Thursday, 28 September 2017

With luxury operation, scarcity is part of the allure



“With luxury hotel operation, scarcity is part of the allure,” Mr. O’Connor said. “You can’t turn it into a commodity and get above-market rates.”

https://www.wsj.com/articles/two-vip-billionaires-teamed-up-to-run-luxury-hotels-its-been-a-slog-1500226911?mod=e2fb

Starting Small.

Starting Small. I'm a believer in starting small. Everything I've achieved has started in with one small step. After 8 yrs in my dad's socks biz, I had an 'idea' to start an online contests site. I was unsure if it would be a success & hesitant to start working on it. One day, I told my dad about the idea. He smiled, looked at me & said, "Alok, everything starts small. Just try it." After our successful sale of mobile2win, I wanted to get into online gaming. Dinesh Gopalakrishnan & I started games2win with borrowed games & a URL! I remember we would get 20-30 visitors a day. When we hit 50 visitors, we celebrated. We have 125 million downloads today. I started Art of Living meditation in 2001. It took me 11 years of 'tapasya' daily before I even met my Guru Sri Sri Ravi Shankar. Post that meeting, everything changed. Lessons, takeaways: - DON'T be obsessed to start with a Bang. You, your passion, a great idea & PLAN is good. Start small.  - Don't care about people joining you. "Jodi Tor Dak Shune Keu Na Ase Tobe Ekla Cholo Re” (If no one responds to your call, then go your own way alone) of Tagore is my favourite line on this - Take your time. You can't grow a Rose Garden in a day. All great things comes to those who wait.

Monday, 25 September 2017

The world's richest billionaires were from brands

Tall buildings - the financial returns are not good

Office Building 666 on Fifth Avenue Value over the years

1976 - $80 mn ($530 mn real value)

2000 - $518 mn ($830 mn real value) : 2% CAGR return from 1976 to 2000

2006 - $1,800 mn ($2,200 mn real value) : 18% CAGR from 2000 to 2006

2017 - $2,850 mn : 2.5% CAGR from 2006 to 2017


Note: For the most part, the returns were very low. Similar to government bonds. So, no point in taking additional risk?

Owners:

1957: Tishman family via Tishman Realty and Construction built the building

1976: Tishman sold it in 1976; Japanese realty and development company Sumitomo purchased in late 1980s

2000: The newly reconstituted Tishman Speyer Properties bought the building along with the German investment firm TMW

2006:  Kushner Properties (at the time the highest price ever paid for an individual building in Manhattan)

2017:  reports were made that Anbang Insurance Group of China was in talks to purchase an interest in the building

Note: Financial partners like investment firms and insurance firms are required in such large transactions. Only they have such large funds and are fine with low returns with low risk.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/666_Fifth_Avenue

Thursday, 7 September 2017

“When yields on corporate bonds are lower than dividends on stocks? That unnerves me.” - Goldman's Blankfein


Goldman’s Blankfein on Markets: ‘Things Have Been Going Up for Too Long’
By Liz Hoffman
Sep 6, 2017 2:15 pm ET
34 COMMENTS
Goldman Sachs Chairman and CEO Lloyd Blankfein
Goldman Sachs Chairman and CEO Lloyd Blankfein PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES
Goldman Sachs Group Chairman Lloyd Blankfein on Wednesday sounded a warning about the markets, saying that some of what he sees “unnerves” him.

Mr. Blankfein said the current market environment “doesn’t feel like tulip-bulb-mania,” a reference to the famous speculative bubble in the Netherlands in 1637, but was nonetheless concerning.

“Things have been going up for too long,” he told attendees at a Handelsblatt business conference in Frankfurt. “When yields on corporate bonds are lower than dividends on stocks? That unnerves me.”

Those remarks came near the end of a question-and-answer session with the Goldman chief. Mr. Blankfein participated via a video link, speaking from Goldman’s headquarters in New York.​

Here are some other highlights from his remarks.

On speculation that Goldman alum Gary Cohn could become the next chairman of the Federal Reserve:

​”​I think Gary is very very capable. He would be a different kind of person. Not an academic. I don’t know that he reads a lot of policy papers, let alone writes then, but there’s nobody who understands markets better​.”

Relative to current chair Janet Yellen, Mr. Cohn is “much less theoretical.”

“Who’s to say what’s better or not?​” he said, noting that past Fed chairs have had more of a markets bent. “I’d be willing to give that a try. I think he would do a different job, but a great job.”

On the Trump administration:

“Things could have gone better but I’m not without hope. A lot of what [President Trump's] trying to accomplish I’m friendly to. There are a lot of layers of protectionism and regulation that have been built up that impede progress. I think his good intentions are to take a lot of that away.​ ​I have some disappointment but also some hope.​”​

On the “Government Sachs” moniker and the perception of a revolving door between Goldman and the U.S. government:

“We have a lot of people who are civically minded…I’m proud of it. Their qualities are recognized. ​T​hey make a sacrifice and we feel the cost of that sacrifice, because they’re very capable people.”

On the Volcker rule, which limits proprietary trading by banks:

“You have people sitting on desks who are paralyzed out of fear… It has had chilling effect in people’s willingness” to make markets.

On declining revenue at the firm’s securities-trading division:

“We have always had periods of time where we haven’t done well. I’m not terribly aggrieved by it. It’s a level playing field for everyone. I think we can do well in this environment, and we can do well if they relax the rules.”

“We’re running in a horse race against our competitors. If it rains, it rains for everyone and we’ll run in the mud. If it’s sunny, we’ll all run in the sunshine.”

https://blogs.wsj.com/moneybeat/2017/09/06/goldmans-blankfein-on-markets-things-have-been-going-up-for-too-long/