Wednesday, 29 June 2011
2 active bubbles
It is interesting to realise (and quite dangerous if you didn't) that probably there are 2 active bubbles nowadays in the markets.
I strongly believe the digital economy is probably one of them. A market bubble is typically created based on speculative expectations about future incomes. To put it in simple words - people that companies in that industry will make money, but that never happens. When we look at the digital economy, we realise there are too many companies (led by facebook) that aren't making real money yet but are already high-valued in the " stockmarket". That valued is based in their "huge potential to generate high caliber revenues in the future" - though that future has not been determined, nor the way they will realise it. They are nowadays high risk assets, as one day the market will demand the promised return, and if they don't materialise, the digital bubble will burst - and it will get ugly! (still, let's not consider all digital companies the same, as Google and linkedin have already strong and profitable business models)
The other bubble is very different. Football madness! Football clubs are paying unsustainable amounts for players - assets that many times will not provide reliable and high enough cash flows, generating multi-million euro debts. This has also been fueled by the arrival of doubtful money into the business as some clubs have been bought by owners that would pour in large sums disregarding of club ability to pay it back. The problem on that is sustainability of those values if no matching income or return value is generated. We are already starting to see the effects in some smaller clubs across europe...
Which one do you think will burst first?...
- enviado de dispositivo móvel.
European union institutions efficiency
- enviado de dispositivo móvel.
Tuesday, 28 June 2011
Spanish Elephants
Wednesday, 22 June 2011
Sales list
Tuesday, 21 June 2011
On the challenge that is now over Europe
Monday, 20 June 2011
On Venezuela – from a consumer point of view
I was on top Cerro El Avila, the 2100m high mountain that overlooks
It was my first time in a communist country. And, though not a huge shock, it was different. First on the way Chavez is presented in national news – he is omnipresent, either with his own personality or through appreciations of interview persons. An example was the TV coverage of the support demonstrations when Chavez was submitted to a surgery in
But then, you also note that on the level of service you receive from a consumer standpoint. People are very nice (actually, they were extremely nice), but you are not on top of their priorities – clearly. If they are doing something else, you’ll have to wait. No performance culture here…
This actually has an interesting implication. This rate is linked to a foreign currency supply limitation, that mean a multinational will have a hard time collecting dividends, profits or payments from their local operations. So, multinationals will stop investing because then they can’t get out of the country the return on their investment. An example was the 5 star hotel I was in – it seemed a hotel back from the 80’s. Probably because it was! It probably doesn’t have major renovations since the middles of the 90’s…
It was a very week and experience! I actually enjoyed the experience a lot! Though everybody talks about security, and this is an actual problem, if you are aware of your surroundings and pay attention to where you are, it won’t be a problem. And it shouldn’t bar you from knowing this country – and enjoying a limited experience in a state controlled economy…