Lunchtime Links MLK Day

Jan 18, 2010 19:59 UTC

McKinsey report on de-leveraging — pdf (McKinsey, ht Paul M) Lots of interesting charts. Conclusion is that debt reduction in the developed world has only begun. The Economist has a good summary too.

Why talking to yourself may be the highest form of intelligence (Just Seven Things) Smart post. I would add a related point, that the most effective study method is actually teaching. Students that must teach study partners a bit of material will engage it at a deeper level as they anticipate questions.

Wall St. weighs constitutional challenge to new tax (Dash, NYT)

New York Times ready to charge readers (Daily Intel) Felix has some thoughts on this, though he fails to defend his view that it’s “not smart business” to “cut users off from the website just for the sake of dealing with a nasty cashflow problem.” Explaining this particular point in detail would be helpful as “nasty cash flow problems” tend to, you know, put companies out of business. Still, Felix acknowledges that NYT needs to charge something in order to support content generation.

Bundles of cable (Surowiecki, New Yorker) Á la carte cable probably wouldn’t lead to lower bills for consumers. Instead, the channels that folks really watch –ESPN, e.g. — would end up taking a bigger piece of the pie.

Cruise ship docks at private Haiti beach for BBQ, water sports (BoingBoing)

Chavez nationalizes retailer (Crowe, DJN) The Venezuelan economy continues to rot from the inside out.

Elevated CO2 in school traced to students’ breath (WMUR) Apollo 13 anyone?

Why NBC breached Conan’s contract (Sklar, Mediaite)

Really fast roller coaster….(fast forward to 0:35)

COMMENT

Fast Forward the video to 53, not 35 ! :)
==RED

Posted by Bob | Report as abusive

In Haiti crisis, a lesson for investors, givers

Jan 17, 2010 23:21 UTC

Well-known to businessmen everywhere, but totally under-appreciated by investors, is the concept of working capital, the day-to-day operating cash flow that makes a business run. Turns out the Red Cross has a big working capital problem when it comes to text message donations. From Carrick Mollenkamp (WSJ), Americans pledge millions, but cash flow takes weeks:

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, CNN, and users of Twitter Inc. have urged people to punch 90999 and then type in the word “HAITI” on their phones to send $10 to the American Red Cross. But the money won’t be routed from most U.S. wireless carriers to relief efforts until cellphone users pay their phone bills.

That could take 30 to 90 days, telecommunications officials estimate, well after the critical initial days in which humanitarian aid organizations are trying to deliver medical supplies, food and water to save injured earthquake victims and help others with their most immediate needs.

To run its operations, the Red Cross needs cash today. But text message donations don’t actually come through until users pay their cell phone bills and carriers pass through the funds. (To be clear, I’m not saying text message donations are a bad thing. They’re an ingenious way for relief organizations to leverage the billing relationships that carriers have with consumers. I gave $10 myself. Still, it provides a good opportunity to discuss cash flow issues that few understand.)

Businesses confront cash flow issues like this every day, yet investors typically ignore them.

Does a business require lots of investment up front to provide its good or service? If so, this can be a big and ongoing operational risk. Every Christmas season, retailers invest in inventory they hope is going to sell. If it doesn’t, they can end up in bankruptcy.

On the other hand, there are businesses that get paid before delivering their good or service. Many subscription businesses get paid up front only to deliver content later.

(The analogy isn’t perfect since the Red Cross doesn’t aim for profits. But it is in the business of disaster relief, which requires a cash investment up front.)

All else equal, it’s better to run a business that gets paid first. Risks that your product doesn’t sell, or that your customers don’t come through with a cash payment, are removed.

Warren Buffett has made his fortune in large part due to astute working capital management. His main business is insurance. He gets paid premiums up front but only pays out if his customers have a claim. In the meantime, he has control of the “float,” which he can invest to generate profits for Berkshire. Writing insurance policies that result in few if any claims has made billions for Berkshire shareholders.

Understanding working capital is also crucial to Buffett’s brand of value investing. If a business must invest capital up front, what is the average return on that capital investment? If the return on capital employed* is high — and the business is simultaneously selling for a cheap valuation — then odds are you’ve identified a stock that will outperform the market. (Joel Greenblatt wrote a best-selling book based on this two-part magic formula.)

And the lesson for charitable givers? Don’t wait for disasters to strike to give money. While the devastation in Haiti is certainly heart-breaking, we shouldn’t think it out of the ordinary. After all, Mother Nature regularly delivers an epic disaster — the Asian Tsunami in 2004, Katrina in 2005, the Sichuan Province earthquake 2008, Haiti 2010.

So consider giving at regular intervals, especially before disasters strike. And not just to the Red Cross. Presumably aid organizations can mobilize more quickly if they have working capital available in advance.

—————

*There are different ways to calculate return on capital employed. Here’s one way:

Return = annual after-tax operating income = last twelve months operating income * (1 – tax rate)

Capital employed = Accounts receivable + inventories + prepaid expenses + net property, plant and equipment – accounts payable – accrued expenses – deferred revenue

ROCE = Return / Capital Employed. If a company has $100 million of after-tax operating income and $200 million of capital employed, then ROCE is 50%.

Even better than a high ROCE is a business that has negative working capital. For instance, if deferred revenue is really high because a business takes in cash before delivering its good or service, then capital employed is likely negative.

COMMENT

Why not donate it to the Blue Cross as people behave like animals when it comes to money. Just paying taxes is crippling, let alone 10% to the ‘church’ AND VAT.

This disaster is classic, Amampour of CNN (spelling ?) attacking the poor Head of the UN, exploitative propaganda (‘I was there first’) and finger-pointing.

It should be simple:

1. Re-establish/concoct communications;
2. Re-establish/concoct transport passages;
3. Move the living out of the disaster areas to rural areas;
4. Supply shelter, water and food to THEM, even if it is dropped by air;
5. Let the big boys start cleaning up the mess.

Most important, Natural Selection, let it flow, we need to knock even larger chuncks out of the 7 000 000 000 headcount.

Rolfe, you are becoming a man of the world by mixing in du Pont formulas into such sensitive humanitarian matters, socratic irony by a ‘hypocrite’. What more do you want ?

Posted by Gandhiolfini | Report as abusive

Afternoon links 1-13

Jan 13, 2010 20:51 UTC

Must ReadKyle Bass: Testimony before the FCIC (fcic.gov) Bass is a hedgefunder that made big profits betting against subprime. His testimony has many fascinating facts and figures. [The pie charts on page 9 look familiar.]

Obama to push tax on too-big-to-fail banks (Nasiripour) Not a lot of details: “the planned tax would be imposed in a way that targets firms’ riskiest activities, such as proprietary trading. It would be crafted in a way that doesn’t affect a financial company’s retail banking, so that the cost theoretically would not be passed on to retail customers — but it wasn’t clear exactly how that would work.” And will it tax other TBTF firms besides banks? What about insurers? What about GE? Update: WSJ says the tax will target bank liabilities.

Earthquake in Haiti may have killed over 100,000 (Farie/Varner, Bloomberg) The epicenter of the 7.0 magnitude quake was 10 miles from Haiti’s capital city.

Google China spat shines spotlight on cyberspying (Prodhan/Lee, Reuters) Google has consistently tried to thread the needle between the revenue opportunities provided by the Chinese market, and the censorship restrictions imposed by the Communist Party. This attack was so egregious that Google said it’s had enough.

Prime jumbo RMBS delinquencies jump to 9.2%: Fitch (Golobay, HousingWire) ht Implode-o-Meter.

SEC proposes effective ban on naked access (Younglai/Spicer, Reuters)

FDIC’s Bair blasts other regulators for reluctance on banker pay plan (Paletta, WSJ) I’d hoped to share the video archive with all of you but a day later it’s still not available. There are good arguments that additional curbs on pay will be both tough to design and ineffective at curbing risk. A better regulator is failure. But that’s not Dugan’s point. He just wants to protect banks.

VIDEOLennart Green does close up card magic (TED talks)

Clever 2010 calendar (imgur)

Another dose of Martian awesome (Plait, Discover)

A Chinese thanks Google for standing up to the communists (more)…

google thanks

COMMENT

Just read an amazing global tactical allocation report on zerohedge (2 in facts with yesterday macro section) http://www.zerohedge.com/article/global- tactical-asset-allocation-equities

Might be of interest.

Kind regards,
Petter

Posted by Petter Knight | Report as abusive
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