This is not looking good

The ‘Stros dropped the second game of the opening series of the season to the Giants on Tuesday night, 7-5. Frankly, the warning signs for this team are already glaring after only two games.
Andy Pettitte was cruising through 3 and 2/3rd’s innings when he walked Marquis Grissom (not a bad move; Grissom can only hit lefties) to load the bases to get to the light-hitting Neifi Perez. This is how Baseball Prospectus 2004 describes Perez:

Is Neifi Perez the worst hitter of all-time? We won’t go into the detailed arguments here, but he has a case, along with Hal Lanier and a few others. He’s still an excellent fielder, and he might be able to help a team if he’s used mostly as a late inning defensive sub. But regardless of how good a fielder he is, the thought of Neifi Perez breaking camp as the starting San Francisco shortop should be terrifying to Giants fans.

Perez promptly doubled, driving in all three runs. Then, two innings later, he whacks Pettitte again by doubling off of Tal’s Hill in center to drive in another run. So, the story line of this game is that Pettitte made Perez look like A-Rod. At least for one game.
In the meantime, Jimy (“I like veterans”) Williams has four promising young sluggers on this team who are capable of being regular players (Lance Berkman, Richard Hidalgo, Morgan Ensberg, and Jason Lane). The rest are either formerly good hitters in various states of decline (Biggio, Bagwell, and Kent), one below average hitter who has the potential to be average (Adam Everett) and one horrible hitter (Brad Ausmus).
In tonight’s game, Williams played two (Berkman and Hidalgo) of his four promising hitters. This team simply does not hit well enough to score sufficient runs without regular contributions from its best hitters. A good case can be made that Williams inexplicable platooning last season of the emerging slugger Ensberg with the below average veteran Geoff Blum may have cost the Astros the Central Division Pennant (which they lost by one game to the Cubs). If Williams continues that same trend this season by insisting on platooning Ensberg with the newly-acquired Mike Lamb, and failing at least to platoon the promising Lane in centerfield with the fading Biggio, then Astros GM Gerry Hunsiker needs to give Williams a pink slip quickly. Williams just may be that “baseball man” who is a good coach, but is overmatched as a manager.

Check out the Sports Economist today

Professor Sauer over at the Sports Economist has several really interesting posts to check out today:

A discussion of a recent New Yorker article that addresses economic historians’ thoughts on variations in human height.

Here and here, a discussion of the financial and economic issues relating to local government subsidies of stadiums; and

The myth of the “balanced book” as it relates to bets on sporting events, focusing on the three point shot at the buzzer of the last Saturday night’s UConn – Duke basketball game.

All are excellent posts on interesting topics. Check them out.

Corporate tax receipts

This Wall Street Journal ($) article reports on a new General Accounting Office disclosure that more than 60% of U.S. corporations didn’t pay any federal taxes for the boom years of 1996 through 2000.
Corporate tax receipts have decreased markedly as a share of overall federal revenue in recent years. In 2003, corporate tax receipts dropped to 7.4% of overall federal receipts, which is the lowest rate since 1983 and the second-lowest rate since 1934. Collections from the federal corporate income tax rose from $171 billion in 1996 to more than $200 billion in 2000. Receipts fell over the next three years, bottoming out at $131.8 billion in 2003, which is the lowest annual total since 1993. They are projected to reach $168.7 billion this year.
Predictably, politicians are already attempting to gain political mileage out the GAO disclosures:

“Too many corporations are finagling ways to dodge paying Uncle Sam, despite the benefits they receive from this country,” said Sen. Carl Levin (D., Mich.), who requested the study along with Sen. Byron Dorgan (D., N.D.). “Thwarting corporate tax dodgers will take tax reform and stronger enforcement.”

Of course, Senator Levin fails to mention that corporations simply pass higher corporate taxes on to consumers through charging higher prices for the corporation’s goods.
And from the other side of the political spectrum:

Conservatives depicted the GAO report as an argument for tax-code overhaul for both corporations and individuals. Dan Mitchell, a fellow at the Heritage Foundation, a conservative think tank, also noted in corporations’ defense that they have an obligation to shareholders to pay as little tax as they legally can.

While this is closer to the correct response than Senator Levin’s, it artfully dodges the fact that the Bush Administration — even with a Republican-controlled Congress — has done precious little to overhaul the utterly absurd federal income tax code.
Until either political party gets serious about tax reform in this country, expect to continue having stories such as this treated as a political football that is put away once the political campaign is over.

5th Circuit on group pleading of fraud allegations

In this recent decision (Southland Sec. Corp. v. INSpire Ins. Solutions, Inc., No. 02-1055 (5th Cir. March 31, 2004)), the 5th Circuit held that the group pleading doctrine for pleading a company’s public statements (such as press releases or regulatory filing statements) as a basis for fraud against corporate officers does not withstand the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 (PSLRA)’s specificity requirements. The Court observed that the PSLRA requires that untrue statements be set forth with particularity as to each individual defendant and that scienter be pleaded with regard to ‘each act or omission sufficient to give rise to a strong inference that the defendant acted with the required state of mind.'” In short, based on the PSLRA’s repeated references to “the defendant,” the 5th Cirtcuit concluded that Congress intended for plaintiffs to inform each defendant of the specific factual allegations attributable to his particular alleged fraud. In so holding, the 5th Circuit noted as follows:

Significantly, this court has never adopted the ?group pleading? doctrine, even before the PSLRA. While the PSLRA does not explicitly abolish the doctrine, it was not necessary to do so because Congress never made this judicial creation law to begin with. Even prior to the PSLRA, section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5 required plaintiffs to identify the roles of the individual defendants, and describe their involvement, if any, in preparing the misleading statements. [citation deleted] Even if this court were to conclude that the ?group pleading? doctrine existed in the absence of the PSLRA, it cannot withstand the PSLRA’s specific requirement that the untrue statements or omissions be set forth with
particularity as to “the defendant” and that scienter be pleaded with regard to “each act or omission” sufficient to give “rise to a strong inference that the defendant acted with the required state of mind.”

* * *

[C]orporate officers may not be held responsible for unattributed corporate statements solely on the basis of their titles, even if their general day-to-day involvement in the corporation’s affairs is pleaded. However, corporate documents that have no stated author or statements within documents not attributed to any individual may be charged to one or more corporate officers provided specific factual allegations link the individual to the statement at issue.

In sum, this is another in a long line of 5th Circuit decisions that require specific factual allegations to sustain a fraud claim against a defendant. Hat tip to The 10b-5 Daily for the link to this decision.

“I object,” said the fish

Crescat Sententia noticed the following observation from 7th Circuit Judge Richard Posner‘s opinion on the disclosure of Northwestern Memorial Hospital abortion records. Got to remember this one next time I’m pursuing a motion to quash discovery:

We’re still at a loss to understand what [the government] hopes to gain from such discovery. (We begged the government’s lawyer to be concrete.) Of course, not having seen the records, the government labors under a disadvantage, although it has surely seen other medical records. And of course, pretrial discovery is a fishing expedition and one can’t know what one has caught until one fishes. But Fed. R. Civ. P. 45(c) allows the fish to object, and when they do so, the fisherman has to come up with more than the government has been able to do in this case despite the excellence of its lawyers.

Move to the money

This BusinessWeek Online article provides a good summary of the groups and individuals who are throwing big bucks at the Presidential candidates. It’s always good to have this information handy when evaluating the integrity of a politician’s position on a particular issue.

Dan Jenkins on the 1954 Masters

Bar none, Dan Jenkins is the best writer on golf of our time. In this Golf Digest article, Mr. Jenkins relates his story about the 1954 Masters in which the legends Sam Snead and Ben Hogan dualed in an 18 hole Monday playoff. The entire article is a must read, and the mercurial Mr. Jenkins introduces us to the subject as follows:

When you’re a fledgling youth-type adult, it appears that all people in their 40s look old enough to be in a painting hanging on the wall of a stately home in England. It’s not until you limp into your 70s that people in their 40s look too young to vote, and college cheerleaders closely resemble Yorkshire terriers.
I point this out to explain why I wrote what I did 50 years ago when I was a fledgling youth-type adult sportswriter for a Fort Worth newspaper covering the Masters in Augusta.
This is the 50-year anniversary of that particular Masters. The 1954 Sam Snead-Ben Hogan Playoff Masters. What I wrote so astutely was that this was undoubtedly the last time we would see these two wonderful immortals go head-to-head for a major championship, seeing as how they were so ancient. They were nearing 42, after all.

Oops!

Emergency workers are sometimes lowering the chances that heart attack victims will survive by improperly administering CPR.

Health care industry eschews new technology

On virtually every visit to a private doctor’s office, I am amazed at the amount of clerical staff that even relatively small offices employ. Having run a law office for many years, I understand that the amount — and productivity — of clerical staff is an important component in the overall profitibility of the office. There is no discernible reason why that principle should be any different in most doctors’ offices.
This NY Times article may explain a part of this phenomenom. Despite pressure from an array of interest groups, only a few dozen medical centers across the country are making full use of the latest computerized patient safety systems. Hospitals and doctors contend that they have good reason to be cautious about the new technology because they believe that the computerized systems will never repay their multimillion-dollar cost, or will be outmoded or cost much less in a few years. Moreover, many doctors complain that using the systems to write prescriptions and order tests diverts them from patient care and running their offices on already stressful workdays.
The coordination of technology with patient care and medical practice business operations is one of the most challenging problems in the complicated field of health care finance at this time. This is an issue that we all need to follow closely.

Yeah, but do they have rubber chicken?

This NY Times article relates some airline industry executives’ frustration with the glowing media reports that low-budget airlines such as Southwest Airlines and JetBlue have been receiving recently. The article is a good summary of where the airline industry stands at this point, and includes the following classic Warren Buffett analysis of the industry generally:

Now anyone who really, truly understands the economics of airlines is probably too smart, or unstable, to be working for either an airline or a newspaper. As Warren E. Buffett has often pointed out, if one tabulates all of the airline industry’s finances since the day the Wright Brothers bounced into the air at Kitty Hawk in 1903, one will discover that, cumulatively, there has not been a single penny of profit. (Mr. Buffett has also suggested that, in hindsight, shooting down the Wright Brothers on that beach would have been a reasonable financial, if not moral, move.)