Author Archives: hbcumoney

Just How Much Is Apple’s $117 Billion Cash Pile

“Cash is king.” – Unknown

Let’s compare the amount of Apple’s cash holdings to a few things:

If divided over all 40 million African Americans it would average out to $2,925 per person. The median net worth of African America is $2,170 (the lowest among all diaspora groups in the US).

It is 3.7 times the size of Harvard’s endowment (largest HWCU endowment and largest U.S. college endowment) and 216.7 times the size of Howard’s endowment (largest HBCU endowment).

It is 265.9 times the size of all HBCU research budgets combined.

It is 7.8 times the size of Jamaica’s GDP and 15.9 times the size Haiti’s GDP.

It is 6.2% of Africa’s entire GDP.

This is not to take any particular shot at Apple. It just happens to be the company with the largest corporate cash holdings at the time. US companies as a whole have $1.24 trillion in cash currently combined according to Moody’s which is 66% of the GDP of entire Africa. We’re talking “straight cash, homey” as Randy Moss said once.

Disclaimer: There is no ownership of any of the companies mentioned in this article by myself, my business, or my family as of this article’s publishing.

HBCU Money™ B-School: Dividend

1. A distribution of a portion of a company’s earnings, decided by the board of directors, to a class of its shareholders. The dividend is most often quoted in terms of the dollar amount each share receives (dividends per share). It can also be quoted in terms of a percent of the current market price, referred to as dividend yield.

Also referred to as “Dividend Per Share (DPS).”

2. Mandatory distributions of income and realized capital gains made to mutual fund investors.

1. Dividends may be in the form of cash, stock or property. Most secure and stable companies offer dividends to their stockholders. Their share prices might not move much, but the dividend attempts to make up for this.

High-growth companies rarely offer dividends because all of their profits are reinvested to help sustain higher-than-average growth.

2. Mutual funds pay out interest and dividend income received from their portfolio holdings as dividends to fund shareholders. In addition, realized capital gains from the portfolio’s trading activities are generally paid out (capital gains distribution) as a year-end dividend.

Learn more terms at http://www.investopedia.com

HBCU Money™ Business Book Feature – The Library of Babel

“The Library of Babel” is one of the most memorable stories by the great Argentine writer Jorge Luis Borges. This slim book contains Andrew Hurley’s English translation of the story, eleven illustrations by Erik Desmazieres, and an introduction by Angela Giral.

“Library” is the quintessential “Borgesian” tale. The story concerns an infinite library, composed of endlessly connected hexagonal galleries, and populated by inhabitants among whom have risen various weird belief systems and subcultures. The first-person narrator is one of the library’s residents. “Library” is a masterpiece of the fantastic and the metaphysical.

Giral notes in her introduction that Desmaziere’s engravings are not literal representations of scenes from the story, but rather “the product of a parallel imagination, inspired to create in visual images his own, equivalent universe.” The etchings have an elegant, majestic, and sometimes whimsical quality that effectively complements Borges’ unique imagination. This book would make a nice gift for lovers of Borges, or of fantastic literature in general.

Courtesy of Michael J. Mazza

The HBCU Money™ Weekly Market Watch

Our Money Matters /\ July 20, 2012

NAME TICKER PRICE (GAIN/LOSS %)

African American Publicly Traded Companies

Citizens Bancshares Georgia (CZBS) $3.75 (6.25% DN)

Carver Bank New York (CARV) $6.79 (9.47% DN)

Radio One (ROIA) $0.92 (5.00% DN)

African Stock Exchanges

Bourse Regionale des Valeurs Mobilieres (BRVM)  142.61 (0.22% DN)

Botswana Stock Exchange (BSE)  7 326.54 (0.01% UP)

Ghana Stock Exchange (GSE)  1 016.70 (0.23% DN)

Nairobi Stock Exchange (NSE)  83.54 (N/A)

Stock Exchange Mauritius (SEM)  1 742.85  (0.12% DN)

Johannesburg Stock Exchange (JSE)  34 260.76 (UNCH)

International Stock Exchanges

New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) 7 759.59 (1.18% DN)

London Stock Exchange (LSE)  2 935.15 (1.03% DN)

Tokyo Stock Exchange 733.82 (N/A)

Other

Gold 1 583.90 (0.22% UP)

Oil 91.58 (1.5% DN)

*All quotes reported as of 5:30 PM Eastern Time Zone

HBCU Money™ B-School: Passive Investing

An investment strategy involving limited ongoing buying and selling actions. Passive investors will purchase investments with the intention of long-term appreciation and limited maintenance.

Also known as a buy-and-hold or couch potato strategy, passive investing requires good initial research, patience and a well diversified portfolio.

Unlike active investors, passive investors buy a security and typically don’t actively attempt to profit from short-term price fluctuations. Passive investors instead rely on their belief that in the long term the investment will be profitable.

Learn more terms at http://www.investopedia.com/