Yeah, the dollar really is hitting record lows, sort of

I always get a little irked when I read an article stating that the dollar has hit a “record low” against the euro. The euro’s been around for less than a decade, and happened to come into existence at a time when the dollar was extremely strong. Record lows against it are meaningless. Of far [...]

Robert Scoble fails to solve my Google Reader problem

I use Google Reader to keep up with blogs that I think might be useful to me in my own blogging and columnizing. Actually, that’s being far too generous to myself. For days, sometimes even weeks at a time, I use Google Reader to keep up with the 16 blogs whose feeds I’ve subscribed to. [...]

A statement from Ford’s Alan Mulally that I’d like to hear more about

This little tidbit was in an interview in yesterday’s W$J (yes, I’m behind) with Ford CEO Alan Mulally. The interviewers asked him what had been the biggest surprise he’d encountered since coming over to Ford from Boeing last September. Mulally responded: The biggest learning was the fact of how all our customers are aware of [...]

Another way to look at the S&P 500

A reader e-mailed to ask if it was possible to put together an inflation-adjusted chart of the S&P 500. Well, yeah: Anyone with Excel and an Internet connection can do it (the data here is from Yahoo! Finance and the Bureau of Labor Statistics). But I was curious, so I put together this chart going [...]

Jeremy Siegel says the weak dollar is good for stocks. Except if gets weaker. Or something like that

In the new Time Asia, Wharton School prof and market guru Jeremy Siegel has a mostly optimistic take on the weak dollar and U.S. stocks (to be contrasted with the more sour one that I posted Thursday): The weak dollar … makes U.S. asset prices attractive to foreign investors. U.S. interest rates are higher than [...]

New column: the end of easy money

It’s not technically a column. It is, in Time parlance, a story in the well of the new issue, with “IRAQ” (or is it “A IRQ”?) on the cover. But you can’t tell the difference online. It begins: Again and again in these past few months, financial markets have appeared to be on the verge [...]

This U.S. bull market looks mighty unimpressive from overseas

The stock market has been breaking lots of records lately. Sort of. Wowsers! The Dow closed above 14,000 for the first time! Isn’t that exciting? Not really. In his NYT column Wednesday David Leonhardt made the point that it’s silly to get excited about such nominal-price milestones: The S.& P. 500, which is a much [...]

Go ahead and turn off that Bernanke testimony. It’s irrelevant …

All eyes (okay, some eyes; certainly not mine) have been on Ben Bernanke as he testified about monetary policy yesterday in the House and today in the Senate. In an interesting little essay in the latest Economist’s Voice, though, veteran Chicagoan Lester Telser argues that the Fed’s monetary decisions get far more attention than their [...]

The question I haven’t heard anybody ask about today’s big NYC explosion, yet

Why is that 1,800 buildings in New York still get their power and heat from a century-old network of steam pipes? I mean, I know it’s all about the installed base. If you currently rely on steam, it would cost a lot to switch to more modern power sources. But at some point doesn’t the [...]

How ’bout that Indian rupee?

Time‘s man in New Delhi, Simon Robinson, has an article on Time.com that deserves some more attention than it’s been getting. He writes: As U.S. politicians line up to bash Beijing for its weak currency and gigantic trade surplus, one message they might want to offer their constituents is, buy Indian. Unlike China, Asia’s other [...]