Author: Serkadis

  • What’s Going To Happen To Berkshire Hathaway When Warren Buffett Departs

     

    Alice Schroeder, Author, The Snowball: Warren Buffett and the Business of Life (3 min)

    • The future for Berkshire Hathaway
    • The Oracle will not step down and retire.  He is 79, however, and he freely admits he’s not going to live forever.
    • His successor has been chosen.
    • Unfortunately, Berkshire Hathaway sans Warren will probably be like Paul McCartney & Wings

    Produced By: Kamelia Angelova & William Wei

    More Alice Schroeder:
    – Warren Buffett’s Secrets To Success
    – How Warren Buffett Really Makes His Investment Decisions
    – ºThe Truth About Warren Buffett: He’s “Almost Like A Kid”

    More Video: TBI Calendar Click HERE >

    Join the conversation about this story »

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  • Morgan Stanley: What’s With USD’s Pathetic Move In Response To Dubai?

    Felix Salmon noted this weekend that the US dollar didn’t see much of a bounce from the latest turmoil, which is, perhaps, an ominous canary in the coalmine.

    In a new note, Morgan Stanley is observing the same thing:

    Is this the best the USD can do in the face of risk retrenchment?  While the USD responded very strongly to signs of financial market frictions and deleveraging among market participants in major economies during the summer of 2008 through March 2009, the USD has not seen a uniform
    trend following the news of a possible default by Dubai World, and rising concerns about sovereign risk more broadly. 

    Over the past week, the USD is stronger against some higher- yielding currencies such as AUD and NZD, but it is weaker against JPY and EUR. The mixed performance of the USD
    suggests that while investors may have scaled back risk somewhat following the recent developments, there is not yet a strong global safe-haven demand for US Treasuries; which is what usually propels the USD higher during periods of global risk aversion.  Investors seem to be interpreting recent
    events as discrete and idiosyncratic in nature, a view that we share.  As a result, we do not anticipate a broad-based USD rally in the wake of this hiccup in risk appetite.  Instead, it is notable that JPY, CHF and even EUR, are benefitting relatively more than the USD.

    Morgan appears to be hedging its bets a little bit. Is the lack of USD appreciation the result of the fact that it’s fading as the safe-haven of choice, or the fact that Dubai is no big deal.

    Given the relative calm in the market over the past several days, it would seem to be the latter.

    Join the conversation about this story »

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  • Menu Monday plus a Cookbook Giveaway

    How was everyone’s Thanksgiving? We had a slight mishap with our turkey – it sort of cooked way too long and dried out – but I discovered that turkey breast meat steamed in a covered container with a little water in the microwave tastes just fine covered with turkey gravy šŸ™‚Ā Ā  Even after having leftovers for lunch on Friday and turkey sandwiches for lunch yesterday, we STILL have a container full of mostly breast meat in the fridge, so dinner tonight is definitely being made with turkey!

    Monday – Turkey Divan Casserole, tossed salad, crescent rolls

    Tuesday – Sloppy Joes, corn, sliced apples

    Wednesday – Slow Cooker Pork Loin Roast with Gravy (pork loin’s on sale at Meijer, and I have most of these ingredients already!), carrots, potatoes

    Thursday – Spaghetti, Garlic bread, corn

    Friday – Pizza Night

    Saturday – Leftovers

    Sunday – not planned yet

    *************************************************

    COOKBOOK GIVEAWAY!

    After the New Orleans neighborhoods David Guas grew up in were nearly erased by Hurricane Katrina, he knew he needed to record and preserve not only the desserts of his family and region, but his memories as well especially for his two young sons. DamGoodSweet: Desserts to Satisfy Your Sweet Tooth, New Orleans Style is part dessert cookbook, part travelogue and really shines with amazing food photography, wonderful stories of New Orleans and great recipes like Buttermilk Beignets and handmade Chocolate Pralines.

    David wants to celebrate his book with bloggers and foodies that have supported him the most, and so he has created ā€œSweet Swapā€, an ON-LINE LIVE CHAT for bakers, bloggers and all types of folk to discuss recipes they love, questions or troubles they have in the kitchen or even just to say hello. ā€œSweet Swapā€ will be held every Sunday morning from 9:30am until 10:30am EST beginning on November 1st until the end of December on damgoodsweet.com. Just click on the red velvet cake and chat away.

    WIN IT: David is generously offering three MomCooks readers a copy of DamGoodSweet in this giveaway! To enter, leave a comment on this post by 12:00 PM EST on Tuesday, December 8th. Open to U.S. addresses only.

    BONUS ENTRIES: Earn additional entries after you leave your main entry by doing any of the following-

    • Follow MomCooks on Twitter and Tweet the giveaway. Leave the link to your tweet in a comment. You can do this once per day, leave a separate comment for each.
    • Subscribe to MomCooks’ feed, in a reader or by email. Tell me in your comment which way you subscribed.
    • Grab my badge and post it on your site or add MomCooks to your blogroll. Leave a comment with your URL.
    • Stumble the post, vote for it on digg or Kirtsy, or add it to any other social bookmarking site, and leave the URL.
    • Blog about the giveaway including a link to the post and leave the URL.

    Thanks for entering and good luck everybody!

    disclosure: David Guas sent me a copy of his cookbook DamGoodSweet. No other compensation was received.

  • MUST READS: Robert Arnott, Options – Who makes money?, CLOs, Securitization Future

    Bill-Coppedge   original content selection by MortgageNewsClips.com

     

     ra1 ra2

    research-affiliates

    Must read  – THE ā€œ3-Dā€ HURRICANE FORCE HEADWIND – Robert D. Arnott – on deficit, debt, demographics, and asset allocation for the years ahead RAFI Newsletter by Research Afiliates  –      hattip Prieur du Plessis
    ————

     

    surlyImpliedVsRealizedStats surly-trader

    Must read – Options, who makes more money? Buyers or sellers?  – Do Black Swans Negate Option Premiums?Surly Trader

    ————

    soberclo sober-look

    liquidity returning? – The CLO market may be making a comeback – Amazingly, the primary CLO market, which has been shut down since late 2007, may be making a comeback in 2010. The volumes will be a fraction of the peak, the capital structure will be simple, and the equity structures will be thicker, but the deals will get done … This may be the first securitization market that comes back (even as a shadow of what it used to be) without government (TALF) assistance. … – Sober Look Blog

    ————

    seeking-alpha1

    The Future of the Securitization Business, Part I – Daniel Harrison – Seeking Alpha

    The Future of the Securitization Business, Part II – Daniel Harrison – Seeking Alpha
    Part One is pessimistic
    Part 2 is optimistic

  • Mortgage and Lending Related: Reps and Warrants, Fed Buying, Home Sales, Citi on Principal Forgiveness, Underwater NOT, Home Value Insurance, FNMA Shrinks, Tax Credits vs. FHA, Case Shiller Up, 2 on FNMA

    Bill-Coppedge original content selection by MortgageNewsClips.com

     

    mortgage-orb

    good read – On the future of reps and warrants – The New Rules For Compliance In The Post-Crash Environment – BY LOUIS PIZANTE – Mortgage Orb

    ————

    scott1 calafia

    Mortgage valuation: how much is due to Fed purchases? – Scott Grannis – … If rates are going to rise in the future (and I think they will), it will not be because the Fed stops buying MBS, it will be when the Fed and the market realize that policymakers and market participants have mistakenly assumed that inflation risk is extremely low because of the economy’s excess capacity  … – Calafia Beach Pundit

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    mp1 mp2 carpe-diem

    New Home Sales Highest in a Year, Inventory Measure of New Homes Lowest Since 2006 Mark Perry’s Carpe Diem Blog

    ————

    CNNMoney1

    Citi Says Mortgage Principal Forgiveness Must Rise – As unemployment rises, more borrowers need principal forgiveness on their mortgages, not just restructured loans, Citigroup Inc.’s mortgage chief said.  The comments by Sanjiv Das, president and chief executive of Citigroup unit CitiMortgage Inc., came as Citigroup issued its latest quarterly report on its own mortgage modification efforts. – DJ Money CNN
    ————

    latimes-business

    Many ‘underwater’ mortgage holders really aren’t, data firm says – By E. Scott Reckard – First American CoreLogic says its new methodology shows that the owners of 23% of all mortgaged homes had negative equity in the third quarter. Under the old formula, it would have been 33.8%. … First American CoreLogic said it changed its methodology to take into account two things that the firm’s previous data hadn’t reflected: how much of a loan’s principal had been paid down, and how much of a home equity line of credit was actually being used. … – LA Times

    ————

    rmdlogo

    Product Developed to Protect Borrowers Home Values – Working Equity released an interesting solution that allows homeowners to protect 100% of the value of their home even while real estate values fluctuates said a company statement. – has a link to a calculator – Reverse Mortgage Daily

    ————

    reuters1

    Fannie Mae cuts portfolio, delinquencies jump – Fannie Mae shrunk its gross mortgage portfolio by an annual rate of about 28 percent in October and delinquencies on loans it guarantees rose sharply in September … The conventional single-family serious delinquency rate rose 27 basis points to 4.72 percent … One year ago, these rates were sharply lower at 1.72 percent for single-family …Reuters

    ————

    wsj-opinion

    Homebuyer Tax Credits Threaten the FHA – By ROBERT C. POZEN – A few weeks ago, President Barack Obama signed legislation extending an $8,000 tax credit for first-time home buyers – The extension the president signed makes the credit available to first-time buyers, but also to people who have owned a home for at least five years. … The problem is that the FHA insures mortgages of homes below certain price levels with such a low down payment that it can be funded solely by the refundable tax credit … Owners who don’t sink their own money into a house are much more likely to default on the mortgage. .. – WSJ Opinion

    ————

    credit-writedowns

    Case-Shiller Home Price Index up for 5th time, but cracks showing – Posted by Edward Harrison – … When Case-Shiller reported in September, 18 of 20 cities showed price increases.  Then, last month the number turned down slightly to 17 of 20 markets. This month the number really turned down. Only 10 of 20 markets rose in the data (for sales through September).  That is not good.  is this a one-month aberration? It’s hard to say …. – Credit Writedowns

    ————

    washington-post

    Fannie Mae to tighten lending standards – By Dina ElBoghdady – Banks will demand higher credit scores, lower borrower debt  – Starting Dec. 12, the automated system that Fannie Mae uses to approve loans will reject borrowers who have at least a 20 percent down payment but whose credit scores fall below 620 out of 850. Previously, the cut-off was 580.  Also, for borrowers with a 20 percent down payment, no more than 45 percent of their gross monthly income can go toward paying debts. … – Washington Post
    ————

    dsnews1

    Fannie Mae Introduces ‘First Look’ Initiative – BY: BRITTANY DUNN – … Through Fannie Mae’s First Look, only offers from owner occupants and buyers using public funds will be considered during the first 15 days a property is on the market, and offers from investors will only be considered after the first 15 days have passed. … – DS News

  • REPORT: Renault and Russia come to agreement on AvtoVAZ

    Filed under: , ,

    Renault has found a way to appease Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin that didn’t involve writing a check for $850 million. The French company took a 25% stake in Russian carmaker Avtovaz, and when Avtovaz started having a hard time of it earlier this year Renault looked content to see how things turned out. Putin wasn’t: he told Carlos Ghosn to inject cash into Avtovaz, or Putin would dilute Renault’s stake with a share sale.

    Things retreated from the cliff when Renault promised technology to Avtovaz, in return for which Russia would put 50 billion rubes ($1.7 billion U.S.) into the company. Renault’s technology share is valued at €240 million ($358 million U.S.). The know-how could be of greater assistance to both companies than if Renault had contributed cash: Avotvaz gets something it can build on long term, and Renault doesn’t have to throw good rubles after bad.

    Avtovaz is nowhere near rescued, however. The company remains loaded with debt, making it difficult to finance its restructuring, and sales of its primary vehicle, Lada, haven’t rebounded. And to hear Putin tell it, he could be knocking on Renault’s door again soon.

    [Source: Bloomberg | Photo: PIERRE VERDY/AFP/Getty Images]

    REPORT: Renault and Russia come to agreement on AvtoVAZ originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 30 Nov 2009 13:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Volkswagen Polo named 2010 European Car of the Year

    Filed under: , ,


    2010 Volkswagen Polo – Click above for high-res image gallery

    It can be a bit overwhelming when every magazine and their various editions pick their own Car of the Year each annum. Fortunately, the Europeans have it together. Literally.

    Every year, seven of the continent’s biggest car mags – each from a different country and in a different language – get together and jointly choose the European Car of the Year. The process is exhaustive, first identifying the candidates in the summer, then whittling it down to a shortlist of nominees in the fall before selecting their one winner for the year in the winter. And with temperatures dropping everywhere on this side of the equator and the new year fast approaching, the time has come once again.

    For 2010, the jurists have selected the new Volkswagen Polo as their Car of the Year. The fifth-gen VW hatch beat out some stiff competition from the Citroen C3 Picaso, Mercedes-Benz E-Class, Opel/Vauxhall Astra, Peugeot 3008, Skoda Yeti and Toyota iQ. It was a close race, the Toyota coming in a narrow second with 337 points to the Polo’s 347. The Astra took third place by a wide margin at 221 points.

    It’s the first time a Volkswagen has won the award in some 17 years and only the second time Wolfsburg’s taken the prize home in the forty-five years since the jury first sat. Sister company Audi has also won the award twice (for the 1973 Audi 80 and 1983 Audi 100), and Porsche once (for the 1978 Porsche 928).

    [Source: CarOfTheYear.org]

    Volkswagen Polo named 2010 European Car of the Year originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 30 Nov 2009 13:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • RideLust Heads Out West

    greetings-from-los-angeles

    This year marks the first time RideLust’s editorial staff (read: me) has possessed enough disposable income to fund live auto show coverage and it is with great excitement that I embark on my journey to the LA Auto Show. Well actually I embark tomorrow, today is mostly filled with last-minute trips to the bank for toll money (seriously, the bridge fare is a JACK) and Macy’s for a new pack of socks (I plan to be stuntin’), but I digress. I will begin my journey tomorrow with a 7:30am EST flight out of PHL and, weather permitting, I’ll touch down in the beautiful City of Audigier at 10:48am PST. I will be constantly relaying my experiences via Twitter, so if you’re interested in brief, off-color, occasionally off-topic auto show updates be sure to follow me at @SuzanneDenbow.

    When I’m not dodging gang fights in the questionable area surrounding the convention center or groveling at the feet of the friends kind enough to put me up for a few days, I’ll be posting live coverage of all the new and exciting LA reveals here at RideLust. Unfortunately, Volvo does not appear to be hosting a press conference this year and both Lamborghini and Ferrari will be no-shows, so while I might be providing a barrage of updates it remains to be seen whether or not they’ll be “exciting.”


  • One Misguided Tweet Is ‘Indisputable’ Evidence That Piracy Harms Movies?

    We recently wrote about how filmmaker Rhett Reese was somewhat misguided in lashing out at fans over their claims on Twitter that they had downloaded his movie Zombieland. Of course, both of the fans that he lashed out at noted they had seen the film in the theaters (one of them multiple times) and the download was a repeat viewing — and they still planned to buy the DVD, since they loved the film so much. Still, the Twitter message from Reese that got the most attention was the claim that all this downloading would greatly impact the likelihood of a sequel. A few days later, Reese decided to further elaborate his stance on “piracy” and it is a bit more nuanced — he admits that his messages were fueled more by emotion than by rational thought, though he is still upset about people downloading his films and is worried about where it “inevitably leads.”

    From this, Captain Kibble alerts us to an accurately described “rant” at ScreenRants.com about how this is “indisputable” evidence that piracy harms movies. The basis of that claim? Reese’s heat of the moment claim that this could impact the making of a sequel. According to the ScreenRants folks, this suggests it’s a fact that movie piracy is harming movies. Of course, there’s no actual evidence that there is any decreased interest in making a Zombieland sequel. In fact, since the highest grossing movies almost always correlate to the most shared movies online, it seems that being a top pirated movie also likely has extremely high correlation with movies that get sequels.

    Could file sharing be harming movies? Yes, it’s possible. But there is scant evidence that it’s a huge or serious threat that can’t be dealt with through better and smarter business models. As we’ve seen with smart filmmakers who embrace file sharing as a way to gain more fans and “converts,” it can actually help them make more money by building up more people who want to support the filmmaker.

    That said, the latter half of the ScreenRants rant actually does make a few good suggestions, noting that part of the issue is Hollywood’s slothlike pace in offering movie fans what they want in terms of online services and video on demand. One of these days, the movie industry will figure this stuff out, and the answer isn’t freaking out and complaining about “piracy,” but finally putting in place the business models that we’ve seen are working already.

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  • Hussman: I Was Wrong, And Didn’t Realize How Stupid Investors Were

    In his latest essay, John Hussman offers a kind of mea culpa, in explaining why he hasn’t been more on-board the rally this year.

    His rationale: he didn’t realize how little investors had learned from the bust, and how much Wall Street would overreact to a “lull” in mortgage resets.

    In other words: he’s been wrong because Wall Street is dumb.

    I was wrong.

    Not about the implosion of the credit markets, which I urgently warned about in 2007 and early 2008. Not about the recession, which we shifted to anticipating in November 2007. Not about the plunge in the stock market, which erased the entire 2002-2007 market gain, which was no surprise. Not about the “ebb and flow” of short-term data, which I frequently noted could produce a powerful (though perhaps abruptly terminated) market advance even in the face of dangerous longer-term cross-currents. I expect not even about the “surprising” second wave of credit distress that we can expect as we move into 2010.

    From a long-term perspective, my record is very comfortable. But clearly, I was wrong about the extent to which Wall Street would respond to the ebb-and-flow in the economic data – particularly the obvious and temporary lull in the mortgage reset schedule between March and November 2009 – and drive stocks to the point where they are not only overvalued again, but strikingly dependent on a sustained economic recovery and the achievement and maintenance of record profit margins in the years ahead.

    I should have assumed that Wall Street’s tendency toward reckless myopia – ingrained over the past decade – would return at the first sign of even temporary stability. The eagerness of investors to chase prevailing trends, and their unwillingness to concern themselves with predictable longer-term risks, drove a successive series of speculative advances and crashes during the past decade – the dot-com bubble, the tech bubble, the mortgage bubble, the private-equity bubble, and the commodities bubble. And here we are again.

    Read the whole thing >

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  • Rumor Has It: 6-Core i9 Mac Pro Due in 2010, But It Hardly Matters

    Back in October,Ā HardMac reported that Apple was busy testing Intel’s new ā€œGulftownā€ Xeon chip ahead of its inclusion in a refresh of the Mac Pro, which is slated for release early next year. The 32nm Gulftown chip is an evolution of the 45nm architecture found in the currently-shipping 2009 Mac Pro model.

    Gulftown will be sold under the Core i9 brand name for consumer machines, while its server counterpart will be labeled the Xeon 5600 series. HardMac’s sources suggested Apple would have short-term exclusive use of the chip, much as it did for each of the last two ā€œXeonā€ revisions of the Mac Pro line.

    Now, according to AppleInsider, Polish website PCLab last week published performance test results on Gulftown, showing that the new chips operated at nearly twice the speed of the previous generation chips during parallel tasks. In addition, they consumed only 50 percent as much power doing so. Sadly, the performance results are no longer available. PCLab explains:

    We have been contacted by the reps of Intel Corporation. We agreed to remove the article. We will bring it back once Gulftown hits the stores, somewhere in 2010 šŸ™‚

    Earlier this year I bought a 2009 Mac Pro. And – as sheer luck would have it – my purchase was delayed by one week… the very same week, as it happens, that Apple refreshed the Mac Pro line. I scoured the online store, meticulously comparing specs and searching the web for in-depth reviews of the new machine from the sort of geeks who spend their days doing nothing but benchmark testing. In short, I learned that while the Mac Pro prices went up, clock speeds came down – but I was reassured by those ā€œin the knowā€ that it didn’t matter the cores were (marginally) slower than before. I was still getting a more powerful machine than I’d ever need. I don’t mind admitting, though, for what I paid, I wanted my Mac Pro to be light years ahead of everything else, and I wanted it to stay that way for a long time! That’s not too much to ask, is it?

    Still, Gulftown will squeeze-in an extra four physical cores above the eight I currently enjoy, and provide an extra four megabytes of L3 cache over the eight offered by my suddenly lowly-by-comparison machine. And don’t forget that 50 percent power-saving…

    I’m only partially joking. Setting aside my shameful greed for ever-more-powerful hardware, the fact remains that my many-cored 2009 Mac Pro is woefully under-utilized. I do a fair bit of audio and video editing, but none of the software I use takes full advantage of multiple-processor cores. In addition, none of it is optimized for the 64-bit architecture of my machine or its Snow Leopard operating system. Final Cut doesn’t even try to be 64-bit compatible. Adobe CS4 Master Collection (in itself almost the price of a Mac Pro!) stubbornly remains a 32-bit suite.

    So the bottom line is that my gloriously powerful and impressive Mac Pro is still sporting its (virtual) training wheels because, frankly, developers are dragging their heels updating their software.

    That doesn’t stop me wanting the new Mac Pro, of course. Like I said, I’m greedy. But I’m also learning. And even if Apple releases this behemoth early in 2010, I don’t think I’ll be too frustrated. News of breathtakingly-more-powerful machines is tantalizing, to be sure, but until software developers really get behind this new hardware, whatever advantages these powerful new chips and architectures promise remains almost entirely academic.


  • Tweetie 2.1 Update Brings List Support, New Retweet Implementation

    Not one to be outdone by Twittelator Pro’s most recent update, atebits’ latest update for Tweetie 2 (iTunes link) brings implementations of the two newest official Twitter features: Lists and Retweet. As someone who isn’t particularly crazy about the official retweet implementation, I’m not so excited about that, but there’s still a “Quote Tweet” option as well, which lets you do things the old way.

    There’s a lot of other new features and improvements, too, including tweet geotagging, spam reporting via the official Twitter API, What the Trend explanation of trending topics, and more. Once again, Tweetie has returned to the top of the heap, in terms of both functionality and UI.

    Lists can be created, edited, managed and viewed, all from within Tweetie 2 now. That means if users post links in the “@user/list” format, you’ll be able to just click on it to view said list. Your own list management and creation features are accessible via the ellipsis (…) icon. I still have yet to create any of my own lists, but testing this out with the lists of others, it seemed to be well-implemented.

    New video upload and hosting options are also available. You can now select from Posterous, Mobypicture and Vid.ly, in addition to TwitVid and yFrog. Maybe best of all among the UI changes, you can now disable automatic browser rotation, which is a feature every landscape-capable app should have, speaking as someone who often browses lying down in bed or on the couch.

    Lots of other smaller changes and a long list of bug fixes are also included as part of the 2.1 update. The update is free for all Tweetie 2 users, but if you haven’t yet made the leap to the newest version, the $2.99 price tag is seeming incredibly reasonable right about now.


  • Spike VGA to show new Prince of Persia: The Forgotten Sands

    Now that Ubisoft has Assassin’s Creed wrapped up for now, they have plenty of time to work on another popular franchise of theirs – Prince of Persia…

  • Danica Patrick signs multi-year deal to stay in IRL with restructured Andretti Autosport

    Filed under: ,

    There are plenty of reasons why Danica Patrick stays in the news. If it’s not her famous temper, photo shoots for Sports Illustrated or racy television commercials, it’s her impressive results on the race track. She is, after all, the first woman to win an Indy race and, after finishing third at the Brickyard this year, the most successful woman to race the Indy 500. But lately the news has centered over the future of her racing career.

    Rumors first began to pop up that Danica could move on up to Formula One, initially linked with Honda and then with USF1 before Bernie Ecclestone put his foot in his mouth. Again. Most recently, however, Danica’s been tipped to switch to NASCAR. But with the latest announcement, those rumors have been quashed. Well, sorta.

    Announced live today in Times Square on ABC’s Good Morning America, Danica has signed a “multi-year” deal (tipped to be three years) to stay in the IndyCar Series with Michael Andretti’s team. The four-car squad is restructuring this year, with partners Kim Green and Kevin Savoree splitting off the race promotion arm (responsible for the races in St Petersburg and Toronto), while Michael Andretti stays on to manage the team that drops the Andretti Green Racing moniker in favor of Andretti Autosport. GoDaddy.com has signed on to continue its sponsorship of Danica’s No. 7 car. Tony Kanaan and Marco Andretti are locked into long-term deals for two of the other cars, while the fourth car is expected to go to former Rookie of the Year and race winner Ryan Hunter-Reay.

    The announcement of Danica’s extended contract would seem to put an end to the NASCAR rumors for at least the next three years, but reports still suggest that the talented Miss Patrick could run a parallel schedule in the second-tier Nationwide Series while contesting the full IndyCar calendar as well. Busy beaver indeed.

    [Source: Andretti Autosport]

    Continue reading Danica Patrick signs multi-year deal to stay in IRL with restructured Andretti Autosport

    Danica Patrick signs multi-year deal to stay in IRL with restructured Andretti Autosport originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 30 Nov 2009 12:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • The Port Of Singapore Is Eerily Quiet… Too Quiet

    Singapore

    Temasek Hedge highlights how these days Singapore’s port has become too quiet. The Financial Times agrees.

    Temasek Hedge: These days, though, the view is obscured by hundreds of ships lying at anchor, some of them part of the estimated 10 per cent of the world container fleet idled due to lack of business. At the ultra-modern Pasir Panjang container terminal, stacks of empty containers piled up behind protective fencing tell a similar story.

    You can see it for yourself. Just take a drive on the AYE/ECP, and note the number of crane “birds” that are standing up. If they are up, it means they are idle. Of course, FT notes that the silence is not just confined to Singapore. All other ports are suffering too.

    We should note that Dubai aims to be transhipment hub, a meeting point for goods before they are shipped to elsewhere, like Singapore.

    The problem for cities like Singapore and Dubai though is that everyone wants to be a hub now. Thus even a rebound in world container shipping trade, perhaps driven by a moderate recovery for the U.S. consumer, might not be enough to provide much container shipping growth to Singapore, because port capacity all over the world will have likely grown faster. Ports will be undercutting each other.

    Singapore is a far more sustainable model than Dubai, but it wouldn’t take much to rock its relatively small economy. A prolonged trade slump could be enough.

    The picture above shows a recent snapshot of the ships sitting idle around Singapore. Check out the actual live, updated image here. Just don’t expect much action. They aren’t moving.

    Join the conversation about this story »

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  • Goldman Believes Two-Thirds Of Financial Losses Realized, Completely Ignores Derivatives And FAS 166/167

    “Bad loans = big losses.”

    Goldman’s most recent quantification of bank losses begins objectively enough, yet promptly devolves into yet another cheer fest for the financial system.

    GS promptly rehashes its estimate of “only” $2.1-2.6 trillion in bank losses, slighty adjusting the composition of loans it believes will go bad, while completely ignoring the onboarding of off-balance sheet liabilities (FAS 166-167) as well as any and all potential losses in the derivative realm, where Goldman itself is on the hook for tens of trillions in gross notional.

    The only thing missing from this fluff piece is a Conviction Buy rating on Goldman itself (but the Conviction Buy on toxic credit card and real estate debt laden BAC, JPM and COF is certainly present).

    Continue reading at Zero Hedge >>

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  • PlayStation Home to get the Winter Wonderland treatment

    If you don’t celebrate Christmas where you’re from or your neighborhood has gone completely Scroogey, you can get your holiday cheer from PlayStati…

  • Italian Prosecutors Assume Google Execs Read All YouTube Comments; Demands Jailtime Over Video

    We’ve been absolutely stunned by the Italian attempt to prosecute Google execs over a YouTube video. If you don’t recall the story, apparently some schoolboys taunted a disabled boy by throwing a tissue box at him. They filmed the entire ordeal and posted it to YouTube. Because of the video, the kids in the video were actually held liable for the taunting. It actually helped bring those kids to justice. Meanwhile, Google took down the video as soon as they were alerted to it by the authorities (within a couple hours of finding out about it). But Italian prosecutors insist not only that Google should have blocked the video entirely, but the fact that they left it up means that its execs are guilty of criminal violations and deserve jailtime.

    In pressing the case forward, prosecutors are claiming that Google must have known about the nature of the video because there were comments on the YouTube video expressing disgust over the video. It’s as if they believe that Google execs read all the comments posted to YouTube and use those to pick and choose which videos should stay up and which should be taken down.

    In the meantime, I’m still wondering why Italian prosecutors are not trying to push the tissue manufacturer in jail as well, as I would argue that those who made the package of tissues thrown at the boy are at least as, if not more, responsible for the actions of those kids as Google.

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