Posts Tagged ‘mortgage’

Picking stocks by the numbers (2009-9-7)

Most managers pick stocks by the numbers: P/E ratios, earning growth rate, EBITDA to enterprise value, and so on. Hundreds of studies have shown that you cannot outperform the market looking solely at numbers. Insight is required. But insight can cost a manager his job and a $500,000 annual salary. Picking stocks by the numbers [...]

U.S. TAX POLICY FAVORS HIGH-RISK INVESTING (2009-4-27)

It is clear that during many of the past 50 years, risk-free investments such as Treasury bonds offered real after-tax returns that were either negative or in the low single digits for high-bracket investors. (For example, a 5 percent nominal return in a 40 percent tax bracket with 3 percent inflation is a zero percent [...]

PERSONAL FINANCES AND SMALL BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION (2009-4-25)

On July 30, 1953, the federal government established the U.S. Small Business Administration with the purpose of aiding, counseling, assisting and protecting small businesses. SBA financial assistance is vital to the growth and startup of small businesses. Over the years, the SBA has grown in its total assistance provided and also the types of programs [...]

FINANCES – NO CDO BENCHMARKS (2009-4-23)

Analyzing CDO performance is challenging because there is no publicly available secondary market data. Furthermore, there are no readily available performance statistics or CDO indexes to gauge total returns. Certain proxies for CDO collateral performance exist, such as leveraged-loan closed funds (as a proxy for CLOs), synthetic residential MBS indexes, and leveraged-loan indexes, but due [...]

Principled agreement on financial package (2008-9-26)

Democrats and Republicans have settled in the U.S. Congress on a 700 billion euro package for heavy rescue ailing financial institutions agreed. The Democratic chairman of the Senate Banking Committee, Chris Dodd, said on Thursday after two talks: “We are very confident that we can act expeditiously.” Republican Senator Bob Bennett said: “I expect now [...]