Archive for the ‘Business’ Category

Breaking Business News: America Poised For Manufacturing Resurgence?

Saturday, February 14th, 2009
Robert Barr asked:


As we stumble through repairing this mess called a financial system, I find myself yearning for the days of big factories billowing smoke all over the countryside. Back when a factory whistle and the smell of something burning were as intertwined into America’s fiber as our Levis. Now, I am having this halcyon moment because the days of cheap jeans and burning cinders are over; replaced by $200 Euro-trash designer jeans and anything that got our hands dirty was shipped off to India or China.

However, this isn’t going to be another conversation about Wall Street or Washington because, quite frankly, I just don’t have it in me. This is more about me sticking my tongue out at the financial markets in a way that you would if you were 3. I send a raspberry to Wall Street to show my displeasure with their behavior and to make them aware that we are tired of all the spin doctoring and hype. Times up boys, in the words of Michael Corleone; you’re out Tom!

That’s right, it’s time this country remembers that it was founded by people who sweat for a living! That we’re not just a country that makes its collective living shorting stocks, and maybe, just maybe, we should climb into the way-back machine and start making things again! Great companies like Dial and ITT, once Goliaths, got crushed under their own weight. Others, like GE, adapted and moved into other industries that provided better liquidity and higher margins.

But now is as good a time as there’s going to be for a manufacturing resurgence in this country. Lower shipping costs, higher manufacturing standards, and good old American know-how can once again prosper as we build a foundation around a manufacturing sector that is smarter and leaner than days gone by. Not to mention, given our current financial condition, it can’t be as risky making refrigerators as it is trading Chinese short-term rice derivatives on margin (I made that up). Don’t get me wrong, I am certainly not anticipating a land grab throughout Middle America to raise smokestacks and stoke the fires that once made this country great.

But maybe we can develop a more rational formula for what we consider an acceptable return from the companies we invest in. In other words, we promise to accept a few percentage points less if they promise not to poison our drinking water to save margins since at the end of the day, we are ALL responsible for this mess, from Main Street to Wall Street.

Don’t agree? Let’s review. From our never ending quest to get the lowest possible prices on everything we buy to getting the highest return in our 401k’s to having the whitest whites and the softest sheets, we force companies to cut corners in order to provide their customers, investors, and employees the results they demand. Do you think we as consumers have any responsibility in this mess? What would you do to clean up Wall Street?



Jack

Bull Markets Climb a Wall of Fear - Betonmarkets.com

Friday, July 18th, 2008
Mike Wright asked:


After the party comes the hangover, and of course the bigger the party, the bigger the hangover. Over the last few years, financial companies have been gorging themselves on ‘foolproof’ credit trades, based on sub prime debt. Now the party is over and companies are having to face up to their antics in the cold light of day, says BetOnMarkets.com’s Michael Wright.

Last week was no different, with E-trade (A US discount stock broker) announcing that they incurred major losses in their 3 billion dollar fund, and rumours circulated that they were going into bankruptcy. Once this news hit the wires, the Dow and the SP500 both dipped into red territory, as investors yet again became jittery about the health of any stock that has dealings with mortgage lending or investing.

More bad news came from Britain’s HSBC, which said it would have to write down a further $3.4 billion from its U.S. business during the third quarter, again because of exposure to sub prime loans. This comes on top of the billions in losses already reported earlier in the year, and just a few days after a 1.2 billion dollar write down for the 4th quarter by Bears and Stearns Co. The hedge fund was one of the first financial institutions to confirm losses due to sub prime exposure.

Finally, Barclays bank reported that it wrote down 1.3 billion pounds ($2.7 billion) on credit related securities. This was actually much less than many analysts were predicting, and the shares initially rallied on Thursday with the relief that things weren’t as bad as many had feared.

However, the question currently being asked by most analysts, is not who will release announcements of credit related write downs, but how much these will be. The stock market is a forward-looking animal, and many analysts are already pricing in losses to certain financial stocks.

Attention may now turn to insurance companies and pension funds. Both of these invest in mortgage bonds, which is a bond secured by a mortgage on a property. Since they are backed by real estate or physical equipment that can be liquidated, they are usually considered high-grade, safe investments. This however has been not the case lately with the implosion of the US mortgage market.

While relatively few of the pension funds are publicly traded companies, a lot of the bigger insurance companies are. This means that soon they will have no choice but to explain why their earnings per share, aren’t as good as Wall Street had expected them to be.

It is a common truism that “bull markets climb a wall of fear”. Nobody can deny the level of fear in the markets right now, but it is also true that markets **** uncertainty. Losses and write downs may not be as bad as expected, but only the companies themselves know the actual figures. With many losses still unknown, and a fresh round of bad news from insurers presenting a potential hazard, any recovery from here may be jittery at best. There may be rallies over the next month, but they could be tempered by the fear of unknown losses lurking round the corner.

With Betonmarkets.com the average trader can take advantage of these possible events by buying a “no touch” option, hich will compensate the investor if the underlying index doesn’t touch the predetermined level, for a specific period of time.

A “no touch” option on the S&P 500, set not to touch a level 100 points higher in the next 32 days, yields 12%. This means that we can rally tamely, trade in a range or drop further, and you could still win.

- THE END -

Contact Details:

Name: Mike Wright

Tel: 448003762737

Email: editor@my.regentmarkets.com

Url: Betonmarkets.com & Betonmarkets.co.uk

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Regent Markets is the world’s leading fixed odds financial trading group. Through its main multi-awarding winning websites, BetOnMarkets.com and BetOnMarkets.co.uk, it has established itself as the leading global provider of a unique, powerful way to trade the world’s major financial markets. The number, length and variety of trades available to our clients exists nowhere else in the world.



Paula