The Big Picture |
- How Changes in Immigration Policy Might Affect the Federal Budget
- When Does a Central Bank’s Balance Sheet Require Fiscal Support?
- White House: Fox Is Not a News Organization
- Apple’s Q Reveals the Perils of Earnings Predictions
- The Year in VIX and Volatility
- 10 Wednesday AM Reads
- Spectrum of Pain from Oil Price Decline
How Changes in Immigration Policy Might Affect the Federal Budget Posted: 29 Jan 2015 02:00 AM PST |
When Does a Central Bank’s Balance Sheet Require Fiscal Support? Posted: 29 Jan 2015 02:00 AM PST
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White House: Fox Is Not a News Organization Posted: 28 Jan 2015 05:00 PM PST Shepard Smith explains:
This is pretty hilarious, because its true. My solution was somewhat different: Rather than omit the word News, I put the word in quotes, thusly:
Its more aggressive, less passive. Kudos to Shepard Smith, for keeping it classy. And kudos to the White House, for speaking the truth.
Video after the jump
What happens to you when you are not a news organization |
Apple’s Q Reveals the Perils of Earnings Predictions Posted: 28 Jan 2015 12:00 PM PST Apple’s first-quarter earnings were blow-out numbers. Far beyond what anyone forecast, the figures show Apple arguably had the single-greatest quarterly performance in U.S. corporate history. A quick overview: Apple's net profit of $18 billion is an astonishing gain of 38 percent over the already-huge $13.1 billion in the same quarter last year. (So much for the law of large numbers.) Earnings per share rose 48 percent on revenue of $74.6 billion, up a staggering 30 percent. How did Apple rack up such gigantic sales numbers? It begins with the company's flagship product, the iPhone. It sold an astonishing 74.5 million of them in the quarter, a gain of 46 percent from the same quarter a year earlier. What’s more, the phones sold for an average of $687. (The Wall Street Journal calculated that Apple sold 34,000 phones an hour, 24/7.) Revenue in China rose 70 percent to $16.1 billion, making it Apple's third-largest market by sales, after the U.S. and Europe. In the near future, China will probably overtake Europe as Apple's second-biggest market. At the risk of extrapolating to infinity, it isn’t hard to imagine the day when China also surpasses the U.S. as Apple's biggest market. The rest of the numbers were, by all accounts, stupendous, enormous, mind-blowing, record-breaking. Yet it seems analysts were, once again, blindsided by the data. How is it even remotely possible that Wall Street analysts have no idea what the biggest company in the world is doing?
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The Year in VIX and Volatility Posted: 28 Jan 2015 09:00 AM PST Terrific graphic from Bill Luby at VIX and More looking at the various potential drivers of volatility:
click for monster chart
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Posted: 28 Jan 2015 05:30 AM PST We survived the snowpacalypse, with both electricity and internet access intact. Hence, our free range morning train reads:
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Spectrum of Pain from Oil Price Decline Posted: 28 Jan 2015 03:30 AM PST With the price of crude oil plummeting, why some countries are faring much better than others. Oil Prices' 'Spectrum of Pain' |
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