Archive for the ‘Spend Page’ Category

Internet Browsing Taken To A Personal Level

Thursday, August 12th, 2010

A company called [x+1] Inc. is making strides towards the destruction of anonymity on the Web.

  • [x+1] Inc. collects data from users and sells it to companies that use the information that then targets products to specific customers.
  • According to a survey conducted by The Wall Street Journal, [x+1] Inc.’s data is not always completely accurate, but it was able to find out quite a bit of information about the test users, including where they lived.
  • Although this is a troubling infringement of privacy on its own, there is an added threat: the more bits of information a program or company gathers on you, the easier it becomes to narrow you down to a specific person, destroying your anonymity entirely.

Facts & Figures

  • Clients pay from $30,000-$200,000 per month for [x+1] Inc.’s services.
  • According to [x+1] Inc., the company is capable of absorbing thousands of details about a user in just a fifth of a second.
  • 33 “bits” of information are required to accurately determine a person’s identity, where each piece of information is assigned a value in “bits” (your gender is worth just one bit, your ZIP code or birthdate many more). [x+1] Inc.’s analysis of one of the WSJ’s test users yielded 26.5 bits, or enough to narrow his identity down to one of 64 people in the entire world.

Best Quote

“We never don’t know anything about someone.” –John Nardone, chief executive, [x+1] Inc.

BMW Remains On Top

Wednesday, August 11th, 2010

Second-quarter profits indicate that BMW is still the best when it comes to luxury cars makers.

  • BMW’s net profit for the 2nd quarter rose to $1.1 billion, and sales rose 12.5%.
  • Although the luxury car market was hit hard by the economic downturn, there has been a faster-than-expected rebound.
  • The new generation 5-Series is expected to boost sales even further.

Facts & Figures

  • BMW is the world’s best-selling luxury car maker, ahead of Audi and Mercedes-Benz.
  • In the first 6 months of 2010, 696,026 BMW, Mini, and Rolls-Royce cars were sold.
  • BMW now expects sales to rise by approximately 10% (to more than 1.4 million cars) in 2010, which is significantly more than expected at the beginning of the year.

Best Quote

“Sharp sales volume growth on major markets and a high-value model mix are the main reasons for the strong second-quarter performance. [BMW] improved efficiency significantly in all areas of the company.” – Norbert Reithofer, Cheif Executive, BMW

Consumer Spending Slows Further During Spring Quarter

Monday, August 9th, 2010

The United States is on a slow road to economic recovery that gets longer and longer as consumers spend less.

  • Sluggish consumer spending and stagnant personal incomes reflect a slow economy this spring.
  • Experts believe that economic growth will lose further momentum in the second half of the year as high unemployment, insecure consumers and renewed troubles in housing continue to plague recovery.
  • The rate of economic growth in the United States is about half the pace of what it normally is for a country coming out of a recession.

Facts & Figures

  • Consumer spending accounts for 70% of total economic activity.
  • The GDP slowed to an annual growth rate of 2.4% in the April-June quarter.

New Study Suggests Early Teachers Affect Students For Life

Friday, August 6th, 2010

Although previous studies suggested that the beneficial effects of a good kindergarten teacher fade over time, a new study indicates the opposite, making a good case for the value of education.

  • Past studies measuring the effectiveness of kindergarten teachers use standardized test scores to acquire results.
  • According to this method, having better teachers improves your performance for awhile, but by the time you get to junior-high and high school, the effects are negligible.
  • A new study, measuring income instead of test scores, found the opposite: the benefits of having a good teacher in kindergarten coincides with increased average income later in life.
  • The effects of good education are still hotly debated, but this study makes a case for the value of skilled teachers.

Facts and Figures

  • A team of six researchers studied the life paths of 12,000 people who had been part of an educational experiment as children. They are now approximately 30 years old.
  • The team discovered that, by age 27, these people were earning about $100 per year more for every percentile point they had moved up in test-score distributions in kindergarten.
  • If this study is accurate, its authors estimate that an exceptional kindergarten teacher is worth $320,000 per year.

Best Quote

“The worry has been that education didn’t translate into earnings. But this is telling us that it does and that the fade-out effect is misleading in some sense.”–Douglas Staiger, an economist at Dartmouth

Jobless Claims And Recovery Concerns Rise

Thursday, August 5th, 2010

As jobless claims rise, Americans are becoming even more concerned about the economic recovery.

  • New unemployment claims rose last week, which may indicate a weak economic recovery.
  • The unemployment rate is expected to climb to 9.6% (up from 9.5% in June).
  • While growth expanded 3.7% in the first quarter of 2010, it fell to a 2.4% annual rate in the second quarter.
  • Generally speaking, consumers have cut spending.

Facts & Figures

  • Claims for state unemployment benefits rose 19,000 (the highest since April).
  • 4-week average of new jobless claims rose 5,250 to 458,500.
  • Jobless claims fell in 2009 but have stalled this year.
  • The number of people on emergency benefits rose 60,993 to 3.31 million in mid July.

Best Quote

“The bottom line is that any recovery in employment is going to be very slow. It’s likely that we’re still 9.5 percent unemployment or awfully close to it by the end of the year.” -Scott Wren, Senior Equity Strategist, Wells Fargo Advisors in St. Louis

Foreign-Currency Debt Hits Hard In Central Europe

Thursday, August 5th, 2010

In Europe’s tight quarters, borrowing from your neighbor across the border could lead you down a bumpy road.

  • Central European households and small businesses are struggling under the weight of foreign-currency debts.
  • The fluctuation in interest rates and currency values associated with foreign-currency lending has put many into debt, resulting in stalled economies as people try to pay off loans.
  • Governments are scrambling to implement preventative regulations, including legislation to ban foreign-currency mortgage loans and a government buyout fund that would allow borrowers to convert their foreign loans to their native currency.

Facts & Figures

  • In Hungary, nearly 70% of the country’s total household debt was borrowed in foreign currency.
  • In the Baltic states 70-90% of household borrowing is in foreign currency.

Best Quote

“Hungary is close to its non-performing loan peak.” – Sandor Csanyi, Chief Executive, OTP

Cool Electronics Move Ahead Of Clothes And Appliances

Wednesday, August 4th, 2010

Second-quarter reports indicate that Americans have changed their spending priorities from appliances to new and improved electronics.

  • Rather than purchasing appliances and clothing, Americans now tend to put their money toward new electronics and in their savings.
  • Electronics are constantly evolving to become newer, cooler and better–causing an incentive to buy the latest items.
  • Some clothing retailers, such as American Eagle Outfitters and Macy’s, are giving consumers electronic incentives to buy apparel (like giving away smartphones).

Facts & Figures

  • Sales of televisions, computers, video and telephone equipment grew 1.8% in the first six months of 2010.
  • Spending on appliances decreased 3.6% and spending on furniture decreased 11%.
  • The U.S. savings rate increased to 6.4% from May to June.
  • In the first 6 months of 2010, Americans spent $534 billion on durable goods, up 5.9% from last year.

Best Quote

“But who needs to buy more ties? I mean, come on, I have a great computer.” -Spence Witten, 27-year-old consumer

Audi Is Catching Up To BMW And Mercedes

Tuesday, August 3rd, 2010

Audi sales continue to exceed expectations as it plans to emerge as a luxury car leader.

  • Thanks to very strong car sales, Audi’s second-quarter earnings were “very significant” when compared to those of 2009.
  • Sales of new Audi’s reached a record high in 2008 when more than 1 million cars were sold.
  • Demand for luxury cars declined when the economy fell, but has since recovered faster than expected.
  • Audi plans to reach 1.5 million cars sold in 2015, but now thinks it will do so much earlier.
  • New models, the small A1 and luxury coupe A7, have just been released.

Facts & Figures

  • In the first half of 2010, Audi’s car sales jumped 19% to 554,950.
  • Audi is owned by Volkswagen.
  • Audi plans to sell about 200,000 A7 cars over the course of 7 years.

Best Quote

“We will exceed the 1 million [car sales] significantly this year.” -Rupert Stadler, Audi, Chief Executive

New Health Care Law Shifts Funds Toward Younger Patients

Friday, July 30th, 2010

Costs from the health care overhaul are largely being covered by cuts to health care programs for the elderly.

  • Although the new health care law provides coverage for the uninsured, it will also result in cuts to Medicare. This marks a change in the state of affairs in this country: we are accustomed to a system in which the young support the old.
  • The elderly won’t lose any benefits that the law guarantees them, but many Medicare programs are hybrids of public and private insurers, and these will be adversely affected.
  • The change has some seniors worried about a decrease in their quality of life, even as the previously-uninsured are looking forward to an increase in theirs.

Facts & Figures

  • Medicare Advantage, a combination of public and private insurance for the elderly, currently supports 11.3 million people. Cuts to these plans will pay for 15% of the health care bill’s costs.
  • The bill will cost $938 billion over ten years. $455 billion of that money will come from cuts to Medicare and two other federal programs.
  • Medicare Advantage customers will have their benefits reduced by an average of $68 per month by 2019, the Congressional Budget Office says.

Best Quote

“I’m sure that some of those additional benefits have been nice. But I think what we have to look at here is what’s fair and what’s important for the strength of the Medicare program long term.” – Nancy-Ann DeParle, White House Office of Health Reform

Tax Break And Debate

Wednesday, July 28th, 2010

Republicans and Democrats squabble over the extension of tax breaks for middle income families.

  • Debates over taxes and spending in Washington are prevalent as both parties attempt to address The Unites States’ ballooning budget deficit.
  • Democrats advocate extending tax cuts for the middle class while eliminating tax cuts for higher income Americans.
  • Republicans say that it is unwise to allow upper income tax breaks to expire, insisting that it will weaken an already unstable economy.

    Best Quote

    “Washington Democrats are poised to allow the largest tax increase in American history to take effect next year.” – Mike Pence, Republican, Indiana