 at 8:07 am

    Invictus,


    You nailed it. I can’t improve or criticize this piece.


    The next logical step would be to write about why demand is low, especially in spite of numerous gimmicks to inflate demand using public money, due to costs for commodities being likely overstated due to excess speculative demand and inept regulation, due to an utter lack of credibility that our financial markets have even a shred oh honesty and thus are safe to put personal savings into, or due to incompetent Fed management that prefers to ostensibly ignore credit availability for small business so that large banks can manage prop desks instead.








  11. stonedwino Says:



    July 12th, 2010 at 8:09 am

    Doesn’t anyone see the connection here?


    Consumers are supposed to be 70% of the economy and spending, but the consumer can’t make ends meet; meanwhile corporate America with its lowest effective corporate tax rate at levels not seen since the 1950’s is hoarding $1.8 trillion dollars? Like I’ve mentioned before, we cannot have an economic recovery when the consumer is being squeezed on all sides while corporate America sits on hoards of cash that is not being used to re-invigorate the economy. We are not Japan, we are much worse….This does not look good for the country, capitalism or business….we have come to a point where the imbalances must be corrected and if the need be through higher taxation of those sitting on all those piles of cash…








  12. Mike in Nola Says:



    July 12th, 2010 at 8:09 am

    Hussman has a good rant about the misallocation of resources and the earnings games in the second half of today’s comment:


    http://www.hussmanfunds.com/wmc/wmc100712.htm








  13. Mike in Nola Says:



    July 12th, 2010 at 8:12 am

    Can’t even listen to Bloomberg radio. Feldstein is on telling us how we need to keep tax cuts for “everyone, ” i.e. the rich. It’s a “big cloud” hanging over “us.” Funny that taxes on the rich are always described as being on small businesses.








  14. jaywalker Says:



    July 12th, 2010 at 8:30 am

    Thank God someone is still able to think. While whispered sentiments make good headlines, they don’t make good analysis; thank you for swimming above the toxic political pool that seems to infect so much of today’s “analysis”.


    Jay Walker

    The Confused Capitalist








  15. Mark Down Says:



    July 12th, 2010 at 8:38 am

    Sitting on piles of cash..The new Preparation C.








  16. dead hobo Says:



    July 12th, 2010 at 8:39 am

    BTW, it’s not only corporations that are sitting on piles of cash. My stash might not be as large as the ones you are writing about above, but it is certainly significant to me.


    My personal goal is to live as comfortably as possible without excessive spending, even when I can afford to buy something new or fun. It really takes a full mental reorientation to think on these terms. I don’t deny myself the things I regard as necessities, which would probably look like luxuries to some others. Rather, I constantly look at my life and try to identify where to save a few bucks. In other words, I have replaced a fine hobby of recreational spending and shopping with being frugal. My house is paid for. I don’t owe anyone a dime outside of current balances that are cleared monthly.


    Hunkering down is the only logical course of action. The government is incompetent at regulating financial markets and has created a place where the laws favor the crooks. I’m not putting any savings there unless we have another millennial dip. All it takes is a whining banker to scare Uncle Stupid into making the financial markets a better and safer place for fraudsters to operate without fear. Incompetent economists and business media that often performs as free public relations for commissioned wall street touts assist by being ignorant, stupid, complicit, corrupt, and useless in uncountable ways. In spite of all who complain, this will never change.


    I have no faith in government to do what it should be doing … making the markets safe for investors. They have degenerated into a crook’s and scammer’s paradise and will likely remain as such for many years to come.








  17. dead hobo Says:



    July 12th, 2010 at 8:40 am

    Mark Down Says:

    July 12th, 2010 at 8:38 am


    Sitting on piles of cash..The new Preparation C.


    reply:

    ————-

    Cute, Things I wish I said.








  18. Minderbender Says:



    July 12th, 2010 at 8:40 am

    Two points to complete the picture:


    1) Why is demand low? Uncertainty also on demand side (both consumers and businesses)


    2) Creative Destruction – much of the capacity will never be utilized, as the products that can be produced today will no longer be in demand tomorrow – the new capex spending ought to be the kind of investment for new, different, innovative products








  19. JusTryinTaMakeIt Says:



    July 12th, 2010 at 8:41 am

    Excellent analysis. Meanwhile Judd(R), Cantor(R), and Bayh(D) are all on CNBC this morning, spouting the Republican talking points that business is not growing, because of all the “harsh” measures the Obama admin is imposing on business. Oh, I think Sarah is also part of that chorus!








  20. The Curmudgeon Says:



    July 12th, 2010 at 8:57 am

    The political screeching on both sides is just white noise, even if Obama pretty clearly believes that government provides better solutions than markets. And so do his GOP opponents, no matter what bull they try to sell otherwise.


    The reason corps are sitting on piles of cash is because a) collapse of consumer demand; b) there’s nothing else to do with it; c) deflationary environment means cash is king.


    Is there a political solution to the problem? I doubt it, short of a major war to suck up/destroy excess product. Of course, you could just start bulldozing houses.








  21. tenaciousd Says:



    July 12th, 2010 at 8:59 am

    “… take with a grain of salt what anonymous CEOs whisper into the ear of one of their stenographers.”


    Ouch!








  22. Greg0658 Says:



    July 12th, 2010 at 8:59 am

    a 20 year plan to buy at pennies on the dollar .. or is it .. the 50 year plan – 1.5T dollar man reconstruction – we can build it better than it was before – no insurance dollars spent * – start from near scratch – a 22nd century infrastructure


    * na – it’s monday








  23. constantnormal Says:



    July 12th, 2010 at 9:10 am

    I’m thinking about the charts in the recent Comstock Partners chartfest that show corporate debt rising to huge levels, and just beginning to fall back …


    So on the one hand, we have a huge corporate indebtedness, while at the same time we see companies raising record amounts of cash … does it seem to you that there is a certain lack of balance, a certain excess of individuality, a prevalence of “every company is an island” sort of thinking?


    If an “economy” is an assortment of people and companies working individually toward better futures for all, what happens when that dissolves into “me first, devil take the hindmost”?








  24. JustinTheSkeptic Says:



    July 12th, 2010 at 9:19 am

    Tell them dam chinese making 90 cents an hour to come off their doe and spend it on American ingenuity! lol








  25. constantnormal Says:



    July 12th, 2010 at 9:55 am

    Restore FASB 157, value worthless debts as worthless, and all this will unravel. The bankrupt will be wiped out, and the solvent companies will remain, and begin deploying their cash hoard in acquiring shards of bankrupt monsters for less than the cost to create similar functionality. The financial sector will shrink from its cancerous size and the economy will be in remission from financial cancer.


    Yes, it will be painful, and there is the chance that the patient may not survive the cure. But OTOH, there is a certainty that the patient will not survive the disease.








  26. DeDude Says:



    July 12th, 2010 at 10:26 am

    Amazing how many people fail to understand the simple logic of business investment. If there are costumers to purchase the products then the business will invest and expand and if there are no costumers to purchase the product then they will not expand. The few companies that were run by “if we make it they (costumers) will come” idiots have long ago failed. The reason companies are not deploying their cash into expanding is that the consumer is not doing so well (unemployment, pay cuts, no overtime, etc.). But they may as well take a stab at the only president in recent times that was not a complete slave to the corporations.








  27. Bokolis Says:



    July 12th, 2010 at 10:38 am

    “The demand problem we have on our hands is what is keeping companies’ spigots closed.”


    How, then, does demand get stimulated without putting money in the hands of consumers?


    Right…the problem does not lie in a cyclical slowdown of corporate spending/cash hoarding. The larger issue is that, for ages, it seems as if the corporate infrastructure spending is focused on decreasing headcount costs and squeezing more out of the remaining headcount.


    I don’t see technology improving to (my) satisfaction. But, no one with the talent to push technology would be caught dead working for (from BR’s follow-up) “Exxon Mobil, GE, Microsoft, Apple, Google, Cisco, Johnson & Johnson, Verizon, Altria, EMC, Disney, Oracle,” would they?


    Though, I wish one of them would go to work for Oracle…if only to build a product that isn’t shyte so I can get work done more quickly (giving me more time to fcuk off on here…I don’t want to show my hand regarding the upper limits of my productivity capability).








  28. Tony61 Says:



    July 12th, 2010 at 10:44 am

    Yeoman’s work, BR. I heard Zakaria prattling on and on… and turned it off in disgust. When our thought leaders cannot think, it’s no wonder tea partiers cannot understand. Thank you for scrounging up all the charts and tables.


    BTW, just finished Bailout Nation– excellent. I had to wait several months for my own mental health to read all the nightmarish details, but it is well worth it.








  29. Invictus Says:



    July 12th, 2010 at 10:50 am

    @Tony61


    Credit where it’s due, my friend. Check the byline, please. I’d like to think I bring something to the party…


    Invictus








  30. TDL Says:



    July 12th, 2010 at 11:07 am

    DeDude,

    I’m pretty sure customers weren’t demanding electricity in their home before Edison effectively harnessed it. Sure, they would look for better ways to heat and light their homes, but at the end of the day if something is not built (created, innovated, invented, etc.) it will not be demanded. Your point is awfully simplistic.


    Invictus,

    You missed a critical point. Consumers are slowing the spending because debt loads are too high. Debt has to be extinguished before spending picks up. Then again, if you take the Krugman approach, the most effective way to deal with debt is accumulate more debt (at least at the national level;) then a recovery will kick in and you will be able to deal with the debt because the economy will be growing again! At least that’s what the neo-Keynsians say.


    Regards,

    TDL








  31. plantseeds Says:



    July 12th, 2010 at 11:11 am

    constantnormal said..


    “Restore FASB 157, value worthless debts as worthless, and all this will unravel. The bankrupt will be wiped out, and the solvent companies will remain, and begin deploying their cash hoard in acquiring shards of bankrupt monsters for less than the cost to create similar functionality. The financial sector will shrink from its cancerous size and the economy will be in remission from financial cancer.”


    so true….and that would put an end to the double dip argument for sure and maybe give literal meaning to S&P 500.


    If there was demand, supply and thus investment would soon follow however if CEOs say they’re not investing because of uncertainty coming out of Washington then I suppose it’s possible.


    OTOH if there was a perceived “business friendly” administration and business then started investing as a result, despite lack of demand, would that create demand in the aggregate? Wasn’t that the whole idea of the economic stimulus effort? I’m not sure that works either.


    Bottom line…

    To quote Kevin Spacey in It’s a Bug’s Life, “The first rule of management: Everything is your fault.”








  32. Deborah Says:



    July 12th, 2010 at 11:44 am

    Good post. I can’t stand the garbage conclusions that some people make. When I read the introduction I was going to debate the idiot conclusions of Fareed Zakaria’s with the exact points you raised.








  33. Invictus Says:



    July 12th, 2010 at 11:46 am

    @antisthenes


    With all due respect, how am I to take seriously someone who can’t even read a byline?








  34. gman Says:



    July 12th, 2010 at 12:11 pm

    Great work! Everything in the media is “someone powerful (or the pr agent of a powerful person) whispering in a reporters ear”…think of how people were duped in the lead up to the Iraq war!








  35. wngoju Says:



    July 12th, 2010 at 12:21 pm

    finally read this. agree with, eg, gman. Great!








  36. TDL Says:



    July 12th, 2010 at 12:22 pm

    Invictus,

    antisthenes still has an interesting argument. If I re-post, will you make a counter argument then?


    Regards,

    TDL








  37. steve from virginia Says:



    July 12th, 2010 at 1:00 pm

    In the Potemkin Economy the outlook for financials is bleak due to off- balance sheet ‘difficulties’. Why should non- financials be any different?


    Financials can hold cash @ the Fed and earn some interest (and divert some to executives who hold cash in Antigua- Barbuda, Curacao and Singapore.) Commercials earn almost as much as deflation increases cash value relative to borrowing without the risk. (Cash is diverted to executives who hold cash in Antigua, etc.)


    The fact of the cash holdings is more eloquent than any other aspect. Neither financials or companies expect to produce anything. Financials cannot by nature and companies cannot see any opportunities that cost less than what the market prices can support.


    Money (cash) is now a stock not a flow. The outcome is (self- fulfilling) deflation which is the result/cause of the cash hoarding. Why deflation? Because the ‘tax burden’ to commerce is real energy price which has risen along with consumption. The cash curve tracks the GDP curve which also tracks the oil production curve. All have expanded exponentially since 1980 and Reaganomics and the massive expansion of US credit. Corporate cash represents the capture of some of that credit and its laundering into currency. The currency is a hedge against either the company’s own risk or the systemic risk that depletion- amplified deflation represents to all business.


    The only economic ‘activity’ is acquiring and holding money. With dollars being freely exchangeable on demand for petroleum, there is no alternative to gaining dollars as the primary cost of doing business.


    Of course, at some (deflationary) point holding dollars becomes the sole purpose of the business itself.


    With energy at the basis of all modern economic activity there is only one way for the various curves to bend as oil production declines. You can figure out the rest of this story by yourselves!








  38. pater tenebrarum Says:



    July 12th, 2010 at 1:20 pm

    Unfortunately the so-called ‘regime uncertainty’ is a very real problem, no matter how ‘tired’ Barry is of hearing it. After all, ‘poor sales’ and ‘low capacity utilization’ do not just drop from the sky unbidden, as if they were a natural calamity like a hurricane. The bust is the result of an artificial credit boom imploding, but nonetheless the administration’s massive fiscal deficit spending policy – which makes future equally massive increases in taxation an inevitability – clearly contributes to worsening the bust.

    For more details read:

    Regime Uncertainty http://www.acting-man.com/?p=3820








  39. Monday links: better burgers Abnormal Returns Says:



    July 12th, 2010 at 1:23 pm

    America’s big “pile of cash” is not the source of our economic problems.  (Big Picture,








  40. Brett Tibbitts Says:



    July 12th, 2010 at 1:54 pm

    Don’t you think it’s a little simplistic and naive to state that the reason corporations aren’t opening their wallets is completely due to the demand side?


    Why is it so hard for so many on this site to see that Obama’s initiatives are not conducive to increasing employment in this country? A stimulous bill that is more concerned with keeping state government union jobs than truly benefitting the entire country. A health care bill that is so convoluted that no one will ever figure it out. A finance bill that is the same. All you can really know is that your costs are going up as a business owner.


    Obama is more concerned about suing Arizona than creating jobs. This is his comfort zone.


    And to top it all off, Obama, Pelosi and Reid won’t even tell us what the tax structure will be next year – and ya think this has absolutely nothing to do with corporations’ refusing to open their wallets? Please.








  41. Corporate American’s $2 Tn Cash Pile–Let’s Kill Some Corporate Ass « Phil's Favorites – By Ilene Says:



    July 12th, 2010 at 2:17 pm

    about how much America’s 500 largest NON-FINANCIAL companies have on their books.  This is up about $500,000,000,000 from last year as 2010 has been very, very good for corporate








  42. beaufou Says:



    July 12th, 2010 at 2:19 pm

    Isn’t the notion of a jobless recovery anti-business for those fearless CEOs.

    You would think that decently paid and employed people would boost sales, but by the time we get to any kind of normalcy, they’ll already have learned a lot about “productivity and efficiency” or how to profit a little more from human misery.

    And regulations and taxes are a bunch of cheap bullshit excuses they throw around to hide their disgusting behaviors; try giving more privileges to a bunch of free loading and bottom feeding aristocrats and see what happens, Louis the XVI can testify.

    Politicians and business elites are morally defeated, refusing to even imagine an alternative to their fundamentally flawed ways.


    Nice one Invictus.

    (thanks BR)








  43. DeDude Says:



    July 12th, 2010 at 2:23 pm

    TDL, yes they diverted their money from a petroleum based lights to electricity based light. Businesses can and will always try to improve their products relative to the competition. Those types of investments are still going on and they are fairly unaffected by the economic climate (with the exception of a credit freeze)– because they are essential for the survival of a company (either you or your competitors develop a better product and, therefore, increase market share). So you are making my point; because there are always (more) costumers for a better product ,investments in making a better product are still occurring. The thing that has failed is investment in making more of the current products (new factories to increase production). That will only pick up when consumers start spending more.








  44. impermanence Says:



    July 12th, 2010 at 2:30 pm

    The economy is sort of like a game of monopoly. When one player has almost all the money and all the property, the games is kind of over. The rest of the players can not continue to play until they accumulate enough $ which they can never seem to do because of all the fees, taxes, and other financials pitfalls.


    You always knew when you got to that point in the game when somebody would say, “it’s over.” Well, “it’s over” for real this time.








  45. Market Talk » Blog Archive » Links 7/12/2010 Says:



    July 12th, 2010 at 5:27 pm

    in America,” a recent Washington Post op-ed says. But Big Picture blogger Barry Ritholtz disagrees with that premise. “Since we know that personal consumption expenditures comprise 70% of GDP,








  46. jyc3 Says:



    July 12th, 2010 at 5:54 pm

    Invictus,


    I don’t necessarily disagree but a few questions come to mind:


    1. On the NFIB survey, do we have a breakdown on the types of companies in the survey? For instance, how many of them are in businesses that would benefit from higher capital spending? How many of them are in industries that are related, even peripherally, to real estate? Not knowing the composition of the survey group is a major problem in trying to draw a conclusion from the response. You can’t just assume that they only benefit from consumer spending.


    2. How much of the alleged spare capacity is now obsolete? We know that capacity and therefore capacity utilization is notoriously difficult to measure so I’d be careful depending on that data for anything.


    3. Are you saying that expectations of future policy play no role in the reluctance to spend? If not, how much is due to lack of demand and how much is due to “regime uncertainty” as it has been called elsewhere? If some of the reluctance to spend is due to policy uncertainty (or fear of higher taxes, more regulations, uncertainty about the ultimate cost of hiring a new employee due to implementation of health care reform, etc.) wouldn’t relieving some of that uncertainty be beneficial? Isn’t it possible that relieving that uncertainty would be enough to raise demand enough to get companies to invest?


    4. How much of the change in the rate of cash accumulation can be attributed to globalization and the reluctance of multinationals to repatriate profits and pay taxes? How much of this cash is sitting offshore avoiding taxes?


    I didn’t see the Zakaria piece and won’t read it. I’ve not found his analysis of foreign affairs or anything else particularly compelling. On the other hand just because the CEOs have a vested interest in putting this meme out there doesn’t mean there isn’t some truth to it. Not all industries have excess capacity right now and the ones that do, we might not want to stimulate (do we really want the construction industry expanding right now?). I think we could stimulate with monetary policy but I’m not sure we wouldn’t just get more malinvestment (as the Austrians call it) as we did with real estate the last time we tried that. The economy is not homogeneous and raw demand management may not help that much right now. It takes time for roofers to figure out how to do something else for a living. Having said that, supply side stimulation may not be much help either. It might be that we just need to tough this one out until the debt is paid down. Frankly, I think it would have been quicker if we had forced more defaults and made bank bondholders eat more losses rather than having the taxpayer pick up the tab for their lousy investment decisions. We compressed the amplitude of the recession with all these loss avoidance measures at the cost of extending the wavelength. There is no such thing as a free lunch.








  47. willid3 Says:



    July 12th, 2010 at 5:57 pm

    some how I don’t see that there are more than 2 real consumers. as any business (no matter what they do) either sells to government (or to some one else who does at some point) or to end consumers (or to some one who does). other wise they aren’t really a business. an example is jet engines. no consumer ever buys one do they? but if they don’t buy tickets on airlines, then a lot fewer of them would ever be made, and mostly they would be for military aircraft (bought by government). and air express mail would never have happened with out the airlines, or the post office (aka the government).

    so the real reason for the demand drought is that consumers have been so over whelmed by debt, caused by shrinking incomes, because their pay hasn’t kept up with inflation in a decade, and only easy credit papers over this, in the last decade








  48. mathman Says:



    July 12th, 2010 at 6:21 pm

    This is complete bullshit. The entire global economy is crashing and we all pretend it’s just fine. Anyone who thinks wealth comes from spinning the Wall Street lottery wheel while the Fed backs it up with round the clock printing (to cover the whole fraudulent system up) is delusional. It’s over. Those paper notes you and i have are glorified scrip and will become ever more worthless as time goes on. The entire economic system on which all this supposed wealth derives has a fatal flaw – that the environment from which is obtained all the raw materials for everything we do – has never been factored in to the costs and all too soon we’re going to pay the real price.








  49. beaufou Says:



    July 12th, 2010 at 6:37 pm

    There Invictus, there are more anti-business people in Brussels.


    http://www.eact.eu/

    European Association of Corporate Treasurers


    This fine group of gentlemen are threatening to outsource jobs if derivatives regulations are voted in Europe.

    Apparently regulations would cause the next crisis, just like no regulations didn’t cause the last one.








  50. Invictus Says:



    July 12th, 2010 at 6:56 pm

    @jyc3


    You ask many good, thoughtful questions, and I do not pretend to have all the answers. Not by a longshot (except perhaps to #1, which I could probably get from the NFIB).


    :-)


    My point here was to suggest that the equation: Corporate Cash at Record High = Obama anti-business is a flawed one, and to exhibit as best I could why that is the case. And I hate seeing the media allowing itself to be blatantly used.








  51. Invictus Says:



    July 12th, 2010 at 7:20 pm

    @antisthenes


    Sure, PCE is ~70% of GDP – -but only because GDP is largely defined to capture end consumption in the first place!


    Could you support or elaborate on this? As to the rest of your rebuttal I would, as always, ask for some evidence to support your claims, just as I provided some evidence to support mine.








  52. Invictus Says:



    July 12th, 2010 at 8:12 pm

    @All


    I appreciate the commentary here and the insight both for and against the position I’ve laid out.


    This piece was picked up over at Business Insider, where some of the responses serve to highlight what’s wrong with the discourse in our country today. Herewith three examples of the fact-based, data-driven “responses” to my post:


    There goes Barry shilling for Obama again. According to Barry, everything has been absolutely fabulous since Obama has come into office. I don;t understand why anyone would risk their reputation defending Obama.


    And


    Obama’s radical socialism is the reason I am not spending.


    My personal fave:


    Businesses aren’t spending their cash for two reasons


    1) Fear and uncertainty due to a marxist ‘nationalizer’ acting like a spoiled dictator in the White House.








  53. Sonic Charmer Says:



    July 12th, 2010 at 8:23 pm

    Invictus,


    Far as I could see, you didn’t respond to my question in Comment #1. To rephrase: Why are the two claims ‘businesses aren’t spending due to economic/political uncertainty/instability’ and ‘consumers aren’t demanding’ deemed mutually exclusive? Why is the latter supposed to be some sort of rebuttal to the former?


    To state it explicitly: Couldn’t the reason for the lack of demand among consumers be exactly the same reason business leaders are giving – namely, economic/political uncertainty/instability?


    In what sense does your post and its claim about consumer demand contradict what the business leaders are reported to have said about Obama’s effect on the economic situation?








  54. Invictus Says:



    July 12th, 2010 at 8:46 pm

    @Sonic Charmer


    There’s no way I can see and respond to every comment put up in response to something I post. Just not gonna happen. I do the best I can, but on what Barry pays me it just won’t fly. (Note to BR: We gotta talk raise soon.)


    That said, the answer to your question is, in my opinion, “no.” Consumers are hunkered down — and not “demanding” goods and services — because of the ongoing deleveraging that began several quarters ago and has some time to run. The era of frugality we’ve entered will be with us for some time to come.


    Businesses have been hoarding cash for a while — see the quote in my post from Kevin Warsh from 2006. Was there economic/political uncertainty/instability then? Clearly not, yet liquid asset levels continued to rise.


    Here’s another on-point comment from Richard Eskow’s column at HuffPo: “Here’s the bottom line: Any executive of a publicly-traded company who failed to spend the money needed to serve a ready-to-buy customer base would be violating her or his duty to stockholders and would probably be fired immediately.” In other words, if companies thought they could reap $1.50 by spending $1.00, the floodgates would be open. But they can’t, and that’s not Obama’s fault. The demand just isn’t there.


    One of the very, very few companies that seems to have found a formula to create its own demand is Apple, which I think we’d all agree does an exceptional job at marketing its products, in addition to making products that consumers crave. Beyond that, I just don’t know right now.








  55. philipat Says:



    July 12th, 2010 at 10:08 pm

    So the solution is to get Americans buying useless cr*p from China again? I was sure that this consuption-driven model had been shown to be susopect and unsustainable? Perhaps a little more thrift and better focused investments might actually represent a better way forward?








  56. toddie.g Says:



    July 12th, 2010 at 10:41 pm

    @Impermanence. I think you make a great metaphor using the game of Monopoly to today’s economy. With wealth so concentrated to such a low percentage of the population, unless they invest that wealth in capital formation with abandon then everything just stagnates while all the other monopoly players have nothing.


    By having designed an economy that concentrates wealth at the very top, it leaves a dearth of spending as the super wealthy can only spend so much. As Bud Fox said, “how many yachts can you waterski behind?” If much of the excess wealth isn’t invested in new business, then it just sits idle, adding nothing.


    Another point. I admire Bill Gates’s and Warren Buffett’s great philanthropy, but given the changing times wouldn’t they do the world (and the United States) a whole lot of good by investing some of that money in new businesses, creating jobs and giving opportunity to others, much of it right here at home, than their present initiatives ? The Gates Foundation has very well-meaning initiatives, but they were designed before the economic collapse. I suggest that major philanthropists go back to the drawing board, and come up with some fresh ideas as to how best deploy those funds.








  57. Sonic Charmer Says:



    July 13th, 2010 at 6:26 am

    Thanks for the reply. I recognize one can’t/wouldn’t reply to all comments (or even any, necessarily), yet you seemed active in this thread otherwise, so I thought I’d ask.


    I’m still unclear on how what you’re is meant to be a contradiction of the claim that uncertainty is sidelining capital. You assert that consumers aren’t demanding ‘because of deleveraging’. I tend to agree. You say we are in for frugality for some time to come. I also agree. But if there is uncertainty about the future (including economic and political), this would naturally tend to lengthen the deleveraging period and keep people ‘frugal’ more than otherwise. No?


    It still seems to me that the two phenomena go hand in hand, rather than contradict. So far from being alternative/mutually exclusive explanations of capital ‘hoarding’, actually they could be said to have a common cause, that cause being precisely the one claimed by the unnamed ‘business leaders’ quoted in the article you reference.


    best,








  58. Tony61 Says:



    July 13th, 2010 at 11:37 am

    Invictus– Whoa! Sorry for not reading the by-line. Yes, yeoman’s work on this entry; excellent graphs and charts. Please accept my apologies, but rest assured that to be mistaken for BR is no insult. Thanks again for the useful info.








  59. Corporate Cash Has Been Piling Up Since 1982 | The Big Picture Says:



    July 15th, 2010 at 5:50 am

    want to add to Invictus’ commentary taking Newsweek’s International editor, Fareed Zakaria, to task. There are three facts that I












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Stop Equating Monthly Payments with Affordability to Avoid Financial Trouble





Few of us can claim to not be guilty of at least a purchase or two where we said to ourselves "Only X per month? That's not bad at all!" Using the monthly payment to assess affordability, however, is a financial trap.

Photo by ell brown.


With the variety of ways people can acquire credit and spend money these days it's unsurprising that financial mistakes and misfortunes abound. Over at U.S. News & World Report they've put together a list of seven common financial mistakes. Among the mistakes they highlight is seeing the monthly bill as an indicator that something is in your budget.



Equating monthly payments with affordability: Far too many of us decide whether we can afford something based on whether we can manage the monthly payment. This is particularly true for homes, cars, and furniture. But just because we can handle a payment does not mean we can truly afford something. Monthly payments also ignore the true cost of ownership. A car, for example, costs a lot more than the monthly payment when you consider insurance, gas, repairs and maintenance. Instead of focusing on the monthly payment, separate needs from wants and evaluate how you might better use the money. If you still have consumer debt, for example, consider paying the debt off before buying something that will commit you to future monthly payments for potentially years to come.



Shifting your perspective away from "Do I have an extra $200 a month to spend on this thing?" to "Is spending $200 a month plus all the additional expenses on this thing the best use of my money?" will help you channel your money towards more productive uses. Check out the full list of money mistakes at the link below or share your best advice on easily corrected financial choices in the comments below.



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Fujifilm unveils F300EXR compact superzoom with Hybrid autofocus <b>...</b>

Fujifilm unveils F300EXR compact superzoom with Hybrid autofocus system: Fujifilm has unveiled the FinePix F300EXR which debuts a new Hybrid autofocus system that the company claims is as fast as that on DSLRs.

Liberal journalists suggest government shut down Fox <b>News</b> | The <b>...</b>

FILE - In this Jan. 22, 2009 file photo, President Barack Obama, center, stands near Fox News' Major Garrett, left, in the kitchen of the Brady press briefing room at the White House in Washington. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta) ...

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Panasonic officially announces DMC-LX5 premium compact: Panasonic has officially unveiled the DMC-LX5, successor to the popular LX3. The latest model features a revised sensor, longer zoom range and improved control layout without ...



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Tuesday, July 20, 2010

managing your personal finance

As you’ll read tomorrow (or Monday), I’ve entered a new phase in my life. After years of hard work and long hours building this blog (time that I’ve enjoyed), I’ve been shifting things around so that I have more free time. As a result, I’m going to have more time to devote to creating quality blog posts, instead of rushing around at the last minute looking for something to write about.


Because of this, it’s time yet again to take requests. I do this about once a year, and it’s a great way to get a feel for what GRS readers are interested in. I’d be grateful if you’d take the time to leave a comment below with topic suggestions or article requests. It doesn’t matter if we’ve covered the subject in the past. If you’d like me (or one of the other GRS staff) to write about it, let me know.


Have there been too many articles about credit cards? Too few articles about credit cards? Would you like to know more about individual savings accounts? Do you like the articles about the psychology of spending? Would it be helpful to have somebody come in to explain insurance concepts in plain English? Should I try to persuade my wife to share more of her recipes now and then? Let me know what you’d like to read about!


While you’re all providing feedback about the site, here are a few recent articles of note:


Over at The Simple Dollar, Trent and his readers had a thoughtful discussion about the obligations of wealth. “I think there is some inherent distrust of the rich in the mainstream of American society,” Trent writes as he describes how a wealthy person can keep from alienating his friends. There’s so much to say about this topic; I’m tempted to write an entire article about it.


GRS reader Steven writes a blog called Hundred Goals, which is about achieving your goals while managing your finances. After Sierra’s post this morning about travel, he dropped me a line to let me know that he has a recent article about how to have a great vacation.


Speaking of vacation, my pal Jason over at No Credit Needed spent time compiling day-use fees and free days for state parks across the United States. Handy page to bookmark!


And here’s more travel! At The Art of Non-Conformity, my good friend Chris Guillebeau has posted a beginner’s guide to travel hacking. I’ve been asking him to share this info for a long time; now I’ve got to take responsibility to use the knowledge he’s shared.


Finally, I’ve been giving a lot of interviews lately. I’m much more comfortable with these than I used to be. (They used to scare me to death!) Some examples:



  • Colleen from The Frisky interviewed me about how to save money even when you’re living paycheck to paycheck. This is a tough quandary, something I’m asked about a lot.


  • In an interview with BeFrugal, I discuss frugality, happiness, and conscious spending. (Note: “the ballot” should be “the balance” — I must have mumbled.)


  • Jeff Rose at Good Financial Cents also interviewed me. This interview is very much about the process of writing a book, which may or may not interest you.


  • I also spoke with Beverly Harzog from Card Ratings. We chatted about credit cards, of course, but also about other aspects of personal finance.


  • Finally, USA Weekend has a short piece on how to give your 401(k) a midyear check, for which author Richard Eisenberg interviewed me back in May. This is a perfect example of how much work goes into even a small newspaper article. Eisenberg spent 20-30 minutes on the phone with me, and I’m sure he did the same with the other folks he quotes. Plus, I’ll bet he spent a lot of time writing. I wouldn’t be surprised if there were 4-6 hours in this small piece.


Okay, one last thing before I go. Tim pointed me to a two-year-old New York Times series about the debt trap, which includes an interactive infographic showing average household debt loads over the past century.


That’s enough links for today. Please do leave a comment with topic requests or other feedback. Meanwhile, it’s time for me to go do some yardwork…









As you’ll read tomorrow (or Monday), I’ve entered a new phase in my life. After years of hard work and long hours building this blog (time that I’ve enjoyed), I’ve been shifting things around so that I have more free time. As a result, I’m going to have more time to devote to creating quality blog posts, instead of rushing around at the last minute looking for something to write about.


Because of this, it’s time yet again to take requests. I do this about once a year, and it’s a great way to get a feel for what GRS readers are interested in. I’d be grateful if you’d take the time to leave a comment below with topic suggestions or article requests. It doesn’t matter if we’ve covered the subject in the past. If you’d like me (or one of the other GRS staff) to write about it, let me know.


Have there been too many articles about credit cards? Too few articles about credit cards? Would you like to know more about individual savings accounts? Do you like the articles about the psychology of spending? Would it be helpful to have somebody come in to explain insurance concepts in plain English? Should I try to persuade my wife to share more of her recipes now and then? Let me know what you’d like to read about!


While you’re all providing feedback about the site, here are a few recent articles of note:


Over at The Simple Dollar, Trent and his readers had a thoughtful discussion about the obligations of wealth. “I think there is some inherent distrust of the rich in the mainstream of American society,” Trent writes as he describes how a wealthy person can keep from alienating his friends. There’s so much to say about this topic; I’m tempted to write an entire article about it.


GRS reader Steven writes a blog called Hundred Goals, which is about achieving your goals while managing your finances. After Sierra’s post this morning about travel, he dropped me a line to let me know that he has a recent article about how to have a great vacation.


Speaking of vacation, my pal Jason over at No Credit Needed spent time compiling day-use fees and free days for state parks across the United States. Handy page to bookmark!


And here’s more travel! At The Art of Non-Conformity, my good friend Chris Guillebeau has posted a beginner’s guide to travel hacking. I’ve been asking him to share this info for a long time; now I’ve got to take responsibility to use the knowledge he’s shared.


Finally, I’ve been giving a lot of interviews lately. I’m much more comfortable with these than I used to be. (They used to scare me to death!) Some examples:



  • Colleen from The Frisky interviewed me about how to save money even when you’re living paycheck to paycheck. This is a tough quandary, something I’m asked about a lot.


  • In an interview with BeFrugal, I discuss frugality, happiness, and conscious spending. (Note: “the ballot” should be “the balance” — I must have mumbled.)


  • Jeff Rose at Good Financial Cents also interviewed me. This interview is very much about the process of writing a book, which may or may not interest you.


  • I also spoke with Beverly Harzog from Card Ratings. We chatted about credit cards, of course, but also about other aspects of personal finance.


  • Finally, USA Weekend has a short piece on how to give your 401(k) a midyear check, for which author Richard Eisenberg interviewed me back in May. This is a perfect example of how much work goes into even a small newspaper article. Eisenberg spent 20-30 minutes on the phone with me, and I’m sure he did the same with the other folks he quotes. Plus, I’ll bet he spent a lot of time writing. I wouldn’t be surprised if there were 4-6 hours in this small piece.


Okay, one last thing before I go. Tim pointed me to a two-year-old New York Times series about the debt trap, which includes an interactive infographic showing average household debt loads over the past century.


That’s enough links for today. Please do leave a comment with topic requests or other feedback. Meanwhile, it’s time for me to go do some yardwork…










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Many of us have our feet firmly planted on the treadmills of life - pursuing careers, running homes and living busy lives. Our lives have become cluttered with so much activity that it's no surprise many women today are carrying around with them emotional baggage.

Wondering what I mean by emotional baggage? Well, after working with women for a decade, I have discovered that these come in various forms such as unresolved issues of the past (e.g. a traumatic childhood, failed relationships, etc), unmet needs, negative emotions (e.g. low self esteem, fear, etc), and the like. Emotional baggage also accumulates when you find yourself emotionally battered, wounded and scarred by life all the while carrying on, business as usual, with your mask firmly in place. After all, it's not cool to have your business known by all on sundry. Moreover, who can the highflying female be utterly real with? Hence the 'real' you takes a backseat whilst you pretend being someone you are not. I guess the true test comes when the curtains fall and you have quit performing for the day. You take off your mask off and are promptly confronted with the issues you have neatly tucked away behind your mask (e.g. your success, personality, clothing, roles/responsibilities, etc). Ask me how I know this too well! Let's just say it was a combination of my personal experiences as well as my professional experience as a life coach.

As if things weren't bad enough, we live in a world that places a heavy emphasis on our outward parts (e.g. appearance, accomplishments, etc) whilst overlooking the rest of our being. This means we often invest little or no time nurturing or even dealing with our inner selves. Hence, it's really no surprise that many of us are carrying around our issues, hurts and pains of yesterdays and yesteryears. Over the years, I have come to observe the result of this in that we appear to evolve into a lopsided individual that I term female hybrid. The female hybrid is an unauthentic, pale version of the original woman God had in mind when He created her. Her emotional baggage drives her to precarious attitudes, beliefs and behaviours that, in the end, hinder the full expressions of her capabilities and uniqueness (to say the least). So far, I have identified ten different types of female hybrids in my book, Overcoming Emotional Baggage: A Woman's Guide To Living The Abundant Life (Milestones International Publishers, 2006 - ISBN: 0-924748-73-7) that you will find intriguing, if not revealing, of the woman you might have become over time. Female hybrids display a raft of mindsets and behaviours that propagate their issues. On the surface, she may even seem all that but beware of what lurks beneath the surface.

The problem with being a female hybrid is that there is a lot of inner turmoil. She is constantly trying to compensate for the baggage she is carrying around. Not knowing how to effectively deal with these, many female hybrids find themselves caught in the traps of compulsive, impulsive or addictive behaviours (to mention a few). After all, these appear to quieten the storms raging within - though often short lived. Deep down, their desire is simply to bring about restoration in their souls and having the emotional freedom to live the life they truly desire. The problem with these short-lived solutions is that they have a nasty habit of propelling the real issue and causing further problems down the line (e.g. issues with weight, health, money, relationships, etc).

So the next time you feel the need to 'comfort eat', indulge in retail therapy or any other behaviour to make yourself feel better, ask yourself what the REAL issue is. Reflect on why you think and/or behave in certain ways? And please, don't fall into the trap of thinking, "this is the way I am!" or "I'm doing well in my career/business etc, hence I must be ok". These are the perceptions that keep many of us bound for far too long. And just in case you may be wondering...you weren't created that way neither! Mindsets such as these keep you in denial or in perpetual hiding as you keep brushing your issues under the carpet - hoping it would simply disappear some day. The simple the truth of the matter is that things will get worse unless you deal with them. There comes a time when you will have to accept that this journey called 'life' may bring about some challenging, perturbing or even traumatic situations. That's just life. However, a smart woman, serious about succeeding in life, recognises the importance of effectively identifying and dealing with these situations when they arise so they don't impact any areas of their lives or the lives of those around them.

So maybe you suspect you may have become a member of the female hybrid club. Don't worry. All hope is not lost. I suggest you identify and confront your issues. And if necessary, get the help you need from the right places. Don't just suffer in silence and let your emotional baggage eat away the core of you. Take action today and start living the abundant you deserve to live. To help you on your journey to emotional freedom, below are some powerful life changes to consider:

1. Slow Down: Our fast paced lifestyle is the number one culprit to the proliferation of the female hybrid. Constantly being on the go gives you little or no time to focus inwardly.

2. Get Your Life Balanced: Get a healthy balance between your work and personal life. Failing to do this will surely grant you a lifetime membership in the female hybrid club.

3. Reflect Daily: Schedule some time each day to reflect on your day and/or what's going on in your life. If you stockpile your emotional junk, it will become a stumbling block in your life further down the line.

4. Develop Your Tripartite Being: As you are a woman made up of a spirit, soul and body, spend time developing all aspects of your self e.g. developing/renewing your relationship with God, reading books that will fortify your spirit and soul, etc.

5. Get Your Needs Met: Unmet needs are a huge contributing factor to the accumulation of emotional clutter. Therefore, identify what your needs are and get a healthy dose of them daily.





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Hyperlocal <b>News</b> Site Fwix Debuts Local Trend Search

Fwix, a news site that offers a stream of hyperlocal, realtime news by location, is launching a new portal today that aims to give anyone a real time view of what's happening in a location. You can access the new search portal here.

ASUS EP101TC Now Shipping with Android | Netbooknews - Netbooks <b>...</b>

Today the Netbook News team went down to the ASUS headquarters to hang out with the Eee Pad team, and we learned something that actually made us breath a sigh of relief. The EP101TC pad will dropping Windows CE and will be shipped with ...

Daily <b>News</b> Moving Downtown

The New York Daily News has signed a lease for new space in lower Manhattan and will leave its 450 W. 33rd St. headquarters for 4 New York Plaza next year, the paper's owner, Mort Zuckerman, announced Monday.


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