Eventually some version of Joe Biden’s big social spending bill will pass. While we don’t know the final price tag, we can be sure of one thing: higher taxes will be needed to pay for the wide range of health care, education, childcare, and climate initiatives embedded in the bill. To understand the proposed tax […]
News & Insights
Tales from a Rooftop Solar Shopper…
Installing solar panels has been a goal since I bought my home in 2019. As my little ranch house is a classic 1971 fixer upper, my solar dreams have gotten shelved somewhere between asbestos abatement and eradicating carpenter ants. This changed for me in August with the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s report that we’re […]
Remember that book, Dow 36,000?…
We are almost there now…but this is not the timing the authors had in mind. The book, Dow 36,000, was written by James K. Glassman and Kevin A. Hassett and published in 1999. Their thesis was that stocks were worth a lot more than they were then trading at. In fact, an awful lot more. […]
How worried are we about the world?…
How worried should we be? The list of potential investing headwinds is growing. The economy looks like it’s decelerating as the Delta variant, supply chain constraints, and hiring challenges throw sand in the cogs of growth. Inflation is running hot. Some are even talking about stagflation, the combination of low growth and high inflation that […]
Wall Street explained – the CliffsNotes version
Those of us of a certain age will remember “CliffsNotes,” the condensed study notes that saved a lot of procrastinating students from academic purgatory. I still have never read War and Peace, but the CliffsNotes were great! Back in 2012, Jason Zweig, the excellent columnist in The Wall Street Journal, came up with the idea […]
Watch the scotch tape expense and don’t confuse luck for brains
“When mortals go through a prosperous period, it seems to be human nature for expenses to balloon. We are going to be the exception,” wrote Alan Greenberg, chair of Wall Street firm Bear Stearns, in one of his famous memos exhorting partners to watch expenses like a hawk and pinch every penny. It’s perfectly sensible […]
Electric utilities forge a new path forward
The Biden administration has laid out some aggressive goals to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. Among other things, these objectives aim to have “clean” energy (wind, solar, hydro, etc.) produce 80% of the nation’s total energy generation by 2030, up from approximately 40% today. This target follows on the recently rejoined Paris Agreement’s stated aim for […]
“Things are hopeless but not serious.” (Viennese Satirist, Karl Kraus)
The Social Security Trustees recently released their Annual Report August 31, which warned that the Social Security Reserve Fund would run out of money by 2033, one year earlier than previously projected. Social Security is paid from two sources: First from FICA payroll taxes, the 7.65% of gross pay paid by both employees and employers. […]
A labor market conundrum
You don’t need to look too far to see the negative impact that labor shortages are having on the economy. Long lines at grocery stores, restaurants with reduced hours, and childcare facilities capping enrollment are just some of the examples. As a long-time market observer, I find these persistent shortages somewhat perplexing. Under standard economic […]
Would you rent your furniture? Your tires?
We’ve fully embraced the rental and subscription economies, many would say. We don’t buy software in shrink-wrapped packages. We subscribe. We may buy a movie or music occasionally, but we more likely access our media through streaming services. We can get fashion from Rent the Runway. We can rent furniture too – and not the […]
Sensible wisdom never grows old
As Warren Buffett once said, “Investing is simple…but not easy.” There are only a few principles involved in being successful with money. Jonathan Clements, the Personal Finance columnist at The Wall Street Journal from 1994 to 2008, said there are only 25 different stories in Personal Finance. The trick, after you have written all 25, […]
Back to the office…Remedial education required
We here at Hanson+Doremus try to be “impactful” and “value-add.” We are all about “big data” (we read multiple newspapers!) we have “great capacity” (10+ employees!) and operate “holistically” and “sustainably” (just like the SATs, I am going to assume it is OK to guess on the meaning of some of these.) Buzzwords. Buzzwords. The […]