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The Stingy News Weekly (10/24/2010)


"Price is what you pay, value is what you get"
- Charlie Munger


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Secret Past of Chinese Stocks
"This week, the People's Bank of China jolted stock markets around the world with a surprise interest-rate rise, and the leaders of China's Communist Party called for 'accelerating the transformation of the nation's economic-development pattern.' This drive to manage growth harks back to a declaration on April 22 that 'of the many government functions, the most important is to facilitate commerce and help industries.' The odd thing is, the Chinese government made that statement on April 22, 1903. Amid the almost irresistible excitement over China's explosive growth, it is important to understand that the Asian giant has run this exact race before—several times—and the results weren't pretty."


The Future of Fish
"As overfishing threatens the world's wild fisheries, aquaculture advocates say fish farms will play a far greater role in feeding people around the world. 'We are no more going to get our seafood from the wild than we get our beef, nuts, fruit from the wild,' predicts Kevin Fitzsimmons, a professor at the University of Arizona and former president of the World Aquaculture Society. He is also on the board of HQ Sustainable Maritime Industries (HQS), an NYSE Amex-listed company that sells Chinese-raised tilapia. 'It's all going to be farm-raised,' he says. And there's no fish better suited to this new world than tilapia, says Fitzsimmons. It's a fast-growing species with mild-tasting flesh that producers can easily adapt to all kinds of uses. 'Tilapia,' says Fitzsimmons, 'is going to be basically where chicken is with poultry.'That means that the creatures thrashing in Chen's ponds are the future of fish. The growing American appetite has led to a boom in Chinese aquaculture: With hundreds of breeding centers, fish farms, feed mills, and processing plants, China is the world's tilapia superpower."


Ridley and the rational optimist
"Matt Ridley, author of The Rational Optimist, talks with EconTalk host Russ Roberts about why he is optimistic about the future and how trade and specialization explain the evolution of human development over the millennia. Ridley argues that life is getting better for most of the people on earth and that the underlying cause is trade and specialization. He discusses the differences between Smith's and Ricardo's insights into trade and growth and why despite what seems to be strong evidence, people are frequently pessimistic about the future."


The Tax Haven
"Google uses a complicated structure to send most of its overseas profits to tax havens, keeping its corporate rate at a super-low 2.4 percent "


O Canada!
"By the 1990s, Canada had also become one of the developed world’s most socialized economies, with the government accounting for 53% of the country’s GDP. Economic growth was stagnating, while debt levels were inexorably and dangerously mounting. At its scariest zenith, Canadian federal and provincial government debt amounted to 120% of GDP, with roughly 70% at the national level and an outrageously bloated 50% owed by the provinces. Again, to put that in perspective, despite our debt binge over the last decade, US government debt is around 60% of GDP, while state debt is nearly 17% of GDP, or 77% overall (this is based on net, not gross, debt and excludes the Social Security trust fund holdings as well as intergovernmental liabilities.)Moreover, unlike in our present situation, Canada’s interest rates were rising due to worries about the nation’s solvency. Its coveted AAA credit rating was yanked, and the market was treating it as an increasingly unreliable borrower. In other words, it was much like the situation a number of European countries find themselves in today—except that Canada didn’t have Germany to bail it out. As you can readily see, there’s simply no question that Canada was in some very deep doo-doo. Which begs the multitrillion-dollar question: How the heck did it get out of that jam? "


Spain's Solar on Edge of Bankruptcy
"Spain stands as a lesson to other aspiring green-energy nations, including China and the U.S., by showing how difficult it is to build an alternative energy industry even with billions of euros in subsidies, says Ramon de la Sota, a private investor in Spanish photovoltaic panels and a former General Electric Co. executive. "


Forget gold, buy stocks
"You could take all the gold that's ever been mined, and it would fill a cube 67 feet in each direction. For what that's worth at current gold prices, you could buy all -- not some -- all of the farmland in the United States. Plus, you could buy 10 Exxon Mobils, plus have $1 trillion of walking-around money. Or you could have a big cube of metal. Which would you take? Which is going to produce more value?"


$200 Billion Blunder
"Warren Buffett says Berkshire Hathaway is the 'dumbest' stock he ever bought. He calls his 1964 decision to buy the textile company a $200 billion dollar blunder, sparked by a spiteful urge to retaliate against the CEO who tried to 'chisel' Buffett out of an eighth of a point on a tender deal."


Volatility mesures behavioural risk
"I was wrong to dismiss standard deviation as a risk measure for all of those years. It's not a measure of investment risk but a measure of behavioural risk. Still, standard deviation measures a type of risk that has potentially damaging consequences."


Lies, Damned Lies, and Medical Science
"He zoomed in on 49 of the most highly regarded research findings in medicine over the previous 13 years, as judged by the science community’s two standard measures: the papers had appeared in the journals most widely cited in research articles, and the 49 articles themselves were the most widely cited articles in these journals. These were articles that helped lead to the widespread popularity of treatments such as the use of hormone-replacement therapy for menopausal women, vitamin E to reduce the risk of heart disease, coronary stents to ward off heart attacks, and daily low-dose aspirin to control blood pressure and prevent heart attacks and strokes. Ioannidis was putting his contentions to the test not against run-of-the-mill research, or even merely well-accepted research, but against the absolute tip of the research pyramid. Of the 49 articles, 45 claimed to have uncovered effective interventions. Thirty-four of these claims had been retested, and 14 of these, or 41 percent, had been convincingly shown to be wrong or significantly exaggerated. If between a third and a half of the most acclaimed research in medicine was proving untrustworthy, the scope and impact of the problem were undeniable."



DOW 30 Value Screens

High Dividend Yield StocksP/EP/BP/SP/DYield
Verizon (VZ)13555
AT&T (T)35355
Pfizer (PFE)24255
Merck (MRK)54155
Kraft (KFT)44455
EI DuPont (DD)31344
Johnson & Johnson (JNJ)42144
Chevron (CVX)54444
Intel (INTC)53244
McDonald's (MCD)11144
Notes | More Info...


Value Ratio StocksP/EP/BP/SP/DVR
AT&T (T)35352.24
Merck (MRK)54152.31
Chevron (CVX)54442.96
Travelers (TRV)55433.18
Kraft (KFT)44453.23
Intel (INTC)53243.33
Johnson & Johnson (JNJ)42143.88
EI DuPont (DD)31343.90
Pfizer (PFE)24254.04
Exxon Mobil (XOM)43434.74
Notes | More Info...


Graham-Lite StocksP/EP/BP/DG$dG$(%)
Travelers (TRV)55391.3465.78
JP Morgan Chase (JPM)55158.1454.23
Chevron (CVX)54497.0314.76
Kraft (KFT)44534.337.63
Merck (MRK)54539.797.25
AT&T (T)35528.942.30
Notes | More Info...


Top US StocksYieldV.R.Graham
AT&T (T)YYY
Chevron (CVX)YYY
Kraft (KFT)YYY
Merck (MRK)YYY
EI DuPont (DD)YY
Intel (INTC)YY
Johnson & Johnson (JNJ)YY
Pfizer (PFE)YY
Travelers (TRV)YY
Exxon Mobil (XOM)Y
JP Morgan Chase (JPM)Y
McDonald's (MCD)Y
Verizon (VZ)Y
Notes...



S&P/TSX60 Value Screens

High Dividend Yield StocksP/EP/BP/SP/DYield
Transalta (TA)34355
BCE (BCE)54455
Sun Life (SLF)25555
Husky Energy (HSE)34455
Bank of Montreal (BMO)43355
CIBC (CM)52355
Power Corp (POW)35555
Telus (T)43455
TransCanada (TRP)24255
Manulife (MFC)05555
Notes | More Info...


Value Ratio StocksP/EP/BP/SP/DVR
BCE (BCE)54452.34
CIBC (CM)52352.79
Bank of Montreal (BMO)43353.10
National Bank (NA)53343.18
Transalta (TA)34353.24
Encana (ECA)55443.27
Husky Energy (HSE)34453.56
Telus (T)43453.56
Sun Life (SLF)25553.94
Royal Bank (RY)42243.96
Notes | More Info...


Graham-Lite StocksP/EP/BP/DG$dG$(%)
Encana (ECA)55439.1038.35
Canadian Tire (CTC.A)55267.6717.19
Brookfield A.M. (BAM.A)45333.306.95
Inmet Mining (IMN)54167.246.82
Sun Life (SLF)25529.365.00
Teck Cominco (TCK.B)54147.023.42
Nexen (NXY)45222.852.53
National Bank (NA)53467.791.34
BCE (BCE)54534.320.12
Notes | More Info...


Top Canadian StocksYieldV.R.Graham
BCE (BCE)YYY
Sun Life (SLF)YYY
Bank of Montreal (BMO)YY
CIBC (CM)YY
Encana (ECA)YY
Husky Energy (HSE)YY
National Bank (NA)YY
Telus (T)YY
Transalta (TA)YY
Brookfield A.M. (BAM.A)Y
Canadian Tire (CTC.A)Y
Inmet Mining (IMN)Y
Manulife (MFC)Y
Nexen (NXY)Y
Power Corp (POW)Y
Royal Bank (RY)Y
Teck Cominco (TCK.B)Y
TransCanada (TRP)Y
Notes...



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