Jump to content

B4 The Bell Thursday July 22


Recommended Posts

:D Welcome to B4 The Bell! :D

 

Yesterday, the Jedi returned and struck back against the plans of the evil Microsoft

empire. :lol: Well not exactly, but an unusual and negative chart pattern was formed. The bulls are on the run as liquidity still drains from the economy and the GSEs look like their lending growth has slowed way down.

 

Thursdays are important days for Fed activity. Let's see if the Fed today is really

as confident as the Lizard King that the economy is improving.

 

globex.png

nasdaq.png

 

Good trading! ;)

 

PS Some fine discussion last night of various issues. :)

http://www.capitalstool.com/forums/index.p...80entry322775

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Replies 287
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Gold No Haven

 

When The Well Runs Dry

 

Your Golden Stool, including short and long term updated charts and price targets, is loaded. Even if you are not a goldbug, you should check out the Golden Stool. It's in your Anals daily. Take a subscribatory and download the Golden Stool RIGHT NOW!

 

30 Day Intro Subscribatory. Just $16.99! Get In RIGHT NOW!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

From prior thread:

 

Doc says:

The cost of debt lower than the cost of equity? Maybe that's the way it should be, but it hasn't been that way for the last 20 years. Companies that produce no earnings have been able to raise all the capital they want and then some. The cost of equity has essentially been zero.

That might be true in technology but only during the past 10 years or so. As for the balance of the economy which represents the vast, vast majority of capital employed which is what business essentially has to finance it is most certainly not the case.

 

Paradoxically, it is also not true that over the long haul risk takers will outperform lenders. Over the very long haul (80-100 years), equity returns are hardly greater than the risk free rate of return.

 

Your first sentence contradicts the second, Doc, and you are in any case mixing apples and oranges in comparing the risk-free rates with a corporate cost of debt.

 

Anyway listed equity returns certainly do outperform debt returns over the long haul, particularly so when dividends are taken into account. Maybe not by as much as is widely believed but they do.

 

However, particularly prior to the last 5-10 years listed equity returns have been a very poor proxy for total societal equity returns since companies should theoretically have reached a certain level of maturity prior to listing implying significant pre-listing equity returns. For example, consider the nature of typical private equity/venture capital returns.

 

Equity returns are superior to debt returns over the long haul. Period.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Plunger, too many points in your post to address but consider your statement:

 

It's very easy to see that the VAST MAJORITY of risk takers are nearest the bottom of the food chain, and the bankers are at the top. If more money flowed toward risk takers than banks, the risk takers would be at the top.

First of all borrwoing for consumption has nothing to do with risk taking

 

More substantively as to the second point, ask yourself whether relatively speaking bankers are wealthier and more influential today than they were 100 years ago.

 

The answer is absolutely clear to me.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Plunger said in the previous thread:

 

As for entrepreneurs...Are you prepared to enter into a long term lease on a commercial space to open a new enterprise in this environment?  Are you prepared to secure that lease with your house as collateral?  If so, what business would that be?  What market is presently underserved ...?

 

I've been asking myself and others this question for many months.

 

So far, have not been able to come up with any answer or proposal.

 

Does anyone foresee opportunity in an entrepreneurial-level business which is not massively capital intensive?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

More substantively as to the second point, ask yourself whether relatively speaking bankers are wealthier and more influential today than they were 100 years ago.

 

The answer is absolutely clear to me.

I made no mention of whether or not bankers were more or less powerful today than 100 years ago, and this appears to be a change of subject.

 

So it is then your position that risk takers ARE above bankers on the food chain.

 

OK

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Plunger said in the previous thread:

 

As for entrepreneurs...Are you prepared to enter into a long term lease on a commercial space to open a new enterprise in this environment?  Are you prepared to secure that lease with your house as collateral?  If so, what business would that be?  What market is presently underserved ...?

 

I've been asking myself and others this question for many months.

 

So far, have not been able to come up with any answer or proposal.

 

Does anyone foresee opportunity in an entrepreneurial-level business which is not massively capital intensive?

Simple: Nightclubs.

 

During tough times people will always wish to go out to get pissed and generally forget their troubles. Remember the economic malaise in the 1970s? Party time!

 

Furthremore nightclubs are effectively pre-financed by breweries and drinks companies. Perfect.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I've been asking myself and others this question for many months.

Me too. Especially for the kids who have the energy to run a business, but am I willing to risk the capital to set them up? Can't do it. Too risky. So I'll trade the market for money. What a waste. This country is messed up. Corporations are just awful. When they break the law they should have to go to jail too for one thing.

 

I had a good business for years once. A corp. came into my neighborhood and took my business in sweetheart deals with my suppliers. So I bumped em. Took the money and left them with a pile of old crap. :D

Link to comment
Share on other sites

More substantively as to the second point, ask yourself whether relatively speaking bankers are wealthier and more influential today than they were 100 years ago.

 

The answer is absolutely clear to me.

I made no mention of whether or not bankers were more or less powerful today than 100 years ago, and this appears to be a change of subject

 

So it is then your position that risk takers ARE above bankers on the food chain.

 

As to second point, yes, it is my contention that bankers are today relatively speaking far less wealthy and powerful than they were 100 years ago. No doubt about it.

 

Regarding your first comment, if you say so, Plunger.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest yobob1
Plunger said in the previous thread:

 

As for entrepreneurs...Are you prepared to enter into a long term lease on a commercial space to open a new enterprise in this environment?? Are you prepared to secure that lease with your house as collateral?? If so, what business would that be?? What market is presently underserved ...?

 

I've been asking myself and others this question for many months.

 

So far, have not been able to come up with any answer or proposal.

 

Does anyone foresee opportunity in an entrepreneurial-level business which is not massively capital intensive?

Pimp

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Crapper- Your unequivocal pronouncements from on high are not going to fly here. Sorry. The long term rate of return on stock indexes, which are managed and regularly culled, before taxes, before management fees, is around 7.5%, including dividends. (See Shiller for the data.) If you take out taxes, commissions, and managment fees, to say nothing of the fact that managed indexes do not include the drag on performance of stocks that become worthless, that will leave the typical investor with an after tax return of around 3%. If you include the drag of all of the stocks that go to zero which would be in a diversified portfolio, then the return is going to be even lower. How much lower is anyone's guess, but it would appear to me that this is going to be substantially less than the long term return on debt.

 

If you have facts that would support your argument, fine, but pronouncements in the absence of factual support are not very helpful.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Big Move Coming

 

But Which Way

 

Uncle Buck and the Long Bong Hit, including short and long term updated charts and price targets, is now loaded. Take a subscribatory and get the latest whiff of Uncle Buck and the Long Bong Hit.

 

30 Day Intro Subscribatory. Just $16.99! Get In RIGHT NOW!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

According to Greenie, the Household Survey indicates unprecedented jobs growth among home-based entrepreneurs. For these, their home is their headquarters and their SUV is their business vehicle. These "risk taking entrepreneurs" write off a portion of their homes and their vehicle purchase/use on their tax returns...as many need a means by which to haul trash from garage sales to their homes prior to selling it on EBAY.

 

Welcome to the New Economy!

 

Jobless Claims down 11,000

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

  • Tell a friend

    Love Stool Pigeons Wire Message Board? Tell a friend!
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • ×
    • Create New...