Tag Archive for 'January'

Super Bowl Webinar Explores How To Build Winning Business Teams with “Hiring Secrets of the NFL” Author Isaac Cheifetz January 30 at ExecuNet from 3-4:30 PM

Super Bowl Webinar Explores How To Build Winning Business Teams with “Hiring Secrets of the NFL” Author Isaac Cheifetz January 30 at ExecuNet from 3-4:30 PM












Minneapolis, MN (PRWEB) January 28, 2008

Get your business game on this Wednesday at ExcuNet (http://www.execunet.com/r_network_detail.cfm?fmtid=80a7). Isaac Cheifetz, by day an executive recruiter and organizational consultant at Open Technologies, Inc., by night a student of the NFL, will work from his engaging and insightful new book, “Hiring Secrets of the NFL” (http://www.hiringsecrets.com, published by Davies Black) to explore how to build winning business teams using the drama of the Super Bowl, the hiring histories of the NFL and the nuances of football and business in general.

Join Isaac online at ExecuNet (http://www.execunet.com/r_network_detail.cfm?fmtid=80a7) January 30, 2008, from 3-4:30 EST for a lively interactive webinar in which the C-level strategist brings together his passion and professional expertise to discuss how to build winning teams in business like the winning teams competing in Sunday’s Super Bowl.

“With the Super Bowl coming up, it’s an ideal time to talk about the power and personalities and the psychology and the politics of what makes championship teams – and great companies – tick,” Cheifetz says. “Who are the genuine player talents and characters in the Big Game? And who are they most like in the business world? Are there any ‘Eccentrics’ who may make the difference in the contest? Who are the ‘Gamechangers’ on both sides? Any ‘Teamwreckers’ (Randy Moss?!!) in this event? Does one lead your company? This special Super Bowl Seminar promises to be entertaining and educational about making the right hiring choices for optimum performance.”

Other topics this veteran recruiter, speaker and consultant will cover, using the metaphors of football to speak the language of business, include:

·    The overpriced payouts for underperforming stars

·    The need for fierce competition, teamwork and strategic alignment.

·    Recruit and retain all-around excellence with an eye to the future, not the past

·    Apply the value-investing method made famous by Warren Buffett to avoid overpaying for talent

·    Seek out and distinguish eccentrics from teamwreckers–and learn to manage them effectively

·    Assess the strength of your entire system–not just your stars.

The dialog promises to be wise, witty and pragmatic — just in time for one of the sporting world’s most watched events.

For more information visit: http://www.hiringsecrets.com and http://www.opentechnologies.com

To interview Isaac Cheifetz any time — please contact Martin Keller, Media Savant Communications Company, 612-729-8585.

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Find More Warren Buffett Press Releases

BYD says vehicle sales volume down 15 pct in January

BYD says vehicle sales volume down 15 pct in January
HONG KONG, Feb 15 (Reuters) – Chinese car maker BYD Co Ltd <1211.HK>, backed by U.S. billionaire Warren Buffett, said on Tuesday that its January auto sales volume fell about 15 percent from a year ago.
Read more on Reuters via Yahoo! Philippines News

Congressman John Lewis receives Presidential Medal of Freedom
The Civil Rights icon was awarded the nation’s highest civilian honor just now at the White House alongside former President George H.W. Bush, investor Warren Buffett, artist Jasper Johns and cellist Yo-Yo Ma. A list of recipients can be found here .… [ Read more ] [ Subscribe to the comments on this story ]
Read more on Creative Loafing Atlanta

Buffett Update: Berkshire Exits BofA, Pads Wells Fargo Stake
Billionaire’s investment company reports fourth-quarter holdings.
Read more on Forbes

Drs Ron and Rand Paul interview January 31 2010


more infos at : ronpaul1.blogspot.com

Picking Stocks for 2009. January 16, 2009

PICKING STOCKS FOR 2009. January 16, 2009.

I’m expecting 2009 to be a better time for investors. Not an easy time, as in the one-sided market of the late 1990s when everything one bought went up, but an easier time than 2008 – at least for those willing to engage in a little market-timing. And that’s although I expect rallies will only be bear market rallies within an ongoing bear market.

Why an easier time then?

Last year my newsletter’s market-timing strategy portfolio gained 9.2%, one of the very few advisory services that were up for the year in which the S&P 500 lost 38.5%, hundreds of mutual funds and hedge funds closed due to heavy losses, and even ‘best investor in the world’ Warren Buffett was down 31.8% for the year. But it wasn’t an easy year. The extreme volatility made for stress, and the need to stick with mutual funds and ETF’s due to the higher risk in individual stocks took some of the fun out of it.

The outlook is different in that regard for 2009. Of the many stocks that plunged severely last year, some plunged for good reason, while others sank in sympathy with the market, or were sold simply because mutual funds and hedge funds had to sell something in order to raise cash to meet their record level of redemptions.

I believe that has quite a number of stocks on the bargain table, which is a lot different than when 2008 began.

One I mentioned to you in my December 26 column was Zimmer Holdings, symbol ZMH. Zimmer is about as far away from the troubled financial, housing, and retail sectors as you can get. To remind you of what I said in December, the company designs and manufactures orthopedic implants, including joint, dental, and spinal replacements. I believe its 54% stock plunge last year was overdone, and recommended its purchase. It’s up about 2% since that Dec. 26 column. The encouraging thing about that is how well it held up even as the S&P 500 plunged back down 10% over the last two weeks.

In my newsletter this week we featured another individual stock, which may have appeal to those looking for income as well as those seeking potential capital gains.

It is Cedar Fair, symbol FUN. Cedar Fair operates popular regional theme parks, and water parks, in 13 states in the U.S. and one province of Canada.

The parks include Cedar Point in Ohio; Knott’s Berry Farm and Soak City USA in California; Dorney Park/Wildwater Kingdom in Pennsylvania; Valleyfair in Minnesota; Worlds of Fun in Kansas, Michigan’s Adventure Park: Canada’s Wonderland in Toronto; Kings Dominion in Virginia; and Carowinds in North Carolina.

Cedar Fair is noted for exciting rides. Its Cedar Point Park in Ohio offers 65 rides and 16 roller coasters, including Top Thrill Dragster, one of the world’s tallest and fastest coasters.

In addition to thrill rides for the brave, the parks are family oriented with water slides and wave action pools, as well as attractions for smaller children themed around the ‘Peanuts’ comic strip characters.

While the recession is having an effect on attendance at theme parks, Cedar Fair’s regional attractions, each only a few hours from large population centers, are faring much better than the destination-vacation type theme parks. The company just reported a couple of days ago that attendance in its 4th quarter was 8% higher than the same quarter a year ago, and estimated average daily spending per guest declined only 1%.

The company’s aggressive annual expenditures for new rides and attractions have always been key to keeping visitors returning, and Cedar Fair has announced expenditures of $62 million for 2009 additions, including a huge new coaster at its King’s Island Park in Cincinnati. Company president Dick Kinzel says, “It is likely that many of the difficult market conditions we faced in 2008 will be present in 2009, and we will continue to focus on adding value to the guest experience through new shows, thrill rides, family attractions and special events. I believe we have an excellent overall entertainment package lined up for 2009 that will appeal to today’s budget-conscious consumers.”

Revenues have increased in each of the last ten years. Going forward the worsening recession will probably have a greater negative effect on attendance (and the bottom line). But I believe that with the stock having plunged 57% along with the rest of the market, the potential negatives have been pretty much already factored into the share price.

Cedar Fair may also have appeal for those looking for income. A limited partnership, Cedar Fair must pay out most of its earnings to investors in the form of dividends. The partnership has increased the dividend for 21 straight years. At the current depressed stock price the dividend yield is a robust 15.5%. Even if the company had to cut its dividend for the first time, the yield would probably remain at a high payout.

Meanwhile, according to FirstCall/Thompson Financial, of seven analysts surveyed, three had a ‘strong buy’, three a ‘buy’, and one a ‘hold’ rating on the stock.

As always this is my opinion and there are no guarantees in investing, but I believe Cedar Fair is a good choice for 2009, for both income and potential capital gains.

Sy Harding publishes the financial website www.StreetSmartReport.com and a free daily Internet blog at www.SyHardingblog.com. In 1999 he authored Riding the Bear – How To Prosper In the Coming Bear Market. His new book is Beat the Market the Easy Way! – Proven Seasonal Strategies Double Market’s Performance!

Sy Harding is CEO of Asset Management Research Corp., author of 1999′s Riding the Bear and 2007′s Beat the Market the Easy Way, editor of www.StreetSmartReport.com, and www.SyHardingblog.com.

Ron Paul vs Paul Kanjorski on Bernanke reappointment January 25 2010


more Ron Paul interviews at ronpaul1.blogspot.com

Nouriel Roubini Speech at The AFF Asian Financial Forum 21 January 2010


more on Roubini at nourielroubini.blogspot.com

Ganging up on the market! January 22, 2010

Being Street Smart

Sy Harding

Ganging up on the market! January 22, 2010.

I wrote in last week’s column that “the next few weeks could be a testing time for both bulls and bears”.

To my way of thinking too many influential participants decided to take part in that testing this week for comfort.

Early in the week the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) reported that its Housing Market Index, which measures the confidence of home builders, declined to 15 in January, its lowest level since June, indicating that only 15% of builders have confidence in the housing industry going forward. The NAHB’s chief economist said the housing market recovery is tenuous as foreclosures continue to rise, the jobs recovery is slow, and builders are having trouble getting construction loans.

That was followed the next day by the report that new home starts unexpectedly fell 4% in December.

Banks got into the testing of the market by reporting fourth quarter earnings that were again produced mostly from their investment trading departments and investment-related fees from customers, while their credit-card and loan losses continued to pile up.

The World Bank then got into the act, releasing a report on Thursday saying that global economic recoveries will be tepid at best in 2010, and may even stall if consumer and commercial demand doesn’t pick up sufficiently to replace government stimulus efforts as they are withdrawn.

The report and remarks by the World Bank’s Arthur Burns also added weight to recent monetary policy announcements in China, one of the world’s most important and most stimulated economies, that it has begun preliminary moves to reverse its stimulus efforts. Burns said, “We can already see signs of bubbles and tension in the Chinese economy.”

As if there was not already enough pressure in China to cool off its blistering economy or face potential runaway inflation, China reported on Thursday that its economy (GDP) spiked up 10.7% in the 4th quarter.

To add to the confusion and uncertainty, Warren Buffett chimed in with well-publicized remarks that he still doesn’t know when the economy will recover, and seemed to express the need for more stimulus efforts from the government, saying, “The government came through, and overall I give them high marks for what they did  . . . . . . But we need to get money in people’s pockets, and the first stimulus plan did not do that very well.”

So we had the World Bank saying the global economic recovery will be tepid and may even stall, but that China, so important to global economic recovery, may be in a bubble and needs to take more steps to cool off its economy, with China agreeing, while Buffett is saying the economic recovery in the U.S. is still questionable and needs more government stimulus.

Meanwhile, one of the bright spots in the U.S. economy has been the fast recovery of the major banks, their return to significant profitability, and repayment of the TARP bailout money earlier than was expected.

However, as I noted above, their earnings are coming from their investment activities, while their losses from credit-card and commercial loan losses continue to pile up.

But what the heck, earnings are earnings, and their investment and trading activities have certainly been a prime support for the stock market. As I noted in last week’s column “The absence of public investors has not prevented a strong new bull market, rising on very low volume, the participants primarily being professional traders, and professional investors at hedge funds, banks and other institutions. In fact, banks have been reporting large profits due primarily to their trading and investments, even as their loan losses pile up.”

With those factors already testing the market mightily, President Obama then piled it on, giving a very tough televised speech spelling out proposed measures to reign in the power of banks, including banning them from numerous forms of investment trading, from having hedge funds of their own or providing financing to or investing in hedge funds of others, and so on. Probably good intentions, aimed at preventing the kind of risk-taking and greed that caused the recent problems in the banking system.

A good idea for later. But for now, investment activity by the banks has been a major support of the stock market, and the new bull market has been a major support for the economic recovery.

I didn’t have quite this degree of piling on in mind when I said last weekend that the market would likely be in for testing of its staying power.

Sy Harding is editor of www.StreetSmartReport.com, and the free daily market blog, www.streetsmartpost.com.

Sy Harding is CEO of Asset Management Research Corp., author of 1999′s Riding the Bear and 2007′s Beat the Market the Easy Way, editor of www.StreetSmartReport.com, and www.StreetSmartPost.com.