The Big Picture |
- Macro problems, micro solutions
- NSA Apologists Try to Smear Snowden
- 10 Midweek PM Reads
- What is the Best Asset Class in 2014 Going to Be?
- 10 Midweek AM Reads
- Google’s Nest Labs Acquisition is a Smart Defensive Move
- SNOLAB: In Pursuit of Dark Matter
| Macro problems, micro solutions Posted: 23 Jan 2014 02:00 AM PST |
| NSA Apologists Try to Smear Snowden Posted: 22 Jan 2014 07:30 PM PST NSA Apologists Try to Smear Snowden as a "Russian Spy" … Exactly Like Authorities Tried to Smear Daniel Ellsberg, Ben Franklin and Samuel Adams~~~ But Even the FBI and NSA Say There's No Evidence that Snowden Worked With Others~~~ While NSA apologists like Mike Rogers say that Snowden is a Russian spy, the New York Times observes:
The Freedom of the Press Foundation points out that the Nixon administration also tried to smear Daniel Ellsberg as a Russian spy:
Indeed, Founding Fathers Benjamin Franklin and Samuel Adams did exactly what Edward Snowden did … and were likewise labeled as traitors by the British government.
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| Posted: 22 Jan 2014 01:30 PM PST My afternoon train reads:
What are you reading?
Newbies Learn Ropes About Higher Rates From Old Hands
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| What is the Best Asset Class in 2014 Going to Be? Posted: 22 Jan 2014 10:00 AM PST Source: JP Morgan
Whenever anyone asks me about my favorite sector or market for the coming year, I like to show the table above. While not quite a quintillion-to-one bet, the table reveals what a challenge it is to consistently identify the best asset class for the coming year. No one seems to be able to do it regularly. The recognition of that truth hasn’t stopped anyone from trying, as noted in the Bloomberg News story earlier this week: Hedge Funds' Assets Increase 17% to Record $2.63 Trillion. Hence, the romancing of alpha continues even if it means forsaking beta.
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| Posted: 22 Jan 2014 06:47 AM PST Good snowy morning. Here are my weather-delayed commuting reading materials:
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| Google’s Nest Labs Acquisition is a Smart Defensive Move Posted: 22 Jan 2014 04:55 AM PST I have been thinking about Google's acquisition of Next Lab's last week for the eye-popping sum of $3.2 billion dollars. There have been numerous criticisms of the acquisition in terms of cost, with some chatter of this as evidence of a bubble in Silicon Valley. Perhaps it is worth considering this from a different perspective. If we look at some of the biggest tech errors of the past decade, we see a very specific risk arising from new technologies to existing companies. The two that come to mind are Blackberry ignoring the threat from touch screen smart phones (Apple iPhone) and Microsoft ignoring the tablet as a threat to their basic Windows/PC business (Apple iPad). Note that Google's Android acquisition allowed the company to be stay competitive with Apple's disruptive technologies – even as the two previous leaders fell dramatically from their prior number one spots. Android phones are ahead in market share (but not profitability) versus the iPhone; Android tablets are the default alternative to iPads. Blackberry saw its market share plummet. Microsoft is encountering a seismic shift in PC sales. |
| SNOLAB: In Pursuit of Dark Matter Posted: 22 Jan 2014 03:00 AM PST At the bottom of a nickel mine near Sudbury, Ontario, scientists at one of the world’s most sophisticated particle physics observatories are investigating one of the biggest mysteries of the cosmos: What is dark matter? Science correspondent Miles O’Brien helps to shed some light on the research at SNOLAB. Scientists search for understanding of dark matter in deep underground lab |
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