Tuesday, June 2, 2009

Sichuan Tenzhong Buys Hummer After GM Files Bancruptcy

Who bought Hummer?

hummerSichuan Tengzhong Heavy Industrial Machinery Co. Ltd. plans to purchase the Hummer brand from General Motors, the mammoth U.S. auto maker that filed for bankruptcy yesterday.

Hummer is the brand attached to GM’s line of street-legal vehicles based on the HMMWV, or humvee. The abbreviation stands for High Mobility Multipurpose Wheeled Vehicle. Many people still call refer to a GM Hummer as a humvee.

About Sichuan Tengzhong

Sichuan Tenzhong is a Chinese company based in Chengdu. There is still at least one other company interested in buying Hummer, but those talks are on hold. Bloomberg.com reports that GM has a “memorandum of understanding” with Sichuan Tengzhong.

Sichuan Tengzhong “is a privately owned maker of special-use vehicles, structural components for highways and bridges, and construction machinery,” according to Bloomberg.

Few details on the deal

The agreement between GM and Sichuan Tengzhong is confidential, so the selling price for the Hummer brand is unknown. In GM’s bankruptcy court documents, CEO Fritz Henderson estimated Hummer’s worth at $500 million.

GM did say in a statement today that the deal will close by the end of third quarter. So if you want to buy an American-made humvee you’d better get some quick cash now.

The Hummer business

Hummer has been a highly recognized brand under the GM umbrella since it bought the brand name from AM General Motors in 1998. AM General motors originally only manufactured humvees for the military, but it started making civilian humvees under the brand name Hummer in 1992.

Since acquiring the Hummer brand, GM has sold the vehicles under that name and used the Hummer trademark on colognes, flashlights, bicycles, shoes, coats, hats, laptops, clothing, CD players and other items. ... click here to read the rest of the article titled "Sichuan Tenzhong Buys Hummer After GM Files Bancruptcy"

Manage Your Money Wisely | Avoid the Root of All Evil

Cultivating gratification in the many simple things in life will prevent us from developing the love of money and all the problems that come along with it. Money is indeed the root of all evil. When managed properly, however, money can provide you with the freedom to pursue the more important things in life, such as a strong, close bond with the ones you love the most.



Cash Advance Loans Can Save Your House

A Couple with Trouble

~Here, then gone~A cash advance loan can save your home. It did for a married couple I know; they are close friends of mine, and happier than ever that they decided to seek help. After all, when the country is slowly rising from the ashes of recession, things might seem a little off track before becoming balanced again.

A Terrible Storm

A friend of mine, Sam, came to me in a huff a few years back, because the roof on his house began to cave in at the back of the house, due to a severe thunderstorm. He told me that he was considering fixing the roof himself, but the next week he informed me that it would cost entirely too much money for him to fix the roof himself, and furthermore, he didn't have the knowledge to execute the idea.

Meanwhile

Sam's wife was having a little "bad luck" herself. As she was picked up the kids from various after-school activities, she ran over a broken glass bottle, and busted one of her car tires. Image her frustration, stuck in her car with a flat tire and three kids, still bubbling with energy!

The Quotes

A local mechanic shop quoted her $75 for a new tire and $45 for their labor. The total costs, plus tax came to $146. Luckily for her, she had a few bucks saved in the bank. But when Sam called a repair man for the roof, he said a patch job would cost $500. All together they'd have to pay $646 dollars.

Still Not Enough

After awhile, Sam and his wife put their heads and money together, but unfortunately both of their savings and checking accounts added up to $173. They were short $473 dollars and needed the money immediately. To make matter worse, they had practically no food in the kitchen, and with three children that just wouldn't do. ... click here to read the rest of the article titled "Cash Advance Loans Can Save Your House"

Memories Make a Place More Like Home

About two and a half years ago I moved to a new city. I was having a lot of trouble getting used to it. I didn't like anything about it. I couldn't find a yoga school I liked. I hated the weather. I couldn't find dance lessons that I felt were worthwhile. I couldn't find an organic market on a par with the one in my old neighborhood. I hated my new job. I didn't like my house. My neighbors drove me nuts.

Then one day I was talking on the phone to a friend from my old town who, coincidentally, had moved here a year before me. She was having the same issues. Listening to me bemoan the shortcomings of our new city, she suggested that we both needed to get out and "make some memories" in order to make the place more like home. I resisted her advice because I simply did not want to think I could ever consider such an unappealing place to be anything like home.

But eventually I took her advice. I made myself go out and do things where I could take of picture of what I'd done. I did the local walk-a-thons and took photos at the finish line. I took up a new kind of social dance and ventured out to unappealing-sounding venues that really weren't so bad. And I took photos to prove it. I made a point of going sledding in the neighborhood park when the snow was really deep – not my kind of thing, but it provided good photo ops. I found places to run my dogs off leash without getting caught, and I took photos of my transgressions. I haunted a couple of neighborhood coffee houses in all kinds of weather.

Pretty soon, I left the camera at home. Within a year or so, I noticed that when I drove by parks or dance venues or coffee houses, memories surfaced without effort on my part. And so, my new city is still a backwards kind of place, but my friend was right. Attaching memories to a place makes it at least a little more like home.



Thinking is Not Enough

This is a guest article by Frank Curmudgeon, author of the Bad Money Advice blog. For updates from Frank, subscribe to the Bad Money Advice RSS feed.

We often see the struggle to get control of our spending as being the conflict between our emotional and logical selves. Emotion wants to go out to that new restaurant tonight, logic says cook at home.

We say to ourselves “If only I could stop and think about all my spending decisions, I’d soon be rich.” That’s not wrong, exactly, but it makes at least one big faulty assumption, that it is easy for us to be logical around money when we want to be. The truth is that just thinking about it is not always enough.

There is an entire field of economics, behavioral economics, which studies the differences between what logic would have people do with their money and what they really do. The academics in this area have collected many such “anomalies.”

Mississippi River

One that illustrates well the illogic of our thinking selves is anchoring, the tendency for people to be influenced by even the most ridiculous estimates of a number. The classic example is that if you ask people if the Mississippi is more than 6000 miles long and then ask them to guess its exact length, they will give much higher guesses than if you had just asked them to estimate its length. (It is 2340 miles long, by the way.)

Dan Ariely, a professor at MIT/Sloan, conducted a striking demonstration of this effect. He asked a group of MBA students to write down the last two digits of their social security number. Then he asked them if they would be willing to pay that amount of dollars for a bottle of fine wine he was holding. Finally he had them submit actual bids for the wine, which he really sold to the winner.

Sure enough, the students tended to bid higher if they had social security numbers that ended in higher digits. So the anchoring effect was there even though the participants were fully aware that the suggested value was completely random, even though they were sophisticated and thoughtful (have I mentioned I got my MBA at Sloan?) and even though it was their own real money at stake. This was not an impulse decision in which consumers let emotion get the better of them. These were would-be shrewd businessmen who undoubtedly assumed that Prof. Ariely was up to something sneaky.

And anchoring explains a few oddities in our everyday lives. It is why houses, cars, and jewelry often have high “asking” or “sticker” prices. The seller does not really expect to get this price and the buyer does not expect to pay it. So why bother? Because by attaching a tag on a watch that reads “$500″ the jeweler can more easily talk you into paying $425, even if you know full well that the $500 price was just for show.

And anchoring also helps explain some stock price movements, specifically the phenomenon called price momentum. That is the tendency for stocks that have been going up over the past few months to continue to do so.

Imagine that there is an exciting growth company that announces some positive news when its stock trades at $50. There is a large group of investors who love this company, are excited by the news, and would, in principle, pay $100 a share. However, because of anchoring, they just cannot bring themselves to pay more than $10 above what the stock was trading at in the past month. It just seems expensive. When the stock goes above that level these buyers back off, temporarily. After a few weeks, the current price does not seem so unreasonable, because they get used to it, and they resume buying. The result is that even though in a more logical environment the stock would have gone to $100 immediately, what actually happens is that it climbs steadily at about $10 per month over five months.

It’s important to understand that anchoring doesn’t happen because you are stupid, or too emotional, or overly influenced by advertising. It happens because you are human. It is the way your brain is wired up. You can’t stop yourself from doing it, although being aware of it is a great help.

The point is that merely resolving to think about how you spend is not enough. Spending logically is harder than it looks.

Photo credit: Don3rdSE

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Thinking is Not Enough



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Monday, June 1, 2009

I heard the scariest story the other day

And the scary part was that it was totally true and there was evidence. So there was this guy, and he went to the cemetery to go visit his grandma. It was a bright sunny day and everything was going fine, the cemetery wasn’t crowded at all, and him and his wife were taking pictures and later when they went to get the pictures developed, guess who was in every single picture they took in the background? Yeah, it was his grandmother as a little girl in the kind of old clothes she used to wear as a little girl. Him and his wife never saw her when they were taking pictures but she ended up in every picture they took, it was so scary. I saw all the pictures and after that, I definitely believe in ghost. I don’t believe the ghost that fly and make scary noises, but spirits of the dead I totally believe in. Like after they die the spirits are still here and just hang around the people that they loved. I don’t think that all of them are bad but I’m sure the re are bad spirits.



Roses are so beautiful.

They really do make our world more colorful and fragrant. There’s so many colors and they all smell wonderful. My favorite kind of roses are the ones that are white right by the stem and then turn into a vibrant bright color at the tips of the pedals. Those are defiantly the best ones. I don’t believe that different color roses mean different things. I would much rather give away or receive a brightly colored rose bouquet rather than a bouquet full of deep red roses any day. Bright colors seem to just brighten any room or any mood. You can’t look at a bright color and be in a foul mood, especially when they are roses and smell so good.