• Professor Elam

    Warren Buffet already owned 20% of Burlington Northern, why did he buy the rest?

    One reason for this blog is to go behind the headlines and link what we study in the classroom with the real world. I posed this question to the Intermed II class last night, indeed, why?  The answer is that he will literally own the earnings of BNI as Berkshire will account for it as a consolidation. The earnings of BNI will become earnings of Berkshire. This will boost the bottom line of Berkshire as well as their cash flow. 

    AS you read the article note that he will then have a 50 to 1 split of BRK.B, the lower priced shares. The split will not change the equity of BRK but will change the price to below $100. The purpose will be to make the shares easier to purchase and gain a wider group of stockholders. 

  • Professor Elam

    PC241369
    Bentley is a 70 pound Catahoula Spotted Leopard Hound. The breed is in the hound family and yes they are bred as hunting dogs. His specialty as you can see is hunting a soccer ball or a warm place on his costco  bed or if possible a couch. 

    We are in a much smaller home and frankly getting out of the animal business, we also have three cats. 

    He is spayed and has had all shots.  He is about two years old. Ideally he needs a big yard to run and play and a couple of boys, minimum ten years age,to play with until they are both tuckered out. Yes he can catch the Frisbee. He is short haired and not subject to shedding like a long haired dog. He is actually gray with patches of black.

    Obviously we want a good home where he will be appreciated and well cared for. He is on Pedigree dry dog food and as you can see, looks much more fit than I do. He is as smart as a Lab but no he does not care to get in the water. 

    If you know of a family that could and would care for Bentley as a member of the family, let me know. Comes complete with two Costco pet beds, toys, and dog food. 

  • Professor Elam

    AS a senior in high school we debated a national right to work law. In the process I learned quite a bit about organizing a union. Read this article from the WSJ about new rules on how votes are counted. 

    Also note the large fine assessed at the end of the article. Such fines do the workers no good as they do not get the money. They do serve as serious incentives to not hire any more employees and find ways to use robots or send the work elsewhere. This is the worst possible message to send in a recession to employers. 

    Mandatory health care with penalties for not signing up, $87 M fines, no wonder unemployment is 9.8% and rising. 

  • Professor Elam

    Non-Confirmations

     

    Nov 4, 2009,
    London
    Ministers yesterday launched a £50billion bailout of Britain's crippled
    banks – and warned there could be worse to come.
      State-controlled lenders Royal Bank of Scotland and
    Lloyds Banking Group will receive fresh injections of taxpayers' money
    totalling £39billion.

     

    Charles Dow created his Dow Theory (after no
    doubt searching the universe for a suitable moniker, he found one) in 1896. The
    idea was that the index for companies that move goods, Transports, should
    confirm the price action for the companies that make goods, the Industrials. A
    new high or low in one should be confirmed or joined by a new high or low in
    the other. We have warned extreme caution lately in that these confirmations
    have not happened, let’s take a look.

    Tuesday November 3 Warren Buffet announced
    Berkshire’s acquisition of Burlington Northern BNI. The juxtaposition of the
    announcement to the non-confirmation of the Transports is just too incidental
    to ignore. The Administration clearly has Goldman Sachs buying the Dow
    Industrials the last half hour to rally it, especially on down days. But GS
    cannot buy everything. The Transports have not made a new high as the
    Industrials have. BNI is a major component of the Transport Index. That jumped
    the index Tuesday but not enough to generate a new high. Similarly the Russell
    and NASD indices of smaller stocks have not made new highs. This adds up to a
    glaring non-confirmation.

    Gold, the money politicians cannot print from
    trees, made a new high Tuesday. India, the country, purchased 200 tons of gold
    form the International Monetary Fund IMF for $6.7 Billion. This is a rich irony
    in that the IMF is divesting gold to acquire more fiat money to ‘loan’ to
    developing countries. That is another story. As we remarked last week, gold is
    the last bull standing, the only ongoing bull market in the world. And so it
    closed at a new high of $1,084.60. But none of the gold mining indices such as
    the XAU or gold stocks went to a new high. This is a glaring non- confirmation.
    It suggests that gold mining stocks will likely join the overall stock market
    in a sell off, when that happens. This was the case last fall.

    With India buying gold, one might think the
    dollar bears drove the buck to new lows. But no they did not.
      The beleaguered US Dollar inched higher
    along with gold!
      How can that
    be?
      World debt is denominated in
    dollars. There is a rush to pay debt, CIT went bankrupt since we last visited.
    Bank demands to pay debt (remember Lloyds and RBS?) in dollars results,
    finally, in a rush to gather dollars. And so gold and the Dollar are in demand.

    In the Permian Basin, the value of the Dollar
    Index is more important than the temperature. Oil transactions are settled in
    dollars. A dollar rally will lower the price of oil. A kilo of gold is much
    more camel friendly than a barrel of oil. Exxon is off its high, and oil is
    hanging around $75-80 as we suggested weeks ago. But a dollar rally will likely
    lower that price in a hurry.

    Volatility has finally stirred, more folks are
    buying put insurance. Like the elections in Virginia and New Jersey,
    complacency has been high, the markets should ‘come alive’ in November.

    Finally there is the banking situation alluded
    to in the opening quote. All the stimulus money has found its way into the
    stock market, not into shoring up bad loans as frankly there is no way to do
    that, they must be written off and the collateral taken to the real market.
    That is why the efforts in England will likely fail. The most glaring
    non-confirmation of all is that Citibank stock is still less than $5 after all
    this FED stimulus.

    Look for November 9 to be a potential turn date
    for many markets. Theses glaring non-confirmations endorse our stance of
    keeping the checkbook in the drawer for the time being. 

  • Professor Elam

    One columnist wants to know why Hollywood is exempt from salary caps?

    Good question, Barney Frank wants to regulate all salaries. Okay Barney, meet Bob!

    Katzenberg at Dreamworks is a big  supporter of social regulation, I bet he would be pressed to make it on $200K, how does he feel about this?

    How do you feel?

    I presume since no one has sounded off on this that all of you are quite prepared to never make more than $200,000……..

  • Professor Elam

    I spent an hour by phone yesterday with a typepad graphic designer. I hope to improve the blog with a better look and learn more about how to manage the various displays. 

    I have reduced the number of categories to a more manage able list. Socionomics will now handle all the social commentary, such as entertainment. I have categories for specific accounting courses as audit, ethics  cost, financial, and items of interest like certified exams. 

    I am open to suggestions. Crescenio and Marilyn are headed to Kingsville to observe their student govt and to visit with chancellor McKinney, I asked them to bring some photos back!

    I should be able to incorporate the new A & M Banner into the blog or at least integrate some logos. 

  • Professor Elam

    A MOVE TO CHANGE SARBANES-OXLEY

    By 

    Neal Boortz 

    November 4, 2009 8:22 AM Permalink | Comments (8) TrackBacks (0)

    Hold on to your hats. I'm about to give The Community Organizer credit for something.

    The Obama administration is apparently pushing Democrats in the House to reform the hideous act of 2002 known as Sarbanes-Oxley. Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel is spearheading the campaign to spare small public companies from complying with the costs of Sarbanes-Oxley. Rep. Carolyn Maloney is set to add the exemption to the House financial reform bill for firms with market values of less than $75 million. One Representative, John Adler, wants to increase that figure to firms with a market value below $700 million, until the SEC can figure out how to reduce compliance costs.

    How much are we talking about in compliance costs? From Bloomberg: Small companies voluntarily adhering to the audit requirements said they spent $690,219 on average in their most recent fiscal year, according to an SEC survey in October. Businesses with market capitalizations from $75 million to $700 million spent $1 million and the largest U.S. corporations spent $3.99 million, the SEC said.

  • Professor Elam

    And now the rest of the story, Edmunds.com calculates that only a fraction of the sales were caused by the govt initiative, the rest would have happened anyway, no wonder the White House is upset, gee, facts get in the way.

  • Professor Elam

    India bought gold to boost reseves today to meet needs for IMF standards.

     
    The big news is the European banks with the the break up of Lloyds  and RBS, Royal Bank of Scotland.   UBS in Switzerland report a continued loss in investment dollars and thier shares tumbled.    The truth is that USB is accurately reporting what is going on in the banking industry and the US bansk are not. 
     
    US banks are really in the same bad shape as Europe but the bail out money is giving the illusion that there is no problem but the bad asset problem has not gone away.
    Maybe this spill is really being started by Europe and it will impact the US into Thanksgiving.   
    If the S & P cannot hold 1032 soon, we may have to sell but will still give it a chance.
     
    Barry Rosen, Fortucast
  • Professor Elam

    As a matter of fact no one is. Deflation not the hyyper inflation that you read about contnues its devastation.

    Now Eddie Murphy has had to cut the price of Bubble Hill in half! Gee he ;may have to make Bevery Hills Cop Nineteen! Deflation, the collapse of asset prices continues across America and the world.

    When the WSJ, a paper devoted to Wall Street, was featuring twenty pages of Distinguished Properties leading up to the stock peak in 2007, that was a socionomic clue of a bubble on its way to bursting.