Category: News

  • Chase Charges $5 To Use Non-Chase ATMs Outside The U.S.?

    Chase says this about using non-Chase ATMs: “$2 each for any non-Chase ATM withdrawal, balance inquiry or transfer. $3 per ATM withdrawal outside the U.S.” You might think that means it costs $2 in the U.S., and $3 outside. You’d be wrong.

    Leila writes,

    I bank with both Chase and Citibank, using Citibank for my international transactions, namely wire transfers as they have a good Global Wire transfer program. Sometimes I withdraw money from the Citibank ATM using my Chase Bank Card, to deposit money into the Citibank Account. Each time I use the Citibank ATM I am charged a 3.00 ATM fee, which is outrageous.

    Upon looking at my recent Chase Banking Statements, it came to my attention that in ADDITION to the 3.00 Non Chase ATM Fee’s that I am charged directly during the withdrawal, Chase ALSO administers a 2.00 NON CHASE ATM FEE usually within 24 hours of outside ATM withdrawals, which actually makes ALL NON CHASE ATM WITHDRAWEL FEE’s $5.00 per transaction, NOT 3.00.

    I called Chase to discuss this and was given the standard “We can mail you our disclosure notice”. I repeatedly asked why I am charged at the point of transaction AND after for a total of 5.00 per transaction and was given absolutely no adequate answer.

    Most people seem to believe they are paying 2.00 OR 3.00 for Non Chase ATM Fee’s, but the actual fee as of April 20, 2010 is a whopping $5.00 per transaction.

    Update: Several readers have suggested that the $5 is typical for international ATM access. One reader says it doesn’t cost $5 to use Chase ATMs in Mexico.

  • The Nicest iPad Twitter App You Haven’t Heard Of [IPad Apps]

    Twitterific is probably the best Twitter app on the iPad. But you’ve heard all about it. The nicest to actually look at? One you haven’t, a little app called TweetFlow. More »







  • 10 Things We Learned From Jim Chanos

    jimmy_chanosA few weeks ago, we interviewed famed hedge funder Jim Chanos at his office in Midtown Manhattan.

    We spoke for around an hour, touching on topics that ranged from his time shorting companies like Tyco and Enron to what kind of girl scout cookies he likes. Chanos spoke at length on more modern topics as well, such as Greece and how he’s shorting China.

    The whole conversation was education, but we thought we’d boil down….

    10 particularly interesting things we learned >

    Be sure to check out our interview with Jim Chanos:

    Part I: Greece Is A Prelude

    Part II: China’s High-Rise Property House Of Cards

    Part III: Inside The Fall Of Enron

    The CDS market was invented to hedge non-marketable instrument risk

    The CDS market was invented to hedge non-marketable instrument risk

    But what people forget is that the CDS market was created exactly for that. Because if you are a creditor of that government with a non-marketable instrument, say Greece owes you money, say Greece has promised to fund your projects. You don’t own a Greek bond. You can’t market that IOU, but you have economic risk. Your project may be imperiled if Greece cannot fund it as promised. The only way you can hedge that off is through the CDS market.

    So that’s exactly why the CDS market was invented. Not just to hedge sovereign debt instruments, because you can simply sell those instruments if you’re bearish! It’s actually to hedge off non-marketable instrument risk. We saw the same thing during the banking crisis when people started saying “Oh there’s been an explosion of buying CDSes on banks, and short-selling the shares of banks in the Spring and Fall of ’08.

    Read the interview ->

    His investigation into Enron started with a phone call

    His investigation into Enron started with a phone call

    A catalyst for our involvement was simply a phone call I got from a friend in Dallas who ran a hedge fund who asked if I had seen Jonathan Weil of the Texas Wall Street Journal’s Heard On The Street column if I had heard the accounting of the energy merchant banks. And I had not seen it.

    So he faxed it to me – email was still not ubiquitous at that point – and it was a really interesting column about how the energy merchant banks had lobbied the SEC successfully for getting mark-to-model and mark-to-market accounting for their long term investing in energy derivatives. To take the present value of all the future profits that were written into the derivatives were sold as opposed to adjusting it pro-rata over the life of the contract. And they were celebrating.

    The article if I can recall went on to say that there were a number of academics and accountants who were worried about this practice. That anytime you could front-load profits you’d really suspect that company of corporate abuse. We had experience with this in a number of areas in the first subprime fiasco in the mid-90s and then way way back going back to the annuity issuers – Baldwin United and others – back in the early-80s. They were selling insurance policies and cooking up all their future assumed income up front.

    Read the interview ->

    Enron was really just a giant leveraged hedge fund

    Enron was really just a giant leveraged hedge fund

    The next thing that caught our eye was even with what looked to be some pretty aggressive accounting, we calculated the company’s pre-tax return on capital including their derivatives book to be somewhere a little north of 6% but below 7%. And based on what Enron bonds were trading at and the equity risk premium, we realize this company wasn’t earning its cost of capital.

    So it was a giant leveraged hedge fund as my partner Doug Mellon said at the time that was earning 6% a year if you would, on a leveraged balance sheet and you were gonna pay six to ten times book for it. It made no sense.

    Then finally, there were the more interesting secondary issues like the insider selling through 2000. A lot of executive departures in 2000. So all these things for us were enough for us to start initiating a position in November of 2000.

    Read the interview ->

    Skilling triggered the position

    Skilling triggered the position

    The “A-Ha!” moment for me that I suddenly knew that something was not in the grey area but the black area was when Skilling resigned. That’s when I knew.

    When Skilling resigned abruptly at that point I knew that something was very very wrong that we couldn’t see. And what we couldn’t see of course was the gua ranted payments that they had made to the offshore entities should they sell them assets were suddenly loss-making.  So in order to get these toxic assets off their books, they agreed to issue Enron shares as a “make-good” to the offshore entities. And they didn’t disclose that.

    That was the hidden troll, in terms of an equity analyst.

    Read the interview ->

    Condos in China are nothing but empty shells

    Condos in China are nothing but empty shells

    The Chinese bubble has its own interesting set of anecdotes and circumstances and one of the more interesting ones from our perspective as a westerner is that when people were buying 2 and 3 condos in Miami for example, they would rent the 2nd or 3rd condo to try and get some rental income. In China, that’s not the case.

    They’re empty shells. When you buy a condo, you’re getting an empty shell and nothing more. By and large most of the developments are 1100 square foot boxes. And they [the owners] don’t rent them because people want to keep them basically as pristine as possible for when they flip them because new is better than old. So ironically, you have people that are buying multiple condos here to speculate who are carrying themselves – there’s no rental income.

    Read the interview ->

    A mortgage for a Chinese condo sucks up 60 to 100% of your pretax income

    A mortgage for a Chinese condo sucks up 60 to 100% of your pretax income

    Keep in mind that the average median income in China, and it’s only slightly higher in the cities, is something like $3500 per person. Typical second-tier city real-estate prices have now gone above $100 a square foot. So a typical 100 square meter condo is probably going to cost you after all your expenses (if you build it out to live) $120,000 to $140,000 US. Well say you’re a dual income couple and you make $7000 to $10,000 a year total. OK? Even if you put down the 20% down that everyone’s pointing to, that’s 20% on your purchase price. You’re still paying mortgage interest of probably … 60 to 100% of your income, pretax.

    Read the interview ->

    China’s housing market is completely high-end

    China's housing market is completely high-end

    The other interesting thing about the boom here is that it is completely high end. When people talk to me about China’s “migration of people” into the cities and the population and blah blah blah, and the growth of the economy, I said “That’s all and good but they’re putting up the equivalent of New York City highrises at almost New York City prices for a populous that is 1/10th of that per-capita income.” So this building boom is aimed at: A) the corporate market, corporate highrises and office buildings or B) very high end of the residential market. It’s not the masses – it’s for people speculating.

    Read the interview ->

    Mark-to-market accounting is fine…if there’s a liquid market

    Mark-to-market accounting is fine...if there's a liquid market

    Yes, there’s nothing wrong with mark-to-market accounting if there’s a liquid market in instruments. The problem really for Enron, and then as we found out later for the banking industry in the latest financial crisis, was really mark-to-model accounting. Mark-to-market for lots of derivatives is really, for the vast majority of them, looks towards something that’s liquidly traded, say something like a Treasury bond or IBM stock. And if it’s an option on IBM stock, or say it;s a simple mortgage-backed bond that trades off of Treasuries, it’s fairly easy to get a reasonable set of assumptions as  to what your derivative  might be worth by looking at the price of the “underlying” as they say.

    Read the interview ->

    He likes girl scout cookies

    He likes girl scout cookies

    When Chanos walked into the conference room, he brought with him a fresh box of Girl Scout Cookies. Thin Mints, to be precise. The man has good taste!

    Dubai was a property bubble

    Dubai was a property bubble

    Dubai’s exclusive Palm Jumeirah development

    Image: AP

    Dubai was a property bubble. Plain and simple. Go to Dubai and see what happened. It was…what I call it the “Edifice complex” – it’s just, we can grow by putting up lots and lots of buildings and trying to attract people to come here, stay here, and put up offices here and sooner or later, you put up too many. And whether it’s the Palm Island project or the indoor ski resort or, you know, take your pick because everyone has lots of Dubai stories. At first it seemed plausible and economic and by the end of the boom, they were putting on drawing boards all kinds of crazy projects. So it didn’t take a rocket scientist to see the excesses. They were pretty visible to the naked eye.

    Read the interview ->

    Want to learn about other men like Chanos?

    Want to learn about other men like Chanos?

    Check out The Greatest Trades of All Time ->

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • Goldman: Markets Have Completely Missed The Consumer Rebound Happening In The Real Economy

    A chart caught our eye from Goldman’s Noah Weisberger — Goldman’s basket of consumer stocks, the ‘Wavefront US Consumer Growth Basket’ appears to have fallen behind the sharp rebound in U.S. consumer data as of late.

    Goldman:

    However, as we look at how consumer bits of the US equity market stack up against the economic data, it still seems that the market response has been quite restrained (see Exhibit 2 and 3). And even though we see the near term risks as about balanced, we still see plenty of “macro” value in consumer stocks, be it via our Wavefront Basket, via the broader consumer discretionary sector (say the XLY), or even via some more narrowly focused retail baskets (like the RTH, with the MVRX the clear exception to this). Moreover, we continue to have a fairly constructive outlook in terms of the near-term balance between better growth news, still moderating US inflation, and the resulting monetary policy response (or lack of one).

    Chart

    For those without access to Goldman’s basket, the Consumer Discretionary Select Sector SPDR (XLY) ETF, mentioned in the excerpt above, might be a proxy. Another idea is to look at strong consumer-driven companies that may have underperformed the overall market, such as Best Buy or Walmart. If Goldman’s Consumer basket rises with the rebound in consumer data shown above, most consumer names will probably be rising as well.

    Chart

    Chart

    (Via Goldman Sachs, Tradewinds: Flat tactical equity risk, Noah Weisberger, 20 April 2010)

    Note: The author does not personally own Walmart (WMT), Best Buy (BBY), or XLY shares, but investors he speaks with may. Everyone should perform their own complete due diligence with any stock mentioned.

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • GM Pays Back All Its Government Debt?

    Troubled U.S. automaker giant General Motors paid back the remainder of the debt it owed the government. In an announcement today, the U.S. Treasury said that it repaid the final $4.7 billion it owed out of the original $6.7 billion the government had lent the company. GM was expected to pay back its debt early, but not this soon. Does that mean taxpayers are off the hook? Hardly.

    The Treasury still retains a great deal of GM’s equity. It owns $2.1 billion in preferred shares and 60.8% of common stock. So taxpayers still own GM, they just aren’t owed any debt from the firm. Until the Treasury gets rid of its stake in the company, the bailout could still result in a loss if it fails to recover. If you include equity, the GM received about $50 billion. Taxpayers have a ways to go before they can stop worrying about the automaker.

    And there’s still reason for skepticism regarding GM’s ability to survive. The company lost $4.3 billion in the second half of 2009. It forecasts a profit for 2010, but it certainly isn’t minting money yet.

    The company also paid back its debt to the Canadian government. Where did GM get the billions to pay all this back? It has been doing better lately and likely utilized a great deal of its revenue to make these payments. This was a priority for the company, as it would have trouble convincing private investors to buy into a new public equity offering with debt to governments still outstanding.

    One big fear is that GM rushed this repayment. If the company runs into trouble again, having a few billion dollars in free cash lying around would certainly be helpful. Lower interest payments going forward are a plus, however. The repayment should make for lower net income in the short run, but higher profits in the long run. That is, if the automaker can manage to control its costs and recapture the consumer demand that it has lost over the past few years to bring back sales.

    (NAV Image Credit: Mike Licht, NotionsCapital.com/flickr)





    Email this Article
    Add to digg
    Add to Reddit
    Add to Twitter
    Add to del.icio.us
    Add to StumbleUpon
    Add to Facebook



  • The $7,865.84 Verizon Bill

    Yowza! David’s eyes popped out his head when he saw his $7,865.84 bill from Verizon.

    The charges stemmed from a recent trip to Tel Aviv where he used 350,000 kb of data on his Mifi connection. As we’ve extensively documented, Verizon charges 2 cents per kilobyte. Before leaving the states, a Verizon rep told him how much it would cost. Not used to thinking in kilobytes, David asked what his normal data usage was. His response was that David was on the unlimited plan so he was not charged by kilobyte. While a truthful statement, it didn’t exactly answer David’s question.

    David is going to pay his bill, which Verizon offered to go hafsies on. He writes that he accepts full responsibility for not doing the math and for not taking advantage of the VZ Manager software that pops up when you tether your phone that can track your kb usage. David just wishes Verizon had been less obtuse in its explanation, and/or had told him about the VZ Manager tool.

    I can connect up to 5 of my employees to my Mifi; if I had traveled with a team to Tel Aviv and used my full 5 GB of a lotted monthly usage I would have come to a $100,000 bill- something that usually costs me $50. The thought of that even “accidentally” being allowed to happen makes my head spin.

    Word to the wise, don’t use your American cellphone overseas to track your Farmville operation, or really, do anything with it.

    Verizon Data Roaming Nightmare [David Snyder’s Snydey Sense]

  • Mo’Nique Unhappy With Brother’s Molestation Confession On “Oprah”

    Mo’Nique’s fractured relationship with her estranged parents and the brother that molested her for several years during her turbulent childhood is more damaged than ever after The Imes Family appeared on The Oprah Winfrey Show on Monday. Alhough the Oscar winner originally gave Oprah her blessing to interview her brother Gerald, snoops close to the Precious star say Mo’Nique is “not happy” with the direction the interview took, and even charges that her “unsympathetic” brother lied about many of details surrounding the abuse that began when the comedienne was just 7 and Gerald was 13.

    Here’s what one tattle told RadarOnline.com: “Oprah and Mo’Nique were never the best of friends… Mo’Nique was less than impressed with how the interview played out as she felt that her brother lied and that it was not sympathetic enough towards her. She was particularly upset that Gerald lied to Oprah that he molested her while she was sleeping because she was wide awake and scared of him.”

    The tipster adds: “Also, she is angry that he did not get any help or enter a rehab and she does not trust him around children. Oprah asked her to appear on her show again for another interview but at this point she has declined the invitation. If anything it has made the situation worse between Mo’Nique and her family and she doesn’t know if she will ever speak to them again now.”

    Mo’Nique received the supporting actress Academy Award in March for her role in Precious: Based on the Novel ‘Push’ by Sapphire. The Baltimore-born mother of three has said that she channeled the rage she felt toward her older brother for her role as monster mom Mary Jones.


  • Clean energy jobs can be shipped overseas (and what to do about it)

    by Jesse Jenkins

    Politicians talking about clean energy jobs like to claim “they can’t be shipped overseas.” From President Obama’s State of the Union to Rep. Ed Markey stumping for the climate bill he co-authored with Rep. Henry Waxman, the promise of new “green jobs that pay well and can’t be outsourced” is an all too common refrain.

    The only problem with it is that it’s wrong on its face.

    America is already exporting clean energy jobs—or seeing them created abroad in the first place.  After pioneering wind and solar power, electric cars, and nuclear plants, America turned its back on the public investments in cutting edge technology that catalyzed these innovations, forfeiting cleantech industries to foreign countries who did not make the same mistakes.  The cap-and-trade program at the heart of the climate bill authored by Rep. Markey may help create more clean energy jobs overseas, but it won’t bring those jobs back to America.  Conventional responses to today’s competitiveness challenge won’t cut it.  Here’s what will …

    Most clean energy jobs can easily be shipped overseas (or created there in the first place)

    Unless our vision of a prosperous American clean energy economy revolves solely around jobs retrofitting homes to be a bit more efficient or installing (Asian and European built) solar and wind farms or high-speed trains, the reality is that the global cleantech sector is increasingly competitive, and the United States is already ceding thousands of jobs in clean energy manufacturing and innovation.

    According to one study from the Renewable Energy Policy Project, 70-75 percent of the total labor required for a typical wind turbine or solar panel is ‘upstream’ of the installation and maintenance—the only jobs that truly ‘can’t be outsourced’—mostly in manufacturing the various component parts.

    That’s bad news for the U.S., which now lags behind competitors in Asia (and Europe) in the production of virtual all clean energy technologies, from wind to nuclear power and from high-speed trains to plug-in hybrid cars and the advanced batteries that power them, as the Breakthrough Institute and ITIF‘s comprehensive report, “Rising Tigers, Sleeping Giant” documents.

    So forget the notion that clean energy jobs can’t be outsourced.  Recent research by the office of Senator Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) showed that in the last five years the U.S. trade deficit in renewable energy goods has ballooned by 1,400 percent to $5.7 billion in 2009.  Roughly 70 percent of the renewable energy systems and components installed in America are now manufactured by workers overseas, according to estimates from the Apollo Alliance.  And even the American Wind Energy Association, the industry’s trade group, concedes that about 50 percent of the components installed in American wind farms are manufactured abroad.

    Outsourcing clean energy innovation

    If things don’t change, cleantech scientists and researchers will be the next to follow the cleantech factory worker overseas.  Jobs in clean energy research, innovation, and new product development—traditional areas of U.S. leadership—are already on their way abroad as high tech giants and startups alike shift innovation activities to be close to vibrant clean energy manufacturing centers and markets overseas.

    Applied Materials, the leading producer of the equipment used to manufacturing solar cells, recently opened the world’s largest and most advanced solar energy R&D center in Xi’an, China, creating hundreds of high-tech jobs there and shipping out their Chief Technology Officer and Silicon Valley luminary, Mark Pinto, to oversee the project.  IBM recently announced a $40 million investment in a new “energy and utility solutions” lab in China that will perform cutting edge work on smart grid and other clean technologies.  And U.S. technology powerhouse GE is putting their Chinese research centers in the lead developing new clean tech products like wind turbines and power control electronics.

    In the realm of startups, the United States still leads in total venture capital (VC) investments in cleantech, according to research from the CleanTech Group, which closely monitors the sector.  But the North American share of VC funding fell from 72 percent in 2008 to 62 percent in 2009, a four-year low for the region, with North American cleantech startups raising $3.5 billion in VC funding that year, down 42 percent from 2008.  It was Chinese firms that dominated initial public offerings (IPOs) in cleantech sectors, however, with 17 Chinese companies securing $3.4 billion, or 72 percent of global IPO proceeds in 2009.

    Competing for clean energy industries: what works (and what won’t)

    So the fact is, not only can clean energy jobs be shipped overseas, they already are—or are being created abroad to begin with.

    That’s why it’s concerning (to say the least) to see this kind of rhetoric about ‘green jobs that can’t be outsourced’ proliferate.  If American politicians are serious about creating clean energy jobs in the United States—the kind of high tech and manufacturing jobs that are central to both a vibrant American middle class and a prosperous national economy—they need to focus on developing and enacting a robust and comprehensive clean energy competitiveness strategy.  It’s time to explicitly recognize that American clean energy jobs, like any other high tech or manufacturing-based sector, need to be proactively created and retained.

    The problem, however, has been that insofar as our nation’s politicians and pundits have even acknowledged America’s clean energy competitiveness challenges, they have, with a few exceptions, responded with conventional thinking, calling for carbon prices or tariffs or protectionist measures that will do little to restore America’s competitiveness or create hundreds of thousands of U.S. clean energy jobs.

    A carbon price could certainly help create demand for cleantech products, but at the levels considered by Congress, such demand would be modest.  More to the point: that demand could easily be satisfied by continuing to import foreign-built clean technologies, so we can’t count on carbon prices or cap and trade to bring clean energy jobs back to America.  In the end, carbon prices are absent from China, Japan or South Korea’s effective clean energy competitiveness and jobs strategies.  Why do we think carbon prices will be central to ours?

    Carbon border tariffs or protectionist ‘Buy American’ provisions may also help somewhat, but each treats the symptoms, not the causes of America’s lagging competitive position in clean energy markets. 

    Instead, what the United States needs to build a competitive clean energy sector capable of supporting hundreds of thousands of good-paying jobs across the clean energy value chain is a comprehensive set of sustained public investments in cleantech research and innovation, education and workforce training, advanced manufacturing, and market creation (more on that strategy here).

    This is how America has always sparked the innovation and high-value manufacturing that creates long-term jobs and built enduring industries that have formed the foundation for generations of economic prosperity. The primary reason the United States led in aerospace, communications technology, information technology, computing and the major new energy technologies of the later 20th century (gas turbines, nuclear, wind, and solar power) is because the U.S. government made a series of smart investments on the cutting edge of each of these technology fields to catalyze entrepreneurship and innovation.

    We love to valorize private sector entrepreneurs, and it is true that the private sector is where much of this innovation ultimately happens. But we simply do not see entire new high-tech sectors emerge without the kind of direct, proactive, and comprehensive suite of investments in innovation, education, infrastructure, manufacturing, and market creation that led to each of the 20th century U.S. technology booms mentioned above.

    We don’t see the Silicon Valley high tech boom of the late 1990s without the more than three decades of government investments in the region’s communications technology, IT and computing sectors that preceded that heyday of private sector entrepreneurship.  We don’t become world leaders in commercial aviation or aerospace technologies unless the U.S. government takes the lead in procuring and improving jet engines or fully commits itself to the Space Race.

    The irony is that while so many in our class of political ‘elites’ seem to have forgotten the real history of American technology leadership, policymakers in China, Japan, South Korea, Germany, Denmark etc. have all taken these lessons to heart.

    The simple fact is, smart public investments at the leading edge of emerging technology sectors is how new industries are born and how the U.S. stays competitive.  If American policymakers want to create and retain new clean energy jobs and industries, and aren’t satisfied with simply ‘capturing’ the 25-30 percent of the value chain involved in retrofits, installations and maintenance, then we cannot afford to ignore this history any longer.

    Originally posted at the Breakthrough Institute

    See also:

    A Clean Energy Competitiveness Strategy for America
    Winning the Clean Energy Race: A New Strategy for American Leadership
    Rising Tigers, Sleeping Giant: Report Overview

    Related Links:

    This Earth Day we need more than a celebration, we need a clean energy revolution

    A Clean Energy Competitiveness Strategy for America

    Focus the nation on jobs and the clean energy race






  • Pics Aplenty: Recovered 1925 Bugatti Type 22 Brescia in detail

    Filed under: ,

    Recovered 1925 Bugatti Type 22 Brescia – Click above for high-res image gallery

    You might remember a story from last summer about the recovery of a vintage Bugatti from a lake in Italy. The story was both fascinating and sad, and definitely one worth recounting.

    The tale begins, or so we’re told, in Paris in 1934 when a Swiss man acquired the car from legendary racecar driver Rene Dreyfus in a game of poker. The man headed home in his new car, but when he arrived at the Swiss border, he was required to pay customs on the car. Not having enough money, the man left the car at Lake Maggiore. By law, the Swiss officials were supposed to destroy the car, and they apparently did so by pushing it into the lake.

    A little more than thirty years later, the Bugatti was discovered by a local diving club in the summer of 1967. The car became a local attraction for divers who would plunge more than 170 feet to see the remains at the bottom of the lake. It would seem that the Bugatti would forever remain there until a tragedy changed its fate. A young local man, Damiano Tamagni was brutally beaten and killed, and the diving club decided that they would try and retrieve the car and sell it to benefit the foundation created in his name to combat youth violence. It took more than thirty volunteers and nine months, but the Bugatti was finally lifted from the lake on July 12, 2009.

    From there the Bugatti was put up for auction for the highest bidder. At Bonham’s Retromobile sale in Paris earlier this year, the Type 22 Brescia brought a top bid of £228,000 – around $350,000 USD – much higher than the pre-auction estimate. The winning bidder? None other than the Mullin Museum in Oxnard, CA. The museum has decided to not restore the Bugatti and display it in its current condition.

    We were overjoyed to see the Type 22 Brescia in person at the museum’s grand opening last week, and were fascinated with the different parts of the car that survived three-quarters of a century submerged underwater. The right side of the body is completely gone, but other items like the tires and some of the gauges are perfectly intact. You can see the car in detail in the high-res gallery below.

    Photos by Drew Phillips / Copyright (C)2010 Weblogs, Inc.

    Pics Aplenty: Recovered 1925 Bugatti Type 22 Brescia in detail originally appeared on Autoblog on Wed, 21 Apr 2010 12:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • Goldman Sachs Embraces Financial Regulation

    By Tim Shoemaker

    Washington Examiner columnist Tim Carney articulates clearly just how Goldman Sachs will benefit from the financial “reform” bill currently under consideration in the Senate.

    There’s a rule of thumb in Washington: Whenever politicians open up a legislative or regulatory debate, the side with the best lobbyist usually wins. Goldman’s clout is not measured so much in terms of lobbying dollars — though I’m sure the firm pays generous fees to its K Street soldiers, notably Dick Gephardt, John Breaux, and Tony Podesta — but in its direct pipeline to the corridors of power.

    Carney highlights several administration officials with close ties to Goldman combined with the $950,000 Goldman executives donated to Obama for America to show that Goldman Sachs will get the regulation they really embrace.

    Politico quoted a Goldman lobbyist Monday saying, “We’re not against regulation. We’re for regulation. We partner with regulators.” At least three times in Goldman’s conference call Tuesday, spokesmen trumpeted the firm’s support for more federal control.

    Goldman reported on the conference call that it holds 15 percent “Tier 1 capital,” meaning it is very liquid and not very risky. Goldman can play it safe, you see, without needing a regulation. But regulations prevent smaller competitors from taking the risks needed to compete with Goldman (and every competitor is smaller).

    Read the rest.

    We’ve all seen this before.  Corporatism at its finest.  Big business is using government to establish regulations meant to “reign in” the excesses of big business.  While in reality, the regulation makes entry into the market place more difficult, resulting in competition being stifled.

  • A Quick Lesson In Back-Testing ETFs To Improve Your Odds

    (This is a guest post from FXIS Market Insights.)

    The naughties (00’s) are often referred to as the lost decade culminating in the financial tsunami of 2008/09.  Total returns (including all dividends) on the S&P 500 were about –9% (-22% in nominal terms) for the entire decade.  With those numbers, it has become difficult to find a rationale for the “Buy and Hold” strategy that has been indoctrinated to the average investor for decades.

    But despite the poor performance of stock markets over the past decade, there is ample evidence suggesting that stock picking and other active investing strategies are bound to run into substantial headwind over a longer period of time.  As Tom Lydon of www.etftrends.com suggests in his post: How to Become a Better ETF Trader:

    According to a recent TrimTabs study, ETF investors are so bad at picking the right time to buy or short-sell the equity markets that those doing exactly the opposite of what ETF players did in the past 10 years would have ended up making sevenfold profits, reports Oliver Ludwig for Index Universe. 

    The likelihood that a similar scenario would apply to most other active trading strategies in general is high and the rationale for that is quite simple: With more frequent transactions, trading approaches the realm of a zero sum game and the probability of outwitting other investors is by definition 50/50 minus transaction costs.  Unless you are an above average investor (trader), you won’t beat the crowd.  Although this may seem an oversimplification in terms of stock trading, an active investment strategy should on average under-perform the market by the amount of transaction costs incurred. 

    So we have established that “Buy and Hold” didn’t work in the past decade and that market timing is also a particularly challenging task.   How can one improve the odds and what is the right strategy?

    Tom Lydon suggests a few simple rules:

    • Implement a simple strategy. Studies have shown time and again that there’s a direct correlation between how complicated a strategy is and how often you’ll use it. Keep it simple, silly.
    • Have a stop loss. “It’s easy to buy and hard to sell,” goes the adage. Make selling easier by knowing when you’ll do it. And then do it.
    • A simple strategy we suggest is trend following by using the 200-day moving average to determine when you buy and sell. You’re buying when a trend is there, and only when the trend is there. This allows you to check your emotions at the door.

    Of these 3 basic trading tips, the third one is the most concrete example of a relatively simple and verifiable trading strategy. Brokerage firms often provide free access to research and trading analytics.  But these days, there are also free online resources available that let you back-test whether the proposed strategy would have worked for any given ETF. Let’s take this 3rd rule for a test drive then…

    As a example, please consider www.etfreplay.com (no affiliation with the author) which has a tool allowing you to back-test a strategy using moving averages:  http://www.etfreplay.com/backtest_ma.aspx

    Enter the ticker symbol SPY (the ETF for the US benchmark S&P500), use the suggested 200-day moving average and select “Trade On: Day of Cross”.  Choose your time frame, in this case, the past decade and hit the button to run the Back-test.  Here are the graphical results:

    asljknvajklsdnv

    The proposed strategy seemed to have worked quite well with a more than 3:1 ratio favoring the 200 day moving average over the buy and hold period (Note: Returns are calculated from date of first backtest buy). 

    asljknvajklsdnv

    There are  a few caveats however, again pointing towards a difficulty with regard to timing and money management.  For starters, the first trade did not occur until January 2002 which means staying on the sidelines for 2 years, had we implemented the strategy in January 2000.   That would have required a lot of patience!  Perhaps more difficult even for seasoned traders is the necessity to stick to a strategy during times when patience and conviction are severely tested.  The first 6 trades of this strategy were all losing money, albeit small percentage losses.  But the fact that the majority of the trades (77%) were losing trades can shatter the guts of the most confident traders.  Sticking to a strategy when the first few trades aren’t working isn’t everyone’s cup of tea.

    asljknvajklsdnv

    In closing, I’d like to note that as with any trading strategy, simulated results from a backview mirror perspective are always to be taken with a grain of salt.  While the proposed strategy appears to have worked for the benchmark S&P 500 it may or may not work for other indices or other ETFs.  Please also note that this is just one example of an easy to implement trading strategy – there are many others.  In terms of an overall financial plan, a tailored asset allocation may be much more important and prove more successful over time than a serious of specific investments or individual trades, no matter what timing or trading strategy may be adopted.  Usual disclaimers and general investment risk disclosures apply here as well. 

    Having said that, there are more and more trading tools available now that allow individual investors to test and verify if a given investment strategy could work, something which was available to only professional traders until recently.  Overall, the easier and often free access to professional trading tools and investment analytics should make for better informed and more educated investors.  But don’t take my word for it, test it yourself. 

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • Christoph Westphal Resigns as Sirtris CEO, Takes Over Glaxo’s SR One Venture Arm

    Christoph Westphal
    Ryan McBride wrote:

    Christoph Westphal is leaving his CEO job at Sirtris Pharmaceuticals, the Cambridge, MA-based developer of drugs that target genes linked to the aging process, to get back into the venture capital game, according to an e-mail Westphal sent to friends and colleagues as well as Xconomy.

    Westphal says in his note that he is taking over as head of SR One, Glaxo’s venture capital arm. He’s also working with fellow Sirtris alumni Michelle Dipp and Rich Aldrich on a new Boston venture firm, Longwood Founders Fund, according to the note. (Last week the Boston Globe reported that Glaxo is backing Longwood Founders Fund, which appeared on our radar back in February.)

    Still, Westphal isn’t relinquishing all of his ties to Sirtris. He is going to be keeping a close eye on the advancement of Sirtris’s drugs for diseases of aging as co-chair of the Sirtris scientific advisory board. George Vlasuk, who was named president of Sirtris last year and has been in charge of its day-to-day operations, will replace Westphal as the firm’s CEO, according to Westphal’s e-mail.

    Westphal’s career move could be viewed as a return to his roots in the life sciences industry. He first joined Sirtris as a co-founder and interim CEO in 2004, while he was a general partner at Polaris Venture Partners in Waltham, MA. (He eventually left Polaris to lead Sirtris full-time.) During his days as a venture capitalist at Polaris, he was a founder of other high-profile biotech firms in the Boston area such as Alnylam Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ:ALNY), Momenta Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ:MNTA), and Acceleron Pharma.

    Glaxo is now giving Westphal the keys to its own corporate venture fund, at a moment of big change at SR One. Westphal is becoming president of the fund, taking over the responsibilities previously held by Russell Greig, a 30-year Glaxo veteran. Greig left SR One last month, according to this report by the In Vivo Blog. That departure created an opening at the exact moment when corporate VC arms are gaining prominence as traditional venture firms falter, In Vivo noted.

    The SR One position can be one of the plum jobs in biotech venture investing. According to the SR One website, the firm operates as an independent unit of GSK and has invested $600 million since 1985. The fund invests in companies all over the world, and some of its portfolio companies in the Boston area include Aileron Therapeutics, Genocea Biosciences, and Concert Pharmaceuticals.

    [Disclosure: Xconomy’s brand new life sciences columnist, Sylvia Pagán Westphal, is married to Christoph Westphal. Sylvia had no involvement in this story, we swear!]

    UNDERWRITERS AND PARTNERS



























  • El video del primer prototipo de producción del BMW M1 (1-Series-M), en Nurburgring

    bmw-m1_sibal.jpg

    Si bien la imagen precedente no es el modelo final del BMW M1 sino una representación, ya nos podemos dar una idea y comenzar a imaginar lo que será el paso más alto en la línea del Serie 1 que BMW ya tiene en preparación. El M1 va a llenar el hueco de la Serie 1 con este modelo que estará en vistas de competir directamente con el Audi S3.

    A pesar de que todos quisiéramos que el M1 llevara el motor V8 del Serie 3, la realidad es que podría desarrollar una variante más deportiva que el seis en línea del 135i. Se dice que el citado motor estaría llegando a los 330 caballos, aunque no es toda la potencia adicional que podría esperarse de un “M”, ya que apenas sobrepasaría el 135i tradicional por 30 CV. Además queda pendiente su designación, ya que no sería llamado M1, sino 1-Series-M.

    Yendo al video propiamente dicho, vemos que el prototipo probablemente sea una versión mejorada del 135i, al menos por fuera, pero queda el interrogante de la motorización. Este seis cilindros tiene un bonito sonido a través de las curvas del Infierno Verde, pero aún no se puede asegurar si estamos ante alguna mejora sustancial del motor.

    Vía | Left Lane News

    Video | 1Addicts



  • Italian Kitchenware Manufacturer to Release Android Hub

    In an odd but slightly cool move, the Italian Kitchenware producer Alessi is releasing an Android powered home hub for the kitchen.  Designed by Stefano Giovannoni, the AlessiTab as it is called is a tablet (surprise, surprise) unit that will display video, pictures and other information from social media outlets.  The video below gives a demonstration of possible uses for the AlessiTab. Be warned, there is no sound for some reason in the video.

    Click here to view the embedded video.

    This seems like a neat toy, but not sure if it is something that a family must have in their home.  Now, if they decide to include some remote functionality for home theater or other things in a wired home, you might spark some interest. I do have to admit that having video demonstrations of how to execute some recipes would be very handy, but it is nothing that I cannot do on a laptop now. It does beg the question as to why this company is releasing this appliance, but whatever the reason, it is cool to see Android in faraway corners of industry!

    Source: Phandroid

    Might We Suggest…


  • Economic Recovery through Baseball?

    Harrisburg, Pennsylvania needs a lot of help. The picturesque capital city with a population of around 48-thousand has an unemployment rate of 8.6 percent and more than a quarter of its families are living in poverty. While the city comptroller is suggesting the town file for bankruptcy, Mayor Linda Thompson tells Fox that she is keeping that last on her list of options.

    Amidst all the gloomy news in Harrisburg, hope is rising – in the form of a minor league baseball player named Stephen Strasburg.
    Michael Reinsdorf, Chairman of the Harrisburg Senators baseball team, grins with pride when asked about his star player, “they say he comes around once in a lifetime.”

    21-year old Strasburg has been called the most talented pitching prospect of all-time and was the first overall pick in the 2009 baseball draft by the Washington Nationals with a fastball which has been clocked as high as 102 mph.
    He reportedly received a $15.1 million contract with the team and has been sent to start his career with the Nationals’ minor league team in the struggling city of Harrisburg, sending ticket sales out of the park.

    A record crowd of 7,895 waited through a two-hour rain delay, followed by a 20-minute power outage, almost all of them to see Strasburg pitch last week in his first home game in a newly renovated 42 million dollar stadium. The sell-out crowd has Mayor Thompson optimistic that the success will help area businesses, “hopefully at the end of the day, people will empty out into our streets and support our local businesses in terms of dining and entertainment in the evening so that we can boost the evening economies and just create an atmosphere of excitement.”

    Fans like Brian and Trish Anthony were thrilled with the performance of their flamethrower star, and even more thrilled with the prices. Tickets at Metro Field range from 5 to 30 dollars and beers go for 2 bucks. “It’s affordable entertainment for a family, and you don’t break the bank doing it. Especially in these times, that’s pretty important”, Brian said.

    Strasburg may get pulled up the ranks by the Washington Nationals to play in the Majors at any time. While his time with the Senators is uncertain, the future of Harrisburg already looks brighter according to Reinsdorf, “I think that this will bring a lot of pride to not only people of Harrisburg but to the surrounding areas. I think it will bring a lot of people into the city and obviously that’s a good thing”.

    Harrisburg Senators pitcher Stephen Strasburg

    What do you think? Have you heard of any small towns in America looking at creative ways out of the fiscal gutter?

    Let me know in your comments below!

  • 10 Most Irritating Types Of Restaurant Patrons

    Eating out is supposed to be a good thing, whether it’s romance, business, family, friends or just enjoying a nice al fresco meal on your own. But how many times has your pleasant evening been tainted or even ruined by a fellow restaurant patron who does something that just gets under your skin? That’s why the Chicago Tribune has put together this list of 10 of the most irritating people you can encounter while dining.

    1. People who sit far from their table and won’t move up when you need to squeeze by.
    2. People who stuffing tiny bottles of jam into their pockets or purse.
    3. People who bring their own salt.
    4. People whose conversations are so loud everyone in the restaurant can hear them.
    5. People who linger forever over empty glasses of wine even though they can see others are waiting for a table.
    6. People who chew with their mouth open.
    7. People who talk loudly on their cell phone.
    8. People who take a ton of flash photos in the restaurant
    9. People who let in all the cold air from outside (or let the cool air out during the summer) by holding the door open for too long.
    10. People who use a cloth napkin to blot their lipstick and people who blow their nose into their napkin at the table.

    Do you agree with the Tribune’s list? Who did they miss?

    Ten at 10: Most Annoying Habits of Restaurant Diners [Chicago Tribune]

  • Senior Pentagon Official Says We’re Not Attacking Iran

    Haaretz reports on comments the undersecretary of defense for policy, Michele Flournoy, made in Singapore about Iran:

    The U.S. has ruled out a military strike against Iran’s nuclear program any time soon, hoping instead negotiations and United Nations sanctions will prevent the Middle East nation from developing nuclear weapons, a top U.S. defense department official said Wednesday.

    “Military force is an option of last resort,” Undersecretary of Defense for Policy Michele Flournoy said during a press briefing in Singapore. “It’s off the table in the near term.”

    And just wait for segments of the conservative movement and the Republican Party to freak out, as Bill Kristol did over Adm. Michael Mullen’s similar disinclination for an Iran attack over the weekend. Yet if the lesson of the Bush administration’s experience at the United Nations ahead of the Iraq war is any experience, the only way the Security Council will unite around a sanctions package is if the international community doesn’t believe it’s setting the stage for an American attack. The same goes for a post-Security Council resolution coalition of Iran’s major trading partners that the Obama administration is waiting to assemble. There’s a surprising amount of international willpower for sanctions aimed at stopping Iran’s illicit uranium enrichment activities. There’s absolutely none for seeding the bed for an attack, and the prospect of one will drain away the willpower for sanctions. Hence Defense Secretary Robert Gates’ aggressive pushback on The New York Times’ leak of his January Iran memo, and hence Flournoy’s comments in Singapore.

  • Weaning Sugar Wednesday #10: Short and Sweet

     2700

    Today’s report is going to be very short yet sweet because:

    • My laptop got infected with all kinds of nasty viruses and I had to take it to the computer hospital. It was so bad they had to do a complete re-install which means wiping out everything. While in there, the IT guy is telling me I should upgrade to Windows 7 since Vista just sucks. Makes sense so, I say yes. I got the laptop back last night, but now, it’s like moving into a new house whose floor plan you’ve never even seen. I have to re-do and re-learn a whole lot.
    • My folks have been here this week visiting me, and they want to go do some sightseeing today, so mom is like, “Chop. Chop. Let’s go!”

    I will share this one cool new thing, my parents and I did this week in an effort to cut down on sugar. My birthday was on Monday, and normally mom would buy some large cake at Safeway. This year, we got a small 3″ Coconut cake at Whole Foods, cut it into 4 small pieces, and coupled our cake slice with my favorite So Delicious Coconut-milk based chocolate ice cream.

    We got to enjoy a small amount of cake and ice cream without busting our sugar and calorie consumption. I also introduced my folks to the coconut-milk based ice cream I love so much and they liked it too. Bonus!

    So see, you can have your cake and eat it too….and feel good about it 🙂


  • Review: TealSpeed

    As I browse through the App Catalog on a day to day basis, I’m sometimes drawn to the applications that endeavor to improve on the ease of use and functionality offered by webOS. Call it a morbid fascination really, as none of the applications I’ve come across in this space so far have actually improved much of anything, and end up being little more than just the waste of a few dollars. We visited the ActiveCard (2.99 in the App Catalog) application a few months ago, and found it to fit the status quo in this regard quite well.

    You may be familiar with TealPoint Software, the company that got itself into hot water with Palm early last year when they mimicked the webOS interface on Palm OS devices with TealOS . Since then, the company has stocked the virtual shelves of the App Catalog with a number of apps, ranging from shopping list managers to world time clocks. The app we’re looking at today, TealSpeed ($4.99 in the App Catalog), a speed dial and launcher, is one of those applications that aims to enhance the functionality of the UI employed by webOS. Does it make the grade?

    read more