Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Toyota Halting Production @ Princeton

Let's hope this halt to production does not last very long:

http://pressroom.toyota.com/pr/tms/toyota/toyota-consumer-safety-advisory-102572.aspx

If it lasts too long, it'll spell even more economic devastation for SW Indiana... not only through the employees that work there, but the plant's small suppliers scattered about, as well as outsourced services provided locally.

Friday, January 22, 2010

Are You Giving a 0% Loan to the Government?

Now that it's tax season again, I was going to write a post about adjusting your W-4 form at work to stop giving the government a 0% interest loan -- and, therefore, put more more in your pocket each payday. But, before I had gotten around to writing it, I ran across this article, which done a good job I thought, and it saved me from writing it. So, here it is: http://shine.yahoo.com/channel/life/fiscal-fitness-give-yourself-a-200-raise-right-now-562577/

Thursday, January 21, 2010

Even Value of the White House Drops in Value

This post over at CNBC is amusing: http://www.cnbc.com/id/34956652 It just underlines the fact that no one has been been immune to this economy!

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Morality vs. Legality

Here's a good example of where 'the law' separates from common morality:

http://www.theindianalawyer.com/html/opinions-pdf.asp?pdf=01121003mpb.pdf

The case focuses on a man, who applies for a credit card, charges up an amount, then ultimately never pays his account. The credit card company sells it to another company that is in the business of buying bad debts & trying to collect them, and they go after the man. In the end, the man wins because the statute of limitations is invoked on collecting the debt e.g. they waited too long to collect.

So, boys & girls, the moral of the story is this:

In America, it's not what's morally right or wrong, it's just what the 'letter of the law' says.

Friday, January 8, 2010

Easy Money

This type of 'legalized' theft has to stop, as it’s purely the rich stealing from the poor:

http://cincinnati.bizjournals.com/cincinnati/stories/2009/12/21/daily32.html?ana=yfcpc

I've seen the shareholders of various companies over the past several years far victim to this, where an investment company buys an undervalued company. In some cases, they've used the method of loan the target company money via a convertible note, later exercising, and voting all of the shares 'yes' to sell to themselves for a ridiculously low price (think: Conseco several years ago vs. a small insurance company they acquired via this method).

Mark my words, too: the buyer will take it private for a year (maybe two) and then do an IPO, once they've parted off anything they can in their 'chop shop'.

The victims? Those are the long-term investors, who believed in the original company & trusted the Board of Directors with their hard-earned savings. It's call 'fiduciary responsibility' and more Boards need to learn this.

[End of Rant]