Thursday, May 31, 2007

on Science

There is no such thing as consensus science. If it's consensus, it isn't science. If it's science, it isn't consensus. Period.

Monday, May 14, 2007

Real Estate slowing signs

Real Estate Disposition Corp., the Irvine, Calif., company that organized last Saturday's auction of lender-owned homes, plans similar sales May 19 in Los Angeles and May 20 in Riverside, Calif.

At the San Diego sale, houses and condos typically sold for about 30% below the previous sale or appraisal prices. In a few cases, the discounts were around 50%.
A four-bedroom home in Oceanside, Calif., attracted a high bid of $495,000 at the auction, 33% below the sale price recorded in November 2005 for the property. One condo in San Diego sold for $120,000, less than half of its previous value.

ouch!

Phrasel Verbs

know what a phrasel verb is? neither did I until a friend enlightened me and then I started hearing and seeing them everyone. heck I thought that was normal language but it's not . . . A phrasal verb is a verb plus a preposition or adverb which creates a meaning different from the original verb.

click here for more

Wednesday, May 09, 2007

Jeb Bush joins the Tenet Healthcare gravy train

from the Street.com click here
A senior member of the Bush dynasty is about to get a large sum of money from a company with a history of ethical violations.
Stop me if you've heard this one before. Jeb Bush, the president's brother and former governor of Florida, is up for election Thursday as a director of troubled hospital chain Tenet Healthcare. Assuming he's waved through, his pay in his first year would come to nearly $37,000 a day. This is the same Tenet that had to pay $900 million to Uncle Sam last summer to settle charges that it had overbilled Medicare and Medicaid over many years. Nine hundred million dollars.

Tuesday, May 08, 2007

The Black Swan or rare event . . .

Wired Magazine interviewed Nicholas Taleb (Fooled by Randomness) after publication of his latest book on risk called The Black Swan. Taleb is one of my gurus, I recommend both of his books . . . here's some of the interview


Wired: If Black Swans are the crucial determining events in history, why do we think we can predict anything at all?
Taleb: After they happen, in retrospect, we think that Black Swans were predictable. We think that if we can explain why something happened in the past, we can explain what will happen in the future.

But with better models and more computational power, won't we get better at predicting Black Swans?
We know from chaos theory that even if you had a perfect model of the world, you'd need infinite precision in order to predict future events. With sociopolitical or economic phenomena, we don't have anything like that. And things are getting worse, not better, because the growing complexity of the world dwarfs any improvement in sophistication or computational power.

So what do we do? If we can't forecast the really important things, how do we act?
You need to ask, "If the Black Swan hits me, will it help me or hurt me?" You cannot figure out the probability of a Black Swan hitting. But if you're in a business that's prone to negative Black Swans, like catastrophe insurance, I advise you not to take your forecasting seriously — and to think about getting into a different business. You don't want to be a sucker. What you want are situations where you can have as much of the good uncertainty as possible, where nothing too bad can happen to you, and where you have what I call free options. All of technology, really, is about maximizing free options. It's like venture capital: Most of the money you make is from things you weren't looking for. But you find them only if you search.

Is one of the strengths of the American system that, relatively speaking, it's more comfortable with uncertainty?
Yes. People here aren't afraid of failure. They're willing to trade the possibility of failure for the chance at a big upside. No other country is willing to do this. What America does best is produce the ability to accept failure.

Monday, May 07, 2007

Can anyone figure this market out?

For instance, since May 3, 2006, the S&P 500 is up 14.9% while the Investors Business Daily Top 100 is up only 3.1%. Is your portfolio outperforming the S&P since May 3, 2006. Since the 4% correction of March 27 the DJIA has looked like a rocket ship going into space . . . . . . . . most are probably not but yet the cheerleaders as CNBC, et al would have everyone believe that everyone is making money because of the "record" levels being set everyday.

Friday, May 04, 2007

John Sommers . . . ever hear of him?

He wrote "Thank God I'm a Country Boy" which has appeared on over 12 John Denver albums . . .

from his website . . .

"Sommers, of course, knew of Denver, who was living in Aspen in the early '70s but was quickly rising to the ranks of a national musician. Sommers, though, had never met Denver when the singer showed up at a Liberty gig. Denver arrived in time to hear Liberty play “The River of Love,” a Sommers composition that was the only original tune in the band's repertoire at the time.

"He came up and introduced himself and said he loved the song and wanted to record it," said Sommers. "We said, 'Yeah, sure.' That was the first conversation I had with him.


read more here

Thursday, May 03, 2007

Food

“comfort food” that is . . . for those of you not familiar with the term comfort food, that’s what you eat when you need something familiar, something that will make you feel good, something comforting.

Wednesday, May 02, 2007

Murdoch buying Dow Jones . . . . please NOT

That's all any of us who attempts to find objective news needs . . . . the guy who brought opinion "news" and scandal sheets ie FOX, etc taking over the venerable Dow Jones, which publishes the Wall Street Journal. Let's all pray that the majority shareholders stop this one in it's tracks.

Tuesday, May 01, 2007

Clean Investing

Venture capital in clean technologies has ballooned from $623 million in 2005 to $1.5 billion this past year. Is there a bubble a brewing? source Motley Fool