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Spekulatius

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Everything posted by Spekulatius

  1. Fully agree. I actually think the reporting from the MSM is quite good. I watch NBC News / Sky (cause I have free Peacock with my new TV) and they have people on the ground and do seem to do sober assessments. Using the arguments “It’s their own fault- they poked the bear” is like saying, a school bully can kick in another kids teeth and crush his skull with a hammer because that kid looked at the school bully funny and made a wrong joke.
  2. By most accounts, the semiconductor related shortage should subside in the second half of 2022, but now we have to deal with other shortages. The German car manufacturers are hit by disruption of cable assemblies from Ukraine, which will take 2-3 month to work through fully by some accounts. Then we have issues steel (high prices and perhaps shortages of some qualities as well) and a host of other things. I still think that towards the second half of this year some stuff will subside but who knows. I would hate having to buy a car in this environment.
  3. Yes, plug in hybrids save more gas, but you also need to account for the electricity cost to charge them. I am pro hybrid, but I think driving a relatively high mileage ICE car the way to go. I never could make the numbers work for a hybrid, much less and electric car. My next car is likely a Subaru as well, these cars drive like trains in the sometimes icy backroads here in MA where I live. My wife loves her Forester.
  4. I wonder if the issues were on the long or the short side. The short sides seem to get quite tricky, because at times all the junk and suspect stock frauds become correlated and can run against you, leading to risk management issues. On the long side, we have seen very quick and sudden factor shifts. If you invest with a longer time frame, the you can look at very severe underperformance at times.
  5. Your numbers are way off. A hybrid does not save 70% on gas, as you imply, it’s closer to 30%. A typical car will go perhaps from 30 miles/ gallon vs 40 miles/ gallon for a hybrid. So, if you do 15k/ year, the savings will be 15k/30-15k/40= 125 gallon/ year. At currently $4/ gallon that’s ~$500/ year in fuel savings. Now let’s look at Subaru Crosstreck (I like Subarus). MSRP for the Crosstrek is $35.8k. ICE model (Limited, which has more power than the hybrid) is $28.5k. So you pay 7k extra to save $500/ year on gas. Even more, if you step down a model (the hybrid has many extras I don’t care about) you can save 10k outlay and pay $500/ year more in gas cost, which I think you might not get back during the lifetime of the car.
  6. @oscarazocar Great summary on GHC and I fully agree. GHC‘s Management is at best mediocre. I owned this for a while and they do some talk that sounds good, but their capital allocation is below average and capital allocation is what it's about with a conglomerate.
  7. Same here. This decline gets annoying. I also bought some LNR.TO / LIMAF (Starter)
  8. These are expensive Molotov cocktails. This one is in my budget: https://www.liquorandwineoutlets.com/product-detail/2031-Granite-State-Vodka-Vodka
  9. Yeah, you can't just nilly willy switch the entire car production to hybrids, much less electric cars. besides, it looks like the trend is going away from hybrids to foully electric cars. In any case, we are talking about a decade long project here to get production switched and then those vehicles produced up to that point are still going to be an average of ~13 years on the road. That takes us to ~23 years from now until we can phase out ICE engines for good. Maybe be some "cash for stinker" program this is going to be quicker at some point down the road, but I think we are talking at least 20 years from now.
  10. Looks looks the new defense spending bill implies +5% for 2022 (less than inflation though) i do not know if this includes stuff related to Ukraine these incidentals are often is added in additional bills later. https://www.airforcemag.com/congress-unveils-2022-spending-plan-boosting-pentagon-funding/#:~:text=All told%2C the 2022 Department,requested by the Biden administration. This still needs to go through senate.
  11. Russia has nationalist groups as well. I am not sure why this is relevant. I haven’t really heard about countries attacking another one to get rid of them. NBC had an article about this a few days ago. https://www.nbcnews.com/think/opinion/ukraine-has-nazi-problem-vladimir-putin-s-denazification-claim-war-ncna1290946
  12. Interesting thread. I try to avoid digging into twitter on this matter (time suck), but do appreciate selected gems. As for turning cities into rubble and then trying to conquer them - this has been tried before: Stalingrad.
  13. I am going to explain to my grandkids why investing my money in communist and totalitarian countries is a great idea one day.
  14. BTU also got a margin call on their coal hedges. I imagine some E&P's might blow up due to hedges if prices really go parabolic like some think. That would be quite ironic.
  15. Found this one interesting for bank investors: https://www.bankregdata.com//allHMmet.asp?met=ONE
  16. I think one that gets very little recognition is SONY. SONY used to be a consumer goods company, but now they do consumer goods, gaming (both software and hardware), financial services, sensors, media (music and film). They also compounded with a 20.5% CAGR over the last 10 years if my tikr.com is correct. It's a quite well managed company now. I don't own it, but it's definitely on my "close look" list.
  17. CMCSA is mostly broadband, but with media properties like Sky and NBCU one could regard them as a conglomerate. I own them and they do have a pretty good track record over the long run (mid teens returns since IPO).
  18. Reduced PAOHY (about flat). A bit concerned payout production disruptions.
  19. Warren is just making noise. She also was complaining about expensive Thanksgiving Turkeys and a few other things and there was not windfall taxes on those either.
  20. If we do get 8-9%, I think the "returns" this year will beat stocks. I have put a bit more in late January, but we haven't filled out family allocation for 2022 yet. https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-03-09/u-s-inflation-data-to-capture-prewar-prices-rather-than-peak
  21. Uprisings are unlikely, but they do happen. Just look at how Lenin got into power in 1917, in large part due to WW2. Ceausescu (Rumania) seemed secure until this arranged infamous celebration of his accomplishment when people started to call him names and he was gone quickly afterwards. Sometimes these totalitarian regimes seem so solid from the outside but can crumble quicker than anyone would believe. War can be a catalyst and often has been in history, especially a stupid one like Putin started. It's not something one can predict, but I would not exclude it from a possible range of outcomes either.
  22. IEP trades far above NAV as far as I can tell, but does have this sucker yield. You also get a K-1.
  23. I agree with @cubsfan here as far as Palastinians are concerned. I think the rest the world would be a whole lot more sympathetic to their plight if they would govern themselves decently, but even their own leadership doesn’t have any control about what they are doing - like firing their rockets from their density populated Gaza Strip to Israel and then complaining when something comes back. Fact is their Arabian brothers in Jordan or Egypt don’t want the Palestinians either, because they are at best trouble makers and at worst just plain terrorists. Just look at how Jassir Arafad was effed off with Polonium most likely and we all know where this usually comes from. Successor claimed natural causes, nothing to investigate.
  24. China will try to benefit from this, buy some cheap oil/LNG from the Russian etc. but I think they will stay as far away from trouble as they can. This is not their fight and when have you ever seen them helping another country when they had no direct interest or benefit? They are also seeing the response from the west and draw their own conclusions. Besides this, every Chinese company that does business with Russia has to weigh the cost benefit of doing business there or doing business with the west. That will be looked at case by case and I think it is possible that companies like state owned business do some bartering with Russians, because they have got nothing to lose. Most others will be quite careful, they have seen what happened to Huawei.
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