Posted Jul 3rd 2009 6:00PM by Sheldon Liber
Filed under: International markets, Other issues, Rants and raves, Competitive strategy, Workspace, Media World, Headline news

While Michael Jackson is referred to affectionately by fans as the
"King of Pop" . He could have just as easily carried the title
"The hardest working man in show business" except for the fact that elder statesmen of the music world, the late
James Brown earned that title first.
While recriminations are being thrown around about the specific cause of Jackson's death, the primary reason he passed away may really have been overwork. In truth, his sleep disorder, eating disorder, drug dependency and seemingly bazaar behavior at times may have all stemmed from his obsessiveness. He truly gave his fans everything he had in him right to the very end.
Many of us have been accused of being workaholics, some worse than others. Michael Jackson was an extreme example pushed by his perfectionist attitude and the fact that he always felt the need to surpass his already high performance level.
Continue reading Michael Jackson fireworks, the workaholic
Posted Jul 2nd 2009 6:00PM by Sheldon Liber
Filed under: Rants and raves, Competitive strategy, General Electric (GE), Diageo plc (DEO), Anadarko Petroleum (APC), Wells Fargo (WFC), Chasing Value, Commodities, Anglo Amer ADR (AAUK), S and P 500, DJIA, Stocks to Buy, Intuitive Surgical Inc (ISRG), NASDAQ, Annaly Capital Management (NLY), Best Stocks for 2009, American Eagle Outfitters (AEO), EZCORP (EZPW)
The second quarter is now behind us and for the most part it was a positive one in terms of the market pushing higher almost 40%. This is the second review of my 2009 stock picks through June 30 (see: Chasing Value: 9 picks for 2009 -- APC, GE, ISRG, WFC and more). There was a lot of talk about green shoots this past quarter as Wall Street was looking for any small bit of optimistic data to support the market.
The federal printing presses continued to run at full speed pushing the dollar lower and oil prices higher. While the feds were printing money to cover their deficits, the States do not have that same luxury and many of them are having trouble balancing their budgets to the tune of billions of dollars.
Continue reading Chasing Value: 2009 picks 731% better than S&P -- 2nd quarter review
Posted Jun 30th 2009 4:40PM by Sheldon Liber
Filed under: Good news, Products and services, Industry, Rants and raves, Competitive strategy, General Electric (GE), Workspace
The federal government, for better or worse, has been increasing the money supply as fast as it can in an attempt to prevent a collapse of our financial system, stabilize the housing market, improve the employment outlook and rehabilitate our nations infrastructure.
Most economists have some fear of inflation as a result of this, even if the fear is not for three to five years. To combat the increase in money supply we need to balance it out with an increase in productivity.
Continue reading GE invests in Michigan, USA -- new technology center
Posted Jun 30th 2009 12:00PM by Sheldon Liber
Filed under: Rants and raves, United Parcel'B' (UPS), Options, Chasing Value, Stocks to Buy, Best Stocks for 2009
For those of you who are able to trade options, I have been writing more and more about naked puts, "selling to open" stock options that I have been doing all year with great returns due to an overabundance of fear.
Yesterday I reviewed one example in Chasing Value: GE -- maybe not eating out of trash cans after all, and today I review some of my favorite ways to make money and improve my portfolio.
Let me start with United Parcel Service Inc. (NYSE: UPS), a company with a great balance sheet, strong management, and trading 29% off its 52-week high, about where I sold it last year. I bought it earlier this year at the bargain basement price of $44, and now wished I had bought more.
Continue reading Chasing Value: Favorite trades -- UPS
Posted Jun 26th 2009 2:00PM by Sheldon Liber
Filed under: Rants and raves, Money and Finance Today, Economic data, Personal finance, Politics, Headline news, Recession, Financial Crisis

We live in amazing times. Consumers are earning more; at least the ones with jobs.
They are also saving more than they have in the last 15 years. The savings rate, which was hovering near zero in early 2008, surged to 6.9 percent, the highest level since December 1993. I think that is fantastic!
Ben Franklin said, "A penny saved is a penny earned". If that is true, then people are improving their economic condition day by day. Strange as it might seem, the government is troubled by this.
The government and many economists are worried that without greater spending by consumers any economic recovery will be stalled that much further. During our recent manic economy, over the past decade, consumer spending was responsible for about 70% of the GDP.
I say to all my readers, let others spend -- YOU KEEP SAVING -- and reducing debt. You will be glad you did. The consumer led economy was a false economy. The world is mourning the sudden death of Michael Jackson who passed away yesterday from yet to be determined causes leading to cardiac arrest, reportedly $400 million in debt. You think he was under any stress?!
Continue reading Consumers: Income & savings up -- Gov't worried
Posted Jun 20th 2009 8:10AM by Sheldon Liber
Filed under: International markets, Rants and raves, Middle East, Scandals, Politics, Headline news
It really matters little what the outside world thinks about the current conflict in Iran over the disputed re-election of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, or whether the people in Iran are crushed by the totalitarian form of government that has been adopted. This is not a matter of opinion. It is a matter of fact by definition. There is a supreme ruler and what he says goes.
Nothing is more important to the ruling elite than remaining in power -- not the economic well being of it's citizens, not the education of the rural population, not the personal freedoms of the man in the street, and certainly not the rights of Iranian women.
Continue reading Iran's ayatollah willing to sacrifice economy, education and personal freedoms
Posted Jun 16th 2009 2:40PM by Sheldon Liber
Filed under: International markets, Bad news, Rants and raves, Middle East, Scandals, Politics, Headline news

The Iranian government
hand counted tens of millions of presidential election ballots in a couple of hours; less time than we count ours by computer --
an Ayatollahs' miracle for sure! These results indicated that
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was able to garner two-thirds of the vote. Given the Ayatollahs miracle, the public viewed this result as anything but.
Protesters expressing their extreme objection to the election results then created
a miracle of their own when up to one million marchers hit the streets forming a 5 to 6 mile parade of discontent, claims of fraud, and in some cases calling the government a dictatorship.
Meanwhile
Ahmadinejad who made references to disgruntled fans after a football game in slighting the protesters, hung around for a couple of days before appearing a day late for a conference in Moscow. He missed some of the key events but he did get a chance to mention how bad the US economy was doing, neglecting to mention that Iran's economy is showing signs of falling off a cliff. If he remains president that is a real possibility.
Meanwhile the pragmatist in me knows that the greatest miracle of all would be a recanting of the election results and the president stepping down. The Ayatollahs have asked for an investigation of the election results to appease the fuming population.
The results of this investigation being conducted by the same folks that created the fraud in the first place are easier to determine than any of my stock picks. Look for the results of the investigation to acknowledge that the vote count was off by some meaningless percentage, not affecting the outcome and leaving the results as they stand.
The Ayatollahs are all for democracy as long as they get to choose who wins. Perhaps in the future they will simply default to the patterns of authoritarian rulers before them -- massive election rhetoric, with only one candidate on the ballot.
Related stories:
Iran's great potential and its challenges!Iran will waste four more yearsSheldon Liber is the CEO of a small private investment company and the principal for design and research at an architecture & planning firm. He writes the columns Chasing Value and Serious Money.Posted Jun 15th 2009 6:47PM by Sheldon Liber
Filed under: International markets, Other issues, Rants and raves, Middle East, Scandals, Politics, Presidential elections, Oil, Headline news

The landslide victory of current president
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and the announcement of same, only hours after the voting polls closed, even though paper ballots had to be hand counted, has cast serious doubts about the election results.
Last week I wrote of
Iran's great potential but today much of that potential has evaporated for the time being, and perhaps for another four years. The rulers of Iran have decided that the devil they know is better than the one they don't. Unfortunately, as far as politicians go, they may have gotten exactly that.
Continue reading Iran will waste four more years
Posted Jun 10th 2009 5:45PM by Sheldon Liber
Filed under: International markets, Other issues, Rants and raves, Competitive strategy, Middle East, Politics, Presidential elections, Oil, Headline news
Iran's flawed democracy is still better than most of the political systems among other countries in the region. For the past few decades the morality police, prodded by religious literalism, have mandated women to cover themselves when they are out in public. This same religious literalism has impeded the potential of a country that has a large population, in a key geographic region, with oil and other natural resources.
Iran is in the midst of a presidential election that has stimulated much heated debate among the population about the failures of the current government in economic and political terms, and that has created a feeling of isolation. The isolation is more than a feeling, and it has limited the growth of the nation to something far less than its capabilities.
Continue reading Iran's great potential and its challenges!
Posted Jun 3rd 2009 3:20PM by Sheldon Liber
Filed under: Products and services, Rants and raves, Charles Schwab Corp (SCHW), Personal finance, S and P 500

My investment world leads me to deal with many brokers and I am constantly amazed at the bad advice that is so prevalent in the financial industry. I think many brokerage houses remain conflicted, try as they might to be otherwise.
Here is the latest example to reach my doorstep. We have personal assets with
Charles Schwab (NASDAQ:
SCHW) and they publish an in-house magazine for their clients called
"onInvesting". In the summer 2009 issue listed under the heading of
"Expert Insight" there is an article titled
"How Sector Investing Can Work for You". I could not find a link to the story online. It is written by Brad Sorenson, CFA, director, Sector Analysis, Schwab Center for Financial Research.
Continue reading Schwab's bad advice about sector investing
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