Recently stunned by $300+M IPO of a microfinance institution in India.
Mo Yunus says of the recent exits of MFI institutions (which has been happening in India and Mexico): "It’s not mission drift. It’s endangering the whole mission."
I too am wary of a confused organization that is trying to have a "double bottom line" impact but only pays employees and investors with one of those bottom lines. What if you got a promotion and you were rewarded in "more goodwill" with no pay raise? I think it would be weird.
It reminds me of communist slogans about equality when all the bureaucrats really meant was "equality of no opportunity for you, but lots of money for me". I am highly skeptical of "idealistic" companies.
The biggest risk here is taking public money to invest, with quite possibly lax financial controls (at least relative to pure banking institutions), moreover having these for-profit institutions push loans on poor people quite like what happened with subprime lending in the US.
This RPCV is not a buyer.
Friday, July 30, 2010
This week in Disney
Disney buys Playdom for $763M.
Disney sells Miramax for $660M.
So Playdom is worth more than Miramax (makers of Shakespeare in Love, Pulp Fiction, etc)?
Maybe its the old foggey in me but is the possible virtual goods are worth more than good movies? Sigh. Am I not acknowledging today's entertainment reality, or does this smell like kneejerk acquisition/overvaluation of new media?
Disney sells Miramax for $660M.
So Playdom is worth more than Miramax (makers of Shakespeare in Love, Pulp Fiction, etc)?
Maybe its the old foggey in me but is the possible virtual goods are worth more than good movies? Sigh. Am I not acknowledging today's entertainment reality, or does this smell like kneejerk acquisition/overvaluation of new media?
Thursday, July 22, 2010
Microsoft Looking Cheap
Yahoo Finance tells me MSFT is trading at a Forward PE of 11. To put this into context, consumer goods companies sell at multiples of 11-15, and they have operating margins in the 18ish range, if they're really, really good.
Many of my loyal readers will know that I am a big Apple fan and I remain an Apple fan despite the Antenna issue - only Apple could make a technical malfunction seem so endearing. But Microsoft is looking cheap, like a value stock that generates lots of cash. Did Apple earnings surprise this week? No, because as we had noted before, prior quarter earnings did not reflect the sale of a single iPad.
I'm surprised MSFT gets such a beat down given how generous the valuations are for Food Companies. Anyways, with their dividend yield at 2.1%, probably better to put $$ in MSFT than a savings account. As much as we dislike Windows, its not going away any time soon.
Hugs from Mo' Money.
Many of my loyal readers will know that I am a big Apple fan and I remain an Apple fan despite the Antenna issue - only Apple could make a technical malfunction seem so endearing. But Microsoft is looking cheap, like a value stock that generates lots of cash. Did Apple earnings surprise this week? No, because as we had noted before, prior quarter earnings did not reflect the sale of a single iPad.
I'm surprised MSFT gets such a beat down given how generous the valuations are for Food Companies. Anyways, with their dividend yield at 2.1%, probably better to put $$ in MSFT than a savings account. As much as we dislike Windows, its not going away any time soon.
Hugs from Mo' Money.
Thursday, May 27, 2010
China - New Lender of Last Resort?
The US is living on borrowed money (yes, thats the money we used to bail out the real estate deadbeats, finance easy money for new homeowners, car companies). Europe is living on borrowed money ("stimulus package" to do the same, but of course, since Europe has all kinds of restrictive laws around firing people, their economy hasn't turned around as quickly, PLUS most recently, the recent retroactive payment on Greek democracy).
Who has money to deal with further crises?
Today we were reminded, China! China has been hoarding all our US cash while we've been borrowing to finance our fancy consumption standards.
If they have cash, why don't they step it up to bail out these Greek dudes?
It is an economic concept called "free riding". If the other developed countries pony up the cash to deal with this, why bother? China can just free ride off the other countries providing financing to float the global economy towards uninterrupted consumption of "stuff", which of course drives the Chinese economy.
Would China step it up if the global pockets are empty?
Trades on deck:
GS
Euro
Thursday, May 6, 2010
Greece taking payment for democracy
Looks like this Greece thing is blowing up the financial systems. Not sure euro can handle it. Today's market activity is a little troublesome. Any time there's a precipitous drop like that it means that people are scrambling for the door, not running valuations. Reminds me of August 2007, when all of a sudden and without warning, the market just spontaneously dropped.
I guess we've had easy money for a while, so that's to be expected. Even though the market did bounce back up (perhaps from short covering), these types of drops are not momentary. They signal a fundamental weakness in the confidence of investors, and possibly foreshadow a lack of liquidity (everyone cashing out no matter what the price).
Would not be surprised if we head downhill for a while.
Scary stuff!
I guess we've had easy money for a while, so that's to be expected. Even though the market did bounce back up (perhaps from short covering), these types of drops are not momentary. They signal a fundamental weakness in the confidence of investors, and possibly foreshadow a lack of liquidity (everyone cashing out no matter what the price).
Would not be surprised if we head downhill for a while.
Scary stuff!
Friday, April 23, 2010
04.23.10 Timber!
When I saw this article in the WSJ about the high cost of raw materials, I thought immediately of Yale. Apparently lumber as gone up 59% in the last 4 months.
I've been reading in the alumni/ae magazine about how the endowment invests in assets like private equity, emerging markets, and timber yards. I must admit, I was a little perplexed about the latter. What on earth would Yale be doing with a lumber yard. Ah-ha!
I'm not sure how smaller funds, like Mo Money LP can get in on the action. I was very excited about rice futures a couple years back, and John Rogers had a fund but the minimum purchase was 100K.
Thursday, April 22, 2010
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