The Big Picture |
- Corruption Threatens BRIC Giants
- The Price of ‘Attention Unworthies’ . . . ?
- Global Trend Indicators
- Measuring our way to future success
- Non-Political Lessons from 2012 Election
- 10 Sunday Reads
| Corruption Threatens BRIC Giants Posted: 11 Nov 2012 10:30 PM PST Corruption Threatens to Bring Down China and Russia
We pointed out last year that China is plagued by corruption and phony bookkeeping. Reuters notes:
We have no idea whether Wen Jiabao's family really has $2.7 billion stashed away. But given that the family of Egyptian dictator Mubarak holds $40-70 billion, and Libya's Moammar Gaddafi was worth$200 billion, it is within the realm of possibility. Russia is facing its own corruption problems:
University World News noted in 2010:
Radio Free Europe reported in 2009:
And Time reported last year:
Of course Putin doesn't want real reform … instead, the man wants to expand his current net worth of$40 billion. |
| The Price of ‘Attention Unworthies’ . . . ? Posted: 11 Nov 2012 03:00 PM PST While I was working on my collection of lessons for my WaPo column this week, I ended up finding all manner of interesting, amusing but ultimately unusable items. Some of these were ironic and funny and snarly, but I did not want the column to be “The Schadenfreude Chronicles.” Rather, I wanted to find real lessons that were usable for investor and business types. However, lots of this stuff was too good to just throw away. So as a wrap up to this week’s theme of Lessons of the election, I’d like to point out some of the folks who distinguished themselves, but mostly in the wrong way. As per last weekend’s discussion on info sources, these are the methodologies, organizations, and yes, people whom you should quarantine as dangerous to your wealth. They have poor long term track records, (pretty awful is a fair descriptor). Their approaches favor wants and hope over data, confirmation bias over mathematics, and cognitive dissonance over objective reality. If you can recognize this sort of foolishness in real time, you can avoid allowing these folks to help you lose money. Perhaps we can start giving out awards for this kinda stuff: ~~~ • Big Money Loser (Institutional): Wall Street Wall Street bet heavily on a Romney victory, and lost. Not only is Dodd Frank and the Volcker rule going to be a thorn in their paw for the foreseeable future, but Senator Elect Elizabeth Warren is going to haunt them for at least 6 years. Bonus stupidity: Hasn’t anyone on Wall Street ever heard of Hedging?
-Honorable Mention: Intrade, whose numbers were consistently less accurate than Betfair and other prediction markets. I don’t know why, but they were much less accurate, and not nearly as reliable as other sites. ~~~ • Big Money Loser, Super Pac edition: American Crossroads Karl Rove’s Superpac spent over $300 million dollars — net results were a loss of 2 senate seats, 1 house seat — oh, and the Presidency. Whoever gives this guy money might as well burn the cash for kindling.
Source: @bendimiero ~~~ • The Stating the Obvious Award: XKCD: Math Matters
The delightful nerd comic xkcd tickled my funny bone with this instant classic: ~~~ • Innumeracy Award for most Mathematically Incompetent: UnskewedPolls.com I dont know if they simply made up their own numbers of just cherry picked what they liked (Selection Bias, Confirmation Bias). Nearly every data point they ran was wrong. This screenshot shows their Ohio exit polling data — and it was simply delusional:
~~~ • The ‘Not Nate Silver’ but Close Award: Votamatic Every one has been talking about 538, but Simon Jackson’s Votamatic predicted 91.4% Chance Obama Wins with 332 electoral college votes.
Nicely done! ~~~ • Right Wing Can’t Be Wrong All the Time Award: While much of the conservative movement were happily living in their artificial bubble, one right wing pundit made the early call in February 2011: “Ann Coulter says that if we don't run Chris Christie for President, then Romney will win the nomination and we'll lose in 2012.” I have to chalk this one up to luck, as she is so often wrong about, well practically everything else she ever writes, speaks or I assume, thinks. Bonus: Bruce Bartlett nailed it as well — Why Romney Can’t Beat Obama in 2012 — but since he is rational and not criminally insane, its less notable. ~~~ • Most Notable Election Jackass: Donald Trump The Donald’s election night meltdown was consistent with his persona of a self promotional blowhard assclown. Brian Williams summed up the Tweets, by broadcasting “Donald Trump, who has driven well past the last exit to relevance and veered into something closer to irresponsible here is Tweeting tonight.”
A fledgling movement has begun — trying to get his horrific MensWear removed from Macy*s and a boycott of his inane show on NBC. And while I never followed him, today, I blocked @realDonaldTrump — It felt great! Trump: The only business person who has managed to lose money in both NYC Real Estate AND casinos is now well past his Sell By Date. ~~~
My advice to you goes well beyond politics: It does not matter if they are left, right center or far right — note who has a process that works, and bookmark their site. Note who does not, and throw da bums out. These are the money losers, and The Price of Paying Attention to them is simply too great. Delete the bookmark, quarantine them and move on. Your portfolio will thank you . . .
Previously: Information Triage (April 2011) |
| Posted: 11 Nov 2012 12:05 PM PST |
| Measuring our way to future success Posted: 11 Nov 2012 09:30 AM PST Are our blinders keeping us from seeing new opportunities, and / or following our customers as they move on? The presentation looks at how we measure online activities, and if this is limiting our perspective.
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| Non-Political Lessons from 2012 Election Posted: 11 Nov 2012 07:00 AM PST > On Wednesday, I jotted down a few takeaways from the election that were applicable to investors and people running businesses. Really, it was for any one with an interest in learning from the misstep of others. I liked the idea so much I decided to expand it for my Sunday Washington Post Business Section column. It was not about schadenfreude; rather, this is an inexpensive form of tuition, letting other organizations make strategic, cognitive and tactical errors that you can learn from. These include both of the candidates, the media, the consultants, the GOP primary candidates, some of the major memes of the campaign, a bit of philosophy, and a few words about money. Called simply Lessons from 2012 Election, it discusses the various non-political lessons that can be derived from the entire season and applied to investors and business leaders. Here are the 10 :
Note the focus is Non-Political lessons; I will let the politicos handle the specific getting elected related takeaways themselves. > I still cannot access the print version, so if anyone can send me a PDF of G6, it would be appreciated. I’d like to see what the Post did with the dead tree version of it.>
Source: |
| Posted: 11 Nov 2012 04:30 AM PST Some pre-football, early morning reads for your Sunday pleasure:
What are you reading?
Cracks in Fortress Balance Sheets Source: WSJ |
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