Shane? Thank God, somebody sane. Well, sane-ish.
Yellen’s comments suggest, and I agree, that we are in an asset bubble.
Had a nice conversation with Tim Cook today. Discussed my opinion that a larger buyback should be done now. We plan to speak again shortly.
In life and business, there are two cardinal sins, the first is to act precipitously without thought, and the second is to not act at all. Unfortunately the board of directors and top management of Times Warner already committed the first sin by merging with AOL, and we believe they are currently in the process of committing the second; now is not a time to move slowly and suffer the paralysis of inaction.
I believe there are and will be major opportunities to enhance Time Warner's value in future combinations.
Too often it's not the most creative guys or the smartest. Instead, it's the ones who are best at playing politics and soft-soaping their bosses. Boards don't like tough, abrasive guys.
We're not about liquidating companies, but if you do that, why is that terrible? We're not blowing up the factories. The person who buys it should be able to make the asset more productive.
When she cried, he would say, "there is nothing wrong with crying. Your feelings tell you who are. They tell what is important. Don't ever be ashamed of them.
Credit is a promise to deliver money. It will produce GDP but you'll create credit. . . So you reach a certain point that that you can't do that anymore. . . There are choices. And how do we best support, apportion the money? How much is going to be transferred?
What the eye does not see, the stomach does not get upset over
The man would stop suffering, when he become capable of dissolving the I.