Motley Fool Money - Motley Fool Money: 09.11.2009

Episode Date: September 11, 2009

What role did the Lehman Brothers bankruptcy play in the financial crisis? Is the Yahoo! CEO a shrewd negotiator or serious distraction? Is the latest from Apple much ado about nothing? We tackle thos...e questions and share three stocks on our radar.   Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hey everybody, welcome to your 30-second laughing session brought to you by The Laughing Cow. Ready to laugh? In three, two, one, and... Okay. Great job, everybody. Now unpeel a wedge of the Laughing Cow light spreadable cheese. A delicious snack with two grams of protein and 25 calories per wedge. Feels good to have a cow, huh?
Starting point is 00:00:35 Welcome to Motley Fool Money. I'm Chris Hilton. I'm joined in studio by Motley Fool's senior analyst, Seth Jason and James Early, and from an undisclosed location that we like to call Montreal, Shannon Zimmerman. Guys, happy Friday. Happy Friday, Chris. On today's show, Apple CEO Steve Jobs shows up in public, and Yahoo CEO, Carol Bartz, shows up her predecessor. But as we come up on the one-year anniversary of the Lehman Brothers bankruptcy, we begin with this question. Was the government right to let Lehman fail? It was about this time. last year, things started getting a lot uglier for the financial markets. On Thursday, Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner said that Lehman's failure was not the main cause of the financial
Starting point is 00:01:14 crisis, but it did accelerate the downturn. James, was the government right to let Lehman fail? Chris, the honest answer is nobody knows, but one person who does know, at least claims to is Jim Rogers, a hedge fund manager who thinks that letting Lehman fail was the only thing the government did right. Now, Jim Rogers can be a little bit dramatic, but I think his point is very interesting. In other words, in the short term, obviously it was good to bail out AIG, letting Lehman Fail hurt things in the short run, but in the long run, what's really the best move? I mean, is it better for us to learn the lesson the hard way, a little bit of pain initially, and then be better going forward? Jim Rogers thinks bailing out long-term capital management,
Starting point is 00:01:52 the hedge fund back in 1998, or thereabouts, was actually the mistake that led to the current bubble and crash that we had now. Shannon, what do you think? I think it was a mistake to let Lehman fail, and I think that we spent most of the past year paying for that mistake. And in retrospect, it just seems like an arbitrary choice, almost like parents who get upset over some small thing, when really what they are really truly angry about is that Junior's stolen the credit cards and his cultivated online gambling addictions. I think it was, you know, far be it for me to disagree with Jim Rogers, but I think he's just being gratuitously provocative. Seth? He's never a drama queen. That's what James called him a little while ago. I think I
Starting point is 00:02:29 agree with him on this one. I think that you needed to have the fear in some of these bankers, mines, pocketbooks, do they have any fear? I don't think, I think they've lost it again is the problem. We haven't let any more Lehman Brothers go down. Lehman Brothers was a bit like a Ponzi scheme. A lot of banking is. It depended on borrowing billions every day so that it could loan that money out to others. And when you lose the faith of the people owning you that money, it's all over. I believe that the problem is we haven't dealt with the idea that banks are too big to fail. I don't know if we ever will. Everything is still seen is so fragile now. They're not going to let anybody fail, really. And I don't know, we may have lost the moment
Starting point is 00:03:10 to fix that. And we've only got banks that are bigger, as we talked about on the podcast a little while ago. Let me throw out a few numbers here. Over the last year, six million jobs lost. The Dow dropping about 5,000 points, unemployment up to almost 10%. Did these numbers look different? if the government actually steps in and saves Lehman? I don't think so. And remember, too, do we really have a bubble or do we just have a period of very low interest rates caused by the government years ago?
Starting point is 00:03:43 You know, I mean, there's government intervention on both sides. I mean, you know, with the Federal Open Market Committee, you know, setting interest rates and adjusting them. So it's a very complicated web, I guess, is the best way to describe it. Yeah, I think that we do have some evidence around that, Chris, because basically the government has said to the big institutions now, you are too big to fail, and we're not going to let that happen. What's happened as a result is that we've had a period of stability and rising stock prices,
Starting point is 00:04:08 particularly in the financial sector, whether or not that's a good thing, setting that aside for right now, I think that does indicate what could have been the result of not letting Lehman fail. Huge announcement by Apple this week. In fact, Steve, I think we have some audio from this event, don't we? Sorry, we couldn't resist. There had been a lot of speculation in the media over whether the company would introduce a tablet computer. They didn't, but they did announce... Speculation. People said, wait, it's going to be awesome.
Starting point is 00:04:39 They did announce some new iPod features like an FM radio. The big headline, in fact, was that CEO Steve Jobs made an appearance. Seth, what did you think? He looks a little too much like me. He needs to put on a few pounds. It was good for the Apple fans to see Steve there, and he made a plug for organ donation. Of course, he had that liver transplant, the one they originally denied. And he seems to be back in the driver's seat reportedly taking charge of this tablet product.
Starting point is 00:05:08 But it was a very strange press conference. It was like the Seinfeld of press conferences. It was sort of a conference about nothing. And even the Apple faithful, those that haven't been disappointed have been very quiet. Adding an FM tuner to the iPod, which was it the Nano. Actually, probably a good idea. It's a feature you could get from the Zoom or a Walkman, or you could have gotten from any number of people, companies a long time ago.
Starting point is 00:05:37 The video camera, people have been taught. I've seen people talking about how that's going to kill the flip camera, that Cisco product. Never going to happen, of course, crummy video cameras already exist in phones, and they haven't killed the market. It's really odd. It's sort of, you wonder why they had the party except that Steve was going to be there. Yeah, I have to concur.
Starting point is 00:05:55 I mean, I was trying to research the story for the podcast, and I was trying to figure out what the actual story was. You know, it just wasn't clear. I mean, FM radio, you know, they have it... I like an FM radio, but yeah. AM radio, now we're talking, but, I mean... That's where I get my news. Shannon, what did you make of it all?
Starting point is 00:06:12 Well, yeah, I mean, I think that it was kind of devoid of content, just as sort of brazen to sharper relief, the fact that Steve Jobs is back. That clearly was not even the subtext, it was the text of the event. One thing that is kind of cool, there's been an iTunes update that, can't wait to get back home and try it out, because it allows you to share your library across
Starting point is 00:06:31 multiple computers. If that really works, it's going to be a cool thing. Otherwise, it was much to do about nothing. You couldn't do that before? You could have it like five devices or something, but it was separate, right, if I recall? Exactly. So you can share it over your network, and there were ways around that, but this is the officially Apple-sanctioned way of doing it, Seth. Huh, it just seems like they're catching up to features that have been available from others for a while. But, hey, you know, Apple can take credit for them and everyone will be happy. Yeah, what I really want is a memory expansion spot, but something tells me that's never going to happen. No, that's for losers. We're trying to decipher the tea leaves here,
Starting point is 00:07:02 but it sounds like Yahoo CEO Carol Bartz thinks her predecessor, Jerry Yang, made a mistake by not accepting the offer Microsoft made last year to buy out Yahoo at $33 a share. In an interview on CNBC this week, when Bartz was asked if she would have accepted the deal, she replied, quote, sure, do you think I'm stupid? Close quote. Barts is known for not mincing words during an earnings conference call last April, she dropped the F-bomb when talking about Yahoo's problems. Guys, I've said it before, and I'll say it again, I love Carol Bartz. Now, I will couch that by saying, I'm not a shareholder, but from an entertainment standpoint, I love this woman. She had you at the bad word. She had me at profanity. We all love a potty mouth here.
Starting point is 00:07:48 The best part about her is, according to the Wikipedia, she's in Minnesotan and a Wisconsin, So everybody has to love that. Well, sure, sturdy Midwest values. Hey, she was homecoming queen. Don't call her sturdy. All right. In all seriousness, though, I mean, is she a loose canon? Or is she a shrewd negotiator?
Starting point is 00:08:07 Because you could look at this as her way of saying, hey, you know what? We didn't accept this offer last year, but the stock's trading at 15 and a half right now. We're open for other offers. Well, I think she represents a breath of fresh air and a lot of clarity, which is what Yahoo needed. but the verdict is still out in terms of, or the jury still out in terms of whether she's an effective
Starting point is 00:08:28 CEO, I think we'll meet another year or two on that. Shannon? Yeah, I have a big crush on her as well, and there's a way in which people that are regarded as making gaffs, politicians quite frequently make what the media calls gaffed, and really they're just saying what the truth is. I think that she does that. The question is whether or not that's intended, and I almost don't even care, both for the entertainment value and just to state the obvious.
Starting point is 00:08:50 It's good to sort of clear the air and say, you know what, that was a dumb job. choice that was not taken back when Yang was in charge. And if I had it to do over, I certainly would not have made that choice. That's just a statement of obvious fact. And it gives them a lot of credibility, even if it does kind of undercut them in the short term, it gives them over the long run a lot of credibility to be that straightforward. Wow, I can't believe the sides, how the sides are shaping up here. As a guy whose schick is to always say the worst thing and be kind of the naughty person,
Starting point is 00:09:17 I think she's a little over the line. I think if I wouldn't do it, if I think it, if I think it's, it's over the line, it must really be over the line. I think that Jerry Yang screwed up, and I think we said so at the time, I think I said so, at least on maybe on some video on talking head CNBC. I'm a dude in a tie in a suit, therefore listen to me. But I don't know that I would have said what she said because it just seems a little more disrespectful than poor Jerry Yang deserved. So. I'm kind of curious, if this is what leaks out in public, What does she like in private?
Starting point is 00:09:52 You have to figure that behind closed doors. That's got to get wild. All right. As we head into the next week, guys, give me one stock in your radar. Shannon, we'll start with you, and I'll just say I'm hoping for something with an international flavor. You know what? I'm going to have to disappoint you on that. I came last week with insurer United Health.
Starting point is 00:10:11 I'm going to come back with another insurer, WellPoint, tickers WLP. And, you know, as the health care conversation, insurance reform conversation goes on, and it gets to be weaker and weaker sauce in terms of what the industry is going to have to soak up. I think the insurers are going to benefit from that. And even on the House side, some of the Democratic leaders are saying, we don't have to have a public option either. That's good news for private-side insurers continuing to do businesses. They've done it for all these years.
Starting point is 00:10:37 James? Shannon, have you been to Tim Horton's up there? You know what? There's an S.O. station that I'm looking at right now, there's a little Tim Horton's booth, and yes, I was there yesterday. Tim Hortons are everywhere in Canada. It's definitely, it's kind of like a Canadian Dunkin' Donuts. and they're just all over the place.
Starting point is 00:10:52 It's like an institution. It's an interesting company. I don't know if I... Is that your stock? If I'd invest. Let me give you a different one. Serial companies I've been looking at Kellogg's and Journal Mills the past few weeks.
Starting point is 00:11:03 I think they both have attractive valuations. I think they're very solid companies, and if you're looking for a little stability, you can purchase either one of them. Cereal companies, donuts? Who are you? James is getting his stock. We had cereal day yesterday, and I think James went to the rotunda and had cocoa puffs, and oh, this solves two problems for me.
Starting point is 00:11:20 I take inspiration from that, which is around me. I think this is like the pod person version of James, that it's not really James. It's like, it's the bizarreo James. It's just like, yeah, donuts. I love me some donuts. There is a weird antenna coming out of it. I've not had a donut in probably 10 years.
Starting point is 00:11:39 Seth? I'm going to go back to Yahoo. And I was originally going to be harsher in this evaluation, and I'm going to not try to be. too harsh. I don't want anyone to get in trouble, but I think there's room for Carol Barts to say what the f*** again, because I got this box in the mail with nothing on it, and it comes from Yahoo. And you actually have the box here in the studio. I'm going to unbox this on audio, and if you folks out there think that makes for terrible radio, you're right, but this is free,
Starting point is 00:12:09 so no complaints. Okay, so this box has a stupid speaker in it that yells Yahoo, right? It has a god-awful purple T-shirt. shirt size extra large what is this like 1995 everyone's wearing extra large or what does it say about me there's also a very strange foam bull in here and perhaps well the second weirdest thing
Starting point is 00:12:34 is this weird little stash bag that you can like hang around your neck what am I going to a fish concert loaded down with dope or something this is absolutely insane I don't know what you do in spare time there's this chocolate money I got tips on that.
Starting point is 00:12:50 It appears to be about Yahoo Finance launching some apps, one for the iPhone, one for the Blackberry, where you can get a kind of condensed version of Yahoo Finance on their homepage. But the ultimate irony is that the screenshot on the little piece of paper in here that shows the home screen on the Blackberry shows Yahoo's PE as 4,896. Wow. Now, as of Yahoo Finances quote today, that's only in the mid-800s level.
Starting point is 00:13:19 But I think they have some cost cutting to do. Folks in PR, I feel a little bad about doing this, and I know you're just trying to do your jobs. But this is a waste of money. Somebody like me doesn't need this. We can talk on a phone call, but stop wasting money on this kind of stuff and figure out what's going on, Yahoo.
Starting point is 00:13:36 I think they're hiding under their desks now. South Jason, James Early, Shannon Zimmerman in Montreal, guys. Thanks for being here. You're welcome. You're with you. Thanks for listening to this edition of Muntlet. full money. As always, people on the program may have interest in the stocks they talk about.
Starting point is 00:13:50 Don't buy or sell stocks based solely on what you hear. Do your own homework and make your own decisions. And remember, the conversation continues 247 at fool.com. I'm Chris Hill, and we'll see you next time.

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