Volkswagen challenging Toyota: The new Passat vs. new Camry?

Posted By on August 24, 2011

What is it going to take to make VW the “new people’s car?” With a larger size and lower price, the American built Passat could give domestics and the favored Toyota Camry a run for its money. While the current fuel saving hybrid is not in VW’s powertrain, the interstate frugal TDI diesel is sure to please those living where open road driving is commonplace.

VW doesn’t offer a gas-electric hybrid Passat model to compete with the Camry’s hybrid model or Ford Motor’s Fusion and Hyundai Sonota hybrids. Instead, it has a smooth-performing 2.0 liter diesel engine that’s rated at 43 miles per gallon on the highway. The new Passat gets an eye-popping highway range of up to 795 miles on a tank of gas. Take that, Nissan Leaf.

More important, the new Passat has a lower base price. The cheapest car starts at $19,995—less than the cheapest 2012 Camry.

Posted via email from RichC’s posterous

EDIT: The new audio system in the Toyota is a step forward tho…

Is student loan debt the next home mortgage meltdown?

Posted By on August 23, 2011

Hopefully this will be the last year we’ll be paying for college expenses. This may make me a bit more in-tune to the high cost of college. Unfortunately for many students planning or going to college, the continual rise in tuition and living expenses has made it impossible without taking on significant debt. Some financial experts, including Dave Ramsey, recommend working and attending college locally as a way to decrease the cost of a higher education (Ramsey goes so far as to dissuade borrowing at all to go to college … classifying it as a Stupid Tax).

Project on Student Debt estimates the average debt for 2009 bachelor’s degree recipients at $24,000.

Still the majority going to college choose the debt route even when presented with the cost of borrowing. Who’s right … well in my opinion that depends on the demand and salary for the degree and effort put into an education. Those with a 4-year degrees seeing a high income shortly after graduation have a far easier path to pay back loans than those with majors which either pay little or require further education.

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One would think that having experienced the 2008 mortgage meltdown, that “smart” college students, parents, the universities themselves and agencies who loan for an education could predict what is coming. A glance at  the chart above demonstrated just how indebted students are becoming compared to the housing crisis. If we borrowed too much for homes until the collapse in 2008 (drop off on the blue line), imagine what is going to happen as the hyper borrowing for college (red line) can no longer continue to rise? For students, the monthly payments will be so larger that defaults will be the only answer. Unlike the home loan crisis where one defaults and loses their home or in hardship cases files bankruptcy … there isn’t collateral for lenders to liquidate. Garnishing wages for life may be what some college grads are facing.

Many students take on $100,000 or more in debt to finance their education. U.S. student loan debt has reached $900 billion, more than what Americans owe on credit cards. Those struggling with repayment can’t default on student loans in bankruptcy, and the problem continues to get worse as states cut funding for higher education and schools raise tuition.

There are some who are waving the red flag, but with all the debt and deficit battles in Washington DC, the powers that be probably aren’t going to panic until it is too late.

Hurricane Irene soaks Puerto Rico and takes aim on the U.S.

Posted By on August 22, 2011

hurricaneirene110822aThe U.S east coast and Bahamas look to be in the crosshairs of a strengthening hurricane Irene. The storm finished with Puerto Rico leaving more than half the island without electricity and a quarter of the population without running water. No deaths or injuries have been reported at this time.

Hurricane Irene’s winds remained at 80 mph but the National Hurricane Center expects Irene to continue strengthening over the next few days as it moves through the southeastern and central Bahamas. By Thursday, forecasters say it could be a major Category 3 hurricane with winds of up to 115 mph. The storm remains a threat to the Atlantic coast, from South Florida to the Carolinas.

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A little Sunday humor

Posted By on August 21, 2011

nonstickfryingpan

Saw this photo on a friends G+ “Things that make you go hmmm!” post. Too funny.

Is there a way to financially plan for the future and sleep at night?

Posted By on August 20, 2011

For those wondering what politicians should focus on (jobs) and what individuals should be doing in order to plan for a few years down the road, Jim Mccaughan of Principal Financial Group has a few ideas:

  James Mccaughan: His thoughts on Friday – 8/19/2011

Brief Biography

Mr. James P. McCaughan is President – Principal Global Investors of Principal Financial Group Inc. He heads the Principal Global Investors segment of operations, has been President, Principal Global Investors of the Company and of Principal Life since December 2003. Prior to that time, he served as Executive Vice President and global head of asset management for the Company and Principal Life since April 2002. From 2000 – 2002, he was Chief Executive Officer of the Americas division of Credit Suisse Asset Management in New York, New York.

Financial markets down again, continuing the summer of pain

Posted By on August 19, 2011

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The Dow closes at the low of the day noting that few want to stay long for the weekend. Moving the market down was the misguided management at HP after their announcement yesterday (traded down 20% today and yanking the DJIA with it). Hard to believe an iconic American company with such deep pockets and the ability to finance about any project they want could continue to screw up so bad (over and over).

The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 172.63 points, or 1.6%, to 10817.95. The index swung nearly 250 points from its session highs to lows in a volatile session. The zigzag action comes after the blue-chip index tumbled 419.63 points on Thursday, putting it on track for a losing week and its worst month in more than two years.

Hewlett-Packard was by far the Dow’s biggest decliner, tumbling $5.91, or 20%, to a six-year low of $23.60 as investors fretted about the world’s largest personal-computer maker’s extensive plans to reshape its business model. The company is exploring a spinoff of its PC business and will abandon efforts to sell tablets and smartphones, a seemingly sharp reversal from management’s previous comments. It also agreed to buy U.K software firm Autonomy for about $10.25 billion in a bid to move further into data analytics.

MORE

Here’s a questionable video … but if you are an HPQ share holder or HP/Palm product buyer then the chuckle may be needed (thanks for the link Scott).

Tech Friday and QR codes for smartphones and tablets

Posted By on August 19, 2011

I’m getting pretty geeky with this post, but then again it this is a Tech Friday post.
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Having recently installed a QR (Quick Response) code reader on my Palm Pre, I’ve been trying to figure out just how to use them effectively. Obviously people sitting on a computer don’t need to use their smart-phone to access digital content, mydesultoryblog_qrcodebut as someone who works in the ink on paper world, using the codes might help to sell  “extra” content or as a way to enhance the information included on paper.

My first attempt was to use Kaywa.com to make a QR code for my blog (right) … which I’ve also included as a rotating icon on my Google+ avatar (just because its cool – FYI, you click on the photo to rotate through the images). If you have a reader for your phone, you might try taking a photo of the code to the right and see if where it links.

Other simple ideas off the top of my head would be to use them to enhance business/handout cards or making auto window stickers for an upcoming car show. I’m thinking of the TDIFest in Lexington Kentucky this year; it could be a way to mention CinciTDI or the TDIClub … including enhanced informational webpage. Maybe a bumper or window QR sticker would be a great way to offer information to those interested in TDI Volkswagen diesels? Hmm … I should get an adsense click for that!

A sad day for the future of HP/Palm webOS devices

Posted By on August 19, 2011

219135-webos-event3_originalI was disappointed to hear that HP lost its way as a productive technology company in this economic downturn and was caught off-guard in their decision to say “so long” to webOS. (business story LINK)

As a longtime webOS Palm Pre user (a “longtime” is a relative term for smartphones), I’ve been wondering just what has been going on over at HP headquarters while waiting for the molasses-like slow to market HP Palm Pre3. Obviously there hasn’t been much to cheer about in their tablet attempt, as the Touchpad was a dis-appointment with its “not ready for primetime” upgraded webOS; it wasn’t ready to compete with the big boys … meaning Apple iPad and the many Google Android tablets. In fact, according to most it was a mistake to try and hit a marketing date instead of having HP’s hardware and webOS software working in synergy (pun intended).

Here’s a little bit from Dieter Bohn’s editorial … I liked it.

The story of Palm and webOS is The Little Engine That Could, but some jerk ripped out the last three pages and we’re forced to read it over and over again. It’s frankly exhausting seeing this same narrative play out year after year, never seeing the top of the hill. webOS is perennially the little engine that could have.

Yet we keep opening that book at night, re-reading it. Mainly because there’s one key thing missing from that the litany of failures above: webOS itself. While the transition to webOS 3 and its Enyo underpinnings has been a little rocky, it still represents an intelligent, extensible, accessible, hackable, and above-all elegant framework. Yes, the original version that shipped on the TouchPad was critically flawed, but in general there’s more that’s right about webOS than what’s wrong. Now that HP has given up on making hardware, webOS may never get its chance.

Given the stiff competition webOS faced in the marketplace, it’s tempting to just say that webOS has failed. The truth is that we don’t really know if webOS could have succeeded given HP’s utter inability to execute on the basics of making smartphones and tablets.

I think it’s better to say this: HP failed webOS.

The good thing for me is that this new ‘now’ makes my decision to stick with webOS and hope for a Pre3 a lot easier. Good bye webOS and Pre3, you would have been a sharp smartphone (below) … Android … here I come!

palmpre3

Financial markets shaken: Stagflation or a double-dip recession?

Posted By on August 18, 2011

The talk in financial circles has some pretty negative commentary on growing our economy. Traders and fund manager ran for low yielding safety today as the stock market was down and down big at over 500 points on the Dow just before the close. As the trading day ended, the stock indices were all red.

marketsclose110818

There is real fear that we’re in for a likely global recession with weak U.S. economic data and fresh concerns about Europe’s banks. Gold jumped to a new record of nearly $1,830 a troy ounce dipped below 2% in intraday trading for the first time since at least 1954 – investors were just looking for some refuge no matter how low the yields.

Perhaps the best quote on the day was: "If it’s not a recession, it sure feels like one. And if it feels like one, it doesn’t matter if you can prove it with statistics or not."

Hot inflation data sets up a grim morning for stocks

Posted By on August 18, 2011

The news from Wall Street pre-market is not positive … although some suggest the possible morning downturn it an opportunity for those with cash to buy stocks of “cash rich companies” paying decent dividends?

U.S. stock futures slipped further into the red, setting up the market for a sharply lower open, after rising inflation and greater worries on unemployment added to concerns about the global economy and Europe’s ongoing sovereign debt problems.

Less than an hour before the opening bell, Dow Jones Industrial Average futures fell 218 points to 11163, while Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index futures dropped 27 points to 1163 and Nasdaq 100 futures lost 47 points to 2128. Prior to the data, Dow futures had been down 208 points, while S&P 500 futures fell 26 points and Nasdaq futures shed 49 points. Changes in stock futures don’t always accurately predict early stock moves after the open.

The declines came as new jobless claims rose above 400,000 last week, the latest sign of a persistently weak U.S. labor market. Initial jobless claims rose by 9,000 to a seasonally adjusted 408,000 in the week ended Aug. 13.

Meanwhile, consumer inflation resumed its climb in July as gasoline prices rebounded and food costs continued to rise. Consumer prices rose 0.5% from June, the largest monthly increase since March. Underlying inflation, which excludes volatile energy and food costs, rose by a monthly 0.2% in July, in line with expectations. On an annualized basis, consumer prices were up by 3.6% in July, above the Federal Reserve’s target.

Posted via email from RichC’s posterous

Desultory - des-uhl-tawr-ee, -tohr-ee

  1. lacking in consistency, constancy, or visible order, disconnected; fitful: desultory conversation.
  2. digressing from or unconnected with the main subject; random: a desultory remark.
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