Wednesday, February 13, 2008

US economy entering a "Recession"?

Recession: Decline in economic activity: a period, shorter than a depression, during which there is a decline in economic trade and prosperity.

The country is in a recession. There are empty houses and many of them are for sale. Lots of people are tightly packed into houses to save energy and power.It's also harder to get credit.


http://www.stuff.co.nz/4396802a6026.html

Comparing Obamas and McCains Plans for the economy

John McCain on the Economy:• He supports lowering taxes to help small businesses.• He would cut the corporate tax rate from 35% to 25%,• McCain supports giving tax breaks to businesses for investing in equipment and technology.• He wants to establish a permanent tax credit for research and development.Barack Obama on the Economy:• He supports tax incentives for companies that keep jobs in the US.• He believes that the NAFTA agreement should be renegotiated to protectthe American economy.• Obama suggests a $75-billion plan for the economy would offer a $500 tax rebate to families and a $250 Social Security supplement to seniors.• He also would put more money into unemployment insurance.• He would give federal money States hardest hit by the housing crisis.• He would stop mortgage fraud and predatory lending with legislation that he proposed two years ago.

Friday, February 1, 2008

Microsoft makes offer to buy yahoo

Link to article


Microsoft offers to buy yahoo for $44.6 billion and microsoft doesent intend to take no for an answer. Its intended to give google a challenge. In a letter to Yahoo’s board of directors, Microsoft Chief Executive Steve Ballmer indicated the world’s largest software maker is determined to bring the two companies together. The offer is 31$ a share and i do not think $31 a share will be the final price. I think it will rise steadily.

Is it too late for Yahoo?

Mr. Yang, a high ranked executive who cares a lot about the company, appears to have run out of time to answer those questions. A $44.6 billion bid from Microsoft is once again forcing Mr. Yang and his board to consider the viability of Yahoo as an independent company.
This time, Mr. Yang, 39, faces enormous pressure as he decides whether to try to rescue the company from the clutches of Microsoft, or accept the bid and watch Yahoo become part of Microsoft’s arsenal in its no-holds-barred brawl with Google.
Some analysts and several current and former Yahoo executives are, meanwhile, wondering whether things would be different had Mr. Yang been quicker at making some of the tough choices that Yahoo faced.
“He came on board, announced a 100-day strategic review and promised there would be no sacred cows,” said Mark Mahaney, an analyst with Citigroup.One hundred days went by, and no cows were slaughtered.”
It took until last week, more than six months into Mr. Yang’s tenure, for him to announce that Yahoo would cut 1,000 employees. At the same time, however, Mr. Yang warned investors that he had decided to make larger-than-expected investments in the business. The announcement sent the company’s shares down to their lowest level in more than three years, precipitating Microsoft’s bid.
“Why couldn’t those things be hashed out in the first 100 days?” Mr. Mahaney asked.
Yahoo declined to make Mr. Yang available for an interview. But other Yahoo executives strongly defended his short tenure, saying Mr. Yang had quickly set priorities and laid out a precise strategy for making Yahoo more competitive.
“We have moved quickly and aggressively to implement our strategy,” said Hilary Schneider, an executive vice president in charge of Yahoo’s network of advertisers and publishers.
By most measures, Mr. Yang is one of the most successful entrepreneurs in Silicon Valley history. He helped build Yahoo from an early directory of Web sites into a sprawling Internet giant that offers services from online dating to e-mail that are used by nearly 500 million people around the globe. His wealth is estimated to top $2 billion.