Corporate profits per dollar invested were very high through 2008 Q2. Indicators of 2008 Q3 are coming out now:
NonFinancial Corporations
- Economy stalls, but Google's 3Q profit still rises. This article offers zero evidence for the "economy stalls" part.
- Schlumberger revenues soar to $7.26 billion. Profit up 13% YOY
Financial Corporations
- JPMorgan Chase beats estimates with an 84 pct profit drop, revenue is worse than expected. But they still have profits! And their profit drop didn't stop them from acquiring WaMu.
- Wells Fargo profit falls 25 percent. Again, they have profits. And their profit drop did not stop them from outbidding Citigroup for Wachovia.
- Citigroup posts another loss. They have losses. Interestingly, these losses (among the biggest in the industry) did not prevent them from bidding for Wachovia although, admittedly, they could not outbid Wells.
- Insurer UnitedHealth reports 3Q profit drop. Still have profits.
I see no evidence here that a credit crunch is getting in the way of important business. In case you want to weight these items, note that total earnings for the quarter are $2.8 billion (IBM), $1.89 billion (Coke), $0.12 billion (Hershey), -$0.24 (Contin), $2.7 billion (Nokia), $1.35 billion (Google), $1.53 billion (Sch), $0.92 billion (Honey), $0.53 billion (JP), $1.64 billion (Wells), -$2.8 billion (Citi), $0.92 billion (UnitedHealth), -$5.2 billion (Merrill). I never said that it would be pretty for the FIRE industry!
1 comment:
Let me preface this by saying this is my new favorite blog; my friend recommended it a couple of weeks ago and now I am hooked.
Would you mind explaining in a stand-alone blog post what you mean by "the marginal product of capital"? Incidentally, I have a PhD in economics and actually did a dissertation on capital theory. But in light of the Cambridge Capital Controversy etc., I'm not sure what you mean by that term, especially as applied to the entire economy for a particular year (like 1931).
Thanks for any clarification.
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