Tuesday, February 22, 2011

New iPad Next Week?



Blogs are buzzing that the next version of the Apple iPad is on track to arrive next week.


Kara Swisher of All Things D reported today that Apple plans to hold a media event next Tuesday, March 1. And AppleInsider has reported that Apple has scheduled a meeting in the next few days for all of its retail employees.
Betting among the blogsters is that Apple will announce an iPad 2, or iPad Spawn or whatever they choose to call it.

The first version of the iPad was announced in late January last year and went on to sell about 15 million units. The new version is expected to be lighter and thinner, of course, and include features such and front and back cameras, high-definition video, a faster processor and more memory.

The new pad may also come in versions tailored for two 4G networks: AT&T’s and Verizon’s.

Monday, February 21, 2011

SAC Capital’s Cohen Opens Up

DealBook -Peter Lattman 

Steven A. Cohen likes Green Mountain Coffee.
The founder of SAC Capital Advisers, the $12 billion hedge fund in Stamford, Conn., sat for a rare wide-ranging interview with Paul Tudor Jones, another hedge fund manager, where he discussed his favorite stocks and a whole lot more. The interview was part of a two-day conference at the Waldorf Astoria hotel in Midtown Manhattan sponsored by ISI, the Wall Street research firm.
The conference was closed to the media, but this DealBook dispatch is based on detailed reports from several people in the audience. 

Other than complaining about his bad back, Mr. Cohen is said to have appeared at ease during the hourlong conversation before a packed crowd. Mr. Jones, who joked that he was playing the role of Charlie Rose, pressed Mr. Cohen on a variety of topics but did not — no surprise — ask questions about the government’s insider trading charges against two of his former traders.

Mr. Cohen talked about how he got started as a trader, reading the stock tables in the daily newspaper as a child and hanging around the local brokerage firm near his house in Great Neck, N.Y. There “was something in my blood, something that I loved” about trading that has stayed with him. He had a little money to trade and began putting it at risk. 

Mr. Cohen’s first stock investment? Perkin Elmer, which turned out to be a winner. He said he had ignored an alternative recommendation from his father, a garment center executive, to buy a fabric maker. 

He spoke about his 14 years at Gruntal, a New York brokerage firm where he worked before forming SAC. He started in the firm’s options arbitrage area. But he found himself quickly bored of hedging stocks because he would see the firm selling a position up 20 cents — when if he had only held on it would have gone up a dollar. 

In his 20s, Mr. Cohen said he had his own “pad” and was earning “seven figures” at Gruntal. The firm paid him 60 percent of the profits he earned — “pretty generous” terms, he said — but he eventually wanted more money to manage so he took a pay cut and started SAC. 

He said his fondest market memory came from his time at Gruntal when he was short the market heading into the crash of 1987. “I made a lot of money,” he said, “and I also covered on the open the next day.” Had he not done that he would’ve put his firm out of business, he said. 

During the early days, he described SAC as a “pure trading shop” but soon realized the business was scalable. So he said he went about hiring “people who were smarter than me” and who were “young and hungry.” The hope was to turn SAC into a more “fundamental shop,” meaning a firm that focused less on trading and more on security analysis. 

Considered a gifted “tape reader” with an uncanny knack for predicting stock-price movements, Mr. Cohen said that because of the rise of electronic trading and the way that orders were chopped up, “tape reading is a lost art that today is not very useful.” 

“I always tell my traders that they would’ve loved the 1990s because it was a fairly easy time to make money,” he said, referring to the enormous bull market rally, particularly in technology stocks. “A lot of my money came from that period. It was a tremendous time in the market.”

“In the ’90s it was balls to the wall, long and short with no hedging,” he recalled, according to people at the event. “I could be long at 12 p.m. and have by book totally short by 3 p.m.” 

Mr. Jones asked whether age — Mr. Cohen is 54 — factors into being a trader and whether his style has changed as he’s gotten older. Mr. Cohen said that “the sustainability of actively trading as you get older becomes more difficult.” And he also pointed out that “to make an impact running big capital you have to express your ideas in size.” 

He described the investment process at SAC, which he said employed about 100 portfolio managers and 150 analysts. A lot of his employees’ best ideas get pitched to him, he said, with some having short-term catalysts and other more longer term. 

Mr. Cohen expressed the view that it was important to make concentrated bets and have conviction in your very best ideas, explaining that most SAC portfolio managers tend to run with their largest positions at 10 percent of their portfolio. Mr. Jones agreed with this investment philosophy, though they acknowledged another school of thought — executed at hedge funds like Renaissance — that believes in high diversification. 

When asked about quantitative strategies like statistical arbitrage, Mr. Cohen was unenthusiastic. Such strategies, he said, “doesn’t allow for fundamental work to decide what the next quarter will be or the next hot product will be.”

That said, he always considers technical analysis. “Any time I get into a position, I’ll look at the chart first,” he said. “I always default to the chart. It is critical for entry points.” 

Mr. Cohen said that the starting point for an idea came from one of his staff via a note. Then he either talks to the analyst or has one of the sector heads — who report directly to him — speak to the analyst. These days he say he feels pressure to act on ideas because “information flow” has gotten so “compressed.” “If you’ve got a great idea you’ve got to get it into the book fast,” he said, explaining that the window on any insights you have about a stock is closing a whole lot faster than it did a decade ago. 

What’s the biggest mistakes you’ve made, Mr. Jones asked? 

“In stocks or in my personal life?” joked Mr. Cohen. He then said his Volkswagen short in October 2008 — an investment that hurt many a trader — caused a $250 million loss in a week. He and his team were able to mitigate the damage and walk away down only $75 million on the trade. 

He also remembered getting his clock cleaned on a long position in Tenet Healthcare in 2002, losing $75 million to $80 million on the trade. He described the stock drop in Tenet because of a scandal as one of the worst days of his life. 

Mr. Cohen said it got worse when he came home that night and his wife was orchestrating their Christmas card photograph and made him dress up as the King of Clubs. Sure enough, the picture eventually showed up on the Wall Street blog Dealbreaker, he said. 

Mr. Cohen says that these days his trading has become much more complex than in the late 1990s, when he was more trading focused. But he says he still watches the screens all day and is always reacting, tending to make changes when things are moving against him. “I spend most the day watching my losers because if those are being managed correctly the winners take care of themselves,” he said, according to people at the event. 

He manages risk a number of different ways, he said, including using Barra risk models and constantly monitoring his net exposures. He says he hedges with S&P futures “all day,” and although they are a positive driver of profits he makes most of his returns come from individual stock ideas.

His lessons from the market tumult in 2008? 

“Leverage, concentration and illiquidity are the three things that can kill you,” he said. SAC’s big losses came from new areas that they had entered, like corporate debt. The firm got bigger for the sake of getting bigger, he lamented, and now realizes that they can’t do everything. Quoting his father, Mr. Cohen said, “A shoemaker makes shoes. You have to stick with what you’re good at.”

As for the current market he described it as “grinding every day.” But “underneath stocks are exploding, and everything I’m seeing today looks bullish,” he said. “I’m not going to get negative just for the sake of being negative.” He added that it was a strong January and while there’s the potential for dislocation over summer when QE2 ends but that this is shaping up to be “a typically classic year” for the market. 

His favorite sectors are mobility apps and businesses that create faster networks or enable consumers on the Internet, citing Netflix and OpenTable as examples. 

Mr. Cohen, who said probably 25 percent of his investments were made outside the United States, has been emphasizing to his traders that global macro themes are more important than ever in investing. For this reason he went to Davos, Switzerland, last month for the World Economic Forum and said that he found “the development of the next phase of the consumer economy in China is very intriguing.” He recognized that there “could be more situations like Egypt” and “you have something going on here that could be a tinderbox.” 

His top stock picks? 

Two natural gas businesses — Williams Companies and Plains Exploration, and Green Mountain Coffee Roasters, which hit an all-time high Monday after rumors that a deal with Starbucks was brewing. 

They wrapped up with a discussion about philanthropy. Mr. Jones is the founder of the Robin Hood Foundation, which has received tens of millions of dollars from Mr. Cohen. Along with his wife, Alex, Mr. Cohen has become increasingly philanthropic. He also said that he had recently begun focusing on politics “as a way to express a view of what needs to be done in the country.” 

“I feel like I’m one of the luckiest guys in the world,” he said. “I had no plan for any of this. As I got older I started to realize I don’t need all of this money. I’m married to a very generous woman. There’s something to be said for giving and helping to change people’s lives.”

Planet could be 'unrecognizable' by 2050



WASHINGTON (AFP) – A growing, more affluent population competing for ever scarcer resources could make for an "unrecognizable" world by 2050, researchers warned at a major US science conference Sunday.
The United Nations has predicted the global population will reach seven billion this year, and climb to nine billion by 2050, "with almost all of the growth occurring in poor countries, particularly Africa and South Asia," said John Bongaarts of the non-profit Population Council.

To feed all those mouths, "we will need to produce as much food in the next 40 years as we have in the last 8,000," said Jason Clay of the World Wildlife Fund at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS).

"By 2050 we will not have a planet left that is recognizable" if current trends continue, Clay said.
The swelling population will exacerbate problems, such as resource depletion, said John Casterline, director of the Initiative in Population Research at Ohio State University.
But incomes are also expected to rise over the next 40 years -- tripling globally and quintupling in developing nations -- and add more strain to global food supplies.
People tend to move up the food chain as their incomes rise, consuming more meat than they might have when they made less money, the experts said.

It takes around seven pounds (3.4 kilograms) of grain to produce a pound of meat, and around three to four pounds of grain to produce a pound of cheese or eggs, experts told AFP.

"More people, more money, more consumption, but the same planet," Clay told AFP, urging scientists and governments to start making changes now to how food is produced.

Population experts, meanwhile, called for more funding for family planning programs to help control the growth in the number of humans, especially in developing nations.
"For 20 years, there's been very little investment in family planning, but there's a return of interest now, partly because of the environmental factors like global warming and food prices," said Bongaarts.

"We want to minimize population growth, and the only viable way to do that is through more effective family planning," said Casterline.

Sunday, February 20, 2011

The 10 Most Expensive Watches You Can Buy Right Now



There are hundreds of years of technology packed into even the simplest wristwatch.

But superluxury watches contain feats of engineering like the tourbillon, invented in 1795, which counters the effects of gravity that make a timepiece imprecise. If you find a Rolex Tourbillon, beware, it's a fake.

It's tempting to wax poetic about art and function coming together, but the bottom line is good watches are cool and they command high prices.
To make this list a watch had to retail for over $100k and have been or currently be in production, not a one-off custom piece. Also, none of them have any diamonds or precious gems. The only jewels on these are in the movements to help them keep precise time over the generations.

Sunday, February 13, 2011

The Economics of Blogging and The Huffington Post


When The Huffington Post announced earlier this week that it was being acquired by AOL for $315 million in cash and stock, one group felt slighted: a set of unpaid bloggers for the site, identifying by the Twitter hashtag #huffpuff, which claims that The Huffington Post has “built a blog-empire on the backs of thousands of citizen journalists.”
Some analyses in the mainstream media have echoed these sentiments. “To grasp The Huffington Post’s business model,” wrote the Los Angeles Times’s Tim Rutten, “picture a galley rowed by slaves and commanded by pirates.”
I have enormous sympathy for anyone writing about public affairs, whether as a hobby or as a career. And I’d encourage people to think very carefully about where they are doing their writing, and what they are getting paid for it.
The fact is, however, that sentiments like Mr. Rutten’s reflect a misunderstanding of The Huffington Post’s business model. Although The Huffington Post does not pay those who volunteer to write blogs for it, this content represents only a small share of its traffic. And, to put it bluntly, many of those blog posts aren’t worth very much.

The Huffington Post receives huge amounts of traffic: about 15.6 million page views per weekday, according to Quantcast. But it also has a huge amount of content accounting for those page views. It publishes roughly 100 original pieces per day — paid and unpaid — in its politics section alone. And politics coverage, according to Arianna Huffington, reflects only about 15 percent of the site’s traffic.
How many page views, then, does an individual blog post receive? And roughly what is it worth to The Huffington Post?
A spokesman for The Huffington Post, Mario Ruiz, said that he was unable to share numbers more specific numbers than the the ones that have been released publicly. However, there is enough data in the public domain that we can make some reasonable inferences.

http://fivethirtyeight.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/02/12/the-economics-of-blogging-and-the-huffington-post/?smid=tw-nytimes&seid=auto

Saturday, February 12, 2011

U.S. blacklists Lebanese Canadian Bank



U.S. authorities have blacklisted one of Beirut’s major financial institutions, Lebanese Canadian Bank, alleging that it is part of a drug trafficking network that benefited the banned Islamist group Hezbollah.

The bank was involved in a complex scheme in which cocaine was shipped from Colombia and Panama and retailed in Europe and the Middle East, U.S. officials said. They alleged that the proceeds were deposited with LCB in Beirut, wired to U.S. accounts and used to buy second-hand cars that were resold in western Africa.


LCB doesn’t move or accept money in Canada, but it was once owned by the Royal Bank of Canada. Lebanese-Canadian investors bought it in 1988, and it has a sales office in Montreal.
The Montreal office is registered with the federal Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions, and Canadian federal officials are reviewing LCB’s status, Finance Department spokeswoman Stephanie Rubec said.
“[Hezbollah] derived financial support” from the network, which was headed by alleged Lebanese kingpin Ayman Joumaa, said James Freis, head of FinCEN, the anti-laundering arm of the U.S. Treasury Department. He added that the network moved up to $200-million every month.

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/national/us-blacklists-lebanese-canadian-bank/article1902026/

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

Apple's New iPad in Production

Apple Inc. has started manufacturing a new version of its iPad tablet computer with a built-in camera and faster processor, said people familiar with the matter,
The new iPad will be thinner and lighter than the first model, these people said. It will have at least one camera on the front of the device for features like video-conferencing, but the resolution of the display will be similar to the first iPad, these people said. It will also have more memory and a more powerful graphics processor, they said.



The new iPad will initially be available through Verizon Wireless and AT&T Inc., but not Sprint Nextel Corp. or T-Mobile USA in the U.S., according to some of the people familiar with the matter.
A spokeswoman for Apple, Cupertino, Calif., declined to comment.

Apple has started manufacturing a new version of its iPad tablet computer with a built-in camera and faster processor. WSJ's Yukari Kane joins Stacey Delo to discuss.

The new iPad will initially be available through Verizon Wireless and AT&T Inc., but not Sprint Nextel Corp. or T-Mobile USA in the U.S., according to some of the people familiar with the matter. A spokeswoman for Apple, Cupertino, Calif., declined to comment.

The production of the new iPad shows how Apple is moving forward in the wake of Chief Executive Steve Jobs's disclosure last month that he was taking a medical leave for an unspecified ailment. The iPad, which debuted last April, has opened a new market and is critical to Apple's success.

Since the iPad's release, Apple has sold 14.8 million units of the device. In Apple's December quarter, most recent financial results, which it reported last month ,the tablet contributed $4.6 billion in sales, or 17% of the company's overall revenue. 

The new iPad is expected by Apple watchers to debut in the next couple of months at a similar price range as the current iPad, though exact details couldn't be learned. It currently costs between $499 and $829.

Piper Jaffray & Co. estimates Apple will sell 27 million iPads in 2011, and some investors expect as many as 35 million unitsin sales. "It's going to be a critical growth driver," said Gene Munster, an analyst with Piper Jaffray.

Report: U.S. dependent on China for rare earth metals


By Business Report staff
February 7, 2011 -- WASHINGTON, D.C. — The American Security Project (ASP) recently released a report titled "Rare Earth Metals and U.S. National Security," which outlines the national security risks of United States' reliance on China as the sole supplier of rare earth metals, which are essential to the nation's military and economic needs.

Emily Coppel, author of the report and research assistant at ASP, said, "Rare earth metals present a weak link in our defense supply chain. These metals are critical for national security, as they are essential for our most powerful weapons."

The U.S. was once the world's top producer and supplier of these metals, which are used widely in products, such as hybrid car motors, computer hard drives, cell phones, wind turbines and military equipment, according to the ASP website.

Contrary to their name, rare earth metals are not scarce at all. They are as common in the earth as silver. The U.S. has the world's second biggest deposit of rare earths, with "approximately 13 million metric tons of rare earth elements," mainly located in Western states such as California, Alaska and Wyoming (U.S. Geological Survey, 2010).

http://www.wyomingbusinessreport.com/article.asp?id=55942

Monday, February 7, 2011

AOL to buy Huffington Post for $315m

The deal, which was announced late on Sunday night, is the latest and most significant step AOL has taken to becoming a serious player in advertising-supported internet content.

Carlos Slim Gets Richer as Mines, Mobile Beat Gates, Buffett


Carlos Slim’s Mexican holdings from mining to communications helped him beat Bill Gates and Warren Buffett on the stock market for the second straight year, and gains in 2011 may widen his lead atop the global wealth list.
Slim’s publicly disclosed holdings surged about 37 percent to $70 billion in 2010, with wireless carrier America Movil SAB representing $48.9 billion of that wealth, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The 22 percent jump in Berkshire Hathaway Inc. shares wasn’t enough for Buffett to catch up, and Gates’s Microsoft Corp. fell, hurting his returns even as he spread his investments to other companies.
Mexico will be “the emerging market of 2011,” boosting Slim’s holdings, said Walter Molano, head of research at BCP Securities Inc. in Greenwich, Connecticut. Growth will come from an economic expansion in the U.S., Mexico’s top trading partner, and from investors looking for growth opportunities outside of Brazil, Russia, India and China, he said.

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-02-02/billionaire-slim-gets-richer-as-mining-mobile-beat-gates-buffett-returns.html

Friday, February 4, 2011

Death of the Don

The Rizzutos of Montreal seemed cast by Hollywood. For almost a century the Rizzuto family wrote the history of organized crime in Canada and made billions doing it. Vito Rizzuto is the boss — the CEO of Canadian crime known as Montreal's Teflon Don. With his father and son — Nick Sr. and Nick Jr. — Vito built an empire on gambling, drugs and crooked construction contracts on huge public works projects.

With hidden cameras, wiretaps and undercover footage broadcast here for the first time, the fifth estate goes deep inside the Canadian mafia. It's a story of money and the mob that traces the Rizzutos ruthless rise from their beginnings in New York City to murder and mayhem on the streets of Montreal. As the Rizzuto family's control over organized crime dissolves in blood and loss, the fifth estate's Bob McKeown takes an inside look at how it held onto power for so long and what comes next as Vito Rizzuto prepares for release from prison in 2012.

http://www.cbc.ca/fifth/2010-2011/deathofthedon/

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Julian Assange, The Man Behind WikiLeaks

Talks To Steve Kroft About The U.S. Attempt To Indict Him And The Criticism Aimed At Him For Publishing Classified Documents

 

http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2011/01/26/60minutes/main7286686.shtml