The Big Picture |
- Gauging the Momentum of the Labor Recovery
- Halloween Warning: Don’t Drink and Fly . . .
- 10 Thursday PM Reads
- How Do You Use Linked In? (Infographic)
- Corporate Profits After Tax
- 10 Thursday AM Reads
- Found Stock Certs: Spot the Selection Bias
| Gauging the Momentum of the Labor Recovery Posted: 01 Nov 2013 02:00 AM PDT |
| Halloween Warning: Don’t Drink and Fly . . . Posted: 31 Oct 2013 05:36 PM PDT |
| Posted: 31 Oct 2013 01:30 PM PDT My afternoon train reading:
What are you reading?
Changes in Global Prosperity |
| How Do You Use Linked In? (Infographic) Posted: 31 Oct 2013 11:30 AM PDT click for complete graphic See also 5 Clever Uses of LinkedIn
click for ginormous graphic
|
| Posted: 31 Oct 2013 08:30 AM PDT Billions of dollars, seasonally adjusted, after tax without inventory valuation (IVA) and capital consumption adjustments (CCAdj).
I have been trying to explain to some of my more Fed obsessed friends there are factors outside the central bank that matter also. One such factor is corporate profits. As the chart from the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis shows, after tax Corporate Profits are at all time highs. And while the inclination is to say this is driven exclusively by programs like QE and ZIRP, the pre-crisis profit picture was also very rosy. (Rates were very low than also). I am hard pressed to believe that corporate profits are due exclusively to ultra-low rates. There is no doubt that financing costs are lower, but that is offset by tightened credit. Demand for goods and services has been increasing only modestly. While private sector growth has been repsectable 3-4% — the public sector continues to be a net negative drag on growth. State and municpality layoffs also have the effect of depressing demand. The corporate sector is actually well positioned: Balance sheets are the cleanest in a long while. Companies are running very efficiently, with limited head count (we see evidence of this in stubbornly high unemployment rates). Productivity gains are hard to come by because productivity has risen so much over the past 20 years. Business Intelligence software is allowing firms to make changes on the fly — it used to take several quarters before enough intel could be gathered to shift manufacturing or supply chain decisions. It now happens in real time. ~~~ Yes, the Fed is a factor in high corproate profits — but its not the only factor. |
| Posted: 31 Oct 2013 06:00 AM PDT My early morning reads:
What are you reading?
US Budget deficit fell 37% so far in 2013 |
| Found Stock Certs: Spot the Selection Bias Posted: 31 Oct 2013 04:20 AM PDT This issue comes up every few years: Someone is rummaging about in their attic or basement (or less romantically, a safety deposit box), and they find some long forgotten stock certificates. I first noticed this as an issue with EMC more than a decade ago. A Massachussetts area man found a few certs that had appreciated somewhat:
I was reminded of that story this week when this one showed up in the Guardian:
These sorts of stories typically are used to extol the virtues of Buy & Hold investing, or Set & Forget portfolios. Why is this an example of Selection Bias? I am reminded of the Steely Dan song “Throw Back the Little Ones (and Pan-Fry the Big Ones)”. This method of collecting samples uses outliers — the Big Ones — the wildest and most improbable investing success stories to demonstrate their point. What you do not see are all of the Little Ones, the higher probability, more common versions of the found stock certificate. That narrative usually goes something like “Did you ever here of a company called First Amalgamated Something or Other?” These stories lack the sexiness and Wow! factor of improbably finding a few million dollars in your basement. Here are the headlines that you did not see — because no one shares this information, and due to the natural selection bias of them:
I bet for each one of the found millions story, there are 100 worthless unpublished stock cert tales. Steely Dan song after the jump . . .
Throw Back the Little Ones And Pan-Fry the Big Ones Lost in the Barrio I walk like an Injun [Chorus] Hot licks and rhetoric [Chorus] Done like a matador I pray for the weekend |
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