PeterZ wrote:What rubbish. You'll find companies with a heavy reliance on research get pummeled by the stock market when their R&D expenses fall. Those expenses are directly related to the likelihood of future revenues materializing.
No, pure reality. Those research companies have R&D as their primary asset, therefore, it is considered an investment to put money there.
But paying for transportation is considered purely a negative by by far the majority of investors. There it does not matter if an increase in costs is because of poor management, or because of improvements made that will keep costs down years down the line, either is bad because it eats away at godly profits.
And as Biochem says(something i also have seen through relatives), even "good" R&D is getting hit seriously in the last decade or two. Quarterly results is the new god of capitalism.
And it sucks.
Which of course is why the exceptions, even partial exceptions, are having so much more success than their "equals".
US car makers is a prime example, they´re only still alive thanks to subsidies, even if they have shaped up a little bit since the worst crisis essentially killed them off.
At that time, their idea of planning for the future was effectively down to thinking in months(because that was the only way to satisfy the quarterly reports). While their more successful competitors were making plans for years or even decades ahead, and still are.