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    • Yahoo says buying Tumblr for $1.1B, vows 'not to screw it up' May 20, 2013
      Yahoo said Monday it will buy blogging website Tumblr for $1.1 billion cash, in a bold move to make itself more relevant amid the explosion in social media on the Internet.Yahoo said it "promises not to screw it up," in a press release announcing the deal. It said Tumblr will operate independently as a separate business, perhaps trying to assuage T […]
      Staff reports
    • Boeing Dreamliners back in the air after lengthy grounding May 20, 2013
      After 123 days being grounded and then repaired to ensure its battery systems do not catch fire, Boeing 787 Dreamliners are about to once again make commercial flight in the United States. A United Airlines 787 will fly from Houston to Chicago Monday morning carrying more than 250 passengers including the CEO's of United and Boeing.Given the massive amo […]
      Philip LeBeau
    • Yahoo agrees to buy Tumblr for $1.1 billion cash May 20, 2013
      Yahoo said Monday it will buy blogging website Tumblr for $1.1 billion cash, in a bold move to make itself more relevant amid the explosion in social media on the Internet.In the press release announcing the deal, Yahoo said it "promises not to screw it up." It said Tumblr will operate independently as a separate business, perhaps trying to assuage […]
      Staff reports
    • Hot-air balloons collide near Turkish tourist hotspot; 1 dead, 24 hurt May 20, 2013
      ISTANBUL- A hot-air balloon flying over a tourist destination in central Turkey crashed after colliding with another balloon on Monday, the Anatolian news agency reported.A Brazilian passenger was killed and 24 other people were injuried when the accident occurred near the city of Nevsehir in Cappadocia, an area famous for its geological features called fair […]
      Ece Toksabay, Reuters
    • Tornadoes ravage Plains states; 1 killed, 21 hurt; More severe storms likely May 20, 2013
      A vast area of the central U.S. was warned to prepare for storms on Monday, after tornadoes killed one and injured 21 in Oklahoma and also hit Iowa and Kansas.“After over 300 reports of severe weather on Sunday, another round of dangerous severe weather is expected Monday with the greatest threat once again in the southern Plains targeting Oklahoma and parts […]
      Ian Johnston, Staff Writer, NBC News

Sen. Bernie Sanders: Is the Recession Over?

Just the other day, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said, Iit is very likely that the recession has ended.”

Well, let me just suggest to Mr. Bernanke that today we have about 17 percent of our workforce – 26 million Americans – who are either unemployed, have given up looking for work because they no longer think a job is possible, or they are working part time when they want to work full time. That’s 17 percent of our population.

For those folks, I don’t think they believe this recession is over.

In fact, what they believe is that they are mired in the worst economic mess since the Great Depression.

One of the really disturbing statistics out there is that it is taking unemployed people a lot longer to find a job than used to be the case. On average, it’s taking about six months.

But it’s not just losing your job or working part time. People are losing health insurance, losing their homes, losing their pensions. What it’s about is slipping out of the middle class and into poverty and not having the capability of sending your kids to college. That’s what the economy is about today.

So to my mind, most importantly, we have got to stay focused on the reality that because of the greed, the irresponsibility, and the illegal behavior of people on Wall Street, we are plunged into a real economic mess, and we’re going to have to work together and we’re going to have to think real hard about how we get out of that mess.

I’ve talked before about some of the ideas we’re working on, but let me just reiterate what some of them are.

We need to get a handle on Wall Street so that they do not go back to the horrendous ways of the past. They are spending millions of dollars right now on lobbying and campaign contributions to make that happen. What we must demand – and this is enormously important – is a new Wall Street, not designed to make hundreds of millions of dollars for their CEOs, but a Wall Street designed to help increase manufacturing in the U.S., create decent jobs, help small businesses, do something for the productive economy.

Another area that we need to return to is our disastrous trade policies which allow corporate America to throw American workers on the street, move to China, pay people 50 cents an hour, and then bring those products back into the country.

So there is a lot of work ahead of us in terms of the economy. Let’s stay focused on this issue, and don’t believe anybody who’s telling you “the recession is over.”

Link to Article

Free Seminar, June 24 – Talent Management: Benchmarks and Best Practices for Today’s Economy

Cost:
This is a Complimentary Online Webinar

Presenter:
Karen O’Leonard, Principal Analyst, Bersin & Associates  

Moderator:
David Shadovitz, Editor, Human Resource Executive® magazine

Event Description:
Bersin & Associates and Human Resource Executive® magazine recently conducted the second annual comprehensive study of corporate talent management.  The study found most companies are progressing in their talent management efforts, with a top priority on performance management necessitated by tough times. Yet many companies report spotty development plans, a lack of successors identified for key leadership positions, and a reactive rather than proactive approach to workforce planning.  

Attend this webinar, hosted by David Shadovitz, editor of Human Resource Executive®, and presented by Bersin & Associates Principal Analyst Karen O’Leonard, to preview the key findings of this major industry study. You’ll get insight into how companies organize and implement their talent management initiatives in the current business environment, the best practices and HR systems used by high-impact companies and key talent-related metrics you can use to benchmark your HR spending, staffing, turnover, and productivity levels.   

Please join us for what is sure to be an informative event.

Space is limited, so register today!

Link to Registration:

https://lrp.webex.com/mw0306l/mywebex/default.do?nomenu=true&siteurl=lrp&service=6&main_url=https%3A%2F%2Flrp.webex.com%2Fec0605l%2Feventcenter%2Fevent%2FeventAction.do%3FtheAction%3Ddetail%26confViewID%3D530887957%26siteurl%3Dlrp%26%26%26

An Often Overlooked Issue – Cash Flow

An Often Overlooked Issue!

Professor von Braun
The Rocket School of Economics

May 22nd, 2009.

 

What I have referred to before in earlier articles as the great credit contraction is now well and truly underway. The credit expansion period is over and what we are seeing now is the effects of what happens when a fiat monetary system reaches the limits of its ability to both inflate the value of non productive assets and defer settlement, via the ongoing renewal of existing debt.

Attempts by governments and central banks to reinflate declining asset prices via large infusions of psuedo capital into the banking system so that the issuing of credit can be ‘kick started’ are doomed to fail.

House prices will continue to decline, unemployment will rise, tax revenues will decline further, government debt levels will continue to rise and peoples net worth will also decline. This is a given!

This is what happens when you get a major credit contraction. In simple terms it is like the tide going out prior to the tsunami coming in.

Since a monetary debacle of this size has not been seen before, there is nothing to compare it with, for not even the depression of the 1930’s comes close. Then people still had savings and the US $ was, until late 1933, pegged to gold at $20.67 per ounce.

Today all debts are now due, since the banking system can no longer lend its way out of its own dilemma and this is what needs to be clearly understood by investors. The dollar is a liability and as such being in cash is also a liability. Government securities are also liabilities but the issue of liabilities versus real assets is more widespread than that.

The precious metals are not a liability and ownership of them is a very wise move given the uncertainty surrounding everything else that is happening. We have seen calls by some market analysts for the Dow to be at 400, 600 and ‘under a 1000.’ What does that mean you may well ask?

It means that you have a collapsed banking system along with massive unemployment and no cashflow of any consequence being generated within the system itself. What will happen to brokerage houses if you have the Dow at 400? What will stock exchanges look like if there is a collapse through to these levels? How will capital be raised when there is no capital left?

Cashflow during the credit expansion period was ‘created’ by the banks themselves via home equity lines, credit cards, and a series of market bubbles. Productivity, which should have been the benchmark by which to measure cashflow went off to all sorts of different places such as Asia, India, China and now we have a situation that the holders of US dollar denominated ‘reserves’ are located outside the US. There is little by way of actual ‘reserves’ within the US itself, hence the need to issue more debt.

In addition money that has been spent within in the US by its residents has mostly been spent on items that have little, if any, appreciative value. On the contrary electronic gadgets tend to depreciate, as do autos, as do fridges, freezers, washing machines and dryers. The real estate bubble has now clearly demonstrated that house prices can and do decline. Those who have been saving for their retirement are in a double bind, since in most cases what they believed was assets are now being seen as liabilities. That second house purchase is now a liability and even the primary residence is, in many cases, under water.

The root cause of all of this is the banking system itself and its mismanagement, with some not so little help from both Congress and the Senate, along with the failure of the deregulation of the systems put in place during the 1930’s to stop this from happening. There still seems to be a complete lack of understanding of what the problem actually is, which is clearly demonstrated by the attempts so far to fix the banking systems dilemma.

The often overlooked issue is CASHFLOW! Where is your income going to come from now that the capital gains machine is broken? Even if you are sitting in cash and own high quality government securities (whatever they are), with a 3% return, what can you buy into that can offer a cashflow that is reasonably safe and secure?

What is going to be left to buy when the music stops, when Mr. Fiat finally succumbs to Alzheimer’s disease and you are left holding his empty bag of promises to pay?

Anything that has debt attached to it is a liability that won’t go away. Any sector that is dependant on people spending money on goods or entertainment that provides revenue to service their debt has a problem and all aspects of the economy are at risk. Real estate, both residential and commercial, travel & leisure, retailing, the auto industry, even the medical profession will be facing lower revenues. The economy is not something that can be easily isolated into safe & unsafe sectors as it is all interconnected via the banking system which can no longer inflate the value of the underlying assets, regardless of what they are.

The example given by President Roosevelt’s revaluing of gold in 1934 is of interest and contains pointers to the issue of cashflow. Small mining operations sprung up in many parts of the US. The reworking of tailings dumps from previous operations became common and with the increase in price gold mining became one of the few sources of consistent cashflow. Employment for miners was assured and towns that were close to producing mines did not nearly suffer the downturns and bank closures of areas that were not.

The production of gold is as close to guaranteed cashflow as you can get, even if gold is confiscated and a new ‘official’ price created, the gold that is being mined does have to be purchased and paid for by somebody. Will there be a resurgence of small privately owned gold mines?

Very few have understood the predicament the banking industry is in. The banks have been in the business of asset inflation and for a while it seemed to be working. But when it became the only game in town, everybody joined in and the ability to keep a lid on the issuance of debt was lost. Productivity was forgotten about as the technological advances gave people access to what appeared to be the goods, but was nothing other than an image.

The need for savings was ignored and now we have a compounding to the downside as assets continue lose their value. Ownership of debt is now being seen for what it is, something that can become problematic very quickly. Investors with capital are few and far between and assets that have strong cashflow potential are also few and far between.

The coming cashflow shortage will affect all entities from the Federal Government, to the states, the counties, pension plans, investors and homeowners alike.

Duke/CFO Global Business Outlook Survey Results

I just participated in the latest Duke University CFO Magazine Global Business Outlook Survey, and received advance notification of the results.

Following is an extract of key survey results:

CFOs express record or near-record pessimism. On a scale of 0 to 100, U.S. CFOs rate the economic outlook at an all-time low of 40. European and Asian CFOs are similarly pessimistic, rating their economies at 43 and 47, respectively, on a scale of 0 to 100.

Only 35 percent of CFOs say the U.S. economic recovery will begin in 2009, with most CFOs expecting recovery to begin in 14 months. European (16 months) and Asian CFOs (13 months) also expect the recession to last well into 2010.

Domestic employment is expected to fall in the U.S. (5.6 percent reduction), Europe (7.6 percent reduction), and Asia (3.2 percent reduction) over the next year. In addition to layoffs, a majority of firms report wage freezes or cuts, as well as reductions in hours worked.  

Nearly 60 percent of U.S. companies indicate they will institute a hiring freeze for the next year. In addition, 57 percent will enforce a wage freeze or reduction, with one in five companies expecting to reduce wages over the next year. Even for those employees who keep their jobs, 39 percent will work fewer hours per week.

Nearly two-thirds of European companies indicate they will institute a hiring freeze over the next year, and 57 percent will freeze or reduce wages. Almost one-third of companies say they will reduce work hours for remaining employees. More than 60 percent will reduce their workforce, with the average reduction among those firms being 9 percent.

More than two-thirds of Asian firms plan a hiring freeze for the next 12 months. Sixty-three percent plan a wage freeze or wage reduction. In addition, 30 percent of Asian CFOs say their firms will reduce the hours worked by employees who retain their jobs.

More than two-thirds of Chinese companies will impose a hiring freeze this year, and 30 percent will reduce wages. One-third will reduce the hours worked by retained employees.

Weak consumer demand and financial market woes are major external concerns for CFOs around the world. Working capital management is a primary internal concern, as is maintaining employee productivity and morale.

Credit market turmoil is still buffeting the corporate sector, with the effects much worse on companies with poor credit ratings. About 40 percent of companies rated AAA or AA indicate credit market conditions are hurting their firms. Among companies rated B or lower, 77 percent say they have been hurt.

U.S. Companies rated B or lower have nearly maxed out credit lines, drawing on average 70 percent of the maximum. AAA and AA rated firms, in contrast, have drawn only 27 percent of the maximum. Among Chinese companies with bank lines of credit, the average firm has drawn 56 percent of the maximum allowed.

Fifty-eight percent of European CFOs report problems with suppliers, ranging from 40 percent of suppliers being unable to obtain trade credit or bank financing to 21 percent of companies having a supplier go out of business.

Fifty-five percent of Asian CFOs report problems with suppliers, with many not receiving enough order volume to be viable. This has led to a consolidation of orders with stronger suppliers at nearly half of Asian firms.

Forty-six percent of Asian CFOs expect their own country’s economy to begin to recover in 2009, and another 29 percent expect the recovery to begin in the first half of 2010.

Al Walsh, Owner/Founder

Walsh Enterprises, Business Advisors

Huntington Beach, Ca

http://www.awalsh.us

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