Posted in Awesome on August 4th, 2010 by admin – Be the first to comment
Posted in Economy, Electricity, Energy, Personal Finance, Trading on July 7th, 2010 by admin – Be the first to comment

“This makes sense. The underwriters of the IPO, led by Goldman Sachs, could only support the shares for so long before market forces took over. And the market, in turn, has shown intense skepticism for cleantech stocks over the past five years.
It’s a pattern most visible with IPOs of solar companies. In 2004 and 2005, there was a golden age of growth for solar companies, with big venture capital investments. In 2006, there was a strong wave of such IPOs, and their stock prices fizzled within six months. This year, again, solar company Solyndra had to pull its IPO. The problem then, as now, was always the same: high costs and low profits. Clean technology is expensive, and it doesn’t have the benefit of the extensive government subsidies that go to fossil fuels like oil.”
A short but great article on Forbes.com regarding IPOs of cleantech companies – http://wallstreet.blogs.fortune.cnn.com/2010/07/07/tesla-motors-not-so-different-after-all/?source=yahoo_quote
Posted in Commodities, Economy, Energy, Hedge Funds, Learn, Personal Finance on July 6th, 2010 by admin – Be the first to comment
- Mr. Prechter is convinced that we have entered a market decline of staggering proportions — perhaps the biggest of the last 300 years.
- “I’m saying: ‘Winter is coming. Buy a coat,’ ” he said. “Other people are advising people to stay naked. If I’m wrong, you’re not hurt. If they’re wrong, you’re dead. It’s pretty benign advice to opt for safety for a while.”
- His advice: individual investors should move completely out of the market and hold cash and cash equivalents, like Treasury bills, for years to come. (For traders with a fair amount of skill and willingness to embrace risk, he suggests other alternatives, like shorting the market or making bets on volatility.) But ultimately, “the decline will lead to one of the best investment opportunities ever,” he said.
- For a rough parallel, he said, go all the way back to England and the collapse of the South Sea Bubble in 1720, a crash that deterred people “from buying stocks for 100 years,” he said. This time, he said, “If I’m right, it will be such a shock that people will be telling their grandkids many years from now, ‘Don’t touch stocks.’ ”
- He has far less day-to-day influence now, after years spent developing a theory he calls “socionomics,” which holds “social moods” as the cause not only of market cycles but also of economic and political events. A grand cycle is ending, he says, and the time for reckoning is near.
- In 2002, he published “Conquer the Crash,” which predicted misery ahead. Even so, he said in 2008 that the market would soon rally sharply — then said late last year that stocks were about to fall and that the great decline would resume.
Read the whole article – http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/04/your-money/04stra.html?ref=general&src=me&pagewanted=all
Posted in Awesome, Energy, Europe, Hilarious, Nuclear Power on May 15th, 2010 by admin – Be the first to comment
I would think they wish this never surfaced again -

Posted in Awesome, Music, Photos, Style on March 17th, 2010 by admin – Be the first to comment

Mick Jagger and Nicaraguan Bianca Perez Morena de Marcias just after their wedding in St Tropez, France on 12 May 1971
Posted in Economy, Hedge Funds, Quotable on March 16th, 2010 by admin – 3 Comments
Finally, there is the “garage band hedge fund” started by Jamie Mai and Charlie Ledley in 2003 with a Schwab account containing $110,000 and housed in a shed in the back of a friend’s house in Berkeley, Calif. Mr. Ledley believed, Mr. Lewis writes, “that the best way to make money on Wall Street was to seek out whatever it was that Wall Street believed was least likely to happen, and bet on its happening.” In this case, his contrarian instincts told him, in Mr. Lewis’s words, that “the markets were predisposed to underestimating the likelihood of dramatic change.”
Four and a half years later the American economy was in trouble, and, Mr. Lewis says, the fund run by Mr. Ledley, Mr. Mai and their partner, Ben Hockett, would net more than $80 million.
Continue reading – http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/15/books/15book.html?src=me