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Pastimes : The New Qualcomm - write what you like thread. -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: foundation who wrote (5878)3/5/2003 8:53:17 AM
From: John Carragher  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 12247
 
interesting this morning Imus had a ,green beret, special forces guy on this morning. asked about iraq being in with terrorist.. the guy says we found all kinds of fake passports on Iraq's in afgan.. we also killed or capture many Iraq. officals during the war. They also supplied weapons to them.... now tell me he isn't tied into helping the terrorist organizations.

Turkey military came out today and says they support U.S. soldiers on the ground in Turkey... The Turkey govn did a poor job of handling the vote.. This war will be fast and furious and over very quickly... Un has secret plan already in place to take over Iraq. in three months. The world will be a much safer place...



To: foundation who wrote (5878)3/5/2003 9:33:37 AM
From: foundation  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 12247
 
Global: Capital Spending Myths


Morgan Stanley
3/5/03
Stephen Roach (from London)

As I travel the world -- last week in Asia, this week in Europe -- I
detect an understandable sense of urgency in the investor mindset.
In a US-centric world, everyone has become an expert on the state
of the American economy. And the postwar recovery call is now in
doubt. The overseas consensus is little different from the view I
pick up at home. The hope for some time has been that the spark
would come from a revival in business capital spending. All it will
take, goes the argument, is for the veil of geopolitical uncertainty to
lift. Corporate America -- now having atoned for the excesses of
the late 1990s -- will do the rest and step up and spend on long
deferred investment projects. And the remainder of the economy is
then expected to follow suit. In my view, this may well be one of
the biggest myths to the coming recovery in the US economy. Here
are three reasons why.

First of all, there are the perils of deflation to consider. Deflation
may well be a monetary phenomenon, but it also reflects an
inherent imbalance between aggregate supply and demand in the
real economy. And business capital spending is what drives the
supply side of this equation. Lacking in pricing leverage and fearing
the globalization of an Asian-style deflation, companies should be
biased against making incremental additions to capacity. With a
post-bubble world still awash in excess supply of goods and
services, a sudden burst of capital formation would only add to the
overhang. Over the past several months, I have had conversations
with executives from a broad cross-section of America’s leading
companies. I can assure you they get it. They are virtually
unanimous -- with the exception of a few energy businesses -- in
expressing the view that caution on capital spending goes hand in
hand with a lack of pricing leverage. These executives don’t forget
for a moment how badly they were burned by the open-ended
capex surge in the late 1990s. Until the supply-demand balance
turns more favorable, the businesspeople I have spoken with tell
me this post-bubble caution is unlikely to fade -- irrespective of
war-related gyrations in the US economy. The only capacity
expansion programs they are contemplating are in low-cost
outsourcing platforms such as China.

The record of history is a second reason to worry about a
capex-led recovery in the US economy. It turns out that business
fixed investment has normally been a lagging sector in business
cyclical recoveries -- not the leader that many are hoping for. In the
five recoveries since 1960, the capital spending share of GDP fell
by an average of 0.3 percentage points fully four quarters into a
cyclical upturn. This implies that cyclical leadership typically came
from other segments of the economy. That same dynamic is playing
out in the current cycle -- but far more powerfully, given the
bubble-induced investment excesses of the late 1990s. After the
economy contracted in the first three quarters of 2001, the
current-dollar business capital spending share of GDP stood at
11.8% of GDP in 3Q01; fully five quarters later, this share had
fallen another 1.2 percentage points to 10.6% in 4Q02.

This pattern reflects one of the key macro characteristics of the
capital-spending dynamic: This sector can be considered what
economists call a derived demand -- it moves largely in response to
fluctuations in other segments of the economy. This is admittedly a
contentious point in the academic literature. Some macro models
portray capital spending is being more endogenous to the system --
responsive to changes in profitability, cash flow, the stock market
(the “Tobin Q”), and a host of cost-of-capital considerations. For
my money, the “accelerator theory” -- driven by perceived
fluctuations in demand -- has long been a superior construct. To
the extent that demand visibility finally emerges in the aftermath of a
recession, this model suggests businesses will then conclude that
operating pressures on existing capacity are likely to rise. Only then
does expansion make sense. Unfortunately, with the manufacturing
capacity utilization rate having fallen to 73.6% in the final period of
2002-- well below the 80% threshold that normally triggers
increased investment -- the accelerator construct offers little
encouragement to the capital spending outlook.

Admittedly, there has been a dramatic transformation in the mix of
capital spending over the past 20 years -- away from the bricks
and mortar of smokestack industries and into the bits and clicks of
the Information Age. In 4Q02, IT hardware and software
amounted to 47% of total spending by US businesses on capital
equipment -- well in excess of the 31% share that prevailed in
1980. To the extent that this transformation reflects a dramatic
shortening of the capacity replacement cycle due to the rapid
obsolescence of IT capital, then it may simply be time for an
upturn. After all, corporate IT budgets were slashed by 15% over
the five-quarter period from 3Q00 to 4Q01. As a result of this
downturn and in the aftermath of the anemic recovery that has since
followed, current-dollar corporate IT budgets in 4Q02 were
essentially no higher than they were three and a half years ago in
mid-1999. Since IT products are widely thought to have a
three-year shelf life, goes the argument, the replacement cycle is
now overdue to kick in.

I am highly suspicious of this line of reasoning -- a third reason why
I believe that consensus expectations for a capex-led recovery are
likely to be disappointed. For starters, I am quite dubious of the
claim that there is a three-year shelf life for IT products. To me, this
smacks more of vendor-driven hype. In the post-bubble era,
companies have learned to live without the all-too-frequent product
upgrades that do little to enhance employee productivity. IT
replacement cycles have been stretched out as a result, and the
capital spending cycle has not benefited from the shorter
replacement cycle that was purportedly tied to the hyper-growth
dynamic of rapid technological change. A second factor weighing
against visions of the IT-led capex recovery is the consolidation
that is now occurring in the IT user community. The ongoing
rationalization of excess capacity in the IT-intensive services sector
--especially transactions (and processing) intensive industries such
as finance, telecommunications, air transportation, and the
distributive sector (wholesale and retail trade) -- points to a sharp
reduction in the intrinsic demand for information technology. In
other words, once the IT replacement cycle turns, there could well
be fewer buyers than there were just a few years ago. This
consolidation is yet another manifestation of America’s post-bubble
shakeout.

Putting it all together, I see little reason to bank on business capital
spending as the sector that will spark the next cyclical recovery in
the United States. War or not, that upturn will eventually come. But
for many reasons -- some tied to the time-honored rhythm of the
business cycle and others related to the unique characteristics of
this post-bubble climate lacking in pricing leverage -- the uplift from
capex should come later rather than sooner. Once again, that puts
the burden of recovery squarely on the shoulders of the American
consumer. And that could well be the biggest problem of all.



To: foundation who wrote (5878)3/6/2003 2:10:48 PM
From: gdichaz  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 12247
 
Ben. Curiousity squared.

You are clearly far and away the most knowledgeable and helpful poster on the fun and games of the GSMers (Eu at the core) and the free world - i.e. those not caught in the sadly socialist EU bureaucratic cragmire of unelected officials at Brussels who keep choice out. CDMA in current spectrum, no, no. (Even to the extent of denying small business the opportunity to use any spectrum ((450 or otherwise)) to enhance efficiency.)

The most indefensible of which is keeping 1x EV-DO out which could save the EU's bacon for their failures re: CDMA 2000 as such in current spectrum.

Why then all the posts here which are puzzling - at minimum?

Are you against wars in general or only those which might change to balance of power in the Arab world?

Chaz