Conquering Nature: The Enviromental Legacy of Socialism in Cuba (Pitt Latin Amercian Studies) by Sergio Diaz-Briquets Buy used from: $13.99 |
Wednesday, February 4, 2009
Labour's Legacy Lingers like a Lefty Leper
Posted by Share Investor at 9:45 PM 0 comments
Labels: Labour's Legacy
Mark Weldon now in two minds about Carbon Trading
The announcement last week by Mark Weldon, CEO of the NZX, that they are going to sell their flash new carbon trading registry business TZ1 Registry to Markit, a global financial information services company, leaves the financial world more than just a little perplexed.
Mark has been banging on about his registry and how much potential for business and I guess profit that this new registry will have.
Then why sell the golden goose?
That is where Weldon either becomes the cleverest man in the world for flogging off this dead horse to a poor sucker, in this case Markit, or the biggest hypocrite New Zealand business has ever seen for turning his back on a growth opportunity akin to the second coming of the tulip bulb craze of the 1600s.
Most sensible people know that this carbon trading lark is based on a lie and eventually it will all come crashing down on itself and that is where Mark becomes a clever little bastard-ditching a no-hoper before it becomes a worthless millstone .
Payment will be made in Markit shares, currently worth around $NZ 60 million, so unfortunately this exposes the NZX to losses further down the line when carbon trading fails.
Lets hope Mark will be smart enough to see that coming and jump ship before that happens.
Mark Weldon's hypocrisy is clearly evident because he has fully backed this TZ1 carbon trading venture with all the rhetoric, pomp and circumstance and the so-called "science" that backs it up and is now leaving the registry services part of it behind.
NZX is left with the relatively insignificant TZ1 carbon trading division.
Prospective and current investors in the New Zealand Stock Exchange [NZX.NZ] will be left wondering, does Mark Weldon believe in the carbon trading business or is he just taking advantage of the ignorant and blind?
Lets hope it is the latter.
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c Share Investor 2009
Posted by Share Investor at 12:01 AM 0 comments
Labels: carbon trading, Mark Weldon, NZX, TZ1
Monday, February 2, 2009
Dipshit of the week: Bob Harvey
"MPs get a lifetime pension when they retire, yet when I finish I won’t get a thing, even though I’ve done 16 years in local government. It’s grossly unfair." stuff.co.nz
The fact that the world is in a financial crises seems to have passed him by but it is probably no surprise to most because he would have to get his head out of his arse to see what was going on in the real world.
Furthermore this evil, greedy little lefty doesn't think his massive growing staff at the council should limit their salaries this year like we are all having to.
Its "grossly unfair"?
Yes it is, Waitakere ratepayers should get their money back.
Congratulations Bob, you are the inaugural Political Animal Dip shit of the week.
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c Political Animal 2009
Posted by Share Investor at 9:25 PM 1 comments
Labels: Dipshit of the week: Bob Harvey
Short-sighted critics of Warren Buffett wrong
There has been alot of criticism of Warren Buffett and his recent spending spree over the last 4 months or so and how that (so far) hasn't paid off.
One person in particular, Doug Kass, has said that Buffett's strategy is stale and This is the end of Warren .
Now Doug Kass has money riding on this by short-selling. He has bet that stocks will go down from here-and he is probably right-while Buffett has been buying up large for the long-term shot.
Everything from Burlington Northern Railways, BYD Auto, Goldman Sachs , General Electric and many more in between, Warren Buffett has been like a kid in one of his See's candy stores with 90% off the prices.
Now I am probably the wrong person to read if you wanted to read unbiased stuff about Warren Buffetts "buy good stocks for a good price and hold forever" strategy but I happen to agree with the great investor and follow that strategy as well-my portfolio is similarly down, well...duh!
Where I think Kass and other critics of Buffett have been shortsighted-and the word shortsighted is the key here-is that they haven't given Buffett's big bets a time to play out-the fact that Buffett has a long-term view seems to have completely escaped the critics!
Buffett's big spending spree began earlier in 2008 when he made deals related to the Mars/Wrigley Merger, the Anheuser-Busch/Inbev marriage and increases in his Kraft shareholdings, then continued past the September 2008 stockmarket meltdown when he made the quite audacious statement to anyone who would listen, in an Op-ed piece that he wrote in the New York Times, to "buy American" stocks, because he thought they were "cheap".
So far this has affected Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway stock price and his other company holdings in a serious way, he has lost billions in wealth as a result and all in a very short time-frame.
But, and it is a big but, Warren Buffett has faced similar stockmarket and economic meltdowns before, bet huge sums while stocks were affected by these meltdowns and always managed to come out smelling of roses and manifold more times wealthier.
After a 5 year absence from the stockmarket from 1969 because he thought stocks in that period were not cheap, he made a reappearance in 1974 just before the turn of a bear market, when he declared in a Forbes interview:
How do you contemplate the current stock market, we asked Warren Buffett, the sage of Omaha, Neb.
"Like an oversexed guy in a whorehouse," he shot back.
Buffett then proceeded to buy up cheap stocks in good companies like he had some kind of billionaire fever. He did it again after the 1987 crash and after the late 1990s tech meltdown.
To be sure even Buffett himself has said the current economic and market situation is like an economic Pearl Harbour and we haven't witnessed anything like this since WW2, so he hasn't got his head completely up the far reaches of his vast wallet.
The only thing that worries me slightly about his recent behavior is that he has been uncharacteristically vocal, giving lots of interviews and making numerous public comments like he never has before.
In one recent interview with Susie Gharib from PBS Nightly Business Report (which incidentally runs on Auckland's Triangle TV at 4.30pm weekdays and is very good) Buffett answered this question from Susie and I would have to agree:
I mean what is your most important investment lesson?
WB: The most important investment lesson is to look at a stock as a piece of business not just some thing that jiggles up and down or that people recommend or people talk about earnings being up next quarter, something like that, but to look at it as a business and evaluate it as a business. If you don’t know enough to evaluate it as a business you don’t know enough to buy it. And if you do know enough to evaluate it as a business and its selling cheap, you buy it and don’t worry about what its doing next week, next month or next year.
SG: So if we asked for your investment advice back in 1979 back when Nightly Business Report first got started, would it be any different than what you would say today?
WB: Not at all. If you’d ask the same questions, you’ve gotten the same answers.Indeed, time to be greedy when others are fearful.
I would bet on Buffett's side long-term. Lets see what Doug Kass has to say in 5 years.
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c Share Investor 2009
Posted by Share Investor at 10:25 AM 0 comments
Labels: Buffett buying big, Doug Kass, Susie Gharib, warren buffett