Yearly Archives: 2012

Investing in Cuba

Investing in Cuba?

If any of you who answered the question in this post: http://wp.me/p1PgpH-1eK

Your company has been given a concession to open a resort on the North coast of Cuba. What recommendation would you make to your investment committee? What should your required rate of return be?

by thinking or saying 15% or 25% on your cost of capital, you get an F. Tell the investment committe no, but to be sure, you would be willing to travel down to Cuba for three weeks and explore the options. 🙂

Above is the Hertzfeld Cuba closed end fund (CUBA) that trades at a 13% discount to Net Asset Value.  It has been a “value” trap for a while. Why the rally in 2007?

http://youtu.be/D2IKNPFdvII  Fidel takes a dive.

Investment declines in Cuba: http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/sns-rt-us-cuba-investmentbre88618j-20120907,0,4082746.story

I attended an investment conference at Yale’s Gradute Business School on Cuba ten years ago. Students were asked what return would they require to invest in Cuba. Replies were 15%, 20% perhaps even 25% venture capital-like returns/cost of capital.

I then asked the students, “What return would you require if the contract you signed was torn up AFTER you invested in the country AND there was no rule of law or PROPERTY RIGHTS to recoup your investment?”

Where is common sense?  Would I invest in Cuba? NO.  But Cuba can change. I wait.

http://finance.yahoo.com/news/risky-business-investing-cuba-more-185000298.html

Investment risk can mean a number of different things. This past fall, British businessman Amado Fakhre took a particularly severe type of loss: His freedom.

October, 2011: Fakhre, the Lebanese-born, Havana-based CEO of Coral Capital — which claimed to have invested $75 million in Cuba, with more than $1 billion worth of projects in the pipeline — is woken at dawn and arrested by Cuban authorities. Coral Capital’s offices are shuttered and declared a crime scene. Fakhre has been held without charges ever since.

April, 2012: Coral Capital’s COO Stephen Purvis, is picked up by Cuban government agents as he prepares to walk his children to school. He too, has been held without charges, and no mention has been made of either case in Cuba’s state-run media.

Before their disappearances, Fakhre and Purvis seemed to have no shortage of confidence in Coral’s ventures.

EXCELLENT BLOG on cuba

http://www.cubaforyumas.com/   view the videos.

 

Value Vault Update; Approved for Transplant and Emerging Market Value Investing

Value Vault Update

Many have been having troubles opening the Value Vault. The main problem is the size of the folder; there is a 2 Gig limit. Splitting folders means multiple emailing of keys. I get 10 requests a day so time constraints make this a hassle.  Yes, there is Google, Dropbox and many other choices than Yousendit.com.

To make this blog more assessable for learning, I will post the videos up on this blog and the important books. All case studies, documents and more obscure books, I will place in a folder (less than 2 Gigs)  or two and then email out all the keys.

This blog will no longer have advertising on it. The videos will have the corresponding case studies and financials for ease of study.  Once that is up, you have about 10 valuation case studies with videos to develop your skills along with all the prior posts.

I have all your emails, so you won’t be forgotten when I email out the new keys. You will see the videos going up by tomorrow.

I have been finally approved as a kidney donor so I wait for the date of my surgery. More blood samples, CAT scans and X-rays have been taken of me than any lab rat. Ready to go so the recipient doesn’t have to suffer dialysis or death.

http://www.mayoclinic.org/kidney-transplant/what-is-a-kidney-transplant.html

Quiz for emerging market value investors

Your company has been given a concession to open a resort on the North coast of Cuba. What recommendation would you make to your investment committee? What should your required rate of return be?

Buffett Tutorial on Accounting and Valuation: See’s Candies Case Study

I have always maintained that excepting fools, men did not differ much in intellect, only in zeal and hard work.  –Charles Darwin

Value investing works, because it does NOT work ALL the time. –Joel Greenblatt

Today’s post focuses on accounting (GAAP) and valuation through the words of Warren Buffett. The case study on See’s Candies and the other readings will help improve your skills. The burden is on you to understand and apply the lessons. If you do not understand FIFO or deferred taxes, then look up those terms in a basic accounting book, then do problem sets to grasp the concepts. Don’t take Buffett’s words on faith; try to apply the concepts of economic Goodwill to a commodity based company like, for example, US Steel (X) versus a franchise company like Coca-Cola (KO). Do you agree with Buffett’s analysis?

Prof. Joel Greenblatt’s book, The Little Book that Beats the Market, is (simply) an application of Buffett’s thoughts on economic Goodwill.

Helpful hint: Take a subject like share repurchases or divdend policy and try to find many different sources on the subject. Learn the subject to death. Master how, when or if a company should act in returning capital to shareholders.

See’s Candies Case Study:Sees Candies 2012

SUPPLEMENTARY READINGS

A Parable on Valuation: The Old Man and the Tree or a Parable of Valuation

Inflation:Inflation Swindles the Equity Investor and Buffett inflation file

EBITDA: Placing EBITDA into Perspective and TEV to EBITDA Research

Joel Greenblatt: Little Book That Still Beats the Market, The – Joel Greenblatt

Secrets of (view): http://youtu.be/3PShSES5nBc   25 minutes

Corporate Finance

Share Repurchases: Corporate Structure and Stock Repurchases and Assessing Buybacks from all Angles_Mauboussin

Dividends: Dividend Policy, Strategy and Analysis

You will beat Wall Street easily if you apply the above lessons. The hard work is in mastering the material.   Stay the course.

Hollywood Course on Wall Street–Better than any MBA!?

Working on Wall StreetMargin Call: http://youtu.be/0rqofLr9HE0

The way to make money on Wall Street- Margin Call: http://youtu.be/xOO1NY6ctYU

You are getting fired-Margin Call: http://youtu.be/2f2kGHcdJYU

Danny Devito as Ben Graham in Other People’s Money, “Show me the numbers.” http://youtu.be/yypj-aYtp9c

Danny Devito as “Larry the Liquidator” says, “I’m NOT your best friend, I am your ONLY friend” http://youtu.be/p7rvupKipmY

Boiler Room: “RECO!” http://youtu.be/4zakyg3thfY You could do a thesis on all the psychological ploys used to make this sale.  Also, http://youtu.be/izOIOvguncU  Always be closing!

Wall Street: “Because it’s wreckable.”http://youtu.be/2Mr4mjeZ2ko

Trading Places: Learning about commodities: http://youtu.be/7EjdC0pjo1A

Valuation Study in Trading Places, “Well, in Philadelphia, it is worth 50 bucks: http://youtu.be/jLo7tHDHgOc

Auction market: http://youtu.be/uZ94J09IsHA

Trading Soybeans (How would you like to do THAT all day?) http://youtu.be/XZEBz01t5vg

In those short clips you will grasp more than many beginning MBAs of how the world works.  Good luck!

Appendix: Comment: A movie like this is not a sign of a Bull Market. The movie reflects and/or caters to the Public’s disgust with Wall Street.

| SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 2012

Wall Street Meets Hollywood. Greed Ensues.

By MARTIN FRIDSON | MORE ARTICLES BY AUTHOR

A review of the new Richard Gere vehicle, Arbitrage, in which a wealthy hedge-fund manager is—surprise—the villain. Suggestion to the filmmakers: Check the dictionary before you title your next movie.

“Arbitrage—buying low and selling high—depends on a person’s ability to determine the true value of any given market,” reads the program note for the Sundance Film Festival, where writer-director Nicholas Jarecki’s movie Arbitrage was screened to rousing acclaim in January.

From the start, then, someone got the definition wrong. Whoever wrote that program note apparently believes arbitrage—simultaneously buying and selling the same asset at difference prices—is just another form of value investing (“buying low and selling high”).

Call me a purist, but if you pay good money to watch a movie called Arbitrage, you should get to see a little of it. Arbitrage depicts nobody in the act of arbitrage. Not that this would be the first time title and content diverge. At least the hedge-fund manager in Arbitrage does engage in hedging (laying off risk), unlike some real-life firms that call themselves hedge funds without actually hedging.

image

If Arbitrage were a bond, it would make investment grade, but just barely.

Richard Gere stars as Robert Miller, a successful hedge-fund manager who illegally covers up a $400 million loss, then attempts to escape the consequences by selling his company. The sale becomes more difficult when he commits another crime in the course of a bit of wife-cheating with a sexy art dealer. That leads to a second coverup and to a breach with his adoring and idealistic daughter, who is also the firm’s chief investment officer.

Compared with other films on finance worth seeing—admittedly, a short list—Arbitrage fails to give the stock market a pivotal role. Director Oliver Stone’s Wall Street, which features Michael Douglas as takeover artist Gordon Gekko, creates tension with a takeover battle. That film also shows protagonist Charlie Sheen breaking the insider-trading laws instead of just telling the audience about it.

In Boiler Room, the most engrossing action consists of penny-stock salesmen conning their victims. By contrast, Gere’s Robert Miller has already committed his financial crime by the time the action begins.

It might be objected that Arbitrage would lose the average moviegoer by dwelling on the details of securities transactions. But the excellent finance film Margin Call, which does depict margin calls, manages to convey the essential facts about complex derivatives to a general audience. By declining the challenge of portraying finance on-screen, Arbitrage becomes a film as much about its peripheral subjects—police work, the art world, and philanthropy—as the stock market.

BEYOND BEING MISNAMED, the film lacks one key ingredient of the most enduring investment-oriented movies: an instantly quotable line. Wall Street had “Greed is good.” The cult favorite Boiler Room had “You got a cannoli you can stick in your mouth?”—followed by a rejoinder that is not printable in a family magazine. The best Arbitrage can offer is this response to the observation that it’s a cold world: “You’d better get a warm coat.”

The Bottom Line

In addition to being a thriller with few thrills, Arbitrage even bungles the meaning of its title. Wait for this one to come to cable.

But hey, this is a movie: Whether or not Arbitrage holds up as a finance film, is it a decent popcorn picture that spins a suspenseful yarn? It benefits from some good acting. Richard Gere is more than adequate in the lead. Susan Sarandon, already experienced at playing Gere’s long-suffering wife (in Shall We Dance?), again fulfills that duty with finesse. Tim Roth and Nate Parker shine in supporting roles. CNBC’s Maria Bartiromo plays Maria Bartiromo in a cameo that adds luster to the proceedings.

Key plot twists are at times cleverly foreshadowed. Characters reveal unexpected depth as they confront not-so-easy moral choices. A tearful embrace that occurs at a funeral is a powerful use of dramatic irony, and the story’s resolution denies viewers any smug satisfaction that all’s well that ends well.

But these individual touches are too infrequent. If Arbitrage were a bond, it would make investment grade, but just barely.

This shortfall raises the question of why Arbitrage garnered such raves at Sundance, even spurring talk of an Oscar for Richard Gere. The critics’ huzzahs are hard to explain on purely cinematic grounds. As an exploration of family betrayal, Arbitrage is no more than workmanlike. Unlike the best thrillers, it will leave most stomachs unknotted.

THE SUNDANCE CRITICS WERE probably won over by writer-director Jarecki’s choice of a fashionable political theme, the 1% versus the 99%. And you can never go wrong in Hollywood by making the businessman the villain.

Gere’s Robert Miller stands a good chance of prevailing over the law-enforcement system, thanks to his immense wealth, unlike the working-class youth he draws into his crime, played by Nate Parker. The detective, played by Tim Roth, who pursues Miller openly complains that he is in an unfair fight if he must pursue such a privileged perpetrator without having license to fake the evidence. To compound the corruption at the top, we learn that Miller cut corners even in the supposedly lawful phase of building his fortune.

Arbitrage will be released in theatres Friday, Sept. 14. Will media critics also be seduced by the film’s populist theme, or will they judge it according to more rigorous standards of movie-making? That question is as suspenseful as anything you’re likely to see in Arbitrage.

MARTIN FRIDSON is the global credit strategist and CEO of FridsonVision.  He reviewed the film version of Atlas Shrugged last year.

The Old Man and the Tree: A Parable of Valuation; Back to School; and More…

Back to School

Back to school (a classic!) http://youtu.be/YlVDGmjz7eM

Any Columbia Graduate Business School Students attending this–Course on Mental Models and Investment Frameworks? Mental Models Columbia GBS 2012 Syllabus

A Preview to be read for the See’s Case Study (forthcoming….)

The Old Man and the Tree: A Parable of Valuation

Adapted from Solomon, Schwartz & Bauman,
Corporations – Cases and Materials at 143 (3d ed. 1996).

*****

Once there was an old, wise man who owned an apple tree. It was a fine tree. With modest care it yielded a crop of apples which he sold for $100 each year. The man wanted money for new pursuits and thought of selling the tree. So, hoping to teach a good lesson, he placed an ad in the Business Opportunities section of the Wall Street Journal: “For sale, apple tree – best offer.”

The Old Man and the Tree or a Parable of Valuation

Readings and Viewing

http://blog.marketpsych.com/ and http://www.marketpsych.com/blog.php

Do not criticize the government (Marine sent to mental ward): http://www.lewrockwell.com/lewrockwell-show/2012/08/24/303-psycho-state-targeted-brandon-raub/

HAVE A GREAT WEEKEND!

What Can We Learn from IBM?

PS: I may not post the See’s Candies case study until tomorrow….backed up with work. Until then, tackle this:

Why did Buffett buy IBM?

IBM_VL    Don’t cheat! Look at the Value-Line and write what Buffett sees in IBM. (Disclosure: I own IBM along with BDX, BCR, CSCO, LXK, NVS, TESCO, ORI, etc. and I will not announce if and when I sell. I may be incorrect in the assessment of those businesses either in price paid or assessment of value.)

What do you think of IBM’s growth? Is this a good business? What might be driving returns for shareholders? How would you classify this company?  A rapid compounder? Value trap?

How can a company as well-known as IBM become mis-priced?

Hint: For those who wish to start your own fund….research the studies on horse track betting where favorites are SYSTEMATICALLY under-bet (under priced) while long shots are SYSTEMATICALLY over bet or over priced.

Notes:

Betting on Favorites

See research:Favorite_Longshot_Bias

http://www.gogerty.com/blogpersonal/2012/09/

One of the common criticisms I (Investor lecture at Columbia GBS) hear about this type of investing is that it is akin to betting on favorites at the race track. Once you have identified a company that is so obviously superior, how likely is it to be undervalued since the whole world will have perceived that it is an extraordinary company? The stock won’t have a margin of safety and may be persistently over-valued. The stock may be over-loved and overvalued.

Let me back up a second. As part of my misspent youth, I spent a lot of time in horse racing and handicapping. In fact, bettors in aggregate in pari-mutual betting are, in fact, very good at picking winners at the racetrack. Favorites do win races. But betting on favorites does not make you money; it loses you the least amount of money. Because there is a tremendous track take. So the horse racing/handicapping is a minus 20 percent on typical betting. If you just put money down on favorites as a mechanical system, the record shows that you will lose over time only 2%, 3% or 4%. If you bet on long shots, you will lose 20+% of your money.

Now in the case of the stock market over a long period of time, it has been a plus 9, plus 10, plus 11% game so it is very much more favorable business than horse betting. But betting on favorites, betting on quality as opposed to junk is a winning bet, as long as the valuation discipline is appropriate.

Prize awarded: Boom, Gloom, and Doom Report for the BEST reply.

Ok, now take a look at these articles: http://tech.fortune.cnn.com/2011/11/14/warren-buffett-ibm/

and  http://seekingalpha.com/article/510371-what-does-warren-buffett-see-in-ibm

Lessons learned?

If I can stress anything–and it took me TEN years to learn and I fall off the wagon occasionally–keep things simple!

Expectations for Growth, Agricultural Prices

The Count of Oropesa, more than four and a half centuries ago had a passion to reform the world. A Spanish saint, San Pedro of Alcantara, gave him the kind of counsel I am urging on everyone who would advance Liberty.

May your Lordship not torment yourself: there is a remedy for this deluge of crimes. Let us be, you and me, that which we should be. There will be two less souls to convert. Let each person behave thus: it is the most efficacious of reforms. The trouble is, that no one wants to correct himself and everyone meddles at correcting others: thus everything stays as is. –Leonard Read

LMCM August  Note page 6 on future expectations.

Agricultural Prices  Where money is going…

Excess Reserves: The key is not what banks put excess reserves in, but that they are moved out of excess reserves. Remember, excess reserves are funds
sitting at the Fed and not in the system. Even if banks take the money
out of excess reserves and buy Treasury bills, they are buying the
bills from someone and thus putting the money in the system. This is
what will cause the price inflation, even if T-bill rates go down
short-term. Bottom line: If enough money comes out of excess reserves,
the price inflation will be huge. Remember, there is more than $1.5
trillion sitting there.   (Watch for Bank lending growth)

—www.economicpolicyjournal.com

 

 

Poverty Amidst Splendor or Lessons in Tyranny. Alexander Roepers, Activist Investor

There is very little the privileged class has that everyone else doesn’t have, except money.–Alex Castro (son of Fidel Castro)

Tremeda Hambre! http://youtu.be/ssIv2c-u7R0  This Cuban interrupts an interview with a Cuban Reggae artist, yelling that he is hungry.  He represents life in Cuba for the majority.

Life in Cuba for the masses:http://www.therealcuba.com/Videos.htm. Grim.

Of course, for a dictator to impoverish his country to desperation while holding onto power, there must be a special few to keep him in power.

Splendor amidst poverty with Cuba’s Gilded Elite http://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2012/09/splendor-amid-poverty-gallery-nights-with-cubas-gilded-elite/261956/

To understand how to take and hold power, read Machievelli http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Niccol%C3%B2_Machiavelli and my recent favorite:

And for more detail, The dictator’s handbook and blog (Satire!): http://dictatorshandbook.net/

Lessons for investors

Why bother? Well, those lessons will illuminate why and how there are so few gifted CEOs but so many highly paid CEOs with miniscule tie to performance in corporate America (though the situation is better than in Japan). Packed, insider boards and benchmarking with diffuse, ignorant shareholders might be the some of the reasons.

Pay for Performance Puzzle: http://www.businessweek.com/investor/content/sep2009/pi20090923_783858.htm

Please be in touch if any of you become a tyrant in a small, hot country.

Alexander Roepers

http://greenbackd.com/2012/09/05/alexander-roepers-gentleman-activist/

Visit www.greenbackd.com for discounts to this year’s Value Investors Conference.

What is Wrong with Austrian Economics? 1873 and 2008; The Future in Glass; See’s Candies Case Study

“If a man has a talent and cannot use it, he has failed. If he has a talent and uses only half of it, he has partly failed. If he has a talent and learns somehow to use the whole of it, he has gloriously succeeded, and won a satisfaction and a triumph few men ever know.” — Thomas Wolfe

“Work is love made visible. And if you cannot work with love but only with distaste, it is better that you should leave your work and sit at the gate of the temple and take alms of those who work with joy.” –Kahlil Gibran

SUGAR: last mentioned http://wp.me/p1PgpH-1dr. Have a jelly donut:http://youtu.be/OhhJwJbYruA

The Future?

A day made of glass: Part 1: http://youtu.be/6Cf7IL_eZ38 Part 2: http://youtu.be/jZkHpNnXLB0

See’s Candies last discussed here: http://wp.me/p1PgpH-1bZ.

Readers did a fine job of analyzing why Buffett paid 3xs tangible book value. While cleaning out old files I came across a discussion of See’s that perhaps not many have seen, so I will post tomorrow.

What is Wrong with the Austrians?

Before you can know what is “wrong” with Austrian Business Cycle Theory (“ABCT”), you need to know about the theory.

A ten lecture series on Austrian Economic Analysis: http://mises.org/media/categories/89/Introduction-to-Austrian-Economic-Analysis

The Austrian School: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Austrian_School

As a history fanatic, I am enjoying A Nation of Deadbeats: An Uncommon History of America’s Financial Disasters by Scott Reynolds Nelson. 

More on the author here:http://www.wm.edu/research/ideation/social-sciences/economic-deja-vu6543.php

The book’s author has studied the Austrian approach but finds fault with it. He weaves an interesting account of the Panics of 1792, 1819, 1837, 1857, 1873, 1907, 1920 and 1929. He says government can’t be entirely to blame for some of the overleveraging, fraud and mal-investment of the booms that lead to busts.  I lack historical knowledge to completely grasp his arguments, but after finishing this book I will take another crack.  I do believe that understanding where leverage has built up is crucial to understanding the effects of the bust. For example, the Internet boom occurred mostly in equities while the 2008 credit crisis developed in the banking system. Banking panics will most likely be much more severe due to the high (at least 10 to 1) leverage in our banking system. The credit contraction is quick to spread throughout the economy. The Internet bust primarily caused a bust in Internet and Telcom companies’ stock prices.

The Panic of 1873 as a model to understand 2008

The best model to understand the 2008 Crisis was the 1873 panic NOT 1929.

The author: “Everyone was talking about 1929, but I said in this article that the depression following the Panic of 1873 was much more like our current crash than 1929,” Nelson said. “1873 was a mortgage meltdown, then bank failure, which then led to stock market collapse.”

http://srnels.people.wm.edu/articles/realGrtDepr.html

Scott Nelson 1873 and 2008 and below are original source documents from the period. NYT on Panic of 1873, 

Workers Riot in NYC 1874

Speculation Rampant in RR in 1873

Problems with Austrian Business Cycle Theory

Another historian’s view: Jeffrey Hummel Arguments against ABCT

I will seek out the contra-arguments to Austrian theory as a way to better understand the strengths and weaknesses of various economic theories and approaches. Is Austrian theory perfect? I don’t believe so, but it has been the best construct for me to understand how booms develop and end–so far.  What do YOU think?

Business cycle theory

According to most mainstream economists, the Austrian business cycle theory is incorrect.[33]

Some mainstream economists argue that the Austrian business cycle theory requires bankers and investors to exhibit a kind of irrationality, because their theory requires bankers to be regularly fooled into making unprofitable investments by temporarily low interest rates.[5][24][117] In response, historian Thomas Woods argues that few bankers and investors are familiar enough with the Austrian business cycle theory to consistently make sound investment decisions. Austrian economists Anthony Carilli and Gregory Dempster argue that a banker or firm loses market share if it does not borrow or loan at a magnitude consistent with current interest rates, regardless of whether rates are below their natural levels. Thus businesses are forced to operate as though rates were set appropriately, because the consequence of a single entity deviating would be a loss of business.[95] Austrian economist Robert Murphy argues that it is difficult for bankers and investors to make sound business choices because they cannot know what the interest rate would be if it were set by the market.[97] Austrian economist Sean Rosenthal argues that widespread knowledge of the Austrian business cycle theory increases the amount of malinvestment during periods of artificially low interest rates.[118]

Economist Paul Krugman has argued that the theory cannot explain changes in unemployment over the business cycle. Austrian business cycle theory postulates that business cycles are caused by the misallocation of resources from consumption to investment during “booms”, and out of investment during “busts”. Krugman argues that because total spending is equal to total income in an economy, the theory implies that the reallocation of resources during “busts” would increase employment in consumption industries, whereas in reality, spending declines in all sectors of an economy during recessions. He also argues that according to the theory the initial “booms” would also cause resource reallocation, which implies an increase in unemployment during booms as well.[28] In response, Austrian economist David Gordon argues that Krugman’s argument is dependent on a misrepresentation of the theory. He furthermore argues that prices on consumption goods may go up as a result of the investment bust, which could mean that the amount spent on consumption could increase even though the quantity of goods consumed has not.[119] Furthermore, Roger Garrison argues that a false boom caused by artificially low interest rates would cause a boom in consumption goods as well as investment goods (with a decrease in “middle goods”) thus explaining the jump in unemployment at the end of a boom.[120] Many Austrians also argue that capital allocated to investment goods cannot be quickly augmented to create consumption goods.[121]

Economist Jeffery Hummel is critical of Hayek’s explanation of labor asymmetry in booms and busts. He argues that Hayek makes peculiar assumptions about demand curves for labor in his explanation of how a decrease in investment spending creates unemployment. He also argues that the labor asymmetry can be explained in terms of a change in real wages, but this explanation fails to explain the business cycle in terms of resource allocation.[122]

Hummel also argues that the Austrian explanation of the business cycle fails on empirical grounds. In particular, he notes that investment spending remained positive in all recessions where there are data, except for the Great Depression. He argues that this casts doubt on the notion that recessions are caused by a reallocation of resources from industrial production to consumption, since he argues that the Austrian business cycle theory implies that net investment should be below zero during recessions.[122] In response, Austrian economist Walter Block argues that the misallocation during booms does not preclude the possibility of demand increasing overall.[123]

Critics have also argued that, as the Austrian business cycle theory points to the actions of fractional-reserve banks and central banks to explain the business cycles, it fails to explain the severity of business cycles before the establishment of the Federal Reserve in 1913.[33] Supporters of the Austrian business cycle theory respond that the theory applies to the expansion of the money supply, not necessarily an expansion done by a central bank.[124] Historian Thomas Woods argues that the crashes were caused by various privately-owned banks with state charters that issued paper money, supposedly convertible to gold, in amounts greatly exceeding their gold reserves.[125]

In 1969, economist Milton Friedman, after examining the history of business cycles in the U.S., concluded that “The Hayek-Mises explanation of the business cycle is contradicted by the evidence. It is, I believe, false.”[26] He analyzed the issue using newer data in 1993, and again reached the same conclusion.[27] Austrian economist Jesus Huerta de Soto argued that Friedman’s conclusions are based on misleading data (such as GDP).[124] Austrian economist Roger Garrison argued that Friedman misinterpreted economic aggregates and how they related to the business cycles he reviewed.[126]

END

Is Sugar Toxic?

OriginalPost:

http://www.onlinenursingprograms.com/nursing-your-sweet-tooth/

What to do: http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2011/07/26/what-caused-america-to-go-from-fit-to-fat.aspx