The Big Picture |
- Military Waste and Fraud Are the Main Cause of Our Problems
- Open Thread: What Value is the Financial Media?
- 10 Thursday PM Reads
- (Paid) Intern Wanted!
- US Employees Furloughed During Shutdown (Interactive)
- S&P 500 at Inflection Points
- 10 Thursday AM Reads
- Melt Up, Government Shut Down / Debt Ceiling Deal Edition?
| Military Waste and Fraud Are the Main Cause of Our Problems Posted: 10 Oct 2013 10:30 PM PDT Military Waste and Fraud Continue In the Middle of the Government Shutdown
Regular readers know that the government shutdown is caused by bad policies supported by both parties, including out-of-control military boondoggles. We wouldn't be in this crisis of hitting the debt ceiling in the first place if we hadn't spent so much money on unnecessary wars … which are horrible for the economy. But it goes far beyond actual fighting. We could easily slash the military and security budget without reducing our national security. For example, homeland security agencies wasted money on seminars like "Did Jesus Die for Klingons Too?" and training for a "zombie apocalypse" instead of actually focusing on anti-terror efforts. Republican Senator Tom Coburn notes that the Department of Defense can reduce $67.9 billion over 10 years by eliminating the non-defense programs that have found their way into the budget for the Department of Defense. BusinessWeek and Bloomberg point out that we could slash military spending without harming our national security. Specifically, we could slash boondoggles that even the generals don't want:
BusinessWeek also notes that redundancy wastes a lot of money:
BusinessWeek provides a list of cost-cutting measures which will not undermine national security. American Conservative does the same. So why doesn't Congress trim the fat? Because politicians want to bring home the pork. As BusinessWeek notes:
American Conservative reports:
Of course, this just scratches the surface. In reality, the military wastes and "loses" (cough) trillions of dollars. See this, this, this, this, this, this, this, this, this, this, this and this. The former Secretary of Defense acknowledged in May 2012 that the DOD "is the only major federal agency that cannot pass an audit today." The Pentagon will not be ready for an audit for another five years, according to Panetta. Billions In Wasted Defense Spending Are Continuing During Government ShutdownIf you assume that the waste in defense spending has stopped during the government shutdown, you'd be wrong. Top military and constitutional law expert Jonathan Turley noted yesterday:
(Even in the middle of the government shutdown, the CIA is ramping up covert training program for Syrian rebels.) Ralph Nader points out this week:
And former FBI translator Sibel Edmonds wrote yesterday:
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| Open Thread: What Value is the Financial Media? Posted: 10 Oct 2013 04:10 PM PDT During the TBP conference this week, several of the commentators noted how little wisdom gets disseminated by the financial press. As we noted this morning, we see lots of noise, and very little signal. Indeed, that has been a theme in my press criticism — too much useless filler. So, what us your beef about the financial press? TV, radio, newspapers, magazines, blogs — what works and what doesn’t? I don’t want only bashing — We know there is lots of junk — but what is worthwhile? (I am working on a column, and this is my open source research) ~~~ What say ye?
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| Posted: 10 Oct 2013 01:30 PM PDT My afternoon train reading:
What are you reading? |
| Posted: 10 Oct 2013 01:00 PM PDT We have an opening for a paid intern position. The ideal candidate will be familiar with WordPress and Instapaper, and have lots of experience with blog posting. (Excel not required but a plus). Strong writing & editing skills a must. Early riser is required — work is at all hours throughout the day but starts unGodly early. Send info to Kris -@- Ritholtz Wealth.com, with Subject line Intern!
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| US Employees Furloughed During Shutdown (Interactive) Posted: 10 Oct 2013 11:30 AM PDT click for interactive tool |
| Posted: 10 Oct 2013 09:00 AM PDT click for ginormous chart
Its time for the update of one of our favorite massive charts, via the quarterly Market Insights JPM puts out. (Yeah, I criticize Dimon but that doesn’t mean he doesn’t have some insightful people working for him). As you can see, we are about 3 S&P points below where the quarter ended, despite all of the noise. This is why I suggest investors tuen out the short term, and focus on the longer term trends.
(You can download the full JPM Guide to Markets here). |
| Posted: 10 Oct 2013 07:00 AM PDT My morning reading:
What are you reading?
Treeing the full faith and credit |
| Melt Up, Government Shut Down / Debt Ceiling Deal Edition? Posted: 10 Oct 2013 04:31 AM PDT
A touchstone of my investing philosophy is the importance of investors tuning out what is unimportant. Lose the News is the counter-intuitive way I first expressed this idea back in 2005. However, since then, I have repeated several variations on this theme: Whether its The Price of Paying Attention or advising people to Avoid the Noise or simply counseling investors to focus on What They Can Control, these overall themes have been very consistent. The signal to noise ratio as of late has been nearly overwhelming — all noise, no signal — which, in no particular order, includes: Syria as the potential flashpoint, then the Summers/Yellen horse race, followed by more European Bank problems, then the US political situation, yet another dust up between Greece and Germany, then the Tea Party war on ObamaCare, no wait government shutdown, no wait the debt ceiling, grabbing center stage. While the market’s up/down, back and forth make it appear over the short term that these things are oh so important, the simple reality is they are utterly meaningless. There is ALWAYS going to be some crisis, some news event, some MOST IMPORTANT THING IN THE WORLD RIGHT NOW, and always has. I am here to tell you that all of these “earth shattering events” each end up being tears in the rain — a momentary emotional blip of little consequence, mostly international back fence gossip, with next to no significance to the overall global economy. They are all noise, no signal, at least in terms of what matters to the intelligent investor’s perspective. As an example, consider the simple truth that despite this immense distraction, we are spitting distance from all times highs on S&P500. So much for trading the macro news flow. This theme was repeated by lots of very smart and insightful people at our conference this week. Regulars on FinTV admit how unimportant most of what goes on air actually is (I call it useless filler); our flawed cognitive views leads us to putting way too much emphasis on these unimportant issues,, especially when they are more recent. The charming and delightful Art Cashin even told the lesson he learned early in his career as to why a reports of a nuclear attack offered the smart trader a buying opportunity. Thus, while I am not suggesting we are past whatever idiocy the jackals in Washington DC have dreampt up — and there always exists the possibility it all comes tumbling down in a disastrous Mad Max canned food and bottled water dystopia — I doubt thats the likely outcome. Indeed, investing history has taught those who pay attention to such things, however counter-intuitive it may seem, that tuning out the noise, and staying with the higher probability, most likely outcome is the way to go. I suggest you consider doing the same. Remember, the end of the world bet has been a money loser since the beginning of time.
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