Web mogul Mark Zuckerberg has become the second-youngest individual ever to be named TIME Magazine’s Person of the Year. TIME’s annual Person of the Year honor goes to the person — or thing — that has most influenced the culture and the news during the past year, whether it be for good or for ill. [...]
Posts Tagged ‘Warren Buffett’
Obama to award Bush ‘Presidential Medal of Freedom’
US President Barack Obama has announced that he would award the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the country’s highest civilian honour, to George W Bush next year. According to the New York Daily News, the decision has come a day after Bush gave a respectful nod to Obama at the groundbreaking of his library in Dallas. [...]
Philanthropy: George Soros and Human Rights Watch
George Soros gives $100m to Human Rights Watch
George Soros has long planned to give away the vast bulk of his fortune, even before fellow billionaires such as Warren Buffett and Bill Gates made the idea fashionable. Now aged 80, the legendary investor no longer believes he can donate all his estimated $14 billion in his lifetime (not least because of his remarkable knack of making even more money). But nobody can accuse him of not trying. On September 7th, in the first in what is expected to be a series of whopping gifts, he gave $100m to Human Rights Watch, a global campaigning group. That should cement his reputation as the greatest backer of “freedom” as a cause, rather as Mr Gates has adopted public health. The gift will be paid out in annual chunks over the next decade, but with one big string attached: every dollar of his must be matched by another from someone else.
…
Genomics: What lies within
The personal genetic-testing industry is under fire, but happier days lie ahead
“BY ALL accounts, I’m a medical miracle,” says Ozzy Osbourne, an ageing rock star who once bit the head off a live bat. For four decades Mr Osbourne (pictured above in his prime) drank too much and took prodigious quantities of drugs. Yet he survived. Now a reformed man, he is getting his entire genome sequenced by Knome, an American genetic-testing firm, for clues to how his body coped with such prolonged abuse.
He is not alone in wondering what mysteries genetic testing might unlock. 23andMe, a genetics start-up in Silicon Valley financed partly by Google, has held “spit parties” for the rich and famous. It compared the genes of Warren Buffett and Jimmy Buffet to see if the billionaire and the musician are related (they are not). The personal genetics business is hardly four years old, but it has already made a splash. Many customers hope that, by analysing their genes, they will learn more about their risk of contracting a disease, getting fat or suffering from some other ailment. …
Buffett: Berkshire businesses saw an uptick in March
Berkshire Hathaway Inc (BRKa.N) (BRKb.N) has seen a big upswing in all of its businesses starting in March, billionaire Warren Buffett said in an interview with Fox Business Network.
“What a difference a year makes, yes,” Buffett told Fox Business Network anchor Liz Claman. The interview will be aired on Friday morning.
Chinese firms buy Japanese ones: Scaring the salarymen
Fear of foreign takeovers may spur change in corporate Japan
MANAGERS across Japan were stunned last month when a factory belonging to Ogihara, a Japanese diemaker, was sold to BYD, a Chinese carmaker that boasts Warren Buffett as an investor. In a sign of the sensitivity of the matter, the Japanese firm tried to keep the transaction quiet, never issuing a press release and refusing all interview requests.
Japan has a long history of resisting foreigners who seek to buy their way into the country. But most recent squabbles have at least been with firms from America, a political ally. Deals involving firms from the Chinese mainland are touchier because of the two countries’ uneasy relations. This has kept the number of Sino-Japanese mergers and acquisitions low, even as China surpassed America in 2007 to become Japan’s largest trading partner. …
Wise Money – 5 Tips From Billionaire Investor Warren Buffett
Want to make investment decisions that lead to wealth in the long term? That’s just what billionaire Warren Buffett has been doing for years. Whether you have $5 or $50 million, Buffett’s wisdom will ring true as you work to make the best choices for your situation.
From the master himself, five tips you can take to the bank:
1. Fear in others is an opportunity for you
It’s been an ideal period for investors: A climate of fear is their best friend. Those who invest only when  commentators are upbeat end up paying a heavy price for meaningless reassurance.
Keep your head about you when others decide with fear and you’ll find value at every turn. From the common market thrashing over quarterly earnings to the small business owner who just wants to get out, learn to smell fear and welcome it as an opportunity.
The irrational fear of the herd is a dear friend to the value-minded investor. When everybody else stampedes, quickly work through your own fear and get back to business.
2. Invest in what you understand
It doesn’t matter how good a deal you’ve found or how cool an investment opportunity seems. If you don’t understand how it works, steer clear. You probably have at least one friend who is always rushing from one “perfect investment opportunity†to the next. Unless you can afford to burn money in a barrel (which you shouldn’t), steer clear of investments that you don’t fully understand.
3. Maintain a healthy margin
We pay a steep price to maintain our premier financial strength. The $20 billion-plus of cash equivalent assets that we customarily hold is earning a pittance at present. But we sleep well.
For most individuals, the idea of even $5,000 in the bank seems like a far-fetched dream. Keeping 6 months worth of living expenses in a separate account is good personal finance sense. Holding enough cash to get you through times of uncertainty in your business has the same result of keeping you free of fear-based blunders.
Figure out the number you need to keep safe in order to sleep well at night. Buffett needs his $20 billion, I need enough to pay for my friends’ drinks for a few months. What do you need?
4. Concentrate on long term results
In the end, what counts in investing is what you pay for a business – through the purchase of a small piece of it in the stock market – and what that business earns in the succeeding decade or two.
Once you’ve put the first 3 tips into practice it’s important to remember that tremendous value is most often gained over the long term. Look at what might happen over the next 15-20 years and invest accordingly.
You’ve got your cushion so you’re not afraid of dips in the market. You’re working within the bounds of what you understand well. You also have the ability to operate calmly when the rest of the world has gone nuts. Putting some focus on 4 tips should be no big deal for you!
5. Take full responsibility for your investment decisions
If Berkshire ever gets in trouble, it will be my fault. It will not be because of misjudgments made by a Risk Committee or Chief Risk Officer.
Make the success or failure of your investments personal and take responsibility for all your decisions. You might have the smartest consultant of all time but that’s no excuse to shirk your responsibilities. If something goes wrong at Berkshire Hathaway, Warren Buffett takes responsibility for the mishap and works to fix the problem as quickly as possible.
He’s famous for treating the latest recession like a mother of 20 stocking up on groceries for 50% off. You probably won’t be in a position to purchase entire companies any time soon though. In the meantime, Get more of Buffett’s advice by perusing his annual letters to Berkshire Hathaway shareholders (quotes excerpted from 2009 letter).
Thanks to CNN Money for the tip!
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Ben Affleck launches aid foundation in Congo
Actor Ben Affleck has established a new aid foundation to help women and children affected by rape and sexual violence in the troubled region of eastern Congo.
Affleck, 37, spent five days in the Central African nation last week meeting with former child sex slaves and rape survivors, as well as male prisoners convicted of [...]
With friends like Hank
Hank Paulson’s book revives worries about GE
IT IS supposed to be a cosy chat between friends, but the onstage conversation scheduled for February 18th between Hank Paulson and Jeffrey Immelt could turn into a fight to preserve the reputation of at least one of these corporate titans. Until a few days ago this event, to be held at a cultural centre in New York, looked like a classic example of the old pals’ act—Mr Paulson, a former treasury secretary and boss of Goldman Sachs, having insisted on being interviewed about his new book by his friend, Mr Immelt, the boss of General Electric, rather than by a journalist. (In a similar event on February 9th Mr Paulson took soft-ball questions from another old chum, Warren Buffett.)
Now, assuming the event goes ahead at all, it could turn into a brawl. This is because of revelations by Mr Paulson in “On The Brink: Inside the Race to Stop the Collapse of the Global Financial System”, about discussions that he claims to have had with the boss of GE in the thick of the financial crisis in the autumn of 2008. GE and Mr Immelt dispute his account. …
Chocs away
Kraft wins a battle for Britain’s Cadbury and will become the world’s biggest confectioner
THE intervention of a government minister in Kraft’s battle to buy Cadbury says much about the strength of British feeling for their favourite chocolate-maker. The American food giant’s sweetened offer, too toothsome to turn down, was accepted by Cadbury’s board on Tuesday January 19th. Kraft will pay GBP11.9 billion ($19.4 billion) for Cadbury in cash and shares, some 50% more than the firm’s value before the bidding started in September. Yet last week Britain’s business secretary, Lord Mandelson, warned a big group of the country’s institutional investors—doubtless fixing those from Cadbury with a narrowed eye—against the dangers of short-termism.
A month earlier he had promised Kraft that the British government would scrutinise a foreign buyer to ensure that “respect” was paid to Cadbury’s proud heritage. The firm has been catering to the British for 186 years. In a country that cheerfully waves in foreign buyers for its businesses the threat of “huge opposition” from the government was an unusual change of tone. Kraft too received some words of wisdom on its attempted takeover from a senior American, although the advice of Warren Buffett was of a more practical kind. His investment firm, Berkshire Hathaway, is a big shareholder in Kraft. Reckoning that Kraft’s shares are undervalued he counselled the firm’s bosses not to let their “animal spirits run high” and overpay for Cadbury. …
Woman Who Invented Credit Default Swaps is One of the Key Architects of Carbon Derivatives, Which Would Be at the Very CENTER of Cap and Trade
As I have previously shown, speculative derivatives (especially credit default swaps or “CDS”) are a primary cause of the economic crisis. They were largely responsible for bringing down Bear Stearns, AIG (and see this), WaMu and other mammoth corpora…
Tavakoli: “We Should Impose a 95% Excess Profits Tax—Or Windfall Profits Tax—On Certain Financial Institutions… Enriching Themselves” at Our Expense
The following is an advanced copy of an essay by Janet Tavakoli to be released tomorrow. Reprinted with permission of Tavakoli Structured Finance.Warren Buffett’s Wall Street WarBy Janet TavakoliOctober 20, 2009In a January 2009 interview with NBC 
Credit Default Swaps – Love ‘Em, Ban ‘Em, or Tax ‘Em?
I have repeatedly argued that over-the-counter credit default swaps (CDS) – or at least at least “naked” CDS – should be banned (“naked CDS” is the term I coined to describe the situation where the buyer is not the referenced entity. I will not comment…
The Case for Inflation
As I have recently pointed out, there are strong arguments for ongoing deflation. But even deflationists think that – after a period of deflation – we might eventually get inflation. For example, in October, I guessed 1 1/2 to 2 years of deflation, fol…
Credit Default Swaps Are STILL Dangerous
I have repeatedly argued that “naked” over-the-counter credit default swaps (CDS) should be banned (“naked CDS” is the term I coined to describe the situation where the buyer is not the referenced entity. There is at least some economic usefulness …
Risky business
By Sharanjit Leyl
Asia Business Report, BBC World

For gaming tycoon Sheldon Adelson, $4bn (£2.44bn) would once have seemed like small change.
On last year’s rich list, the chairman of the world’s largest casino was ranked as America’s third wealthiest man, behind Microsoft founder Bill Gates and investor Warren Buffett.
He has since fallen to 178th place.
The $4bn figure is roughly the amount Mr Adelson’s company reportedly needs to raise to restart stalled projects.
But finding the money is not proving easy.
Losing money
Mr Adelson’s money problems emerged late last year when financial markets went into a tailspin.
Shares in Las Vegas Sands, of which he owns two thirds, lost 95% of their value.
In a BBC interview, Mr Adelson confesses to having taken money out of his children’s trust fund to buy up his own shares as they offered "opportunity".
Las Vegas Sands raised more than $2bn last year, with nearly half the money purported to have come from Mr Adelson.
The projects he had undertaken in recent years – such as the construction of a $12bn casino complex built on a reclaimed strip in Macau, and the more than $5bn casino and convention space being put up in Singapore – were put into doubt.
The Macau project was put on hold, leaving the massive buildings being constructed unfinished, along with thousands of workers without jobs.
Mr Adelson says he hopes to restart it before the end of the year.
But building in Singapore continued after the city’s government stepped in to guarantee the successful completion of it.
Mr Adelson is quick to state in the interview that they did not help financially.
Enough money
These days, Mr Adelson sometimes appears frail.
"Money and I get along very well"
Sheldon Adelson
During a recent "topping out" ceremony of the Marina Sands Bay project in Singapore, journalists were warned not to door- step him for interviews or photographs because he had difficulty walking.
His wife helped him up on stage for the ceremony where he walked with a cane.
But the 75-year old tycoon was animated during the press conference that followed.
He was keen to dispel any more worries about money and when asked if it was still a concern, he looked in his pocket and said "its close, but not exactly enough to finish [the projects], but fortunately our chief financial officer is here and he tells us we have all the money needed".
Government backers
The ceremony was held to commemorate the near completion of the three 55 floor towers, which are due to open in early 2010.
But surrounding them there are still numerous cranes, massive sand piles and other construction paraphernalia that dominate the area facing Singapore’s skyline.
If the project was to stall, it would quite literally leave a gaping hole in the midst of the heart of the tiny city and squash its hopes to triple tourism by 2015.
Hence the participation of Singapore’s government, which Mr Adelson says was helpful even though he has had to "pay a lot for the land, upfront".
"We have the ability to work three shifts a day 24 hours a day, seven days a week," he says.
"Approvals and permits and efficiencies are from the government, as a result of government interest."
Family money
Mr Adelson brushes aside questions about why government help was needed in the first place, and he will not talk about how serious his money concerns are.
"If the company is going to sell shares, why shouldn’t I take my own family money and take advantage of that opportunity and buy the shares" he queries.
"You’re looking at it the other way – that I couldn’t sell it to somebody else, so I had to buy it myself.
"Three months ago, when our stock was $3, I took money out of my children’s trust fund, and I bought almost $40m more of our shares on the open market.
"Is that some sort of necessity It wasn’t necessity, it wasn’t concern, it was opportunity."
Raising money
Still, he admits that billions of dollars were needed to help his business out of the crisis it faced last year.
"The coincidence of the start of the recession, the crash in the economy, all happened at the same time," he says.
"It was no time to go out and spend money. We could have eliminated all of our concerns by selling off the retail and the apartments.
"But because of the economic crisis, the price that we could sell that was too low so we withdrew that as an offering in the market place.
"We waited until the market had turned up again. Now the market is positive again, so we’ll go back out and raise money."
Faltering fortune
Mr Adelson has said that he is keen to raise more money through a possible initial public offering in Hong Kong or bond sales.
Las Vegas Sands now has the markets performance on its side.
After seeing its shares fall 95%, it has since recovered more than half their value.
Mr Adelson is now worth just more than $3bn, according to Forbes, compared with some $20bn last year.
Despite his recent financial problems, he says he does not have any problems with money.
"We have no arguments, no confrontation," he jokes.
"Money and I get along very well."</p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.



