• Professor Elam

    Jerry Flint suggests that we re brand gas guzzlers, after all we as a people are not Fiat 500 size folks. 

    In the last few years pickup sales are down from 2.5 M per year to 850,000, a staggering decrease. 

    I suspect the America you will experience the next ten years will be quite  a different place from 1982-2000.

  • Professor Elam

    Nissan is operating its two plants in the US at 44% capacity. This is emblematic of just how slow things are in the car biz these days. this is surely below its break even point. But I suspect that is true for all the car makers at this point. Plants will be running less or closing….

  • Professor Elam

    The Federal Pay Czar has limited salaries to about $200,000 for firms receiving Federal Aid. In an even more sweeping move, staggered election terms for Directors will e eliminated, making it easier to replace a majority of the Board at once. 

    These are major changes in how companies are run. Essentially the Federal Government is now running these companies. 

  • Professor Elam

    Apple reports Adjusted Sales for iPods, a departure from GAAP.  Sales and cost of sales are deferred over the expected 24 month life of the product. This in Apple's thinking better reflects their product support over that time. Take a look…

  • Professor Elam

    The graduate class is signing up for which project they will undertake, I will keep the tally here, remember we must have an even number in each project, two person teams. 

    Mila and Dorothy Wood have signed up first for the coffee shop. 

    Hmm, I wil update here, this will also be a good way to see who reads the blog, eh?

    Jamie Rapp and Fawna Crider have signed up for Cactus Flower!

  • Patricia Briones and Pamela Roldan are leaning to Cactus Flower

    Irma and Maria are working on the Coffee Shop

    Diana Morales and I, Lauren Officer would like to perform the case excercises on Mocha Java

    Trey and Lisa are working on the Coffee Shop

  • Elena and I (Rebeca) will be doing the coffee shop.

     

    I am considering having someone from the water district come talk to the class about the demand supply and their take on this, perhaps they would like to hear your final presentations?

  • Professor Elam

    Ben’s Dilemma

     

    For the first time
    since the CPI link was enacted in 1975, Social Security recipients will not
    receive a cost of living COLA increase, nor is one expected the following year.

    Wilbur Mills then eyeing a Presidential run, linked  Social Security payments  to increases in the Consumer Price
    Index. In that 1975 era of inflation, no one imagined that prices would ever go
    down. While Wilbur’s Presidential plans splashed down in a fountain with Fannie
    Fox, the prospect of no COLA is s shock to everyone, Ben Bernake FED Chief in
    particular.

    Inflation occurs when too many dollars chase too few goods.
    The Paul Volker cure is high interest rates which shuts off borrowing and then
    spending. Deflation occurs when dollars are not chasing any goods. In his PhD
    thesis, Bernake mused that the FED in the 1930s simply did not print enough
    dollars. Flood the economy with money and it will be spent. And so he has. The
    FED has spent so many dollars that both Barney Frank and Ron Paul are demanding
    an accounting of where they went. The FED has so cheapened the currency that
    the buck has fallen to a fourteen month low. Yet deflation persists. Annual car
    sales have fallen from three years back 16 million to 8.5 million. While
    pundits are certain this will lead to hyper inflation, too many dollars,
    deflation persists. Commercial property sits vacant and foreclosures loom.

    The White House has brushed the COLA rule aside, suggesting
    SS recipients need $250 each, another $13 Billion in spending.   Money is nearly free to banks.
    Treasury Bill rates are but 13 hundredths of a percent above zero. So lend lend
    lend, with the hope that people will spend spend spend. Yet credit card limits
    are being reigned as the public finally begins to save, those that are working
    anyway.

    This has our perennial ‘allies and trading partners’ vowing
    to kick out the buck. The Mid East is now creating its own  currency.  Foreign governments are buying shorter maturities of our
    debt. China, Russia, and India call for a new World Currency, not tied to a
    fluctuating dollar. Our cheaper dollar makes Russian oil, Chinese cars, and
    Indian software more expensive.  
    And it has done little to spur our economy.

    Neiman Marcus is actually distributing ‘free’ $50 gift
    coupons in the store, they are desperate for shoppers.  The Dollar Index is down from 89 to 75,
    stocks up hundreds of S and P points. And as predicted, oil rose from $35 to
    the $70 range.

    I suggested  a
    few weeks back that oil might poke above $75 as stocks hit a new exuberant
    high. Indeed West Texas Intermediate is $77 and change this morning. It all
    hinges on the dollar.  Seasonally
    stocks sell off in October and November. Stocks are making new highs on lower
    volume. Thursday saw more declines than advances yet recorded a new high in the
    indices. And so the lower Dollar drags   gold, oil, and stocks higher still.  A rising tide lifts all boats. A falling
    dollar has done the same for the boats of stocks, metals, and oil.  So it is not the booming economy of
    1982-2000 but a fire sale on our currency that gives the illusion of the rising
    prices. 

    Hmm,  Thursday
    stocks were down, till the last half hour when some parties started buying in
    earnest. Prices rose, the last half hour masking the selling of the day when
    declines outnumbered advances. 
    Perhaps  this is change we
    can believe in.

    Positive social mood drives the desire to put equipment to
    work in search of more oil production. It used to be that the price of oil
    drove the mood. It is not so simple now. The economy has slowed; Americans are
    literally driving fewer miles. The demand for electricity is down. And so, a
    weak dollar raises the oil price but not the desire to engage a pulling unit or
    hot oiler to the lease. Until the Dollar Index reverses course rising above 80,
    the oil price looks higher. This will finally spur more service work, but it
    will be the siren song of price rather than consumer demand for product. 

    When everyone expects the same thing to happen, everyone is usually
    wrong.  The Dollar is down for
    fourteen months. Everyone is certain the buck will only fall further,  for the moment that is the case.  The Dow is back to the future, 10,000 was
    a  1999 level. Commit cautiously
    and carefully

  • Professor Elam

    Now schools are offering an accelerated MBA, not surprise, less time, less money, gee I guess there really was not that much in the curriculum the first year after all!

    Does it pay off, well take a look at this Pay Scale  graph of the top 30 schools.

    One thing is for sure, while I have discussed deflation on these pages, inflation is alive and well in college tuition. 

    Happily A  & M San Antonio sports one of the lower tuition deals around the City or State of Texas for that matter. No wonder enrollment is up!

    But I digress, just how much condensation is too much?  INdeed noted writer E B White addressed this very question back in 1938 with his wonderful essay, IRTNOG.

  • Professor Elam

    As you know I heavily promoted SA CPa Career Night, Mike and Josh have both joined, Josh organized a meeting to coincide with last Friday's event, here are the results from Amanda Talaat, the Marketing Director.

    This is simply outstanding, and shows what we can do with some promotion. I am committed to bringing outstanding accounting professionals to campus and building a bridge from our students to the professional community.To have doubled any other campus and come in second behind Titanic UTSA is a significant accomplishment, I look forward to your experiences there which I would like to publish on this blog. 

    Here’s how it looks this morning:

     

    Total students attending:             82

                    UTSA:                    44

                    TAMUSA:            13

                    StMU:                     7

                    Trinity:                    4

                    UIW:                        4

                    SAC:                         3

                    Schreiner:             1

                    NWV:                      1

                    PAC:                        1

                    Other:                     4

                    (Univ of Phoenix & 2 candidat

  • Professor Elam

    I have had several posts suggesting that the next calamity is commercial real estate.  Student Austin Kroll echoed this sentiment with multiple posts. Take a loo at this You Tube on malls, the author estimates that we have 19.5 sf of retail for every American and we only need,

    12, that would eliminate one third of retail in America. As he says, and you heard it here first, Macy's and Sears will be closing stores, those are anchor tenants!  Now what about the rest!

  • Professor Elam

    How Did Goldman make $10 B in trading profits in three months?  This fellow addresses the question, this is what I have been suspecting, it must be true.