Archive for June, 2010

A Debt Crisis or a Jobs Crisis?

Debate is heating up, pretty much to a boil, about whether our goose is just about cooked because we have too much debt, or whether our goose is just about cooked because we have too much unemployment. Well, at least everyone agrees that the goose is in the oven . […]

The Uncertainty Principle, Applied to One Aspect of Financial Health

Following on the heels of yesterday’s post about the imagery of portfolio planning, today’s post is about some other language I’ve been using, with varying degrees of success. Today, then, we leave behind the simple world of airplanes that definitely fly, and charge into the world of quantum mechanics generally, […]

Painting Yourself into a Corner, as Applied to Retirement Planning

One of the funnest, most difficult parts of my work is coming up with language to help clients understand concepts that tend towards the not-so-easily-understood side of things. Because, even though I often rail against the financial services industrial complex (the FSIC) for the jargon it uses, and for its […]

Lookback at Week 1 of Daily Blogging, and a Brief Comment re: Jobs Report

Oops. Yesterday’s post went long. Lesson learned: explaining something that is a big mystery to most folks is hard to do (for me anyway) in a quick posting. How does Krugman do it? I’m keeping stats (remember the MBA’ism: that which is measured is controlled, and remember this Friedman’ism: that […]

The New Generals: AAPL and MSFT (G vs. V)

Much has been written in the past week about the value of Apple, as a company, now exceeding the value of Microsoft as a company. The more jargony way of saying this is that that AAPL’s market capitalization (often trun cated down tomarket cap) exceeds MSFT’s market capitalization. In fact, […]

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