Or filter by symbol:
Skjellifetti's Comments Stream Stats
- 60 Comments, 3
, 0 
- Total Comment Stream rating
-
= 3
- Free E-Newsletters
- Wall Street Breakfast -Sample
Wall Street Breakfast: Must-Know Newsby SA Editor Rachael Granby- Bank trio becomes duo. Wells Fargo (WFC) will become the largest U.S. bank by branches with its bid for Wachovia (WB), after Citigroup (C) withdrew from compromise negotiations late yesterday on concerns about the quality of some of Wachovia's assets. Wells Fargo, with a bid valued at $11.4B, expects the purchase to be completed by the end of the year, and denies it will have to absorb assets shakier than originally thought.
- Government considers next steps. As the financial crisis continues to worsen, the U.S. government is considering two dramatic steps to turn around, or at least slow, the damage: guaranteeing billions of dollars in bank debt and temporarily insuring all U.S. bank deposits. The moves, which would mark the government's most extensive intervention to date, are in discussion stages only.
- Credit stays frozen. As frozen credit markets refuse to thaw, the cost of default protection on corporate bonds reaches new global records amid investor concerns the credit crisis will trigger corporate failures as companies struggle to finance their businesses. Interbank lending remains limited, and borrowing from the Fed's expanded discount window continued its trend of setting new highs every week, as the total daily average rose to $420.2B vs. $367.8B last week.
- Oil demand withers. The International Energy Agency warned Friday worldwide oil demand...
- The Macro View -SampleSeeking Alpha - The Macro ViewMarket Outlook
- An Outcry from Emerging and Developed Markets Alike by Jonathan O'Shaughnessy
- Long Term, Financials Look Good by Michael Filloon
- Round 3 of the Recession: Main Street by Paul Fekula
Oil Price- Oil Below $75: Increased Chance of OPEC Production Cuts by Money Morning
- Oil Down 48% from Highs by Bespoke Investment Group
- Oil & Gas Headed Lower as Economy Strikes Consumers by Michael Filloon
Economy- Long Term, Financials Look Good by Michael Filloon
- Round 3 of the Recession: Main Street by Paul Fekula
- Reality Bites As Stocks Continue To Collapse by The Mole
- Investing Ideas -SampleSeeking Alpha - Investing IdeasCramer's Picks
- Farewell Financial Bear Raids - Cramer's Mad Money (10/14/08) by SA Editor Joan Wickham
- Better Picks - Cramer's Lightning Round (10/14/08) by SA Editor Joan Wickham
- Perhaps Industrials... Cramer's Stop Trading! (10/14/08) by SA Editor Joan Wickham
Long Ideas- Utilities Beginning to Generate Interest for Longs by Joe Kunkle
- The Long Case for Encore Capital by Value Investor Insight
- 2009: The Year of the Channel for SaaS Vendors? by Jeff Kaplan
- Two Global Infrastructure Investment Opportunities in ETFs by Investment U
- Market Behaves Sanely - Fast Money Recap (10/14/08) by SA Editor Joan Wickham
Short Ideas- Why Short Sellers Are the Heroes of Wall Street by Investment U
- Salesforce.com: Pricey and Coming Down Fast by Charlie Bottle
- Google: 3Q Results Reveal Chinks in the Armor by Mark Krieger
- Jim Cramer's Picks -SampleBetter Choices - Cramer's Lightning Round (10/15/08)by SA Editor Rachael GranbyStocks discussed in the lightning round session of Jim Cramers Mad Money TV program,
Wednesday, October 15.Bullish Calls:Continental Resources (CLR) -- "This is a remarkable decline. All of the high quality ones are down so much, I can't go against it. This is where you pull the trigger.
3M (MMM) -- The moment this stock starts yielding 5%, I'm a buyer. Until then, keep your powder dry.Bearish Calls:Computer Sciences (CSC) -- This is a company that was going to be bought, but they passed up the chance. Now I don't want to buy it."Email continues...
Annaly Mortgage (NLY) -- I think this is a business model that needs to borrow money. Definitively do not buy."
Northrop Grumman (NOC) -- You can't own the defense stocks right now. If I had to own one, I'd look at Lockheed Martin (LMT) with its good dividend. - Stocks & Sectors -SampleSeeking Alpha - Stocks & SectorsInternet
- eBay: Q3 Looks Good but Q4 Guidance Disappoints by Greg Feirman
- Is Google Feeling Lucky? by Sam Gustin
- Why Today Could Suck for Tech by Kevin Maney
Media- A Triple Financial Whammy Afflicts Newspapers by Ken Doctor
- Three Years On, Buying MySpace Looks Like One of Murdoch's Smartest Bets by Erick Schonfeld
- How Will Arbitron Fare in This Market? by Sreeni Meka
Telecom- Ten Ways to Invest in Louisiana by Stockerblog
- Earnings Preview: Electro-Optical Engineering by theflyonthewall.com
- Shared Docks Via WiFi All the Rage by Dean Bubley
Financial- Switzerland Strengthens Its Banks; Short Interest Remains Low by Jessica Johnson
- Reality Bites As Stocks Continue To Collapse by The Mole
- LIBOR Shows Worst Is Yet to Come for Credit Markets by Keith Fitz-Gerald
- Global Markets -SampleSeeking Alpha - Global MarketsChina
- An Outcry from Emerging and Developed Markets Alike by Jonathan O'Shaughnessy
- USANA Health Sciences Inc. Q3 2008 Earnings Call Transcript
- Perfect World Announces Share Repurchase Program by Trader Mark
- China: Hot Money Inflows Down, Nervousness Up by Michael Pettis
India- Indian Economy Has Much to Cheer About by Equitymaster
- India: RBI Cuts Cash Reserve Ratio by Equitymaster
- India: Markets Continue Downward by Equitymaster
Japan- Sanyo Enters Thin-Film Market, Goes Up Against Sharp by Greentech Media
Asia- Four International Dividend Stocks to Watch by David Hunkar
Eastern Europe- Reality Bites As Stocks Continue To Collapse by The Mole
- Alternative Energy Investing -SampleSeeking Alpha - Alternative EnergyAlternative Energy
- Seven Stocks for an Impending Apocalypse by H.J. Huneycutt
- Solar Shares Under Pressure From Credit Crunch and Pricing by Eric Savitz
- Trina Solar Looks Good, Though Market Yawns by Trader Mark
- The Electric Car Market: Wise Energy Use Stocks by Tom Konrad
- Investing in the Power of the Sea
- ETF Daily -SampleSeeking Alpha - ETF DailySector ETFs
- Too Early To Buy Homebuilders ETF by Larry MacDonald
- Utilities Beginning to Generate Interest for Longs by Joe Kunkle
- Two Global Infrastructure Investment Opportunities in ETFs by Investment U
New ETFs- First Trust Launches Infrastructure ETF with Global Reach by Index Universe
- Overview and Analysis of the Global Generic Drug Industry by Mike Havrilla
Emerging Market ETFs- Brazil Is the Best of BRIC by Carl T. Delfeld
- Playing the Market in Difficult Times by Jason Hamlin
- The Daily Dispatch -SampleSeeking Alpha - Daily DispatchWall Street Breakfast
- Wall Street Breakfast: Must-Know News by SA Editor Rachael Granby
US Market- An Outcry from Emerging and Developed Markets Alike by Jonathan O'Shaughnessy
- Wall Street Breakfast: Must-Know News by SA Editor Rachael Granby
Housing & Real Estate- Too Early To Buy Homebuilders ETF by Larry MacDonald
- Another 'Root Cause' That Isn't: Tumbling Home Prices by Tim Iacono
Transcripts- TrueBlue, Inc. Q3 2008 Earnings Call Transcript
- Polycom, Inc. Q3 2008 Earnings Call Transcript
ETF- Too Early To Buy Homebuilders ETF by Larry MacDonald
- About Seeking Alpha
- About Us
- Contact Us
- What's New
- Readers Feedback
- Advertise With Us
- Contributors
- Contribute an Article
- Feature Your Book
- Our Contributors
- Anonymous Contributions
- Dispute an Article?
- Legal
- Terms of Use
- Privacy
- Copyright
Did Reagan End the Era of Free Markets?
This article is, like most conspiracy theories, built upon half baked innuendo and deliberately misinterpreted statements taken out of their complete context.
Personally, I think articles like this are deliberate plants by those in power to keep us from focusing on the threat that is posed by UFOs working in cahoots with the CIA. You can read all about it here: weeklyworldnews.com/
Why Banks Are Hoarding Money
Sun Still Clings to Java Dominance Pitch
I've been architecting/developin... applications for Fortune500 && Gov't clients for nearly 20 years and I have yet to see a single request for an app built using either PHP or Ruby. The TIOBE index puts Java programmers (~20%) at about twice the demand of PHP (~10% ) and Ruby is distant with (<3%). See www.tiobe.com/index.ph... Note that the TIOBE index can't be used to infer the relative scale of projects using given languages.
IT Pundit + Buzzwords = 1.0, Sun = 0.1
Buffett's Advice to the Berkshire Faithful: Buy Index Funds
Bogleheads rule!
Buffett's Advice to the Berkshire Faithful: Buy Index Funds
Vanguard Total Market Index Fund -- https://personal.vangu...
Vanguard Total International Stock Index -- https://personal.vangu...
And maybe a bit of
Vanguard REIT Index Fund -- https://personal.vangu...
You'll do fine.
Another Month, Another Misreported Consumer Spending Number
And that is the problem with articles like this. Since there is no such thing as a typical consumer, it is very difficult to create a market basket of goods and prices that can represent the price changes that are affecting all consumers. Superficial articles like this one that make claims about "we consumers" should be ignored.
Commodity Conundrum Solved: The Hidden Parameter in Interest Rates
Let's Think Long and Hard About Extending Those Bush Tax Cuts
Why is it that proponents of the Laffer Curve always assume we are at a point in our tax system where decreased tax rates must necessarily lead to increases in revenues (the right half of the Laffer Curve)? Remember, the Laffer Curev has two sides. Maybe we are closer to the left half where decreases in tax rates actually decrease revenues because the additional work incentive is simply not enough to make up for the initial lost revenue?
Let's Think Long and Hard About Extending Those Bush Tax Cuts
Read this NYTimes piece on Douglas Holtz-Eakin for details: www.nytimes.com/2008/0...
Dr. Holtz-Eakin served as the Director of the Congressional Budget Office and also served for 18 months as Chief Economist for the President’s Council of Economic Advisors under President George W. Bush and for two years as Senior Staff Economist for President George H. W. Bush’s Council of Economic Advisors. He is now an advisor for Republican Presidential Candidate John McCain.
Central Banks Have Become Dangerous
In no particular order:
"Private, profit-seeking actors would not have generated the corrosive financial flows that have characterized this millennium."
Then why did those same profit-seeking actors so happily provide mortgages to households with fairy tale incomes?
"Less politically-independen... monetary authorities could have leaned against unsustainable financing."
Greenspan happily agreed with the Bush tax cuts which have given us some of the largest budget deficits in U.S. history and you want the Fed more politically dependent?
"We may yet escape, but we have been drawn very close to something very dangerous, to a genuine crisis of scarcity in the United States... This is serious stuff. And central banks are largely to blame."
Scarcity of what? Oil? Oil has always been scarce. Same with every other resource. That scarcity, coupled with demand, generates a market price that reflects that scarcity. To claim that Central Banks are to blame for that scarcity is to ignore the complete unwillingness of the American public and the politicians they elect to do anything to at all to move us toward alternatives. Jimmy Carter warned us about our dependence on foreign oil 30 years ago. Since then, no administration or Congress (D or R) has made any attempt to do anything about it. This isn't the fault of the Central Banks. The politicians did exactly what their constituents wanted them to do: nothing.
"But what the US economy produces is no longer well matched to what Americans consume, and we are structurally unprepared to generate tradables, goods or services, in quantity adequate to cover the difference."
Ohio has a serious shortage of qualified machinists even though the state has lost 200K manufacturing jobs in the past decade. Anyone with an engineering degree has a nearly instant ticket into the top ranks of the middle class because those are the skills demanded in today's economy. Globalization has not destroyed the middle class. But a failure to educate our citizens for the kinds of jobs that an open economy demands might be doing the job.
Smart Regulation vs. Dumb Regulation Is The Real Issue
Because they expected the Great Machine of laissez-faire capitalism to free them from the Fed's instrumentality. That the Great Machine would also give physical form to all of its creator's baser instincts and commit genocide against its creators was about as expected to Wolf and Wessel as Monty Python's Spanish Inquisition.
Today's Lesson: Why the Fed Raised Its Rates in 1931
While Herbert Stein has reminded us that things that cannot go on forever, don't, it is not clear to me why China is importing inflation given the sterilization policy and the fact that they have been (too!) slowly re-valuing the yuan in recent years.
The End of U.S. Investing as We Know It?
But I do enjoy reading the doom and gloom scenarios on blogs like this. They provide the same kind of thrills, chills, and adrenalin rush of a B grade horror film. That reminds me - Gotta pick up some popcorn on the way home tonight.
Global 'Oil Shock' Rattles World Stock Markets
Fears of Dollar Collapse?