Monday, September 6, 2010

STEAM MACHINE

Blog for Kurt Edwards

Archive for March, 2009

Stewart VS Cramer: The Breakdown

Posted by MrKurt On March - 15 - 2009

 

Finance ? Short Term or Long term

 

I wanted to bring up a topic which I feel is the underlying, fundamental question when viewing the financial catastrophe. After watching the “Jon Stewart vs Jim Cramer Brawl” www.thedailyshow.com (which I thoroughly enjoyed) I really thought the emphasis should come down to “Should finance be regulated on a short term scope or a long term scope.”

 

As Jon said, for mom and pop investors, we are taught to invest for the long term and to be very risk averse, so when you hear of all the risky trading going on with retirement funds, it can make you distrust where you place your money. Now playing to Cramer’s side, and I will say he wasn’t given a chance to fully flesh out his side due to time constraints and his humbleness to be the financial scapegoat, but from my little experience of learning finance and working within the industry for a brief time, you are taught about Duty of Care and your goal, which is to maximize shareholders’ value. This value can be viewed not only as monetary but anything the stakeholder believes to be a positive gained aspect. For example, sustainability might be of prime concern to a stakeholder and therefore adding value could be contributing investments to environmental funds.

 

Adding and maximizing a shareholder’s value is all nice and vague but there is no scope of time in this goal. Some view any possible short-term gain should be taken if the opportunity is given ample due diligence. It really must be a balancing act between your long-term financial goal and the small opportunities that present themselves as short-term hurdles on your way to the long-term goal.

 

Additionally, I agree with Alan Greenspan in an interview not so long ago, that this is human nature and there will always be bubbles and bursts or a misuse of power by the “Commanding Heights”.  The reason I agree with Alan Greenspan is simply do to the fact that humans do not view ‘Positive Probabilities’ the same as ‘Negative Probabilities’. I do not think this is wrong for humanity to do, in a sense that we must be optimistic to push boundaries and evolve, but just to know that this will create greater volatility. Out of volatility will come innovation and evolution at a faster pace, but is this socially stable and acceptable? This one argument I have briefly touched on above is what keeps the political and socio-economical pendulum swinging between ideologies. It is for this reason that I will have to draw upon the old saying, “Everything in Moderation”. There is no one right answer but a collective force facilitated by democracy.

 

Long story short; in my opinion, there are regulations that need to be enforced and not simply more regulation. There should be no witch hunt, no one was arguing these risky trading techniques and securities when everyone was gaining (including the government), so stop vilifying the finance industry when the ones who vilify are the ones responsible as well. I believe there is much more to build upon in terms of accountability these days and I believe Jim Cramer is at least trying to take some accountability.

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The power of Twitter

Posted by MrKurt On March - 5 - 2009

“Who would want to see what I am doing all day?! What would I Twitter?  -Hey the burger I got at Mcdonalds was a bit soggy, I think they should rethink the process?-”  

The above is a common perception of what you would say if you caught onto the ‘Twitter’ craze.  I know that’s what I thought when I first signed up.  My brother is actually the one who pushed me on and I am glad he did.  At first, I started out saying things like “Time to go to work”.  Most likely the blandest, dullest statement anyone would ever want to read or be reminded about.  

After some searching around and sifting through equally dull statements from people “that just didn’t get it”, I came upon some treasures.  My first Twitter love was the ‘TedFeed’.  TED is a website that hosts many of the intellectual thinkers for our time.  It’s like the best YouTube for the most curious people.  I don’t know if it’s good to say this or not, but I try to watch one TED video every night before I go to bed.  It keeps things jumbling around in the noggin.   Now that I was following the TEDFEED, I could get updates on new lectures posted to the site which in turn satisfied my hunger for input (thx johny 5).

That is a quick example of how you can use Twitter to create your own streams of information that you are interested in that isn’t edited by big publications.  Think of it as a big group of friends getting together and eventually everyone huddles into groups that they are the most interested in and think they can get the most out of.  Even if you are not totally interested on talking to one particular person in your ‘huddle’, you still want to over hear their conversations just in case something comes up that is useful to you.  

If I wrote that analogy well enough and you could follow, that is what makes Twitter so powerful.  I do not agree with critics who say that Twitter is just an evolution of the degradation of our language and how it is used to express ideas.

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