Category Archives: oud

Amazon, PayPal, Square Fight For Small-Business Payments

Amazon.com ( AMZN ), PayPal ( PYPL ) and Square ( SQ ) are locked in a battle to win business from small and midsize businesses, according to recent announcements and a Bloomberg report. PayPal subsidiary Braintree is adding a service, Braintree Auth, that will allow merchants using all-in-one Web store builders such as BigCommerce to integrate Braintree more easily, the company wrote in a blog post Thursday . “Braintree shares our vision of enabling great e-commerce experiences for retailers all over the world,” said Troy Cox, senior product director at BigCommerce, which offers an all-in-one e-commerce Web platform. “With the launch of Braintree Auth, merchants have greater flexibility and more options to efficiently and securely run their businesses.” PayPal stock was up nearly 2%, above 39, in afternoon trading on the stock market today . The company is an IBD Leaderboard stock and has an IBD Composite Rating of 92, where 99 is the highest. The stock is below a 40.03 entry, trading just above an earlier entry at 38.62. Square stock was down 5.5% Friday afternoon, near 14.50. The company has a 59 CR, which measures key metrics such as earnings and sales growth. Though Braintree has been collaborating with partners such as BigCommerce for about a year , the announcement comes a day after Square said it was , for the first time, enabling anyone with a website to use Square to process a payment. Both Auth and Square aim their new website technologies at small and midsize companies. Such companies are Square’s core market; the company has about 2 million merchants. PayPal has more than 13 million merchants. According to Bloomberg , e-commerce leader Amazon has been succeeding in attracting small and midsize businesses to Amazon Payments, the platform it re-launched in 2013. “There’s a market for selling your soul to the devil,” Wedbush analyst Gil Luria told Bloomberg. “When you accept Amazon Payments, you get access to the coveted Amazon customers. The trade-off is you are opening your kimono to your biggest competitor.” Bloomberg says large retailers are unlikely to sign on because they do not want to give Amazon any such access to their customers and data.

Happy Hour: Build Your Own Smart Beta

I don’t own smart beta funds because I don’t believe they fit my strategy. Instead, I stick with a simple approach, four funds – a U.S., developed international, emerging markets, and treasury bonds – adjusting the allocation based on valuation. Basically, I move from expensive to cheap and if all equities are expensive then move from expensive to bonds. That’s the simplified version. I don’t believe smart beta would add enough “extra return” due to the adjustments. It’s very possible – I haven’t tested it – that I’d get a lower return from smart beta funds due to poor timing and higher costs, so I just stick with the lowest cost approach. Why pay more for something that I might not get? That’s the way I see it. It’s not perfect but it fits my mentality and it’s easy to manage. But if I could design the ideal smart beta fund around my strategy, it’d be based off a global index weighted by quality and price. The highest weighting would go to the highest quality, lowest priced stocks and move down from there. And I really see no reason to own every stock in said index. I’d eliminate all the highest priced, lowest quality stocks or expensive junk. And it would maintain a “cash position” if too many stocks exceeded a specific low quality and/or expensive limit. And it would do it all at a low cost. Pipe dreams, I know. Maybe someday it will be possible to build personally customized funds at a low cost. If it happens, I’m certain someone will screw it up. Anyways, the point of this was because of a slew of smart beta articles I saw this week. Smart betas “market-beating returns” are nice to look it. That’s the draw and the downfall. Too often people pick funds based on performance – not what best fits their strategy – because they don’t have a strategy or their strategy is to chase performance. So most investors will never see those returns. They’re not willing to accept periods of less than market returns to get the excess return over time. Most investors will get better returns simply by being more robotic. Less mistakes lead to higher returns over time. Doing nothing more often with a basket of basic index funds will get you a better return than chasing the best performing smart beta funds. All their doing is spending more money (via higher fees) to make the same costly mistakes. Once you’ve got doing nothing down pat, then look into smart beta and factor tilts. If it fits your strategy, then use it. And if not, then don’t. Last Call

Nvidia Conference: Virtual Reality, Smart Cars, Bartender Robots

Robot bartenders, a drone racetrack and liquid nitrogen-concocted food? Silicon Valley geeks know how to get down — and that’s just after-hours. Next week, graphics-chipmaker Nvidia ( NVDA ) is slated to host its annual GPU Technology Conference at the San Jose McEnery Conference Center where virtual reality, artificial intelligence and self-driving cars will take center stage. In conjunction, Nvidia will hold its analyst day Tuesday, when CEO Jen-Hsun Huang is scheduled to deliver a keynote talk. RBC Capital analyst Mitch Steves expects Nvidia to offer an update on its Pascal GPU architecture, virtual-reality offerings and automotive efforts. Steves upped his price target to 36 from 32 on Nvidia stock, which he rates a sector perform. “Overall, we are positive on the VR opportunity and believe that growth rates will remain robust,” he wrote in a research report. Virtual reality is getting a big splash this year, and tech names  Apple ( AAPL ), IBM ( IBM ), Alphabet ( GOOGL ) and Tesla Motors ( TSLA ) are on deck to attend the GTC alongside myriad startups like BriSky, a maker of industrial drones, and Lucid, which makes 3D cameras. Under the GTC umbrella, BriSky, Lucid and 10 others will compete Wednesday for $100,000 during the Emerging Companies Summit. Another eight are slated to present their VR tech in an eight-minute elevator pitch for a chance at $15,000. There’s no denying the summit’s success, which helped launch VR headset-maker Oculus and video game-streaming service Gaikai into worldwide recognition. Facebook ( FB ) later acquired Oculus for $2 billion, and Sony ( SNE ) paid $380 million for Gaikai. Mellanox Technology ( MLNX ) and Xilinx ( XLNX ) will present during the OpenPower Summit, Tuesday through Friday. Moore’s Law physics make power a challenge within the industry. Data centers need faster chips, but those chips overheat quicker. Other splashy GTC events include keynotes from IBM Watson Chief Technology Officer Rob High and Toyota Research Institute (under Toyota Motors ( TM )) CEO Gill Pratt on Wednesday and Thursday. Separately, GTC will feature speakers from Nvidia, Twitter ( TWTR ), IBM, Baidu ( BIDU ), Google and Disney ’s ( DIS ) Pixar.