What Happens When You Tell Google To Take A Hike?

December 23rd, 2010

Apparently they fund one of your competitors and DESTROY YOU.

(Back story: Google offered to buy wildly successful Internet coupon company Groupon for $6 billion. Groupon said, “meh.”)

Read the original:
BBC News, 12/21/20: Google eyes smaller players after Groupon: report

Diana Ayton-Shenker: Fast Forward to a Better World

December 22nd, 2010

Diana Ayton-Shenker is uniquely* passionate about investing in social change… that is, literally investing in social change. She runs an organization that is all about hooking up young investors with worthwhile social venture projects. It’s one of those win-win-win endeavors.

We’ll let her tell you about it, in less than a minute:

* Fun fact: When Diana was 18, she saved up for a vacation in the sunny Soviet Union, where she spent her time meeting with human rights activists and Jewish Refuseniks.

How A Bunch Of Really Smart Kids Ruined Everything (Volume 1)

December 22nd, 2010

“Repo 105″ – like Four Loko, but more dangerous to the health of your company.

Ever wonder how enormous old financial firms suddenly bite the dust? Well, the answer (according to the man suing Ernst & Young for civil fraud)  is that they do stupid things with the help of accountants.

According to New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo, giant accounting firm Ernst & Young helped their client Lehman Brothers hide billions of dollars in debt so that it would look like a healthier company than it really was. For seven years. Until (surprise!) Lehman went bankrupt in 2008.

Lehman owed a lot of people a lot of money (like, billions of dollars). But they didn’t want to go around telling people about it.

mathemagician-by-kf6gpe.jpg

credit: kf6gpe

So (according to the lawsuit) Ernst & Young helped them hide their little debt problem with a ninja accounting tactic called “Repo 105.” Basically, Lehman would sell off a bunch of their assets and use the money to pay off some debt. That day was a good day, because when they had to show their financial reports to the world, it looked like they didn’t owe billions of dollars.

But – here’s the genius part – the next day, they would buy back the assets they sold at an even higher price, taking on more debt than they had before.

In exchange for its creative accounting services, Ernst & Young received $150 million in fees from Lehman between 2001 and 2008. Ernst says it was just using “generally accepted accounting principles,” which makes you wonder what other firms have been drinking. Cuomo says it will be paying those fees back to the State of New York by the time he’s done with them.

Announcement: TILE on CPB Website

December 21st, 2010

What would TILE look like if it were in the Wealth Education section of Citi Private Bank’s website? http://bit.ly/hM5lId

How To Mess Up Your Holiday Giving

December 20th, 2010

It’s holiday giving time! People who – oops – forgot to donate to charity all throughout 2010 are now scrambling to give away enough money to score some sweet tax breaks before the end of the year. But according to some lady at the Wall Street Journal, there are a lot of stupid things you can do when you engage in last-minute philanthropy.

gift-house-by-howard-dickins.jpg
credit: howard dickens

Let us count the things you should not do, according to Ms. Shelly Banjo:

1. Give impulsively. Newsflash: Charities are falling over themselves trying to get your attention. Good for them, but don’t be a philanthropic sucker. Think about what’s really most important to you, decide how much you want to donate, and engage in some thoughtful charity.

2. Donate stock you’ve held for less than a year. Did you know you can donate stock to some organizations? Did you also know that you can only get a tax deduction for doing it if you’ve owned the stock for more than a year? Now you know.

3. Donate stock that’s lost a lot of value. You can actually claim the money you lost on that stock as a tax deduction, which might lower the taxes you have to pay on the investments that did make you money. If you hold onto the stock and donate cash instead, you get double the deductions!

4. Think you can claim the cost of a fundraiser ticket as a charitable donation. Okay, actually you can do this. But you can only claim the cost above what the ticket is actually worth. (So if you bought $1,000 Knicks tickets to benefit a charity, but the tickets are actually worth $200, you only get to claim the $800 as a donation.)

5. Donate stuff (instead of money) to an organization that won’t use it. This is something only your accountant understands. Basically, the amount you can write off on stuff donations depends on the mission of the organization you’re donating it to.

6. Donate something called a “gift annuity” when interest rates are really low (i.e. right now). Gift annuities are basically donations to charities that earn you a little money on the side. The charity keeps the money you’ve given them, but they pay you interest every year on the amount you donated. So low interest rates mean your payments will also be low.

7. Obsessively stick to charity ratings. Rating sites like CharityNavigator.org and GuideStar.org are helpful when it comes to sorting through the jillions of charities out there. But they can basically only give you numbers. (And numbers liiiiie!) It’s up to you to get the full picture before you shell out for a particular organization.

8. Give to a charity that rents or sells your personal information. (duh)

9. Donate to the wrong donor-advised fund. Donor-advised funds are a complicated way of pooling your money with other investors so that you all save big on taxes while your money or investments go to organizations you all believe in. You don’t have much control over where the money goes after you put it in the fund, so make sure you’re a believer before you join a specific donor-advised fund.

10. Don’t get insurance if you’re on the board of an organization. Congratulations! You’re on the board of an organization. Now you’re partially responsible if that organization does something stupid. Directors and officers insurance exist for a reason.

Now that you’re paying attention, here’s a picture of two Christmas cats hugging to get you in the philanthropic mood:

christmas-hugs-by-tuija2005.jpg
credit: tuija2005

Aww.

College Entrepreneur Kristen Santerian Is Moving [Out]

December 11th, 2010

TILE showed up for part of the Global Student Entrepreneur Awards at the New York Stock Exchange this October, and we met some young folks who made us feel bad about sleeping through college.

Kristen Santerian is still in college, and she decided to forgo sleep entirely to start her own competition-crushing moving and storage business called PennMoveOut. She seems to be dealing with the sleep deprivation pretty well to us:

Watch the oh-ficial GSEA 2010 recap video here. To see all our GSEA interviews, click here..

Important Credit Ratings Agencies “Provided Little Or No Value”

December 10th, 2010

Ten credit ratings agencies are in charge of predicting risk for investors worldwide. So why didn’t they predict the economic crisis?

  • Agencies like Moody’s and Standard & Poor’s rate the quality of companies, bonds, even countries. Investors use this information to decide whether a particular investment is a safe bet.
  • In the financial reform bill that passed this July, the government called them out for ineffective ratings and serious conflicts of interest.
  • In many lawsuits against the agencies, they’ve said that the First Amendment protects their right to assess investment risks whether they end up being right or wrong. But because they’re regulated by the government, they’re supposed to be trusted and non-biased sources of information for the public.
  • The conflict of interest appears when a credit rating agency wants to do business with a particular company. In that case, it may be tempted to give that company a higher rating than it really deserves.

Facts & Figures

  • The ratings industry is worth about $6 billion worldwide
  • $3 billion of that is in the U.S. market
  • Fitch, Moody’s, and S&P control 97% of all U.S. ratings
  • Moody’s rated 42,625 mortgage-backed securities (you know, the ones that blew up the real estate market) as AAA – the same rating as ultra-secure U.S. Treasury bonds

Best Quote

“Activities of credit rating agencies are fundamentally commercial in character and should be subject to the same standards of liability and oversight as apply to auditors, securities analysts and investment bankers.” – from the Dodd-Frank financial reform bill

Santa’s Skipping The Credit Card Debt This Year

December 10th, 2010

Credit card companies are freaking out as they try to entice shoppers to pay for gifts with credit. But those 5% cash back offers aren’t exactly worth taking on thousands of dollars in debt.

  • Even though holiday spending is up compared to last year, shoppers are less likely to whip out their credit cards at the register this year.
  • Some shoppers are trying to avoid taking on more dangerous debt, and some simply lost their cards because of the recession and last year’s credit card reform. Outstanding credit card debt is “bad debt” because it lowers your credit score.
  • Card issuers make money when customers run up their credit bills and then fail to pay the entire balance at the end of the month. If they miss payments, their interest rates go up, and so does their total amount owed.

Facts & Figures

  • Use of Visa and Mastercard cards fell 11% in the past year
  • Spending on Black Friday was up more than 6% over last year
  • 15 million Americans lost their credit cards because of the recession and new credit card regulations

Best Quote

“With the interest rates, it just seemed like I never paid it off.” – Liz Gonzalez, talking about her credit card debt

China Prevents Activist From Accepting Nobel Prize

December 10th, 2010

By cracking down harshly on government reformers, China is drawing international attention to the very activists it’s trying to silence.

  • Today’s Nobel Peace Prize award ceremony was missing one popular award-winner: Chinese political reformist Liu Xiaobo. He is being held in a Chinese prison for proposing changes to the communist government there.
  • China treats Liu as an enemy of the state, and accuses nations that support him of creating unnecessary conflict between China and the Western world. They have responded by ending trade talks with Norway, where the prize ceremony was held.
  • When prizes winners are unable to attend the ceremony, a family member is allowed to accept the prize on their behalf. But Liu’s wife, Liu Xia, has been under house arrest since October.

Facts & Figures

  • The last time a Nobel Peace Prize winner did not claim his award was when Hitler prevented Carl von Ozzietzky (a pacifist) from accepting the prize in 1936
  • Seventeen other nations joined China in boycotting the event – most of them non-democratic
  • Liu is currently serving his fourth term in prison – 11 years for the alleged crime of sedition (which is any act or speech that is intended to provoke rebellion in a country)

Best Quote

“[As a world power, China] should become used to being debated and criticized.” – Thorbjoern Jagland, Chairman of the Norwegian Nobel Committee

Facebook Founders Pledge To Give Away Most Of Their Assets

December 9th, 2010

Why wait until you’re dead to make your mark on the world?

  • Mark Zuckerberg and Facebook co-founder Dustin Moskovitz are the latest billionaires to sign on to “The Giving Pledge.” They’re part of a growing number of wealthy individuals choosing to get involved in philanthropy while they’re still young.
  • The Giving Pledge was thought up by Warren Buffet and Bill Gates, who are on a joint mission to get other billionaires to donate the majority of their wealth to charity before they die.
  • Internet and technology billionaires like Gates and Zuckerberg have a special motivation to give – they’ve already built their wealth by trying to change the world.

Facts & Figures

  • More than 50 billionaires have signed onto the pledge so far
  • In 2008, donations in the U.S. totaled $315 billion; in 2009, that number fell to $303.75 billion
  • Zuckerberg recently pledged $100 million in donations to Newark public schools

Best Quote

“Wealth is an advantage, but it also is frankly a responsibility.” – Nicolas Berggruen, Investor, recently signed on to The Giving Pledge