Tag Archive for 'Their'

Warren Buffett and Bill Gates on Their Relationship and Market Opportunities

Warren Buffett and Bill Gates interview at the Berkshire Hathaway annual meeting, May 4, 2009.

www.pivotfarm.com Warren Buffett is the greatest investor of all time. His decisions about buying shares and companies have beaten the stock market year after year and made him the richest person in the world – thought to be worth 37 billion dollars. Yet Buffett lives modestly in his native Omaha, in America’s mid-West, and runs his 150 billion dollar business with a staff of just twenty. Evan Davis meets him to find out about his unique investment strategy and his eccentric lifestyle. He talks to Buffett’s family, friends and colleagues about the man they call the Sage of Omaha, and Buffett’s friend Bill Gates praises his philosophy of life. As the greed of the super-wealthy is widely criticised in the current financial crisis, Davis asks whether Warren Buffett is the acceptable face of the filthy rich

Warren Buffett We send to China little pieces of Paper for their Goods !!!

warrenbuffet101.blogspot.com for more of Warren Buffet Warren Buffett Peter Schiff marc faber gerald celente Glenn Beck scandal dollar Fema Camps NWO UK Britain pound sterling Marc Faber Jim Rogers gold Gerald Celente Max Keiser Lou Dobbs civil unrest turmoils riots Alex jones david Icke Bob Chapman economy collapse meltdown silver currency Worst Case Scenario 2020 obama mayors stimulus wisely Illuminati new world order skull and bones bohemian grove bush Freemason
Video Rating: 4 / 5

Why Investors Do Not Need China in Their Portfolios

ch39 The Giant-2 – Kempton’s Review/Best of “The Snowball: Warren Buffett and the Business of Life”


Image by k-ideas
Here is my review/"best of" the book,
Kempton’s Best of “The Snowball: Warren Buffett and the Business of Life”

Why Investors Do Not Need China in Their Portfolios
By Jacob Wolinsky. In a previous article on ValueWalk.com I took a look at a recent op-ed by Burton Malkiel, in which he listed some reasons for investing in China. I played devil’s advocate and defended Malkiel’s suggestions, in this article I am going to refute them. Read more » »
Read more on Guru Focus

Buy Hewlett Packard Co. (HPQ) When Others are Fearful
By Chuck Carnevale. To be perfectly blunt, Hewlett-Packard Co. ( HPQ ) posted a solid first quarter 2011. However, it’s amazing how the media can spin a tale of negativity out of excellent operating results, and how the market could take this already inexpensive technology stalwart down at a double-digit percentage rate as a result. In short, we feel the reaction to Hewlett-Packard’s earnings …
Read more on Guru Focus

When Will This Stock Be Worth Buying?
Be ready whenever the market gives you the opportunity.
Read more on The Motley Fool

People Whose Salaries Do Not Reflect Their Affluence (a.k.a. Rich People)

“Filling Mr. [Warren] Buffett’s shoes won’t likely lead to that kind of eye-popping pay, says Mr. Buffett, who earns 0,000 in salary as CEO of Berkshire, though he’s been enriched through his holding of Berkshire shares.” – Wall Street Journal, Oct. 26, 2010

So why, exactly, 0,000 as a salary for the third-richest person in the world? For whatever reason, Buffett has received the exact same salary 29 years in a row.

Meanwhile, back in Gotham, New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, the world’s 17th-richest individual, accepts a year for his services. He also does not bother to live in Gracie Mansion, the official mayor’s mansion, but in his own pad.

Apple’s Steve Jobs takes home an annual salary of , whether he’s earning millions or billions more in paper wealth (as he does most years) or losing + billion (as he did in 2008).

For some reason, Oracle’s Larry Ellison, who in 2000 was briefly the world’s richest person, went from a base salary of million in fiscal 2009 to the beloved per year for fiscal 2010.

Carlos Slim, the world’s richest man, subsists on a salary of 3,600,000 pesos, or just under 0,000. Not to worry; his estimated net worth of billion is equivalent to 6% of Mexico’s GDP. As a comparison: When John D. Rockefeller died in 1937, America’s GDP was billion; Rockefeller’s fortune, by far the largest ever for an American as a percentage of national GDP, was .4 billion, or roughly 1.5% of GDP.

Bill Gates has not been drawing a Microsoft salary since he stepped down as Chief Software Architect in 2006, when his salary, as well as CEO Steve Ballmer’s, was 6,667 (not the top salary at the company). Today, Gates gets 0,000 in compensation as a Microsoft director, and Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway is kind enough to compensate him with ,700 – that’s not truncated to save space – to serve as director.

In 2009, President Obama earned 4,460 – a pro-rated portion of his 0,000 salary, since he was in office for only 345 of a total 365 days – but he and Michelle declared total 2009 income of .5+ million, which does not include the .4 million he snared for the Nobel Peace Prize (and which was donated to ten charities). Most of the money the President made came from royalties of his two books.

As Vice President, Joe Biden earns 1,100.

Actors are more like the rest of us shmoes: If you’ll put aside the oodles they may make from TV syndication, or participation in their movies, or other inside deals they’re privy to, etc., etc., etc., they, like most of us, must rely on their salaries. Just a few examples:

For each new episode of Two and a Half Men, Charlie Sheen gets .25 million, while his co-star Jon Cryer gets a mere 0,000. Each of the four main, hardly desperate Desperate Housewives – Marcia Cross, Teri Hatcher, Felicity Huffman and Eva Longoria Parker – earn 0,000 per episode, the same amount that Dan Castellaneta and Julie Kavner each get for voice-overing each Simpsons episode. David Caruso gets 5,000 per for CSI: Miami; Tina Fey, Jeremy Piven and Kyra Sedgwick 0,000 per for, respectively, 30 Rock, Entourage and The Closer; Steve Carell 7,000 for each episode of The Office; Patrick Dempsey and Kate Gosselin 0,000 each for, respectively, Grey’s Anatomy and Kate Plus 8; and Nicole “Snooki” Polizzi ,000 per episode of Jersey Shore.

As for annual salaries: Judge Judy (Sheindlin) gets million, David Letterman million, Matt Lauer million, Ryan Seacrest million, Bill O’Reilly million, Ellen DeGeneres million, and Jimmy Kimmel million.

But don’t forget: That’s all before FICA withholding.

 

Author of ten books (and counting), as well as stories in numerous magazines and newspapers, he has riffed on a wide range of subjects, including sports, the environment, love and sex, health care reform, dying, pop culture, computers, fatherhood, reality TV, travel, numbers, odd symmetry and more. His father Neil thought the best opening line to a novel was found in Rafael Sabatini’s Scaramouche: He was born with a gift of laughter and a sense that the world was mad. DayRiffer feels no reason to disagree.


Article from articlesbase.com

Wealthy Can Express Their Values Like Buffet and Gates Through Philanthropy, PNC Expert Says

Pittsburgh, PA (PRWEB) June 28, 2006 –-

When leaving a legacy, wealthy individuals ought to think about their money in the context of “stewardship” and not “ownership,” according to Bruce Bickel, Ph.D., a senior vice president of PNC Wealth Management, in response to the recent philanthropic announcements by Warren Buffett and Bill and Melinda Gates.

“Rather than reaching a stalemate over how to share their wealth, they should explore their shared beliefs and values. How they spend their money and the legacy they leave then becomes an expression of the heart, not the power of the purse,” said Bickel.

In terms of how wealthy men and women view philanthropy, a recent survey conducted by PNC of nearly 1,500 affluent Americans, found very different perspectives. Men tend to donate greater amounts of money to political or advocacy organizations, religious and faith-based organizations, and educational institutions. Women, on the other hand, donate greater amounts to children and youth services, community foundations, animal rights groups and women’s organizations. Furthermore, women are generally more concerned than men about giving to charities and having enough assets for philanthropic purposes, Bickel reported.

Bickel oversees 16 private foundations across the nation for PNC Wealth Management and understands the motivation behind decisions of affluent people to donate one’s wealth to charitable causes, and the processes for foundations in dealing with a large inflow of capital, as well as managing the demands from the foundation’s viewpoint.

The survey was commissioned by PNC to identify attitudes about wealth among high net worth individuals, how it affects their lives and their needs in managing wealth.

The PNC Financial Services Group, Inc. (NYSE: PNC) is one of the nation’s largest diversified financial services organizations providing consumer and business banking; specialized services for corporations and government entities, including corporate banking, real estate finance and asset-based lending; wealth management; asset management and global fund services.

For more information, contact Alan Aldinger, PNC Corporate Communications, at 412-768-3711.

Survey Methodology

The survey was conducted online by Harris Interactive in October and November 2005 among a nationwide cross section of 1,485 adults (age 18 or over) with annual incomes of $ 150,000 or above (if employed), at least $ 500,000 of investable assets (if employed) or at least $ 1 million of investable assets (if retired).

Media Contact:

Alan Aldinger

(412) 768-3711

alan.aldinger @ pnc.com

www.pnc.com

###



Celebrity CEOs and their brands

Celebrity CEOs and their brands
Some of the strongest brands use celebrity CEOs to connect with consumers, from Oprah Winfrey and Martha Stewart to Bill Gates. Click on the link underneath this gallery to read more.
Read more on The Globe and Mail

General Electric Earnings: What to Expect
Story updated with additonal information. NEW YORK (TheStreet) — GE shares closed at $ 18.33 Wednesday, down 2% over the previous week, despite the company’s announcement of a slew of deals with Chinese partners in the energy, aviation and rail sectors that are “expected to generate more than $ 1 billion in exports from the U.S. and create or support jobs in both countries, including more than 4 …
Read more on TheStreet.com

Copper Stocks Slide On Freeport’s Weak Outlook
Freeport said copper sales are expected to drop to 3.85 billion pounds in 2011 from 3.9 billion pounds in 2010
Read more on Indie Research via Yahoo! Finance

How a Thirty Year Old Australian Woman has Succeeded in Beating the Boys at Their Own Game

(PRWEB) November 1, 2003

TYPICALLY referred to as a Â?boysÂ? clubÂ?, the financial industry has a new team mate in the form of Margaret Baldock: a 30 year old Australian woman who is fast becoming one of the most influential people in the financial industry thanks to her creation – Conscious Investor – a revolutionary investment system that is achieving international success.

Margaret Baldock saw a gap in the way stock market advice was filtered to everyday investors.

A stock market expert herself, Margaret experienced first hand the Â?horrorÂ? stories of how the industry was systematically ripping investors off.

Â?I realised that the whole industry was not really interested in creating wealth for investors but rather in raising capital for business ventures Â? to transfer wealth to entrepreneurs and their financiers,Â? Margaret said.

Thus began a journey to discover a way to educate and empower investors to take control of their financial futures.

Margaret sought out and partnered with John Price, a professor of financial mathematics who is renowned for developing unique intellectual property, based closely upon the ideas of the world’s greatest investor, Warren Buffett.

Â?I have always known that Warren Buffett is the most successful investor and that his approach is radically different from how almost all professionals and the financial media approach investing,Â? Margaret said.

Together, Margaret and John set about developing an investment system that would allow private and professional investors alike to take a common-sense, no-nonsense approach to stock market investing.

“The last couple of years have seen the business really take off – sales in America & Australia have been increasing rapidly and our system is now used by investors in 34 countries around the world,” Margaret said.

How Conscious Investor Works

Conscious Investor filters the financial information of companies on the Australian and American stock markets and generates a selection of top quality companies that a Buffett-like investor would consider investing in.

“Conscious Investor uses financial hurdles to eliminate companies that may, for example, have risky levels of debt, a history of unstable earnings or consistently low returns on equity,” Margaret explains.

“Not only are you left with a comprehensive list of quality stocks, the program also allows you to determine the right price to pay for them – a concept unique to Conscious Investor.”

Share prices, performance measures and comprehensive company financial data are downloaded to the program daily.

###

Media contact:

Sarah Kelly Condon

+61 8 9431 7081



Billionaire givers and their giving Pledge

Billionaire givers and their giving Pledge

About 40 billionaires have signed on to ” The Giving Pledge”,” a charitable initiative started by Warren Buffet and Bill and Melinda Gates . Each has made a commitment to give the majority of their wealth to the causes and charities of their choice.

Forbes estimates there are 403 billionaires in the U.S. Some, including a talk show host, haven’t commented publicly on the pledge, and others, including a California gubernatorial Candidate, -reportedly have declined.

You don’t have to be a billionaire – or even have money — to help others. Here’s how you can find volunteer opportunities in your area.

The Giving Pledge

The Giving Pledge is a philanthropic campaign started in June 2010 by American billionaires Warren Buffett and Bill Gates .The official website states that it “is an effort to invite the wealthiest individuals and families in America to commit to giving the majority of their wealth to philanthropy.” As of August 2010, 40 billionaires in the US have joined this campaign and pledged to give 50% or more of their wealth to charity; among these are people such as Michael Bloomberg, Tom Steyer, Ted Turner and Barry Diller. In addition Larry Ellison founder of Oracle Corporation, Standard I. Weil former CEO of Citigroup, former CEO of citigroup, Pierre Omidyar founder of eBay and film maker George Lucas were among the ones who joined the pledge. By making the pledge the donors are promising a collective sum of at least 5 billion. According to the pledge the donation can happen either during the lifetime or after the death of the donor. The pledge is a moral commitment to give not a legal contract. The list of donors includes Jon Huntsman, Sr., Barron Hilton and David. Buffet said that he would meet wealthy individuals in India and China to talk about philanthropy and stated that they hope the idea of generosity will spread. He stated “We’re hoping that America, which is the most generous society on Earth, becomes even more generous over time.”

The campaign was started in June to convince US billionaires to give away at least half of their fortunes either during their lifetimes or after their deaths.

“We’ve really just started but already we’ve had a terrific response,” Mr Buffett said in a statement.

He added: “The Giving Pledge is about asking wealthy families to have important conversations about their wealth and how it will be used.”

Those who pledge their money to “philanthropic causes and charitable organisations” must publicly state their intention through a letter of explanation.

‘Improving education’

Other billionaires who have pledged large sums of their money include film producer George Lucas, philanthropist David Rockefeller and oil investor T Boone Pickens.

“I am dedicating the majority of my wealth to improving education. It is the key to the survival of the human race,” Mr Lucas wrote in his Giving Pledge letter.

The organisation says many of the donors have committed to donating sums far greater than the 50% minimum level.

“While the Giving Pledge is specifically focused on billionaires, the idea takes its inspiration from efforts in the past and at present that encourage and recognize givers of all financial means and backgrounds,” says Givingpledge.org.

I’ve long stated that I enjoy making money, and I enjoy giving it away”, said T.Boone Pickens Oil  investor.

Mr Buffett along with Mr Gates and his wife, Melinda, held numerous dinners with US billionaires in the past year to promote the campaign and urge America’s financial elite to pledge.

Mr Buffett, the chief executive of the investment firm Berkshire Hathaway, pledged 99% of his money to the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and family charities in 2006.

Forbes Magazine estimated Mr Buffett’s wealth at bn (£29bn) in March.

Bill Gates, who Forbes rates as the world’s second wealthiest person, has also given away more than bn to his foundation.

The billionaire investor Warren Buffett has donated .6bn (£1.05bn; 1.5bn euros) to the charitable foundation created by Microsoft founder Bill Gates and his wife Melinda.

In all, he donated shares worth .93bn to five foundations.

The rest went to foundations set up in the name of Mr Buffett’s late wife, Susan, and their three children.

Mr Buffett, who owns the investment company Berkshire Hathaway, pledged in 2006 to give away 99% of his wealth.

This year’s donation is higher than the figure of .5bn donated in 2009 because Berkshire Hathaway has improved its performance.

Largest donation

Mr Buffett is a trustee of the Gates Foundation, which supports projects including polio eradication, micro finance and university scholarships.

The Gates Foundation employs 830 people and spent bn (£1.97bn) last year (2009).

The Susan Thompson Buffett Foundation provides scholarships for American college students.

Mr Buffett still holds about .9bn of Berkshire stock, or 23.3% of the total outstanding, according to documents filed with the US Securities and Exchange Commission on Friday.

In 2006, Mr Buffett made the largest philanthropic donation in US history, giving bn to the Gates Foundation.

In June, he and Mr Gates called on American billionaires to pledge at least half their wealth to charity.

Following their charitable donations, Mr Buffett and Mr Gates are now the world’s second and third richest men respectively, behind the Mexican billionaire Carlos Slim


Article from articlesbase.com

Billionaire’s sister helps those down on their luck

Billionaire’s sister helps those down on their luck
Doris Buffett, sister of Warren Buffett, created the Sunshine Lady Foundation with the goal of giving away her fortune before she dies. Here, she speaks about her philosophy of giving. Video by E …
Read more on The Nelson County Times

Melrose Jewelers Is Now the Leading Online Rolex Watch Retailer in Rome, Italy
Melrose Jewelers, USA’s #1 Online Rolex Retailer, Today Announced That It Has Become the # 1 Online Rolex Retailer in Italy Including Rome (Roma), Milan (Milano), Naples (Napoli), Turin, Palermo, Genoa (Genova), Bologna, and Florence
Read more on Marketwire

Zuckerberg, Icahn to give away bulk of their money

Zuckerberg, Icahn to give away bulk of their money
Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg and 16 other wealthy U.S. individuals and families agreed to give most of their fortunes to charity, joining a pledge started by billionaires Warren Buffett and Bill Gates. Investor Carl…
Read more on San Francisco Chronicle

More U.S. billionaires pledge to give away wealth
Another 17 U.S. billionaires, including Facebook co-founders Mark Zuckerberg and Dustin Moskovitz, have pledged to give away at least half their fortunes in a philanthropic campaign led by Warren Buffett and Bill Gates.
Read more on Reuters via Yahoo! News