Come All Come Many

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namynuk@gmail.com
11 Jul 08

Matt Harding - A huge viral hit in the last couple months. Short Story………..Matt was a video game programmer for 7 years from ages 19-26. Woke up one day and decided he didnt like sitting in a cubicle getting fat, pale, and starting at a computer screen all day. He took the money he saved traveled 42 countries in 14 months. This was the result. My desire to travel has grown even more due to him, hugely inspirational.

This also expresses a certain trean in Internet popularity. Lip dubs, dancing, and anything combining them have been huge lately. DaveyDanceBlog.com took off last summer, as well as the lip dub trend approximately two years ago. This tells me two things either the groundbreaking trends that were destined for popularity, or that in the world today its not such a bad thing to see people having fun. Thats why I watch them, and I think theres alot more people out there like me

10 Jul 08

The Cheapest Stocks Around

The market is down. Woe as us, right? Well not if you’ve got some money to invest, because now’s the time to check out some cheap stocks.  Luckily the Motley Fool did this so I didn’t have to. Here are their cheap stock finds:

  • Coca cola (NYSE:KO)  hit 52 week low*
  • Northrop Grumman (NYSE: NOC) hit 52 week low*
  • Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT) lowest PE since 1992
  • Hansen Natural (NASDAQ: HANS) stock price has been halved
  • Whole Foods (NASDAQ: WFMI) stock price has been halved
  • Eastman Kodak (NYSE: EK)
  • Electronic Arts (NASDAQ: ERTS)
  • General Electric (NYSE: GE)
  • Eli Lilly (NYSE: LLY) 23% off a 52 week high*
  • AT&T (NYSE: T) 23% off a 52 week high*

So before jumping the gun, you have to look into why these stocks are low. Is is just volatility? The current economic downturn? Or the company itself?

The listed stocks have seen decline due to either rising input costs (Hansen’s, Coca-Cola, GE) a messy acquisition (potentially Microsoft) competitive concerns (AT&T, Whole Foods, Northrop Grumman), regulations (Eli Lilly), or general recession-fueled fears.

The key is to find situations where the stocks have fallen, but the company’s business fundamentals are unchanged or have improved. That’s the key to loving volatility. The Motley Fool recommends Buffalo Wild Wings (NASDAQ: BWLD), who is building a national presence and has seen annual revenue and earnings growth despite rising chicken costs, but is trading 43% off its 52-week high.*


*What does trading __% off a 52-week high mean?  It’s just a way of measuring a stock relative to where it was traded in the past year. You can gauge a stock’s performance based on its highs and lows of the past 52 weeks. So “43% off the 52-week high” means that if BWLD was trading at $100 at some point in the past year, it’s now trading at $57. That means it is likely undervalued. It’s helpful to look at this to determine if the stock is low and undervalued (=buy), or high and overvalued (=short). Note that there are many other considerations when assessing a stock, so maybe only put HALF of your savings into Buffalo Wings.

06 Jul 08
[Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]

This song just started playing on my iTunes and I experienced a peculiar jolt of happiness. For a few seconds I couldn’t figure out why, and then a part of me remembered that this is the song that plays in 10 Things I Hate About You when Julia Stiles and Heath Ledger make-out while playing paint ball.

When I was 12, that scene was pretty much the definition of romantic. Years later, I can see that it was really just another silly, unrealistic scene in a teen romantic-comedy. But it doesn’t matter. It turns out that that 12 year-old definition of romance never completely goes away.

And, I don’t know about you, but I think that’s actually pretty great.

28 Jun 08

Do you know what’s going on in Zimbabwe?

I’ve been following the situation in Zimbabwe since March, and am surprised by a. how little media attention it has received (that is, until Sunday when Morgan Tsvangirai pulled out of the election and sought refuge at the Dutch embassy in Harare), and b. how few people to whom I ask that question say yes.

From what I have read/heard/researched, here’s the story:

Zimbabwe was a British colony since the 1880’s, then known as Rhodesia. Robert Mugabe was leader of the nationalist Zimbabwe African Union and in 1979 struck an agreement with British officials to establish a independent democratically elected government, renamed Zimbabwe.

Mugabe later became prime minister, helped unify the nation (though resulting in the death of 30,000 alleged dissidents), became president, and was re-elected numerous times.

However, during his reign, Zimbabwe became more and more impoverished. This can be attributed to the Land Acquisition Act and other similar movements which allowed the seizure of land held by white colonists to be redistributed to the Zimbabweans. The problem was the Zimbabweans did not know how to farm and properly use that land. This led to commodity shortages, a plummeting economy, and an impoverished nation where everyone is a billionaire, yet nobody is. Inflation is around 165,000%.

On March 28, 2008 Mugabe lost his first election since taking power. Morgan Tsvangirai of the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) won the election. But Mugabe contested that, and despite a recount, called for a run-off election.

That run-off election was finally scheduled for this Friday. However, after Mugabe’s declaration that he would not cede power to the opposition under any circumstance, and after the death of 85 MDC supporters, Tsvangirai has stepped down stating that increasing violence had made a free and fair poll impossible.

Read about it in the Harare Tribune, the Economist, and a little history of Zimbabwe under Mugabe in the WSJ, and check out some CNN videos.

27 Jun 08

23 Jun 08
[Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]

gooneruk:

LEN - Steal My Sunshine

I’m in a summery mood at the moment, and this is a great tune to keep that mood going. To think, this is almost 10 years old.

It was one of the last CD singles that I bought, if memory serves. This time, it took me 5 seconds to find it online, and about the same again to download the track. How times change.

22 Jun 08

I’m a huge fan of The Onion. Its my favorite paper and my favorite source of news. The Onion News Network keeps getting better. I couldn’t stop laughing at their newest, Most Children Strongly Opposed to Children’s Healthcare.

20 Jun 08

Boyfriend and Girlfriend Discuss "Sex and the City"

  • Boyfriend: Why are you and your friends so obsessed with "Sex and the City?"
  • Girlfriend: Because the characters are just like us!
  • Boyfriend: Like the fact that only one of you is kind of attractive?
20 Jun 08
Vin Baker, Boston Celtics: Sure, the pic’s a little blurry, but this is what the entire world looks like to Vin and Tonic.  (Found by Brian at the Celtics’ victory parade.)
Vin Baker’s alcohol problem throughout his NBA career has been nothing but a field of jokes, I could not resist this one.

Vin Baker, Boston Celtics: Sure, the pic’s a little blurry, but this is what the entire world looks like to Vin and Tonic.  (Found by Brian at the Celtics’ victory parade.)

Vin Baker’s alcohol problem throughout his NBA career has been nothing but a field of jokes, I could not resist this one.


19 Jun 08

processed foods (should) keep inflation down

Food inflation is all the rage in the news these days. But here’s something I learned today. Only 2% of the price of processed foods goes to the farmer. In that box of cereal I ate the morning, the actual grain in the box is only two percent of the total value. Well, in Canada at least, where this picture is from (click for larger size).

That’s why Canada and the US have seen such low food inflation compared to the rest of the world – we eat so much processed food. Canada’s inflation is 1.2%, US food inflation is 5.9%. China, on the other hand, is seeing an annual price increase of 22%, and Sri Lanka’s inflation rate is 34%!

(Canada gets break because of its stronger dollar, a supply management system that limits meat and dairy imports, and the Wal-Mart effect – Wal-Mart just entered Canada and spurred on a highly competitive retail market.)

Averaging processed foods with staples like meat and dairy, the USDA reports that US farmers get about 20 percent of the retail food dollar.

Farmers are getting a lot of flack for the increase in retail prices. But, per the chart, the increase in commodity prices should not result in a big increase at retail.