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New Life for the New Trade of the Decade (22nd May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
First, stocks hit new highs on Friday. Gold lost $22 per ounce.
Why real estate is a bad long term investment (21st May 2013) Contributed by Manav Choksi
Most people in India are convinced that real estate is a great asset. More caution is in order. Real estate investment is not a guarantee of profit. It is hard to be diversified, and illiquidity hampers portfolio structuring. Most important, the outlook for supply over the medium term implies that there is no great upside.
Oil! Price Discovery and Regulation (21st May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
Market signals about the relative value of available materials are paramount for widely dispersed people to make rational decisions. Such was the solution to the “knowledge problem” elaborated by F. A. Hayek. A topical example of Hayek’s theory in practice is the decade-long adjustment in the prices of oil and products refined from petroleum. Oil is generally considered to be a fungible global commodity, and one frequently hears reference to global oil prices as reflecting global supply and demand. But a combination of factors over the past decade has substantively reduced the fungibility of this once-standard product.
Jim Rogers Tells Us When to Start Buying Gold-video (20th May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
Is the gold rush over? Or is this just one last great buying opportunity?
As rally pushes prices higher, time to buy -- or save? (20th May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
The stock markets are shooting skyward and bond prices remain lofty. It’s enough to put investors in a cheery mood as we approach the summer holidays.
The Week Begins, and Silver Is Instantly Getting Destroyed (20th May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
Fans of precious metals have been getting creamed lately. Thanks to declining volatility and a growing sense that real interest rates are on the rise, gold and silver have been getting taken to the woodshed.
30 Big Ideas from Seth Klarman’s Margin of Safety (18th May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
With the possible exception of Warren Buffett, no investor today commands more respect than Baupost Group’s Seth Klarman. Since founding his investment partnership in 1983, Klarman has not only produced unrivaled returns (in excess of 20% per year), but he has also from time to time offered wise and timeless commentary on markets and the craft of investing.
PIMCO's Bill Gross Doesn't See A Bond Market Crash, But He Does See An End To The Epic Bull Run (18th May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
Bill Gross did not see the S&P 500 going up 15% in 2013, never mind by the middle of May.
What is the “Warren Buffett of Europe” Up To? (18th May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
Every first quarter of the year, the Spanish firm Bestinver Asset Management holds its annual meeting with investors. This year, the meeting had to be postponed until 16 April (from 4 March) because of administrative problems with the venue where it was originally scheduled to be held. The event is a small-scale replica of the Berkshire Hathaway meeting, but it is large enough to fill a 3,000 seat theater in IFEMA, Madrid’s main convention center, and includes an unlimited Q&A section.
Interview with A Remarkable value Investor – Josh Tarasoff (18th May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
I met Josh the first time in 2006, at the value investment seminar I attend each year in Italy. In that year Josh was finishing up his MBA at Columbia University specialising in value investing.
How to (Safely) Buy a Rising Market (18th May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
Predicting the direction of the major indexes on a day-to-day basis is an impossible feat. Attempting to play the market’s movements by the hour or minute will cause you to go insane (and lose all of your money in the process).
Longleaf Partners Q1 Report (18th May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
Mason Hawkins and Staley Cates of Southeastern Asset Management [VII, August 31, 2012] in their latest fund quarterly report describe their approach to activism – on display recently with respect to Dell and Chesapeake Energy – and describe how their fund holdings have evolved as “stock prices increased faster than values” in recent months.
“Warren Buffett is Bullish ... on Women” (18th May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
Warren Buffett in this Fortune essay explains why he believes women are key to America’s ongoing prosperity.
Markets Shift to Overdrive (17th May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
Do you see what’s happening here? This market is in overdrive. The melt-up has been relentless, with the broad market gaining more than 1% yesterday. Nearly 200 domestically traded stocks finished the day up 5% or more.
The Importance of Doing Business (17th May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
This month, an independent review panel is expected to release its findings regarding the World Bank’s Doing Business report. Speculation abounds that the panel might recommend outsourcing Doing Business, removing its rankings of countries for the ease of doing business in them, or even eliminating the report altogether.
From Petrodollar to Petrogold: The US Is Now Trying To Cut Off Iran's Access to Gold (17th May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
The US is moving to broaden its 'blockade' efforts of Iran to the movement of pure gold into the Islamic Republic. The US-led embargo of Iranian crude succeeded in slowing the flow of petrodollars into the nation but as Foreign Affairs committee chairman Edward Cohen remarked, there is "no question that there is gold going from Turkey to Iran."
Advisers vs. Machines (17th May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
Professional and individual investors have long had a hard time beating the broader market. And, says Mark Hulbert, the rise of computer trading programs may be making it harder than ever.
The three most dangerous words in investing (16th May 2013) Contributed by Jitendra Gupta
The Value Investing Congress just concluded in Las Vegas where approximately 20 speakers gave their pitches for their favourite stocks. I always find this conference a useful source of ideas to take a further look at. Some of the speakers have incredible track records and their analysis is very robust. The one aspect, however, that really caught my eye was not a stock pick.
‘Black Swan’ Author Says Market ‘Fragility’ More Important Than Risk (16th May 2013) Contributed by Jitendra Gupta
Nassim Taleb argues markets need ‘stressors’ to prevent catastrophic events
Tom Russo on Attending Berkshire Hathaway's Annual Meeting-Video (16th May 2013) Contributed by Jitendra Gupta
Tom Russo is a partner at Gardner Russo & Gardner and has managed to beat the S&P 500 index by 4.7 percentage points annually between 1984 and 2011.
The Buffett Formula — How to Get Smarter (16th May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
Most people go though life not really getting any smarter. Why? They simply won’t do the work required.
The Unintended Consequence of the Soaring Dollar (16th May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
It seems the S&P 500's recent strength is somehow comforted by the fact that the USD is riding high on its cleanest dirty shirt meme at 34 month highs but unfortunately for the Chinese (and their practical peg to the USD), things are a little less fun than in the old mercantilist manipulation days. The implicit benefit that dollar flows appear to be getting (via the wealth effect in the US stock market) is not there in China (lower equity ownership); in fact, the rising Yuan is drastically hurting them as despite export orders remaining in growth mode, the China Daily reports that "most exporters in the delta region have told us that the rising yuan value has led to a big profit decline."
Office Hours with Warren Buffett (15th May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
Warren Buffett is a businessman and philanthropist. As Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Berkshire Hathaway Inc., Mr. Buffett has invested in a broad range of companies from See's Candies to Fruit of the Loom.
Four Important Facts to Remember About Gold (15th May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
When volatility prevails in the gold market, I love seeing so many different opinions because it promotes critical thinking and healthy markets. But because gold is unlike any other commodity, many perspectives can be extreme, such as “golden freudes” who take pleasure in gold bugs’ pain.
Thank god gold prices are falling (14th May 2013) Contributed by Jitendra Gupta
How many of us would like to walk into a shopping mall holding several grams of gold in the pocket to buy a packet of soap or other daily necessities? This is quite possible if paper currency loses its significance or value.
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Martial Law vs. Market Law: Reflections on Boston (22nd May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
There are two kinds of people in the world: those who respect coercive authority and consider it legitimate, and those who do not. The former group is likewise split into two factions: a relatively small group that, for whatever reason, essentially worships power, and a much larger one whose members merely tolerate authoritarianism, either as a matter of expedience or habit.
Kyle Bass bets on full-blown Japan crisis (22nd May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
Kyle Bass hopes he is wrong, and so may everyone else, as the danger predicted by the founder of Dallas-based Hayman Capital is nothing less than a full blown financial crisis in the world’s third-largest economy, Japan.
Jim Rogers - Give Me a Trillion Dollars and I’ll Show You a Really Good Time!-Video (22nd May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
Here is another interview with Rogers who is continuing to warn about an unhappy ending to all of the global money printing.
Austere Illusions (22nd May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
The doctrine of imposing present pain for future benefit has a long history – stretching all the way back to Adam Smith and his praise of “parsimony.” It is particularly vociferous in “hard times.” In 1930, US President Herbert Hoover was advised by his treasury secretary, Andrew Mellon: “Liquidate labor, liquidate stocks, liquidate the farmers, liquidate real estate.
China’s Interest-Rate Challenge (22nd May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
China’s successful transformation from a middle-income country to a modern, high-income country will depend largely on the reforms that the government undertakes over the next decade. Financial reforms should top the agenda, beginning with interest-rate liberalization.
A Case of Virtual Hyperinflation (22nd May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
As virtual fantasy worlds go, Blizzard Entertainment’s Diablo 3 is particularly foreboding. In this multiplayer online game played by millions, witch doctors, demon hunters, and other character types duke it out in a war between angels and demons in a dark world called Sanctuary.
Your Cousin, the Blade of Grass: Brian Cox on the Wonders of Life (22nd May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
“All science is provisional.”
How Creativity in Humor, Art, and Science Works: Arthur Koestler’s Theory of Bisociation (22nd May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
“The discoveries of yesterday are the truisms of tomorrow, because we can add to our knowledge but cannot subtract from it.”
The Power of I Don’t Know (22nd May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
“There seems to be a widespread presumption that writing is prescriptive (or proscriptive) rather than simply observational or meditative,” writes Tim Kreider in his New York Times op-ed.
Vagueness Undermines Accountability (22nd May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
Opinions and organization theory has generated quite a bit of feedback.
What Is It About Bees And Hexagons? (22nd May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
More than 2,000 year ago, Marcus Terentius Varro, a roman citizen, proposed an answer, which ever since has been called “The Honeybee Conjecture.” He thought that if we better understood, there would be an elegant reason for what we see.
The Situational Benefits of Compassion (22nd May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
Decades of clinical research has focused and shed light on the psychology of human suffering. That suffering, as unpleasant as it is, often also has a bright side to which research has paid less attention: compassion.
Sweaty Babies (22nd May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
A study of one year old babies has found an intriguing connection between their physiological symptoms when they are confronted with a frightening situation, and their levels of aggression two years later
If Your Shrink Is A Bot, How Do You Respond? (22nd May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
Her hair is brown and tied back into a professional-looking ponytail. She wears a blue shirt, tan sweater and delicate gold chain. It’s the first time she has met the man sitting across from her, and she looks out at him, her eyes curious
How Psychiatry Went Crazy (22nd May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders is often called the “Bible” of psychiatric diagnosis, and the term is apt. The DSM consists of instructions from on high; readers usually disagree in their interpretations of the text; and believing it is an act of faith.
Does Our Innate Ability to Estimate Numbers Benefit From Education? (22nd May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
Children are born with an innate number sense — the ability to discriminate quickly between different amounts or numbers of objects, even without counting.
Centralization and Sociopathology (22nd May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
Concentrated power and wealth are intrinsically sociopathological by their very nature.
The Gold-Silver Ratio Has Me Nervous About What's Next For Stocks (22nd May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
"The gold-silver ratio has risen to its highest point in three years (August 2010) and in the past this served as a flash-point for a renewed risk-off trade.
Think Piece: Regulation and the UK's energy market (22nd May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
Stephen Little child, Professor emeritus at the University of Birmingham, fellow of Judge Business School at the University of Cambridge and a top regulatory from 1983 to 1998, explains how politicians and regulators have, by misunderstanding how markets work, regulated to boost energy firms' profits at the expense of higher bills for consumers.
How India is throwing away the world’s biggest economic opportunity (21st May 2013) Contributed by Manav Choksi
IN THE past 35 years, hundreds of millions of Chinese have found productive, if often exhausting, work in the country’s growing cities. This extraordinary mobilisation of labour is the biggest economic event of the past half-century. The world has seen nothing on such scale before. Will it see anything like it again? The answer lies across the Himalayas in India.
Finance Ministry appoints auditors without consulting RBI, step aimed at avoiding conflict of interest (21st May 2013) Contributed by Arjun Ashar
Senior government official confirmed the development, explaining that the decision not to consult with RBI was taken to avoid what he described as a "conflict of interest".
A Virtual Weimar: Hyperinflation in a Video Game World (21st May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
As virtual fantasy worlds go, Blizzard Entertainment’s Diablo 3 is particularly foreboding. In this multiplayer online game played by millions, witch doctors, demon hunters, and other character types duke it out in a war between angels and demons in a dark world called Sanctuary.
Reinvigorating Egypt’s Economy (21st May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
Some two years into Egypt’s grass-roots revolution, the country’s economy is in a worrisome downward spiral. A growing number of people, inside and outside of the country, are starting to blame the revolution itself for derailing an economy that was growing, reducing its external-debt burden, and maintaining a comfortable cushion of international reserves.
The American Story… Abroad (21st May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
In 1881, Dakota Territory had never sold a bushel of wheat to anybody outside of Dakota. Six years later, it sold 62 million bushels.
The Flawed Origins of Expansionary Austerity (21st May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
Several of my Harvard University colleagues have recently been casualties in the crossfire between fiscal “austerians” and fiscal stimulators. The economists Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff have received an astounding amount of press attention since it was discovered that they made a spreadsheet error in a 2010 paper that examined the statistical relationship between debt and growth. They quickly conceded their error
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Bill Gates: My 13 favorite talks (4th December 2012) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
When we asked Bill Gates to curate a list of his favorite talks, his first response was, “There are too many to pick, really.” Here, he's whittled it down to 13 essentials.
Kill the Password: Why a String of Characters Can’t Protect Us Anymore (3rd December 2012) Contributed by Abhay Bhagat
It’s not a well-kept secret, either. Just a simple string of characters—maybe six of them if you’re careless, 16 if you’re cautious—that can reveal everything about you.
Microsoft Said to Speed Windows Upgrades to Once a Year (3rd December 2012) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
Microsoft aims to upgrade the software more frequently, about once a year, rather than every two or three years as it’s done in the past, said the people, who asked not to be identified because the product plans are private. The company plans to unveil the first of these updates in 2013, one of the people said.
Frozen Water and Organic Material Discovered on Mercury (30th November 2012) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
For the first time, scientists have confirmed that the planet Mercury holds at least 100 billion tons of water ice as well as organic material in permanently shadowed craters at its north pole.
Seeing the light: Ed Boyden's tools for brain hackers (27th November 2012) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
Ed Boyden, an engineer turned neuroscientist, makes tools for brain hackers. In his lab at MIT, he's built a robot that can capture individual neurons and uses light potentially to control major diseases -- all in his quest to 'solve the brain'.
The Scientific Blind Spot (26th November 2012) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
In 1870, German chemist Erich von Wolf analyzed the iron content of green vegetables and accidentally misplaced a decimal point when transcribing data from his notebook.
Having Broken CO2 Speed Limit, World Now "Stepping on the Gas" (26th November 2012) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
The United Nations Environment Program warns that global emissions of greenhouse gases are opening up a widening gap between reality and climate change goals
Galaxy Might Be Most Distant Seen Object (26th November 2012) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
Thanks to gravitational lensing by a cluster of galaxies, the light emitted by a small galaxy 13.3 billion years ago has reached Earth. John Matson reports
Global Energy: The Latest Infatuations (24th November 2012) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
In energy matters, what goes around, comes around—but perhaps should go away
Solar storm as desert plan to power Europe falters (24th November 2012) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
An ambitious plan to provide 15% of Europe's power needs from solar plants in North Africa has run into trouble. The Desertec initiative hoped to deliver electricity from a network of renewable energy sources to Europe via cables under the sea.
In His Own Words: Bill Gates Dishes on Computers, Religion and Being Smart [Excerpt] (24th November 2012) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
Bill Gates in His Own Words readers get a glimpse of the visionary Microsoft co-founder and philanthropist's philosophy on business, technology and life via some of his most memorable quotes
European Exoplanet-Hunting Space Telescope Nears Its End (23rd November 2012) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
A pioneering European space telescope that discovered the first rocky extrasolar planet is on its last legs, Nature has learned.
Planting Seeds of Dementia (23rd November 2012) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
A cascade of misfolded proteins may trigger Alzheimer's By Carrie Arnold Researchers have untangled some of the neurological events that may ultimately lead to Alzheimer's disease. Two new studies show that a protein implicated in this form of dementia can infect other neurons to spread disease across the brain. These problematic proteins clump together, which can lead to cognitive problems.
Galapagos' Extinct Tortoise Species Could Come Back to Life (23rd November 2012) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
A species of giant tortoises from the Galapagos Islands could be brought back from extinction despite the death earlier this year of the famed "Lonesome George," a tourist magnet and conservation icon who was the last of his kind.
Hunt for Life under Antarctic Ice Heats Up (23rd November 2012) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
On the heels of a Russian drilling effort that reached Lake Vostok, British and American teams also aim to penetrate ancient subglacial lakes By Quirin Schiermeier and Nature magazine
Curiosity Rover’s Secret Historic Breakthrough? Speculation Centers on Organic Molecules (21st November 2012) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
The report comes by way of the rover’s principal investigator, geologist John Grotzinger of Caltech, who said that Curiosity has uncovered exciting new results from a sample of Martian soil recently scooped up and placed in the Sample Analysis at Mars (SAM) instrument.
Brainwave-Controlled Helicopter Lands on Kickstarter (21st November 2012) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
The system uses a NeuroSky MindWave Mobile EEG headset to record brainwave data, which is then sent to software on either a tablet/smartphone or on a specially designed pyramid-shaped base. The software converts the brainwave data to flight commands, which control the flight of the spherical helicopter,
'Super-Jupiter' Discovery Dwarfs Solar System's Largest Planet (20th November 2012) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
In a rare direct photo of a world beyond Earth, astronomers have spotted a planet 13 times more massive than Jupiter, the largest planet in our own solar system.
Humans, chimpanzees and monkeys share DNA but not gene regulatory mechanisms, scientists report at ASHG 2012 (12th November 2012) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
Human Shares ove 90 % of their DNA with their primate cousins. The expression or activity patterns of genes differ across species in ways that help explain each species' distinct biolgy and behavior.
Mini Mover and Shaker: Single-Molecule "Engine" Vibrates Macro Object (12th November 2012) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
The random motion of a hydrogen molecule can drive the oscillation of a much larger structure By John Matson
Spooky Science: Make a Ghostly Illusion (12th November 2012) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
Halloween is a time for sharing ghost stories and watching spooky movies. But have you ever thought about the science behind some of these uncanny experiences? Haunted houses, for example, take advantage of the way your brain uses sensory information.
Climate Change Threatens Legacy Coffee (12th November 2012) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
Rising seas and severe storms are the most talked-about threats of climate change. But here's another: no more coffee. Because rising temperatures may cripple wild populations of Arabica coffee—the most cultivated species in the world.
Can Concrete Be Bendable? (10th November 2012) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
The notoriously brittle building material may yet stretch instead of breaking
Undead-End: Fungus That Controls Zombie-Ants Has Own Fungal Stalker (9th November 2012) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
A specialized parasite fungus can control ants' behavior. But that fungus also faces its own deadly, specialized parasites
The Energy Opportunity in Wasted Heat (9th November 2012) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
For every one unit of energy that is converted into electricity in power plants today, two units of energy are thrown away. This wasted energy is primarily in the form of heat – or thermal energy – and, there is technology available today that can turn this waste into a usable energy stream.
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Q&A with management guru Jim Collins Contributed by Abhay Bhagat
The bestselling author answers our readers' questions about business, leadership - and mountain climbing.
Decisions Don't Wait - Andy Grove Interview.
What's the Right Marketing Resource Focus for Enterprise Software Companies?
Surprising Predictions for 2003 by Morgan Stanley's Chief Strategist
What to Do to Gain Credibility with IT Executives (interview: Toby Redshaw of Motorola)
World-class India.
Management guru C K Prahalad's prognosis for India seems to be little understood in official quarters. Yet, he believes the elephant can dance if it uses the collective wisdom of a billion people. He tells Neeraj Saxena that india needs to learn from home-grown successes and start yearning for change:
Convert India’s Problems into Opportunities.
Interview with Prof. C K Prahalad.
Sources of Power.
Conversation with Jared Diamond
How to Succeed in Business.
A Chat with Top Business Writer Tom Peters
Larry Bossidy: The Thought Leader Interview.
The recently retired Honeywell chairman and CEO offers hard-boiled rules for getting things done.
India is not the best country to invest
India is not the best country to invest
in 1991, became the youngest 'full professor' at the Harvard University's Graduate School of Business Administration. The Jaime and Josefina Chua Tiampo Professor of Business Administration, after receiving his doctorate, worked as a consultant with McKinsey & Company in London during 1982-83, and then joined the Harvard faculty. Between 1995 and 1998, he headed the School's required first-year course on competition and strategy. He currently teaches the elective course, 'Globalisation and Strategy'. His research in this area focuses on the dynamics of globalisation and generic strategies for globalising firms. He serves on the editorial boards of Management Science, the Journal of Economics and Management Strategy and the Strategic Management Journal. When he was recently in Chennai to deliver a lecture on 'India in the era of globalisation' at the Confederation of Indian Industry meet, Ghemawat spoke to Shobha Warrier on issues ranging from what plagues the Indian economy to the effects of liberalisation on the country's economy.
Swiss Cash cow in Search of richer pastures
The head of the world's biggest food group how the company has adapted to regionalisation, trade liberalisation and information technology.
Esther Dyson on Internet Privacy, Policing, ICANN and Investing
During the late 1990s, Esther Dyson was often referred to as the chief guru of the tech world, a reputation enhanced by the publication of her 1997 book, Release 2.0: A Design for Living in the Digital Age. But during a recent talk at Wharton, Dyson, who served for two years as chairwoman of the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN), acknowledges that she didn't foresee some of the digital age's most vexing problems.
Interview - C.K. Prahalad
C.K.Prahalad, the management guru of "Core Competence fame, speaks his mind on intellectual assets and competitiveness and worries about China leaving India in the dust."
Q&A with 3M's James McNerney.
"Cash generation" is the aim of the first-year CEO -- a GE veteran and disciple of Jack Welch
Jack Welch: "The Opportunities Are Enormous"
BusinessWeek Senior Writer John A. Byrne, co-author of Jack: Straight from the Gut, reunited with former General Electric Chairman John F. Welch on Dec. 6 at a BusinessWeek conference in San Francisco. In a wide-ranging interview before an audience, Welch spoke about topics as diverse as his mother's influence on his leadership style and current topics, such as the meltdown at Enron, the proxy battle over Hewlett-Packard's attempt to merger with Compaq, and the chances for an economic recovery next year. Here are edited excerpts from their conversation.
Q& A with Jack Welch
Fast Talk: The Old Economy Meets the New Economy
"Fast Company recently convened a Fast Talk session in Chicago, bringing together some of the smartest people in the world."
Good Questions, Great Answers
"In a Web-exclusive interview, Jim Collins discusses the implications of his research and ideas for the economy, stock market, and the very nature of executive leadership."
It's All Yours, Jeff. Now What?
"General Electric's Jeffrey Immelt inherits the best-managed, best-regarded company in America. Which is exactly why his job looks impossible."
Poor People Are Getting a Voice.
"Management guru C.K. Prahalad talks about corporate strategies for cultivating success in emerging nations."
Andy Grove's Rational Exuberance
"Boom and bust have always been strictly business for Intel and its fearless leader. No wonder high tech's legendary skeptic is also an Internet bull."
Jared Diamond, The Thought Leader Interview
"The innovation historian looks to China, India, and Israel to discover 100,000-year-old lessons in business management."
Feeding the Flames.
"What every manager needs to know about creative destruction. An interview with McKinsey's Richard Foster."
Past Track to the Future.
"Stephen E.Ambrose has written best-selling histories of great feats of leadership and human endeavor. His insights from the past can teach a new generation of business leaders how to build for the future."
Lion in Winter.
"Let cowardly competitors cut back on high tech. GE and a few other brave souls are keeping the faith. Read this and you will understand why Jack Welch is different and a great leader and visionary."
Steve Ballmer's Big Moves.
"Microsoft's CEO faces a challenge that has been the undoing of many leaders in many industries: Can a giant company that dominated one era lead in the next?"
The Future According to Ryan Mathews
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Hedge Fund
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iManage Knowledge Management System Software
Knowledge management systems and knowledge management software
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The Real Warren Buffett
The website of James O’ Loughlin, author of "The Real Warren Buffett".
The General Center for Internet Services Inc. ( GCIS )
The General Center for Internet Services Inc. ( GCIS ) is one of Canada's oldest and largest Internet services provider and e-commerce application developer. Originators of the famous Pagina+ (tm) Search Engine Optimization service, GCIS is in business since 1996.
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