The Big Picture |
- Mutual Assistance Between Federal Reserve Banks: 1913-1960
- Big Banks Want Power to Declare Cyber War
- 10 Tuesday PM Reads
- Media Appearance: Bloomberg TV Trish Regan (3:00 – 4:00 pm)
- How Expensive Are Stocks? (Not Terribly)
- iPhone 6—not the iWatch—is Apple’s biggest launch this year
- 10 Tuesday AM Reads
- Coming July 12: Masters in Business on Bloomberg Radio
- Corporate America = UnAmerican
- From Netscape to Alibaba
| Mutual Assistance Between Federal Reserve Banks: 1913-1960 Posted: 09 Jul 2014 02:00 AM PDT |
| Big Banks Want Power to Declare Cyber War Posted: 08 Jul 2014 10:30 PM PDT Merger of Big Banks and National Security Power … What Could Possibly Go Wrong?Bloomberg reports:
Congressman Grayson tweets:
There is cause for concern, given the following context:
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| Posted: 08 Jul 2014 01:30 PM PDT My afternoon train reads:
What are you reading?
S&P 500 Earnings Inflation-Adjusted
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| Media Appearance: Bloomberg TV Trish Regan (3:00 – 4:00 pm) Posted: 08 Jul 2014 12:00 PM PDT I will be guest hosting with the lovely Trish Regan at Bloomberg TV from 3:00 pm to 4:00 pm on Street Smart. We will talk Bull market rallies, corrections, the Fed and valuation. Should be lots of fun — Check it out at their live streamer on TV.
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| How Expensive Are Stocks? (Not Terribly) Posted: 08 Jul 2014 11:15 AM PDT cick for bigger chart JPMorgan Chase & Co.’s latest quarterly chart book (you can download it here) takes issue with those conventions. As you can see from the chart above, U.S. equity prices closely match their long-term average price-to-earnings ratio of 15.5. That's precisely at fair value if you are comparing it to the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index earnings-per-share average of analyst estimates for the next 12 months. Continues here |
| iPhone 6—not the iWatch—is Apple’s biggest launch this year Posted: 08 Jul 2014 09:30 AM PDT
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| Posted: 08 Jul 2014 06:30 AM PDT My early morning reads (continues here):
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| Coming July 12: Masters in Business on Bloomberg Radio Posted: 08 Jul 2014 04:30 AM PDT Over the past few weeks, I have been dropping hints about a new project I am working on with the folks at Bloomberg. Now that we have an official launch date, I can reveal the details to you. I have over the years, lamented about the state of media (see e.g., this, this and this). Rather than merely whine continuously about the state of the financial press, I wanted to do something about it. Last summer, I floated the following idea: Why not turn the usual Wall Street interviews upside down? Speak to the key people who are the source of the ideas that shape markets, drive portfolio management, influence the economy, and make the modern world of business and finance what it is today. My elevator pitch to the powers that be at Bloomberg was “Mark Maron’s WTF meets Charlie Rose, for finance.” Instead of focusing on the next 15 minutes, discover instead how they became who they were. Get to their philosophy, worldview, favorite books, mentors, etc. Oh, and no stock picks and no predictions. Instead, I want to focus on how the modern masters in business and finance got that way: Who and what were their influences? Who were their mentors? How did they get started, what odd or funny things shaped their careers? What helped to form their philosophies? How has the business of finance changed over their careers? A deep dive into the most fascinating characters in finance. Here is an interesting thing about Bloomberg LP: For a large and very successful organization, they are surprisingly entrepreneurial. Make a decent proposal, and they are happy to give you enough rope to hang yourself with. Which so far, we have. The show — which has the title Masters in Business – is half radio, half podcast. It is a weekly one-on-one interview, broadcast (repeatedly) each weekend. The first half of it is an hour of radio (about 32 minutes of record time in 4 segments). But the second half has no time restrictions at all. I didn’t want anyone to feel rushed or pressured to give a pithy answer, or time pressured. After the live-to-tape for broadcast radio is done, we just keep going. Let the recording just run, and see what happens. This led to some amazing and surprising results. Doubleline’s Jeff Gundlach tells wonderful stories in great details about his early days as a bond manager that are fabulous. Jim Chanos, Kynikos fund manager and wonderful raconteur, regaled us for hours with all great stuff. Former SEC Chair Arthur Levitt, Jr. is sharper at 83 then most of us ever were on our best day — and may just well be the finest Human Being I have ever met in my life. Rob Arnott is full of smart insights,James O’Shaugnessy’s career path is amazing, as is Jeff Saut’s and Michael Mauboussin’s. Sheila Bair is an utter delight. That’s the sort of folks who have already done the show. My goal is to speak to the 100+ most influential and important minds in finance over the next two years. The result will be an hour broadcast on Bloomberg Radio — 1130 AM in NYC and on Sirius XM nationally. It will be downloadable on Apple iTunes and on the Bloomberg Radio App. You can also stream it from Bloomberg.com, SoundCloud, the Bloomberg terminal, as well as here on this blog. The interviews I did last year with Ned Davis and Felix Zulauf were the inspiration for the show. Only these are live and in person, which creates a very different interaction. Our first 10 shows are now recorded and scheduled, and should broadcast as follows:
As you can see, its a killer line up. We have recorded 20 interviews so far, with the first one set to broadcast this weekend. Getting the nuances and timing of radio has been a learning process for me. It was much harder than I imagined, and I sucked much worse than I would have guessed at first. But eventually, you kind of figure out the timing, and it starts to come together. I improve a little each week as the show progresses. But my own suckitude matters little, as the guests were so awesome. It is simply killer stuff. I promise you the shows we recorded are great stuff. My bold forecast: This will become MUST LISTEN radio for anyone in the industry, as well as any serious investor. Check out the show. You will not be disappointed. |
| Corporate America = UnAmerican Posted: 08 Jul 2014 03:15 AM PDT Today’s must read comes to us from Fortune, where editor at large Allan Sloane rails against “Positively un-American tax dodges.” Its your must read for today.
Let’s see if the our elected representatives can manage to stop behaving like 10 year olds long enough to resolve this.
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| Posted: 08 Jul 2014 02:00 AM PDT
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