Waging a war on the industrial food system

If we are going to make our children and our nations strong and healthy, we have to start with how and what we are eating. Kimbal Musk is the founder of casual dining upstart The Kitchen, and is working to improve nutrition by expanding healthy and affordable dining options:

“[My brother] told me it was crazy to get into the food business; I told him it was crazy to get into the space business,” Kimbal jokes. “It’s working out fine.”  Here is a direct video link.


Indeed, Americans are facing a number of nutritional issues. More than a third of the country’s population is considered obese, while less than a quarter eat the recommended daily servings of fruits and vegetables, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. And being short on time or money can often lead families to settle for less nourishing options — a reality Musk is determined to change.

“It’s not as hard as people think. It’s just that people have lost the skill of cooking,” he says, adding that he keeps his own grocery budget low to understand what the average family can afford.  See:  Musk waging a war on America’s [industrial] food system.

Posted in Main Page | Comments Off on Waging a war on the industrial food system

Levered ETFs: more weapons of retail slaughter

Leveraged exchange-traded funds were devised in 2006 as a product to allow retail investors to double their exposure to stock indices, then bonds, commodities, currencies and volatility itself.  With dreams of great upside, these products attracted retail capital like bugs to a light.  Bringing in $72 billion in new cash over the past few years, their level of assets has stayed about the same because they tend to burn through money in the long term due to the daily resetting of leverage.  From gullible, weak hands, to insiders as usual… the retail carnage has been brutal.  Read:  SEC may regret the day it allowed leveraged ETFs:

The problem with leveraged ETFs is that the losses from daily rebalancing are not easy to quantify. They’re dependent on volatility: the more volatile the underlying index, the more quickly the ETF will “decay.”

…While retail investors were slow to pick up on the daily rebalancing feature, the quants were not, and what ensued was a giant transfer of wealth from retail investors to professional investors. Professional investors figured out that you could be short leveraged ETFs and actually benefit from the effects of the daily rebalancing.

Here is the key lesson take away, that individuals forget at their peril:

..the whole point of Wall Street is to have a transfer of wealth from the unsophisticated to the sophisticated. There is nothing un-American about that. But this is egregious.

Posted in Main Page | Comments Off on Levered ETFs: more weapons of retail slaughter

Danielle’s weekly market update

Danielle was a guest today with Jim Goddard on The Talk Digital Network, talking about recent developments in the world economy and markets.  You can listen to an audio clip of the segment here.

Posted in Main Page | Comments Off on Danielle’s weekly market update