Thursday, October 28, 2010

October 28 2010: Thoughts ahead of Q3 GDP


Lewis Wickes Hine Winter Newsie December 17, 1916
"Morris Levine, 212 Park Street, Burlington, Vermont. 11 years old and sells papers every day -- been selling five years. Makes 50 cents Sundays and 30 cents other days"


Ilargi: To order Stoneleigh's video presentation "A Century of Challenges", which keeps drawing rave reviews across Europe and North America, CLICK HERE or click the button on the right hand side just below the banner.





Ilargi: Master graph-maker Doug Short requested I do a guest post for his site, dshort.com, after he saw my alterations of his work regarding the Consumer Metrics Institute data. This post appears on both sites simultaneously.







Ilargi: In anticipation of tomorrow's announcement of Q3 GDP by the BEA, here's a comparison of the BEA numbers with a series of other data.

Let’s start with a bit of "history". I first published on the Consumer Metrics Institute's CMI growth Indices in August '10, after seeing Doug Short's graphs in which he combined the CMI 91-day index with BEA's GDP numbers and the S&P 500.


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While the comparison is inviting, as is obvious to anyone who sees it, it's not perfect. So I began to tinker with Doug's work. The first step was to move the CMI 91-day data forward vs GDP by roughly one quarter. Not only does this line up peaks and troughs with remarkable accuracy, it also addresses the fact that the 91-day index is a leading indicator, something that’s easy to see when you realize that it's updated daily, while this week’s Q3 GDP numbers are published a full 4 months after Q3 began. It looks like this:


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I then also shifted the S&P data, something that's a bit harder to explain as both an act in itself and as a phenomenon. What I can say is that the S&P is highly volatile and follows the GDP numbers with, again, remarkable accuracy, only it does so with about a one quarter delay. Now, most of us will feel that the markets have a leading role in the economy, and they do, but it's not the only role they play. They are very much followers too, something I’m convinced we'll see confirmed when in Q4, our present point in time, economic numbers will deteriorate. The result is:


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The problem of course remains the same: we won't be allowed to know what happened in the past 4 weeks until 3 months from now. At least not by the BEA. However, if we can build a sufficiently solid case for CMI data as a leading indicator for "official" GDP numbers, perhaps we won't have to wait that long. We won't be able to offer 100% certainty, since we have no crystal ball, but we might yet be able to make you give this some serious thought.

Friday's Q3 GDP numbers are not all that important. As Doug has previously noted, the “real" data won’t be known until well after the November 3 mid-term elections, when the BEA publishes its first revision. Note that the Q2 numbers only recently went through a second revision, which was down 33% from the first one, lowering GDP growth from 2.4% to 1.6%. That is, more than 5 months after the start of Q2, the BEA still needed to revise its data by a third.

Back to CMI. The 91-day growth index is not the only index they publish, and in fact I find it gets a bit too much attention compared to the others. Which are the 183-day and the 365-day index. Since I had never seen these in a graph, I contacted RIck Davis at CMI in September, and he provided one, saying that they'd never done this graph before, and that it does indeed look interesting. Here's the graph that Doug made which adds these two indices, both with the same one-quarter shift as the 91-day:


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I first contacted Doug last week, and I think that was the first time he saw my versions of his own graphs. He called them "fascinating" and asked me for the post you're reading. The reason I wrote to him, as well as to Rick Davis at CMI, was a question Doug fielded from a dshort.com reader, who wondered how it was possible that the US Census Bureau reported a +7.3% y-o-y rise in retail sales in September '10, while the CMI 91-day index is tumbling.

Earlier, I had seen a Gallup report on consumer spending that showed a drop of -10.6% over that same period.



These are the kinds of things that make me itchy. All parties involved, Gallup, Census Bureau, BEA and CMI, may have different survey methods, and they may measure somewhat different areas of spending. But an 18% difference in findings is simply too much, it lacks credibility.

So who's right? At a certain point it comes down to one's own trust in the various methods. I did ask Gallup for their thoughts on the gap between their data and the government's, but they've unfortunately failed to respond to date. Which is a shame, since even with a bucketful of caveats, the Census Bureau seems to make Gallup look grossly incompetent. And not only Gallup, CMI too.

It would be interesting if Doug can, for a future post, obtain the complete Gallup and Census Bureau files, and incorporate them in a graph. For now, though, we still have to interpret the possible CMI indices. This is no easy matter. As I said, we have no crystal ball. However, we can't deny that the CMI 91-day index, when shifted, has that eery compliance with the BEA GDP numbers. Still, when we look at the 183 and 365-day graphs, we see a much smoother "motion". They take away much of the volatility that's inherent in the 91-day.

We need to recognize that this also means that the 365-day can shift us away, whether up or down, from more recent events, in that it averages out an entire year. And there lies a big clue as to why it is much smoother than the BEA GDP numbers, which measure only 91-day increments. This means that the 365-day then becomes a very solid and reliable index, potentially much more so than the GDP, even if, as I said, it can miss out on very real, more extreme moves.

The expectation among "experts" is that the initial report on Q3 GDP will come in around +2%. Remember, this can undergo strong revisions later on. If we look at the 365-day index in the graph above, we can make a preliminary "prediction" (remember, no crystal ball) for GDP going forward.

As the graph is right now, that is with the 3-month shift forward, Q3 GDP according to the CMI 365-day index comes at around +1.25%. And if I can be bold for a moment, I would say chances are that no matter what number is published tomorrow, the BEA Q3 GDP will be very close to that after all revisions have been done. Sadly, we won't know until say, Christmas. If we look at what the 365-day would appear to say about Q4, I would say we come to about -0.5% (average the graph over the 3-month window).


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While it's still all too close to crystal ball territory for (my) complete comfort, I am convinced that this is a far more solid way of interpretation of the data then the "bare" comparison of BEA and the CMI 91-day index, because both, on account of their limited timeframes, are subject to high volatility.

NOTE: it is for instance entirely possible that we will decide at some point that the 365-day needs to be shifted forward a little more, which would move the fall in GDP also further into the future. But that is not the most important thing here: we're not aiming for details, but for trendlines. And the CMI 365-day index, which as of this morning stands at -2.86% (even as the 91-day shows signs of "recovery"), looks like a solid indicator for such a trendline, far too solid to ignore. Also, seeing that in the most pronounced part of the last downturn, Q4 2008, the 365-day never went below -2%, while BEA GDP scraped -7%, we may well have something worse than -2.86% ahead of us.

Lastly, I remain curious about the discrepancy found in the Gallup and CMI vs the "official" data. And I’m not ashamed to state that I, like many others, have strong doubts about just about any number the US government publishes these days, whether it's GDP or unemployment.

In the latter case, we have a "second opinion" available in U6 vs U3 data, which indicate a US unemployment rate of 17.1% instead of 9.6%. What we try to do with the CMI data is seeking to find a similar "second opinion", this time for GDP and consumer spending.

To be continued, no doubt.






Previous articles on CMI and related data:











A Paralyzed Fed Defers Decision On Monetary Policy To Primary Dealers In An Act That Can Only Be Classified As Treason
by Tyler Durden - Zero Hedge

As if there was any doubt before which way the arrow of control, and particularly causality, points in America's financial system, the following stunner just released from Bloomberg confirms it once and for all. According to Rebecca Christie and Craig Torres, the New York Fed has issued a survey to Primary Dealers, which asks for suggestions on the size of QE2 as well as the time over which it would be completed.

It also asks firms how often they anticipate the Fed will re-evaluate the program, and to estimate its ultimate size. This is nothing short of a stunning indication of three things:

  • That the Fed is most likely completely paralyzed due to the escalating confrontation between the Hawks and the Doves, and that not even Bernanke believes has has sufficient clout to prevent what Time magazine has dubbed a potential opening salvo into a chain of events that could lead to civil war: in effect Bernanke will use the PD's decision as a trump card to the Hawks and say the market will plunge unless at least this much money is printed,

  • That the Fed is effectively asking the Primary Dealers to act as underwriters on whatever announcement the Fed will come up with, and thus prop the market, and, most importantly,

  • That the PDs will most likely demand the highest possible amount, using Goldman's $2-4 trillion as a benchmark, and not only frontrun the ultimate issuance knowing full well what the syndicate of 18 will decide in advance of what the final amount will be, but will also ramp stocks on November 3 to make the actual QE announcement seem like a surprise.


This also means that the Primary Dealers of America, which include among them such hedge funds as Goldman Sachs, such mortgage frauds as Bank of America, such insolvent foreign banks as Deutsche, RBS, UBS and RBS, and such middle-market excuses for banks as Jefferies, are now in control of US monetary, and as we explain below fiscal, policy.

It also means that the Fed has absolutely no confidence in its actions, and, more importantly, no confidence in how its actions will be perceived by the market which is why it is not only telegraphing its decision to the bankers, but is having its decision be dictated by them, an act so unconstitutional it would be seen as treason in any non-Banana republic!

This is the last straw confirming that the only ones left trading the market are the Fed and the PDs, passing hot potatoes to each other, and the HFTs, churning the shit out of everything else to pretend someone is still trading.

And the saddest conclusion is that this is the definitive end of US capital markets: not only is the Fed's political subordination a moot point, but the Fed, and the middle class' purchasing power via the imminent dollar destruction that is sure to follow as the PDs seek to obliterate their underwater assets by raging inflation, is now effectively confirmed to be a bitch of Lloyd Blankfein and his posse.

The official explanation for this unprecedented incursion by the banking crime syndicate in US monetary policy is as follows:

Avoiding Disruption

Treasury officials say they want to avoid any disruption to the $8.5 trillion market in U.S. government debt, the world’s most liquid, as the Fed weighs restarting large-scale asset purchases. The Treasury also doesn’t want to give any impression to investors, particularly those based overseas, that it might be coordinating with the Fed to finance the national debt.

“Treasury debt-management decisions are designed to deliver the lowest cost of borrowing over time and are entirely independent from monetary-policy decisions made by the Federal Reserve,” Mary Miller, assistant secretary for financial markets, said in an e-mail to Bloomberg News yesterday. Before joining the Treasury last year, Miller was head of global fixed- income portfolio management at T. Rowe Price Group Inc. in Baltimore.

The Treasury is scheduled to hold its quarterly meetings with bond dealers tomorrow, ahead of the department’s Nov. 3 refunding announcement.

Fill in the blank: the Fed has essentially given PDs the option of $250BN, $500BN or $1 trillion in monetization over six months. It is now absolutely clear that the PDs will pick the biggest number possible... which incidentally amounts to $2 trillion per year, and is precisely what Goldman's downside case was, as we presented previously.

The New York Fed surveyed primary dealers required to bid in U.S. debt auctions. It asked dealers to estimate changes in nominal and real 10-year Treasury yields “if the purchases were announced and completed over a six-month period.” The amounts dealers can choose from are zero, $250 billion, $500 billion and $1 trillion.

Of course, since a $2 trillion purchase over 1 year means the Fed will have to monetize every single bond issued, the SOMA limit will have to be raised, another prediction we made months ago:

The Fed is unlikely to buy up the entire supply of new securities, although it may adjust its internal guidelines of how much it can hold of any given issue. The Fed limits itself to owning no more than 35 percent of any specific security it holds in its System Open Market Account, or SOMA.

“Our Treasury strategists point out it could also cause pricing distortions along the curve, if, for example, the Fed continues to target a 40 percent purchase concentration in the 6-10 year maturity bucket, as it has in its recent purchases,” analysts at JPMorgan Chase & Co., including Alex Roever, wrote in an Oct. 22 research report. The report predicts the Fed will buy about $250 billion a quarter during the easing campaign.

How about $500 billion?

And, incidentally, since the "independent" Treasury will be forced to issue more debt to fill all the demand for $2 trillion over the next 12 months, as there is not enough debt in the pipeline to fill $2TN worth of demand and prevent the entire curve pancaking at zero (i.e., the 30 year yielding precisely 0.001%) it also means that the government will be forced to come up with more deficit programs, which also means that primary dealers will now also determine US fiscal policy.

Which begs the question, why is anyone pretending that the political vote on November 3 matters at all?

Below are the 18 banks that, in a completely separate vote, will henceforth rule America, regardless of what particular puppets end up in the Congress and Senate:

BNP Paribas Securities Corp.
Banc of America Securities LLC
Barclays Capital Inc.
Cantor Fitzgerald & Co.
Citigroup Global Markets Inc.
Credit Suisse Securities (USA) LLC
Daiwa Capital Markets America Inc.
Deutsche Bank Securities Inc.
Goldman, Sachs & Co.
HSBC Securities (USA) Inc.
Jefferies & Company, Inc.
J.P. Morgan Securities LLC
Mizuho Securities USA Inc.
Morgan Stanley & Co. Incorporated
Nomura Securities International, Inc.
RBC Capital Markets Corporation
RBS Securities Inc.
UBS Securities LLC.





Fed Asks Dealers to Estimate Size, Impact of Debt Purchases
by Rebecca Christie and Craig Torres - Bloomberg

The Federal Reserve asked bond dealers and investors for projections of central bank asset purchases over the next six months, along with the likely effect on yields, as it seeks to gauge the possible impact of new efforts to spur growth. The New York Fed survey, obtained by Bloomberg News, asks about expectations for the initial size of any new program of debt purchases and the time over which it would be completed. It also asks firms how often they anticipate the Fed will re- evaluate the program, and to estimate its ultimate size.

With their benchmark interest rate near zero, policy makers meet Nov. 2-3 to consider steps to boost an economy that’s growing too slowly to reduce unemployment near a 26-year high. Financial-market participants are focusing on the size, timing and maturities of likely purchases aimed at lowering long-term rates, with estimates reaching $1 trillion or more.

"If they buy too much, I think there’s a real chance that rates are going to rise because people are worried about inflation," said Stephen Stanley, chief economist at Pierpont Securities LLC in Stamford, Connecticut. "If they don’t buy much, they’re not going to have a market impact." William Dudley, president of the New York Fed and vice chairman of the Federal Open Market Committee, set expectations of about $500 billion for a new round of so-called quantitative easing, a figure he used in an Oct. 1 speech.

Investor Concern
"What the market wants to hear is that the Fed is going to buy $1 trillion" of Treasuries, said Joseph Lavorgna, chief U.S. economist at Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. in New York. "Concerns that it might be less is causing investors to worry about how deep and broad this program is going to be."
Treasuries rose for the first time in seven days today, pushing the yield on the benchmark 10-year note down two basis points, or 0.02 percentage point, to 2.698 percent as of 10:38 a.m. in London. The yield climbed to the highest in more than a month yesterday on speculation that the Fed will buy less debt than some traders had been expecting.

Europe’s Stoxx 600 Index increased 0.7 percent today and Standard & Poor’s 500 Index futures rose 0.3 percent. The New York Fed’s survey coincides with a Treasury Department questionnaire asking dealers about the outlook for bond-market liquidity. Treasury officials say any additional program of asset purchases by the Fed won’t affect borrowing plans.

Avoiding Disruption
Treasury officials say they want to avoid any disruption to the $8.5 trillion market in U.S. government debt, the world’s most liquid, as the Fed weighs restarting large-scale asset purchases. The Treasury also doesn’t want to give any impression to investors, particularly those based overseas, that it might be coordinating with the Fed to finance the national debt.

"Treasury debt-management decisions are designed to deliver the lowest cost of borrowing over time and are entirely independent from monetary-policy decisions made by the Federal Reserve," Mary Miller, assistant secretary for financial markets, said in an e-mail to Bloomberg News yesterday. Before joining the Treasury last year, Miller was head of global fixed- income portfolio management at T. Rowe Price Group Inc. in Baltimore. The Treasury is scheduled to hold its quarterly meetings with bond dealers tomorrow, ahead of the department’s Nov. 3 refunding announcement.

Treasury Yields
The New York Fed surveyed primary dealers required to bid in U.S. debt auctions. It asked dealers to estimate changes in nominal and real 10-year Treasury yields "if the purchases were announced and completed over a six-month period." The amounts dealers can choose from are zero, $250 billion, $500 billion and $1 trillion.

"Yields would have to back up" if the market is overestimating the size of Fed purchases, said Joseph Abate, money-market strategist at Barclays Capital Inc. in New York. "The dealer community is running much less leverage than they did before. The amounts of inventory they are financing is smaller. Their capacity to absorb extra supply is lower." The Treasury is watching for signs the Fed’s buying program might affect market operations. Fed purchases would take place as the Treasury reduces debt issuance, raising questions of whether the government would have to sell additional securities to avoid market disruptions.

‘Nuclear Option’
"That’s certainly kind of a nuclear option for Treasury," Stanley said. "They would always and everywhere like to avoid that." Extra debt sales have happened just twice in the past decade, with so-called snap reopenings of existing securities in the aftermath of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks and at the height of the financial crisis, in October 2008. The Treasury acted to shore up market liquidity and prevent a trading freeze caused by shortages of highly sought securities.

The Treasury has put a premium on selling its debt in a regular and predictable fashion. Those efforts may be tested by the Fed’s purchase campaign, which would take place in the secondary market rather than at Treasury auctions. The Fed’s purchases might run as high as $100 billion a month, some analysts say -- almost equaling the entire amount the government is likely to sell.

‘Tugging’ the Wheel
"If the Fed commits itself to buying back the bulk of the Treasury’s net new issuance through open-market purchases, it will have more than one hand tugging on the wheel of federal debt management policy," said Lou Crandall, chief economist at Wrightson ICAP LLC in Jersey City, New Jersey. Crandall said the frequency of note auctions, combined with low interest rates, "sharply increases the likelihood of accidental reopenings in the next phase of the rate cycle."

The Fed is unlikely to buy up the entire supply of new securities, although it may adjust its internal guidelines of how much it can hold of any given issue. The Fed limits itself to owning no more than 35 percent of any specific security it holds in its System Open Market Account, or SOMA. "Our Treasury strategists point out it could also cause pricing distortions along the curve, if, for example, the Fed continues to target a 40 percent purchase concentration in the 6-10 year maturity bucket, as it has in its recent purchases," analysts at JPMorgan Chase & Co., including Alex Roever, wrote in an Oct. 22 research report. The report predicts the Fed will buy about $250 billion a quarter during the easing campaign.

The central bank makes the securities in its portfolio available to dealers through its daily securities lending operation, making it unlikely that Fed purchases alone would lead to an acute shortage of a given issue. For now, the Treasury is doing everything it can to show borrowing independence. The department is extending the average maturity of its debt and ramping up sales of 10-year and 30-year securities while cutting issuance of the medium-term securities the Fed is more likely to buy.




Fed Gears Up for 'Gradual' Stimulus,
by Jon Hilsenrath and Jonathan Cheng - Wall Street Journal

The Federal Reserve is close to embarking on another round of monetary stimulus next week, against the backdrop of a weak economy and low inflation—and despite doubts about the wisdom and efficacy of the policy among economists and some of the Fed's own decision makers. The central bank is likely to unveil a program of U.S. Treasury bond purchases worth a few hundred billion dollars over several months, a measured approach in contrast to purchases of nearly $2 trillion it unveiled during the financial crisis. The announcement is expected to be made at the conclusion of a two-day meeting of its policy-making committee next Wednesday.

The Fed's aim is to drive up the prices of long-term bonds, which in turn would push down long-term interest rates. It hopes that would spur more investment and spending and liven up the recovery. But officials want to avoid the "shock and awe" style used during the crisis in favor of an approach that allows them to adjust their policy, and possibly add to their purchases, over time as the recovery unfolds. Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke's push to restart the bond-buying program—a form of monetary stimulus known as quantitative easing—has been greeted with deep skepticism among some of his colleagues.

In some of his strongest words yet, Thomas Hoenig, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, said Monday that more expansive monetary policy was a "bargain with the devil." In the next few months, internal opposition to Mr. Bernanke's approach could intensify as presidents of three regional Fed banks who have expressed skepticism about the plan—Narayana Kocherlakota of Minneapolis, Richard Fisher of Dallas and Charles Plosser of Philadelphia—take voting positions on the Fed's policy-making body. There are 12 regional Fed banks, and five voting seats on the Federal Open Market Committee rotate among them every year, with New York always keeping one.

Investors already expect Fed action. Stock prices have rallied since Mr. Bernanke broached the idea of bond buying in late August. But investors and analysts are divided on whether the gambit will work. In normal times, the Fed reduces short-term interest rates when it wants to spur growth. But the central bank already cut short-term rates to near zero in 2008, so it is turning to an unconventional measure.

Some Fed officials argue the economy is going through long-term changes that the central bank can't rush, and worry a large bond-buying program might only stoke future inflation or a new asset bubble. But the view likely to prevail at the Nov. 2-3 meeting is that the economy is falling short on two fronts: Unemployment, at 9.6%, means the Fed is falling short of its legal mandate to maximize employment. Inflation, which is running a bit above 1% so far this year, is below the Fed's informal objective of about 2%, and runs the risk of falling even lower. With so much unused capacity and spare labor, many officials contend, the Fed is unlikely to stoke a worrisome amount of inflation.

Though details remain to be being sorted out internally, the broad outlines have taken shape. Unlike in March 2009, when the Fed laid out a program to buy $1.75 trillion worth of Treasury and mortgage bonds over six to nine months, officials this time want flexibility as they assess if the program is working. Mr. Bernanke has used the analogy of a golfer with a new putter: Unsure how it will work, he finds best strategy is to tap lightly at first and keep tapping until the golfer figures out how best to use the putter.

The Fed could leave open the possibility of more purchases in the future, particularly if inflation is projected to remain below 2% and the unemployment outlook remains high, which is currently the expectation of many officials. Or it could halt the program if the economy or inflation surprisingly take off, officials have said. Fed officials will update their forecasts for growth, unemployment and inflation through 2013 at the upcoming meeting.

Some investors are on edge about how the Fed will proceed. On the one hand, the Dow Jones Industrial Average has risen 12% since Mr. Bernanke began hinting about buying more bonds two months ago, a welcome rise inside the Fed. But commodities prices are also soaring, with copper, gold and oil prices rising 16%, 8.1% and 13% respectively. That could portend more inflation than the Fed wants. At the same time, the dollar has slid nearly 10% against the euro; that could help U.S. exports, but it creates tensions with trading partners. A sharp drop in the dollar could give Fed officials pause.

The main aim of a bond buying program would be to drive down long-term interest rates by pushing up the price of Treasury bonds and thus driving down their yields. From nearly 4% in April, the yield on the 10-year Treasury note has already tumbled to about 2.6%, in part because investors expect the Fed to be in the market buying bonds. Mortgage rates, closely tied to the 10-year note yield, have fallen to their lowest levels in more than four decades.

Some investors say the Fed doesn't have much margin for error next week. Too modest a move could disappoint those who say the economy needs aggressive Fed action, but an overly muscular approach could prompt concerns the Fed is overreacting. "There is room on either side for a negative surprise," said Mike Ryan, chief investment officer for UBS Wealth Management Americas.

A Wall Street Journal survey of private sector economists in early October found that the Fed is expected to purchase about $250 billion of Treasury bonds per quarter and continue until mid-2011, amounting to about $750 billion in all. New York Fed president William Dudley put forward one key benchmark in a speech earlier this month. He noted that $500 billion worth of purchases had the same impact on the economy as a reduction of the federal funds rate by one-half to three-quarters of a percentage point.

In speeches this week, Mr. Dudley repeated he found the economy's weak state "unacceptable" and said "further Fed action was likely to be warranted." The bond-buying program is likely to focus on Treasury bonds with maturities mostly between 2-years and 10-years, according to interviews with some officials. The Fed could buy even longer-term bonds, though some officials are reluctant to do that aggressively because it could expose them to long-term losses without much added benefit.




‘Savage’ Austerity Is in U.S.’s Future, Buiter Says
by Daniel Kruger and Tom Keene - Bloomberg

Fiscal austerity measures detailed [last week] by the U.K. government will soon be needed in the U.S., according to Willem Buiter, Citigroup Inc.’s chief economist. Britain’s deepest budget cuts ever, outlined by Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne, will eliminate almost 500,000 public-sector jobs and impose a levy on banks. The moves are part of a plan to reduce the 156 billion-pound ($245 billion) deficit, which is forecast to be 10.1 percent of gross domestic product this year, to 2.1 percent in the 2014-15 fiscal year.

"The only question was really the timing and the composition," given the finite willingness of financial markets to endure budget shortfalls, New York-based Buiter said in a roundtable interview on "Bloomberg Surveillance Midday" with Tom Keene. "This is very savage, but no more savage than what the U.S. will have to endure when it gets going."

Stimulus spending to revive the economy and the lingering effects of the recession on tax revenue pushed the U.S. budget deficit for fiscal year 2010 to $1.29 trillion, the second- largest on record, the Treasury Department reported on Oct. 15. The gap was surpassed only by last year’s $1.42 trillion shortfall. The U.S. will still be able to borrow for a while at "risk-free rates" because its markets remain bolstered by the dollar’s role as the world’s reserve currency, Buiter said. "It won’t last forever, that buffer of protection," Buiter said. "Market discipline is being eroded by the burden of unsustainable deficits."

‘Overhang’ on Economy
Governments now face the question of when to begin addressing budget imbalances, said Howard Davies, chairman of the London School of Economics, in the interview. "Our government has made a big throw of the dice today and said we’ve got to get on with it because the existence of this large deficit is an overhang on the economy preventing people from regaining confidence and investing," Davies said. "They know that at some point they’re going to have to pay increased taxes or public spending’s going to be cut."

The cuts are the right thing to do, Davies said. It’s an open question whether Osborne has focused "too much on spending and not enough on taxing," Davies said. "I hope he’s willing to be a bit flexible."




Fiscal disaster set to explode
by Justin Rohrlich - MarketWatch

American states face a perpetual Sophie’s Choice of sorts. When times are good, and you own a business, the last thing you want to do is give up more of your profit. When times are bad, the last thing you want to do is give up more of your diminished receipts.

But many U.S. states are now in a vicious cycle that will be exploding in December. As businesses lay off workers, fewer payroll tax dollars go into each state’s unemployment insurance trust fund. Simultaneously, as businesses lay off workers, more dollars are coming out of those states’ trust funds to pay unemployment benefits.

Since March of 2009, 31 states have borrowed billions from the federal government to continue paying out unemployment benefits while keeping their UI trust funds from insolvency. The federal stimulus provided for a moratorium on interest payments until Dec. 2010. And, as you likely know, that’s a month from now.

Take a look at California. The Golden State is on the hook for $11 billion in unemployment benefits this year but only taking in $4.6 billion. According to the Pew Center for the States, California would have to at least double its business tax to make up for the lost $6 billion.

Pew quotes Rick McHugh of the National Employment Law Project, who says it’s "important to pay attention to the… states in good shape. Washington State hasn’t had to borrow from the federal unemployment fund since the 1980s and — if things continue looking the way they are — it won’t have to anytime soon. Over the past decade, the state’s legislature and business community agreed to a set of taxes that kept the unemployment trust fund well funded throughout the current recession."

Companies headquartered in Washington like Starbucks Corp., Amazon.com Inc., and Costco Wholesale Corp., pay comparatively higher payroll taxes than do Texas-based companies like Dell Inc. and Whole Foods Market Inc.. But, while nowhere close to Michigan’s $382.57 per capita borrowing, now Texas’s unemployment insurance borrowing stands at $1.4 billion, which works out to $57.19 per person, still quite a bit higher than Arizona’s $6.50. It’s important to note that Texas also created half of all new net jobs in the country last year.

Even though state trust funds have now borrowed more, adjusted for inflation, than they did during 1981 and 1982, independent trader Jeff Macke doesn’t believe state governments’ UI trust funds will be driven to insolvency in December.

"It helps to think of this as you would a parent loaning his kids money," he told Minyanville. "Dad may really want to get paid back. He may impose all sorts of penalties on his non-paying children. But it would be stupid for Dad to drive his deadbeat children into destitution for missing a payment. Ruining the kid results in dad never getting paid back and likely incurring further expense when Junior inevitably gets into real trouble."




Zombie America vs. China’s Zombie-Eaters 2020
by Paul B. Farrell - MarketWatch

"Zombie Economics: How Dead Ideas Still Walk Among Us," could easily have been entitled "Zombie Capitalism." Why? The book is all about undead Reaganomics zombie-isms like "trickle-down" that nearly destroyed the American economy in 2008.

Now that same Zombie Capitalism is being resurrected by the Goldman Conspiracy of Wall Street Banksters and their new partner, the GOP Tea Party of No-No. Yes, folks, America’s self-destructive Zombie Capitalism has once again returned from the mausoleum of toxic undead ideas.

But this was so predictable. As Naomi Klein, author of "Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism," warned: "Free-market ideology will come roaring back when the bailouts are done, and the massive debts the public is accumulating to bail out the speculators will then become part of a global budget crisis."

Get it? The Zombie Capitalism of Reaganomics couldn’t kill us during the dot-com crash or subprime credit collapse, but now Zombie Wall Street is shooting for the "Third Meltdown of the 21st Century."

Wait, an even better title would be, "Zombie America." Why? America is not only enjoying Halloween, the great celebration of the undead, but in our election madness we also created a historic trick-or-treat, with invisible monster billionaire backers, ghoulish politicians and blood-sucking vampires emerging from graves in foreign sovereign nations to poison our souls from within.

But the scariest monsters this Halloween are the China Zombie Eaters who are devouring the dying jobs of Zombie Americans. China’s Zombie Eaters are infinitely more dangerous than all the spooky foreign nations funneling megabucks into the Chamber of Commerce’s Supreme Court-sanctioned lobby.

Here are 8 demonic reasons why China’s aggressive "economic warfare" is also a secret long-term defensive military strategy:

1. Zombie-eating China has a long-range plan to conquer America
Listen closely, because the nuttiest theories are so often revealed later as hidden truths. Remember Delaware Tea Party Senate candidate "I’m no witch" Christine O’Donnell. You may question her credibility about secret classified documents revealing that China has a "carefully thought out and strategic plan to take over America."

But still, the facts are that the China Zombie Eaters are destroying and devouring millions of American jobs.

We also know China is stealing U.S. state secrets, stealing proprietary patents, stealing our technology. We know China is hacking away, aggressively engaged in a not-so-secret cyber war against America. We also know China has forged alliances with America’s enemies, including Iran, Venezuela and North Korea.

So while you’ll chuckle at a non-witch’s "classified" plans, the fact is China Zombie Eaters are our worst nightmare, aggressively engaged in wars against America on multiple fronts.

As Ross Terrill, a China expert at Harvard, put it in the Wilson Quarterly: "The Chinese Communists are very aware of this contest with the United States, though Americans (beyond the Pentagon) are not."

Yes, Zombie America is clueless about the threat. And, Terrill warns, our lack of awareness will destroy us: "By being a shrinking violet, the United States would simply hand over the future to China."

2. Zombie-eating China ‘buys’ Australia with surplus U.S. dollars
Want more proof? Read Malcolm Knox’s recent piece in Bloomberg-BusinessWeek: "The Deal is Simple. Australia Gets Money. China Gets Australia." Wake up Americans. While our Zombie Politicians are fighting selfish turf wars this election cycle, China is using its foreign currency reserves (U.S. dollars) to buy rights to Australia’s commodities and natural resources, giving China Zombie Eaters long-term access to natural gas, minerals, iron ore and more.

A lot of those resources are found in Queensland, Australia, the home of John Quiggin, the economics professor who wrote the book "Zombie Economics." Quiggin also summarizes the five main undead ideas of "Zombie Capitalism" in Foreign Policy magazine.

3. China Zombie Eaters easily bully Japan into submission
In a recent New York Times column Nobel Economist Paul Krugman warned: "Last month a Chinese trawler operating in Japanese-controlled waters collided with two vessels of Japan’s Coast Guard. Japan detained the trawler’s captain; China responded by cutting off Japan’s access to crucial raw materials."

Bad news: Like a wounded tiger, China’s Zombie Eaters will turn against anyone. China controls 97% of "the world’s supply of rare earths, minerals that play an essential role in many high-technology products, including military equipment. Sure enough, Japan soon let the captain go."

4. China Zombie Eaters are aware of Pentagon war strategies
That trawler incident got me thinking of the Pentagon study from Fortune back during the Bush/Cheney years: "By 2020 there is little doubt something drastic is happening." The Pentagon warned that "as the planet’s carrying capacity shrinks, an ancient pattern of desperate, all-out wars over food, water, and energy supplies would emerge ... warfare is defining human life." You can bet China’s generals have the same strategic playbook.

Krugman fears the Zombie Eaters long-range plans: "I don’t know about you, but I find this story deeply disturbing, both for what it says about China and what it says about us. On one side, the affair highlights the fecklessness of U.S. policy makers, who did nothing while an unreliable regime acquired a stranglehold on key materials. On the other side, the incident shows a Chinese government that is dangerously trigger-happy, willing to wage economic warfare on the slightest provocation." Maybe even military action?

5. Zombie-eating China way ahead of Pentagon’s war planners
Krugman calls this "economic warfare." But the Marine Corps veteran in me sees a long-range strategy of out-flanking a complacent Zombie America.

It’s well-known the China Zombie Eaters are making deals all over the world — in Africa, South America, Russia and Asia — tying up long-term natural resources, using their surplus credits of U.S. dollar reserves to lock up essential global commodity futures. Meanwhile America’s Zombie Politicians waste time in myopic election turf wars for personal gain, failing to see that America’s consumers and taxpayers are financing China’s war plans. Wake up. Admit it.

So to echo Krugman: I don’t know about you, but on so many fronts China’s behavior smells like their leaders are doing lots more than expanding China’s economy (the Foreign Policy Journal predicts China will explode from 11% to 40% of the global GDP by 2040, creating a $123 trillion economy that will dwarf America’s GDP).

But even more deeply disturbing, China’s behavior tells us they are obviously engaged in long-term defensive military strategies as well as economic planning, and that in the future, another trawler incident may well provoke dangerously trigger-happy Chinese leaders into escalating from defensive military strategies to a preemptive strike protecting China’s economic power.

6. Zombie-eating China aided by the Goldman Conspiracy vampires
The Wall Street Journal reports that Goldman Sachs CEO Lloyd Blankfein (obviously supported by the ghost of former CEO Hank Paulson who left the American Treasury buried in a graveyard of trillions of debt) "is trying to rehabilitate its public reputation with an ad campaign." Yes, that undead Wall Street zombie will try "to show how it helps create jobs, is planning to make changes in the way it reports its finances and how it relates to clients, investors and analysts."

Warning: Goldman’s no passive zombie. They’ll always be the textbook bloodsucking Wall Street vampire for all future Halloweens, what Rolling Stone’s Matt Taibbi called a "giant vampire squid wrapped around the face of humanity, relentlessly jamming its blood funnel into anything that smells like money."

That image forever defines Goldman as an enemy of America, especially now for using its conspiracy of anti-capitalists to aid and abet China Zombie Eaters in their economic war to bury America for all eternity.

7. Zombie AARP retirees vs. American under-40 taxpayers
Unfortunately the coming domestic class war will further drain America’s global power. Soon America will resemble France. Total chaos today. President Sarkozy’s under siege for raising the retirement age from 60 to 62.

French bankers are still getting rich, like Wall Street. But they control government, budget cuts, austerity. Result? Class wars: Students stormed the French Senate. Trade unions blocked airports. Oil refineries forced closure of 3,000 French gas stations. Cost: $100 million a day.

French voters are not zombies, they’re role models. Soon Zombie Americans will revolt, arising as the undead. France has 62 million, America’s five times bigger. Imagine an American class war when Zombie AARP’s 40 million members react after our Zombie Congress raises the Social Security retirement age (or cuts benefits, or raises taxes).

Bet on a nationwide revolution of young voters, unions, unemployed and poor, as in France.

8. Warning: Zombies can’t vote … but zombies will revolt!
Remember "The Night of the Living Dead?" Their time is on the horizon. In the full moon, cemeteries will empty of the undead. Revolting, they will fulfill their destiny. They will take back America from the eternally greedy Zombie Bankers and feckless Zombie Politicians.

Happy Halloween all you zombies, ghouls, vampires, witches and devilish monsters sucking the blood out of America’s soul … your time is coming soon, the end of your evil ways, when a new "night of the living dead" revives our great nation.




Pimco likens US to 'Ponzi' scheme
by Philip Aldrick - Telegraph

US authorities are operating a "brazen" Ponzi scheme in government debt by buying trillions of dollars of bonds to stimulate the economy, according to Bill Gross, managing director of Pimco, the world's biggest bond house.
 

In a bid to restart the stalling recovery, the US Federal Reserve is next week expected to unveil a second round of quantitative easing (QE) of as much as $500bn, on top of the $1.2 trillion already completed. In typically robust comments, Mr Gross said the Fed had run out of other options but warned that more QE would in the long-term mean "picking the creditor's pocket via inflation and negative real interest rates".
 
"[Cheque] writing in the trillions is not a bondholder's friend; it is in fact inflationary, and, if truth be told, somewhat of a Ponzi scheme," he wrote on his investment outlook, arguing that creditors have always expected to be paid out of future growth. "Now, with growth in doubt, it seems the Fed has taken Ponzi one step further," he said. "The Fed has joined the party itself. Has there ever been a Ponzi scheme so brazen? There has not."

More QE is a huge gamble, he said, but necessary because the US is "in a 'liquidity trap', where interest rates or QE may not stimulate borrowing or lending because consumer demand is just not there." Mr Gross is best-known in the UK for saying gilts were "resting on a bed of nitroglycerine" as a result of the nation's high debt levels. Pimco has since reversed its position on the UK and advised clients to gamble on a British recovery.




Current Contraction Surpasses "Great Recession"
by Rick Davis - Consumer Metrics Institute

On October 20, 2010 the aggregate severity of the 2010 contraction in consumer demand surpassed the similar measure of economic pain experienced during the "Great Recession." And a glance at our "Contraction Watch" tells us that the pain is not about to end anytime soon:


Chart
(Click on chart for fuller resolution)


In the above chart, the day-by-day courses of the 2008 and 2010 contractions are plotted in a superimposed manner, with the plots aligned on the left margin at the first day during each event that our Daily Growth Index went negative. The plots then progress day-by-day to the right, tracing out the changes in the daily rate of contraction in consumer demand for the two events.

The true severity of any contraction event is the area between the "zero" axis in the above chart and the line being traced out by the daily contraction values. By that measure the "Great Recession of 2008" had a total of 793 percentage-days of contraction over the course of 221 days, whereas the current 2010 contraction has reached 820 percentage-days over the course of 282 days -- without yet clearly forming a bottom. The damage to the economy is already 3% worse than in 2008, and the 2010 contraction has lasted 28% longer than the entire 2008 event without yet starting to recover.

We have constructed a new chart to assist in the visualization of the "percentage-days" severity of the two contraction events:


Chart
(Click on chart for fuller resolution)


In the above chart the red vertical bar represents the -793 percentage-days of contraction in consumer demand that we measured in 2008. The blue vertical bar represents the same measure (to date) for the 2010 event. But since the 2010 event is not yet over, we have projected the eventual full extent of the 2010 event with the purple vertical bar. That projection is an average of several recovery scenarios, all of which conservatively assume that the bottom has already been reached.

Meanwhile, we are left to wonder if a bottom as been forming in the current contraction. A detailed view of our Daily Growth Index over the past 60 days could be viewed as either encouraging or simply "more of the same," depending on your state of mind:


Chart
(Click on chart for fuller resolution)


It is important to remember that our Daily Growth Index is a moving 91-day "trailing quarter" average for our Weighted Composite Index (converted from a nominal base-100 index into a year-over-year percentage change). As such it responds to the values of both the newest day's Weighted Composite Index (just entering the 91-day average for the first time) and the 92nd day back -- which has just fallen out of the average. The current values of the Weighted Composite Index are in the -5% to -7% range, whereas the oldest days falling out of the average reflect a weaker period in late July when the Weighted Composite Index was in the -6% to -9% range. Even if current consumer demand remains relatively constant we should expect the trailing 91-day "trailing quarter" to improve slightly from recent record lows over the next 30 days. But we are unlikely to see significant improvements until the current values of the Weighted Composite Index move substantially above the zone between 94 and 96 -- which we consider unlikely until after the mid-term elections (see our comments on the impact of Political "FUD" for why we consider that unlikely).




From time to time we have been asked whether we consider the current contraction in consumer demand to be the second "dip" in a "double dip" recession. From a qualitative perspective, we believe that the "Great Recession" is not so much a "double-dip" as a single "big-scoop" that changed character somewhere in the middle. We understand that the NBER says that the recession ended in June 2009. However quantitatively/technically correct that may be by NBER standards, by "Main Street" gut-feeling standards the NBER assertion is somewhere between questionable and ludicrous, depending on the personal circumstances of the observer.

Our data indicates that the consumer portion of the "Great Recession" unfolded (and is still unfolding) along these lines:

► The recession most likely started with a drop in consumer confidence, triggered by bad financial news (Bear Stearns, Lehman Brothers, etc.) and media coverage of the "Housing Crisis"/sub-prime loans.

► The initial recessionary downturn was accelerated by political uncertainties in 2008 and rising energy prices.

► An organic recovery started late in 2008 when energy prices collapsed, lasting well into 2009 with help from short term stimuli ("Cash for Clunkers" and the Federal New Home Tax Credit).

► During 2009 (and now deeply into 2010) a ruthless corporate obsession with short term earnings exacerbated the already weak employment picture, even as equity markets recovered.

► By late summer 2009 consumers realized that this was not a "garden variety" recession, as unemployment persisted and fixed incomes plummeted.

► By early 2010 demographically appropriate "frugal" consumer habits had emerged, reducing discretionary spending in favor of increased personal savings (or the paying down of debt).

The two reversals described above can be clearly seen in a chart of our trailing 183-day "two consecutive quarters" index -- which is designed to closely follow the "two consecutive quarters" definition of a recession -- for the past 48 months:


Chart
(Click on chart for fuller resolution)


Credit the growth spurt in the middle of the above chart to a combination of dropping energy prices, consumer shopping reverting to form after a brief hiatus, positive psyches as a result of a honeymoon with the new administration, and the consumer oriented parts of the stimulus packages. All that changed when consumers realized (in late 2009) that things were not actually getting any better.

But missing from the above narrative is the potential permanence of the damage inflicted on certain consumers. Those consumers living through foreclosures will have suffered lifestyle and financial reversals that may require a decade or longer to rehabilitate. And even those fortunate enough to stay current with their mortgages may have had their dreams of upward mobility (or mobility of any sort) crushed. In both of these cases the damage will have caused changes in habits (the "new frugality") that could last decades, if not the rest of their lives. The "Great Depression" of the 1930's changed an entire generation's attitudes about banks and spending permanently. While this economic strife may not be as severe, the emotional scars may persist longer than policy makers might wish.

Also absent from the above narrative is the impact of the Federal Reserve's extended "zero rate" policy on those attempting to live on a lifetime's modest accumulation of wealth. On Wall Street and inside the Beltway there are no perceived victims of low interest rates, because low rates result in obscene spreads between the real cost of institutional borrowing (essentially zero) and the real rate of consumer lending (18% to 24% on real-world short term loans). Meanwhile every barrier possible has been raised to prevent those lower rates from propagating to those most in need of longer term relief.

Lost on the policy makers is the fact that what's good for banks is not necessarily good for their depositors. Simply stated, it has become impossible to live on the earnings generated by a lifetime of middle class savings. In June 2007 an accumulation of $2,000,000 in an IRA or 401K would translate into $100,000 in annual income when invested in 1 year T-Bills, an annual income higher than the per capita income in any of the richest nations on earth. That was certainly a reasonable target for a middle class household, and one that would allow a comfortable retirement without significant changes in lifestyle.

Today the same $2,000,000 (if it was somehow preserved throughout the "Great Recession") would earn $4,200 per annum if invested similarly -- or roughly the per capita income in the Republic of the Congo. No wonder that many "Baby Boomers" are increasing savings and postponing retirement to the chagrin of younger people desperately looking for jobs; the alternative is a third-world lifestyle.




Wall Street Proprietary Trading Goes Under Cover
by Michael Lewis - Bloomberg

A few weeks ago we asked a simple question: Why are the same Wall Street banks that lobbied so hard to dilute the passages in the Dodd-Frank financial overhaul bill banning proprietary trading now jettisoning their proprietary trading groups, without so much as a whimper? The law directs regulators to study the prop trading ban for another 15 months before deciding how to enforce it: why is Wall Street caving now?

The many answers offered by Wall Street insiders in response boil down to a simple sentence: The banks have no intention of ceasing their prop trading. They are merely disguising the activity, by giving it some other name. A former employee of JPMorgan, for instance, wrote to say that the unit he recently worked for, called the Chief Investment Office, advertised itself largely as a hedging operation but was in fact making massive bets with JPMorgan’s capital. And it would of course continue to do so.

The fullest explanation came from a former Lehman Brothers corporate bond salesman named Robert Wosnitzer, who is now at New York University, writing a dissertation on the history of proprietary trading. He’s been interviewing Wall Street bond traders, he said, and they have been surprisingly open about their intentions to exploit one obvious loophole in the new law.

The innocent eye might have trouble spotting this loophole. The Dodd-Frank bill bans proprietary trading (Page 245: "Unless otherwise provided in this section, a banking entity shall not engage in proprietary trading") and then appears to make it clear what that means (Page 565: "The term ‘proprietary trading’ means the act of a (big Wall Street bank) investing as a principal in securities, commodities, derivatives, hedge funds, private equity firms, or such other financial products or entities as the comptroller general may determine").

Invitation for Abuse
The big invitation for abuse, Wosnitzer says, lies in the phrase "as a principal." It falls to the comptroller general - - or, more specifically, the General Accountability Office, which is overseen by the comptroller general -- to determine precisely what the phrase means. And, at the moment, the GAO pretty clearly hasn’t the first clue. ("We’re really too early in the process to speak to how we might define it," said spokeswoman Orice Williams Brown.) Never mind: Wall Street is busily defining the term for itself.

Make an Argument
"One trader I interviewed," Wosnitzer says, "said that from here on out, if he wants to take a proprietary position in a credit, he will argue that he bought the position because a customer wanted to sell the position, and he was providing liquidity; and in order to keep the trade on, he would merely offer the bonds 10 basis points higher than the offered side, so that he will in effect never get lifted out of the position, while being able to say that he is offering the bonds for sale to clients, but no one wants ‘em. When the trade finally gets to where he wants it -- i.e., either realizing full profit, or slaughtered by losses -- he will then sell it on the bid side, and move on.

Of course, there is all sorts of flawed logic here, but the point is that...there are a hundred different ways to claim to be acting as an agent or for a customer.’’ This ambiguity is no doubt one reason the financial reform bill passed in the first place. Even its clearest prohibitions are couched in language inviting Wall Street to evade them. But the new game of cat and mouse raises a simple, even naive question: Why do these giant Wall Street firms want so badly to make huge bets with their shareholders’ capital?

Save Us
After all, the point of the ban on proprietary trading is as much to save the banks from themselves as to save us from them. We have just come through a period where putatively shrewd individual bond traders lost not millions but billions of dollars for their firms, by making really stupid bets. Even before the crisis there was never any reason to think that traders at big Wall Street firms had any special ability to gamble in the financial markets. Anyone with a talent for investing is unlikely to waste it on Morgan Stanley or Bank of America; he’ll use it for himself, or for some hedge fund, which allows him to keep more of his returns.

And if this were true before the financial crisis it is even more true after it, when trading inside a big Wall Street bank will be less pleasant and more fraught with politics. Yet Wall Street’s biggest firms apparently still badly want their traders to be allowed to roll the bones. Why?

What They Do
One answer -- which Wosnitzer points to -- is that this is what Wall Street firms now mainly do. Beginning in the mid- 1980s, the Wall Street investment bank, seeing less and less profit in the mere servicing of customers, ceased to organize itself around its customers’ needs, and began to build itself around its own big and often abstruse gambles.

The outsized gains (and losses), the huge individual paychecks, the growing ability of traders to bounce from firm to firm from one year to the next, the tolerance for complexity that doubles as opacity: all of the signature traits of modern Wall Street follows from the willingness of the big firms to allow small groups of traders to make giant bets with shareholders’ capital, which the shareholders themselves don’t and can’t understand.

The new way of life began at Salomon Brothers in the early 1980s, right after it turned itself from a partnership into a publicly traded corporation; but it soon spread to the others. ‘‘That was the particular moment when a new culture of finance crystallizes," Wosnitzer says. "And it restructures all of finance. All of a sudden it’s ‘I made X, pay me X minus Y or, screw you, I’m leaving.’"

Keep It Simple
There’s a simple, straightforward way for the GAO to construe the Dodd-Frank language, and it would reform Wall Street in a single stroke: to ban any sort of position-taking at the giant publicly owned banks. To say, simply: You are no longer allowed to make bets in the same stocks and bonds that you are selling to investors.

If that means that Goldman Sachs is no longer allowed to make markets in corporate bonds, so be it. You can be Charles Schwab, and advise investors; or you can be Citadel, and run trading positions. But if you are Citadel you will be privately owned. And if you blow up your firm, you will blow up yourself in the bargain.




Insider Selling Volume at Highest Level Ever Tracked: 3,177 to 1
by John Melloy - CNBC

The overwhelming volume of sell transactions relative to buy transactions by company insiders over the last six months in key leading sectors of the market is the worst Alan Newman, editor of the Crosscurrents newsletter, has ever seen since he began tracking the data. The strategist looked at insider trading activity amongst the top ten companies that make up the Nasdaq such as Apple, Google and Amazon.

Then he analyzed the biggest members of the Retail HOLDRs ETF like Gap, Target and Costco, as well as the top insiders in the semiconductor industry at companies such as Altera, Broadcom and Sandisk. The largest companies in three of the most important leading sectors of the market have seen their executives classified as insiders sell more than 120 million shares of stock over the last six months. Top executives at these very same companies bought just 38,000 shares over that same time period, making for an eye-popping sell to buy ratio of 3,177 to one.

The grand total for the three sectors are "as awful as we have ever seen since we began doing this exercise years ago," said Newman, who was ahead on such trends as the dangers of high-frequency trading and ETFs before the ‘Flash Crash’. "Clearly, insiders are seeing great value only in cash. Their actions speak volumes for the veracity for the current rally."

But the overall market doesn’t seem to care. The S&P 500 is up 16 percent since its 2010 low hit on July 2nd on the back of strong earnings driven by cost-cutting and the hopes for even more quantitative easing from the Federal Reserve. The insider data "is good reason for considerable caution once the price action fades," said Simon Baker, CEO of Baker Asset Management. Still "insiders normally buy early and sell early too. Longer term -- 12 months out -- it is more of a red flag."

Newman isn’t alone in warning about insider selling. The latest report from Vickers Weekly Insider, a publication that makes investments based upon these transactions, shows that total insider sell transactions relative to purchases on the New York Stock Exchange are running at a ratio of more than four to one over the last eight weeks. The normal reading, because of options selling and other factors, is about 2 sales for every buy, according to Vickers.

To be sure, many investors feel the heavy insider selling is just an anomaly based on other reasons. "These are folks that have had to dip into their stocks for the first time in years, as their salaries have been cut and their bonuses, outside Wall Street, have been significantly curtailed," said J.J. Kinahan, chief derivatives strategist for TD Ameritrade. " This may speak more to a cash flow problem, then a market belief."

Still Newman, who is also a favorite commentator of Barron’s columnist Alan Abelson, sees the insider selling as just the latest reason, along with the mortgage foreclosure mess and fully invested mutual fund managers with no fresh powder to put to work, to be cautious on the market. "At the risk of sounding like a broken record, we expect a significant correction," said the newsletter editor.




U.S. Seeks to Shield Goldman Secrets
by Scott Patterson - Wall Street Journal

Goldman Sachs Group Inc. has always closely guarded the secrets of its lucrative high-speed trading system. Now the securities firm is getting a help from an unusual source: federal prosecutors. Federal prosecutors in Manhattan this week asked a federal district judge to seal the courtroom at the forthcoming trial of a former Goldman computer programmer accused of stealing the firm's computer code. The move was a formal request to empty the courtroom of the general public when details of Goldman's trade secrets are being discussed. The trial is set to start to late November.

Prosecutors also asked that any documents related to Goldman's trading strategies remain under seal. Such requests are common when proprietary corporate information could be exposed in a trial, lawyers say. This case is unusual in that it involves secrets about a potentially lucrative trading system, rather than, say, ingredients in a soda formula. Sergey Aleynikov, 40 years old, was arrested by Federal Bureau of Investigation agents in Newark Liberty International Airport on July 3, 2009, and charged with the theft of computer code behind Goldman's high-frequency trading platform. The programmer was indicted in February and has pleaded not guilty.

Motions filed this week by the government and the defense offer a window into arguments that will decide Mr. Aleynikov's fate. Prosecutors are expected to argue that his actions could have harmed Goldman Sachs. A spokesman for the bank declined to comment. Lawyers for Mr. Aleynikov, whom the indictment alleges uploaded Goldman code to a server in Germany and then downloaded it to his home computers, are expected to contend that the code he took only represented a fraction of the broader strategy and couldn't be used to hurt Goldman's business, court documents suggest.

Earlier this year, Mr. Aleynikov's defense team sought details from the government and Goldman Sachs regarding the bank's high-frequency computer systems. The court denied those requests. Lead defense attorney Kevin Marino, of the Chatham, N.J., law firm Marino, Tortorella & Boyle, argued in his motion this week that the defense requires access to information about Goldman's trading system to prove Mr. Aleynikov "could not have intended to injure Goldman" by taking the firm's trading code.

The bar for clearing a courtroom can be high, said Sandra McCallion, a lawyer specializing in trade-secret cases for the New York law firm Cohen & Gresser LLP. The government has to show that "this is something that is so secret that it will cause harm to [Goldman] if it were made public," she said. The arrest of the Goldman programmer helped put high-frequency trading into the spotlight last year. The strategy, in which powerful computers buy and sell securities at ultrafast speeds, has proved lucrative for many traders. The indictment said Goldman's high-frequency trading operation generated "many millions of dollars in profits per year."

The strategy also has come under heightened scrutiny amid concerns that some high-frequency traders were gaining unfair advantages in the market. The Securities and Exchange Commission has launched an in-depth study of issues surrounding high-speed trading and is considering several proposals to monitor it. This year, regulators have focused on the role high-frequency traders played in the May 6 "flash crash," when some of the fast-moving firms stepped away from the market during the height of the turmoil.

Court documents filed by the government in July 2009, soon after Mr. Aleynikov's arrest, state that Goldman's strategies involve "sophisticated, high-speed and high-volume trades on various stock and commodities markets." Prosecutors allege that Mr. Aleynikov transferred a substantial portion of that code to a computer server in Germany. He then downloaded the code to his personal laptop, which he allegedly brought to Chicago, where he had a meeting a firm that had hired him, start-up trading shop Teza Technologies LLC.

Teza became embroiled in its own legal battle following Mr. Aleynikov's arrest. Founder Mikhail "Misha" Malyshev and Teza employees were sued by their former employer, Chicago hedge fund Citadel LLC, for violating agreements not to work for a competitive firm. In mid-October 2009, a Chicago court granted sanctions against Teza. The Teza case showed how details surrounding a trading strategy can emerge during the course of a trial, including disclosures that the Citadel high-frequency unit pulled in about $1 billion in 2008.




US Mortgages to Drop Below $1 Trillion to Low Since 1996
by Jody Shenn - Bloomberg

Home lending in the U.S. will fall below $1 trillion next year to the lowest level since 1996, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association. Originations will decline to $996 billion in 2011, from a projected total of $1.4 trillion this year, the trade group said today in a statement released during its annual conference in Atlanta. Lending reached a record $3.8 trillion in 2003 as refinancing soared, with new loans remaining elevated over the next few years as home prices and sales boomed.

Rates that are unlikely to go lower even if the Federal Reserve buys more U.S. debt will cause refinancing to dissipate by the second half of next year, Jay Brinkmann, the mortgage group’s chief economist, said. A rush by U.S. homeowners to refinance at near record-low interest rates has marked a rare bright spot for the mortgage industry, under attack for choking the economy with shoddy loans and botched foreclosures.

"With these interest rates, you cannot be having a bad year in 2010," Dan Arrigoni, chief executive officer of Minneapolis-based U.S. Bancorp’s mortgage unit, the sixth- largest U.S. home lender, said yesterday during a panel at the conference. "It will probably go down as ranking number one or two for us, both in terms of production and profits."

Loan rates are influencing refinancing levels even more than during the last explosion in mortgages because tighter lending standards and an almost 30 percent drop in U.S. property prices since their 2006 peak are limiting consumers’ use of cash-out refinancings to tap home equity, said Brinkmann of the Washington-based Mortgage Bankers Association.

Refinancing to Drop
As new-mortgage volumes decline, lenders will need to trim their operations and face greater competition for loans that reduces lending margins, Brinkmann said.
Total home lending will drop next year because refinancing will fall "as mortgage rates increase and the pool of eligible borrowers shrinks," the group said in the statement. More loans for home purchases will offset some of that decline, as "existing home sales recover and home prices stabilize."

This year’s estimated $480 billion of home-purchase mortgages would be the lowest total since 1993, Brinkmann said. Next year, such lending may rise to $626 billion, as refinancing falls to $370 billion from $921 billion, his projections show. Home-loan executives including Arrigoni and Todd Chamberlain, who oversees mortgage lending at Birmingham, Alabama-based Regions Financial Corp., said at the conference that they will be able to respond to lower originations because they expanded this year by adding temporary workers and authorizing overtime for existing employees.

Home-Purchase Lending
Ron J. McCord, chairman of Oklahoma City-based First Mortgage Co., which makes about $1 billion in loans a year, said that he "brought back retirees" who can be let go. His company has been focusing on strengthening its home- purchase lending, including by building relationships with real- estate agents and training staff on government mortgage programs for American Indians, because "we all thought the refis could die this year," he added.

Increases in the value of mortgage-servicing contracts as interest rates rise, extending their projected lives by reducing estimated refinancing, will help some lenders offset lower origination profits, Arrigoni and McCord said. The average rate on a 30-year, fixed-rate mortgage fell to a record low 4.19 percent earlier this month, down from this year’s high of 5.21 percent in April, according to McLean, Virginia-based Freddie Mac.

Compared with a year earlier, existing home sales were down 19 percent in September, the National Association of Realtors said yesterday. Sales fell to a 4.53 million annual rate, exceeding the 4.3 million pace that economists forecast, according to the median projection in a Bloomberg News survey. The Mortgage Bankers’ estimates for total lending have declined from its forecast last month for $1.45 trillion of originations in 2010 and $1.06 trillion in 2011.




Mortgage Investors of the World, Unite!
by Shira Ovide - Wall Street Journal














CNBC has more news today about a pow-wow held by institutional investors to discuss mortgage issuers’ potential liability over problems with home loans. Deal Journal colleague Ruth Simon reported the New York meeting — called "Robosigners and Other Servicing Failures" — came amid increased interest among investors to pursue claims against mortgage-loan servicers and originators for packaging bad mortgages into investment securities.

As the FauxClosure Crisis spreads further, last week a group of institutional investors, including Freddie Mac, Fannie Mae, BlackRock and Pimco sent a letter to Bank of America, seeking to recoup mortgage-related losses. Analysts’ estimates of industry-wide mortgage hits to banks have gone as high as $130 billion




Fed Won’t Join Bank High Court Appeal on Crisis Loans
by Bob Ivry and Greg Stohr - Bloomberg

The Federal Reserve won’t join a group of the largest commercial banks in asking the U.S. Supreme Court to let the government withhold details of emergency loans made to financial firms in 2008. The central bank’s decision not to appeal makes it less likely the high court will hear the case, said Tom Goldstein, a Washington lawyer who has argued 22 cases before the high court since 1999 and whose Scotusblog Website tracks the panel.

The Clearing House Association LLC, a group of the biggest commercial banks, filed the appeal today. Under federal rules for appeals, a lower court’s order requiring disclosure remains on hold until the Supreme Court acts. "We will await a determination from the courts and will comply fully with any final order," said David Skidmore, a spokesman for the central bank. "The Federal Reserve remains committed to timely and responsible transparency of its operations."

The bank group is appealing a federal judge’s August 2009 ruling requiring the Fed to disclose records of its emergency lending. Bloomberg LP, the parent company of Bloomberg News, sued for the release of the documents under the Freedom of Information Act. The central bank has never disclosed the identities of borrowers since the creation in 1914 of its Discount Window lending program, which provides short-term funding to financial institutions, the Clearing House said in its petition.

‘Threatens to Harm’
"Disclosure of this information threatens to harm the borrowing banks by allowing the public to observe their borrowing patterns during the recent financial crisis and draw inferences -- whether justified or not -- about their current financial conditions," the group said in its appeal. The Fed’s emergency programs, which were "essential responses to the recent financial crisis," would be harmed if the central bank is forced to disclose lending records, the group said in a statement today. "Unless the ruling is overturned by the U.S. Supreme Court, businesses and individuals may decline to participate in these programs, possibly impairing the federal government’s ability to act effectively in times of crisis."

"Greater transparency results in more accountability, and the banks’ resistance continues to engender suspicion among taxpayers about the bailouts," said Matthew Winkler, Bloomberg News editor-in-chief. "The banks’ move to appeal will deepen the public’s skepticism and defend a position that every other court has disagreed with. The public has the right to know." Under the Supreme Court’s normal procedures, the justices may say as early as mid-December whether they will take up the case. If so, they would hear arguments next year and likely rule by July.

The central bank’s decision not to file its own appeal undermines a central argument against disclosure, said Simon Johnson, a finance professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and a former chief economist at the International Monetary Fund. "The banks are on their own -- their appeal without the Fed makes it clear that system stability issues are not at stake," Johnson, a Bloomberg contributor, said in an e-mail. The Fed and the U.S. solicitor general, who serves as the government’s top Supreme Court lawyer, will probably file a brief in response to the Clearing House petition, said Goldstein, of Scotusblog. He’s a lawyer at Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld LLP.

Possible Argument
One possibility is that the government will argue that the case isn’t worthy of Supreme Court review, even though it will say lower courts reached the wrong conclusion, Goldstein said. The fact that the banks appealed while the Fed did not "demonstrates the desperation of the banks to hide their true condition during the crisis," said Joshua Rosner, managing director of Graham Fisher & Co., an investment advisory firm in New York. "Political realities made it harder for the Fed to do the banks’ dirty work," he said.

The Fed is facing unprecedented oversight by Congress. The Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, known as Dodd- Frank, mandates a one-time audit of the Fed as well as the release of details on borrowers from Fed emergency programs. Discount Window loans made after July 21, 2010, would have to be released following a two-year lag. The Bloomberg lawsuit asks for information on that facility and others.

At issue in the litigation are 231 "remaining term reports," originally requested by the late Bloomberg News reporter Mark Pittman, documenting loans to financial firms in April and May 2008, including the borrowers’ names and the amounts borrowed. Pittman asked for details of four lending programs, the Discount Window, the Primary Dealer Credit Facility, the Term Securities Lending Facility and the Term Auction Facility. After averaging $257 million a week in the five years before March 2008, Discount Window borrowing jumped to a peak of $111 billion on Oct. 29, 2008. It was $20 million last week. The other three programs accounted for more than $800 billion in lending at their peak, according to Fed data.

"The Discount Window is problematic because the Fed since the 1930s has used it to provide assistance to banks on the verge of failure," said Joseph R. Mason, a finance professor at the Ourso College of Business at Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge. "Making loans means you add liabilities to the bank, so lending a bank money makes it more insolvent. This is a chance to show that the Fed did not lend to weak banks."

The New York-based Clearing House, which has processed payments among banks since 1853, includes Bank of America NA, Bank of New York Mellon, Citibank NA, Deutsche Bank Trust Co. Americas, HSBC Bank USA NA, JPMorgan Chase Bank NA, U.S. Bank NA and Wells Fargo Bank NA. In trying to avoid disclosing the documents, the Fed invoked one of nine exemptions to the Freedom of Information Act, or FOIA, which mandates the rules for public disclosures by the federal government. Exemption 4 makes allowance for "trade secrets and commercial or financial information obtained from a person and privileged or confidential," according to the law.

Revealing borrowers’ names may stigmatize them, said Brian F. Madigan, the Fed’s former director of monetary affairs. The stigma "can quickly place an institution in a weakened condition vis-à-vis its competitors by causing a loss of public confidence in the institution, a sudden outflow of deposits (‘a run’), a loss of confidence by market analysts, a drop in the institution’s share price, and a withdrawal of market sources of liquidity," Madigan said in a declaration that was part of the Fed’s defense.

Lower Court’s Ruling
Manhattan Chief District Judge Loretta A. Preska wrote in her Aug. 24, 2009, ruling that the risk of looking weak to shareholders and competitors was not reason enough to keep the information from the public. On March 19, an appeals court upheld Preska’s decision and on Aug. 20 the appeals panel denied the Fed’s request to reconsider. The central bank’s decision to stop appealing was unexpected, said David A. Schulz, a partner with the New York law firm Levine Sullivan Koch & Schulz LLP who filed a friend- of-the-court letter supporting Bloomberg’s position.

"I’m surprised that the Fed, after arguing strenuously that disclosures would jeopardize its ability to protect and regulate banks, would decide to back down," he said.
On his first day on the job, President Barack Obama vowed to open government information to its citizens. "The government should not keep information confidential merely because public officials might be embarrassed by disclosure, because errors and failures might be revealed, or because of speculative or abstract fears," Obama said in a Jan. 21, 2009, memo.




Wells Fargo admits foreclosure problems
by Suzanne Kapner - Financial Times

Wells Fargo, the second-biggest mortgage servicer in the US, has become the latest leading lender to acknowledge problems with its foreclosure procedures. The San Francisco-based bank said on Wednesday it planned to submit additional paperwork on 55,000 foreclosures before the courts in the 23 US states that require a judge’s approval before houses can be reclaimed. Wells said it expected to complete the additional filings by the middle of November.

The bank said it had no plans to institute a moratorium on the sale of foreclosed properties as other lenders had done, including Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase and GMAC. Wells ranks behind only BofA as a mortgage servicer in the US. "The issues the company has identified do not relate in any way to the quality of the customer and loan data; nor does the company believe that any of these instances led to foreclosures which should not have otherwise occurred," Wells said.

Wells said it had identified instances where foreclosure procedures "did not strictly adhere to the required procedures". Wells declined to elaborate on the lapses beyond saying that they involved notarisations and final reviews of some documents.

Lenders have become the target of government investigations, including a joint probe by the attorneys-general of all 50 states, after it emerged that employees had signed thousands of foreclosure documents without checking their accuracy, as required by law. Wells has insisted it did not use such "robo-signers". The FT previously reported that a Wells loan officer said in a sworn deposition that she signed hundreds of documents without checking important information, such as how much borrowers owed and how behind they were on payments.




Economy is running out of gas
by Rex Nutting - MarketWatch

The U.S. economy is in danger of sliding back into another recession, even before we’re fully recovered from the last one. There’s nothing surprising about the economic outlook. We know from reading our history that it takes a long time to recover from credit bubbles, but we’ve become impatient, expecting trends that evolved over decades to reverse themselves quickly.

We want the economy to fix itself, right now! But it won’t. The economy is slowly readjusting and rebalancing, but in the meantime it’s also suffering from a lack of demand to keep everyone employed.

Our political system tried some half measures to keep demand up, but has apparently given up on even those. The economy is running out of gas, and there’s no fueling station in sight.

Consumers are still hunkered down, and without further growth in consumer spending, businesses won’t have the profits they need to justify expanding their companies. Housing is still dead. Exports are benefiting from a weaker dollar, but foreign markets aren’t expanding as fast as they once were. And you can forget about any increased demand from the government.

Add it all up and you have to wonder: Where is the growth going to come from? Despite this gloomy assessment, few economists are predicting an outright recession, just very slow growth.

Levy forecasts recession

One exception is David Levy, chairman of the Jerome Levy Forecasting Center, who looks at the economy from the unusual perspective of profits, not gross domestic product. Levy says he sees "domestic profits eroding, corporate earnings becoming increasingly disappointing, and a 60% chance of a recession in 2011." Read more about the Levy Forecast.

Broadly speaking, a recession is a period of contraction in economic activity, usually associated with job losses, reduced output and reduced sales. By that definition, the economy began to recover from the recession in July 2009. Since then, GDP has grown about 3.5%, but employment is still down about 400,000.

Levy doesn’t use the typical economic models, which might be why he was one of the few who accurately predicted the housing bubble and the 2008 recession. Instead, he focuses on flows of funds through the economy, especially the flows that lead to profits, which play a central role in business cycles.

We’re taught that savings are good, but we’re not taught that it depends on who’s doing the saving, and how much. If everyone saves, then no one will spend. If no one spends, businesses will have no revenue, and workers won’t get paid. And no one will have anything to save.

In his latest forecast, Levy argues that deleveraging by consumers, banks, businesses, and state and local governments continues to hobble the economy. Balance sheets remain bloated by historic standards, which means the private sector will be saving more and spending less, probably for years to come. Federal government deficits made up for those private-sector savings, but only for a while.

Corporate profits were also bolstered by cost-cutting, especially by firing workers and cutting back the hours of the survivors. But in the aggregate, such tactics can’t be sustained, because reduced compensation across the whole economy ends up depressing corporate revenue. After all, consumer demand is dependent mostly on what consumers earn on the job.

Businesses aren’t investing, not because they don’t have the capital, but because they don’t see the demand coming back soon.

"Net fixed investment, normally the most important profit source, remains less than 2% of GDP (the postwar range until the last recession was about 4%-10%) with limited prospects for improvement in the year ahead," Levy wrote. "Deep problems mar the outlook for investment in commercial and residential structures, while overcapacity and slow topline growth expectations limit the potential of the present spurt in capital equipment outlays."

Hatzius says recession can be avoided

Most other economists are bearish, but haven’t come to the point of forecasting a recession. For instance, Jan Hatzius of Goldman Sachs is sticking to his prediction that the economy will avoid a recession, barely. He puts the odds of a recession in 2011 at 25% to 30%, but worries that one of his favorite recession indicators is flashing a red alert.

Since World War II, the economy has never once avoided a recession once the unemployment rate rose by more than 0.3 percentage points (on a three-month average). And it’s about to do just that, Hatzius says. The jobless rate, now at 9.6%, is expected to rise to 10% or more later this year or early next year. The economy is creating a few jobs, but not enough to keep the unemployment rate from rising.

Despite the 11-for 11 track record of this indicator in predicting recessions, Hatzius thinks we’ll avoid one this time, mostly because economic activity is already at such weak levels that the cyclical forces that usually push the economy into a recession aren’t in play. Most companies have already cut their payrolls to the bone, and won’t cut much more even if demand falters.

In other words, the economy isn’t strong enough to plunge into a recession. When you’re crawling, you don’t have far to fall.




US Companies Hoarding $1 Trillion In Cash
by William Alden - Huffington Post

As the economic recovery remains tepid, companies continue to sit on piles of cash, shifting it around internally rather than spending it. The hoard totals about $1 trillion for U.S. companies, Reuters reports, citing data from Moody's. For non-financial companies, the total is about $943 billion as of the middle of 2010, compared to $775 billion at the end of 2008, Moody's said.

Even though revenue decreased in the second quarter, corporate profits in the S&P 500 were up 38 percent from the same period last year, the Wall Street Journal reported earlier this month. Thanks to massive cost-cutting strategies, such as firing employees, it was corporate America's sixth highest quarterly profit ever.

Banks, which also have large cash reserves, used that money to pad their earnings reports, the WSJ says. Of the combined $16.8 billion that the 18 biggest U.S. commercial banks earned in the third quarter (not counting the $10.4 billion charge that stained Bank of America's earnings report), $8.1 billion came from their reserve funds, the WSJ says. At some banks, the contributions from these rainy-day funds outweighed the actual earnings. Of Citigroup's $2.2 billion profit, for instance, 92 percent, the WSJ says, came from its reserves.

According to the WSJ, banks didn't want to prettify their profits. There are rules that say they have to free up cash reserves as soon as it becomes apparent that they don't need them. JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon, the WSJ says, called the rules "silly." With interest rates near zero, banks and other companies can borrow money cheaply. But, as the New York Times pointed out earlier this month, the readily available cash won't stimulate the economy unless banks actually put it to use.

Charles Evans, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago, said earlier this month that the U.S. economy is in a liquidity trap, in which low interest rates don't spur spending. Companies and timid consumers gather piles of money and simply sit on them -- as the NYT put it, "because they can."




The new Wall Street: No bubble, no profits
by David Weidner - MarketWatch

For many reasons, Wall Street should be thriving. The bailouts have come and gone, leaving a vastly consolidated, less-competitive marketplace. Washington’s swipe at the industry, the Dodd-Frank Act, largely avoided remaking the industry or ending "too big to fail." The economy isn’t exactly humming, but the market is up, interest rates are low and deals are getting done. Yet the recent earnings reports from the biggest Wall Street banks don’t reflect this era of opportunity.

Most big banks — Bank of America Corp., Citigroup Inc. and J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. — posted profitable quarters, but they were built largely on the release of loan-loss reserves, a kind of insurance they took when then credit environment was at its bleakest. That little accounting trick is going to run out. Big brokerages, including Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Morgan Stanley, saw their numbers shrink from a year ago as they scaled back proprietary trading and investors stayed on the sidelines, flat-lining trading revenue.

Dull and restrained, some might take the most recent quarter as a reflection of missed opportunity or an anomaly of market forces acting against the banks. That assessment would be wrong, however. The financial industry did what it could. Hey, if Goldman can’t turn in a big quarter with all of its influence, real or imagined, something must be amiss. Something’s amiss. Without a bubble, Wall Street is a lackluster industry.

Profitable? Yes. But its ability to turn in the kind of performance it regularly turned out in the 2000s, without hollow capital being created out of dead-on-arrival Internet start-ups or straight-to-default mortgages, is questionable at best. Consider Goldman Sachs. In 2007, the brokerage had a profit of $11.6 billion, as it enjoyed the final days of the mortgage-security heydays. This year, Goldman is on pace for just $8 billion in profit, and that would only happen if the broker can rekindle the business it saw early in the year.

For big banks, the story is much the same. J.P. Morgan is regarded as the one that’s weathered the financial crisis best among the megabanks. It reported profits of $15.37 billion in 2007, but 2010 results probably will fall at least $1 billion below that amount. More telling: Stripping out those loan-loss reserves, the bank will probably earn closer to $10 billion. Like its peers, J.P. Morgan hasn’t been able to take essentially free money from the Federal Reserve and create a substantial profit by lending it out at interest rates of 3% or more.

The shrinking profits continue even as the megabanks see a rebound in investment banking. Revenue has surged to $47 billion through the first three quarters, after a dud 2009. Mergers are up to $750 billion in the latest quarter, the best in the last nine. Debt issuance has surged, equity offerings have been robust since spring 2009 and corporate lending is at its strongest level since early 2008, according to Dealogic. See Deal Journal’s investment-banking scorecard.

Bubble free, except bonuses
Wall Street’s loss may be the economy’s gain. Until 1985, the financial sector never represented more than 16% of the economy. During the bubble decade, the financial sector churned out 41% of domestic profits. There were a lot of contributing factors, but the biggest was the phony creation of wealth: overvalued tech companies that created paper fortunes and mortgage securitization that did much of the same. In between, Wall Street paid itself for the bubble, not for the pop.

Despite the more modest results across the industry this year, bonus pools point toward record compensation of $144 billion, a 4% increase from last year. A Wall Street Journal survey found that bonuses were rising at a faster pace than revenue. See WSJ report on 2010 bonus increases. In any other industry, something would have to give. Pay would have to come down as revenues fall and profits fall further. But Wall Street isn’t any other industry; it’s essentially a compensation machine. If just 10% of compensation were paid out as earnings, many firms would come closer to achieving the kinds of results they and their investors enjoyed earlier in the decade.

The good news is that investors may be on to this. During the last six months, the KBW Bank Index has fallen more than 18% and the Amex Securities Broker/Dealer Index is down 11% compared with just a 2% decline for the S&P 500 Index. Market analysts say some of the decline is due to the uncertainty surrounding new regulations. But given the numbers, investors have plenty of reasons to stop believing in Wall Street — and that doesn’t even account for the foreclosure tab that’s coming due. Given a healthy environment, banks and brokers aren’t performing. They’d have you believe otherwise, but investors aren’t living in a bubble anymore.




Mortgage Bankers Bristle at Notion of Giving Foreclosed Debtors Free Homes
by Jody Shenn - Bloomberg

The mortgage industry is casting aside concern that its foreclosure practices are rife with unfixable errors, even as executives acknowledge inappropriate practices such as robo-signing, officials said at a conference. The "number of attorneys that signed off on" the policies used when Wall Street firms packaged mortgages into bonds means it’s likely that the trusts used to hold the debt will be able to prove they own the loans in almost all cases, said Philip Seares, a managing director at Citigroup Inc. who run its trading of whole loans.

The industry also has faith that loan assignments handled by the Mortgage Electronic Registration System, or MERS, can’t be broadly contested, Seares and Mortgage Bankers Association President John Courson said at the group’s annual conference. They were countering claims from homeowner lawyers and academics such as Katherine Porter, a visiting professor at Harvard Law School, who say large numbers of borrowers that haven’t paid their mortgages may be able to avoid ever being foreclosed on.

"Everybody wants to believe in this Robin Hood scenario, where everyone is going to get a free house," Seares said yesterday during a panel discussion at the mortgage group’s conference in Atlanta. "That’s not really plausible." Scrutiny of foreclosure practices intensified last month when a memo showed Ally Financial Inc.’s GMAC Mortgage unit halted evictions in 23 states to review its policies. An employee said in sworn testimony that he and his team signed 10,000 affidavits and other documents each month without checking the accuracy of files.

Loan Servicers
Additional loan servicers including Bank of America Corp. then began reviewing their practices, also acknowledging notaries may not have always been present during signings. Attorneys generals in all 50 states started an investigation. This month, Ally and Bank of America resumed processing defaults, saying they had fixed improper policies, would redo incorrect filings and were otherwise confident in their foreclosure work.

They shouldn’t be, according to Porter, whose 2007 research examined practices of lenders and servicers foreclosing on bankrupt borrowers. "The robo-signing simply brought to light a whole array of impermissible practices," she said in a telephone interview earlier this month. The "hardest problem" to solve, she said, stems from mortgage-bond trusts needing to have possession of both so-called promissory notes and mortgages, with full records of transfers of their ownership, to "be on solid ground when they foreclose."

Typical Practices
Joshua Rosner, an analyst at New York-based Graham Fisher & Co., has also questioned whether mortgage-bond trusts did enough to take ownership of loans. Typical practices, such as filling in the names of trusts on notes and completing missing links in assignment chains only after foreclosure work has started, may encourage investors to challenge whether the debt met the requirements for delivery under bond contracts, he said. Ginnie Mae President Ted Tozer said he’s been given "no reason to believe" that securitizations didn’t include proper transfers of the ownership of home loans, though he plans to monitor how courts respond amid heightened scrutiny.

"Securitizations were fine," Tozer, whose U.S. agency guarantees securities backed by federally insured mortgages, said during a panel. The American Securitization Forum trade group, JPMorgan Chase & Co. bond analysts and law firm SNR Denton have also dismissed such talk. In a commentary posted on its website, SNR Denton says that most attempts to question the validity of practices can be trumped by items such as the fact that all parties involved "clearly intended" for the trusts to take ownership.

Legal Challenges
Legal ownership of the homeowners’ debt by the trusts is needed for foreclosures in their names, and for the trusts’ investors to qualify for tax benefits. MERS, which was created to limit the costs and paperwork involved in assigning mortgages to new owners by serving throughout as the party named in government records, has withstood numerous legal challenges, said Courson of the Mortgage Bankers Association. "Frankly, I’ve seen questions about the model but I haven’t seen anything that points me to there actually being anything wrong with it," he said.

Seares, who handles New York-based Citigroup’s brokering of pools of soured mortgages, said trading of the debt has remained robust amid the questioning of foreclosure policies, partly because sellers promise the paperwork will be accurate.

Debt Demand
While a lengthening of the time needed to complete foreclosures amid greater legal challenges by borrowers and the need to fix some items should in theory reduce prices for bad mortgages, there’s so much demand for the debt that values may be little affected, he said. It’s ironic that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the government-supported mortgage companies that have drawn almost $150 billion of U.S. aid since being seized in 2008, would be among those the most hurt if MERS were ruled invalid, he added.

"Fannie and Freddie were the ones who pushed MERS; pretty much everything they own is in MERS," he said "So it’s the taxpayers that own pretty much all of the loans that are in MERS" and would pay if legal efforts challenging its validity ever succeed. "I have too much to do to worry about" foreclosure- document speculation being dismissed by the industry, Fannie Mae Chief Executive Officer Michael J. Williams said in an interview at the conference.




US Builders Hit by Loan Put-Backs
by Diana Olick - CNBC

In all the headlines screaming about the big banks and their messy foreclosure practices, we may have overlooked another set of players in the scandal: Home Builders. The nation's big builders, as many of you new construction buyers may already know, have mortgage arms (pun intended) which originate loans. Builders originated $205 billion of loans from 2005 to 2008, according to Credit Suisse's Dan Oppenheim.

Like the big banks, their loan representations are now in question as well, which makes them a target of all the folks who bought those loans. "We see risk of $1.0 bln in additional mortgage repurchases (spread over several years) related to reps and warranties on loans originated by homebuilders between ‘05 and ‘08, which would represent 9% of book value on average," estimates Oppenheim. He notes that while banks and other big lenders have taken the largest reserves on mortgages sold to the GSE's (Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac), private label originations will also cause trouble as investors ramp up put-backs.

So who's at risk? Pulte and Hovnanian, according to Oppenheim. He estimates exposure could hit 16 percent of book for Pulte and 19 percent for Hovnanian. Toll Brothers and Meritage would have the least risk as Toll requires larger down payments, and Meritage's mortgage operation is pretty small.

Home builder analyst Ivy Zelman, who estimates that builders have recorded $330 million of losses related to loan purchases from 2008 to 2Q2010, sets up some best-to-worst-case scenarios and focuses on DR Horton, Lennar and Pulte as having the highest risk.

"Under our base case where put backs equal 20% of "troubled loans" and severities are in the 45-50% range, we estimate modest hits to book value ranging from 5% for DHI to 7% for PHM. This scenario implies that reserves increase roughly three-fold from the charges taken over the past two years. On the other hand, our bear-case assumptions would result in 9-13% equity erosion, while our bull case results in just a 2-3% hit to book value. In all three scenarios, we would expect these charges to be recognized over a multi-year period."

No question it will all take a long time, as the GSE's are more focused on the big banks, right now. Oppenheim also notes that homebuilder mortgage divisions are non-recourse, so the builders could ultimately just let them fail if they become too costly. Of course he reasons, "Tough to imagine that it would be so easy to pull off, as there were requirements that buyers use the mortgage subsidiary to get certain incentives, etc, which would make the businesses (homebuilding and mortgages) less independent."




End Bailouts—No Ifs, Ands, or Buts
by Chris Farrell - Businessweek

It's hard to imagine, but it looks like the beleaguered U.S. housing market faces further travails. And that means the financial system could be entering another perilous phase, especially since the economy continues to sputter. But this time around the U.S. Treasury and the Federal Reserve should send a clear message up front to the top brass at big financial firms: no more bailouts.

The latest setback for U.S. housing reflects growing doubts about the foreclosure procedures of the major mortgage loan servicers, such as Bank of America and JPMorgan Chase. The servicers are attempting to label foreclosure procedure problems as clerical errors, but the message isn't gaining traction. Instead, the attorneys general from every state announced on Oct. 13 that they are investigating the loan servicers for questionable foreclosure practices.

Major federal regulators are looking into foreclosures, too, including the Securities & Exchange Commission and the Federal Housing Finance Agency. The foreclosure investigations ratchet up the market uncertainty enveloping the already fragile housing market. Who wants to buy a foreclosed property without clear title, let alone a securitized package of mortgages?

Specter Of Forced Buybacks
The picture gets even uglier. Big investors are starting to exercise the rights written into many mortgage-backed securities requiring banks to buy back loans gone bad. For instance, Bank of America's market value dropped 3.4 percent on Oct. 19 on reports that three giant investors—Pacific Investment Management Co. (Pimco), BlackRock, and the Federal Reserve Bank of New York—want the lender to repurchase $47 billion of securitized mortgage bonds. There is a genuine probability that the mortgage-backed packagers could be on the hook for billions of dollars. Analysts at JPMorgan Chase estimated in an Oct. 15 report that the put-back price tag could reach as much as $80 billion.

The Obama Administration hasn't done much to address the latest developments in the housing market. Bravo. A hands-off approach is appropriate even though odds are many financial institutions will pay a steep price for the credit spree that ended disastrously with the credit crunch three years ago. Congress is hardly willing to contemplate another bailout. Foreclosure law is primarily a state issue. The courts are the proper venue for sorting out the fight between big investors and mortgage-backed securities packagers.

But the Administration should go farther. Seize the opportunity to tell bank managements bluntly that even in a worst-case scenario, "You're on your own. Oh, and by the way, we won't make management, shareholder, or creditors whole if you get into trouble."

Seize And Liquidate
That's right, the government should make its intentions clear that it will exercise the power authorized by the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act of 2010 and seize and liquidate any of the nation's biggest bank holding companies or investment banks if their deteriorating finances threaten the economy. A forceful stand like this will greatly reduce the risk that the combination of bad foreclosures and sour mortgage loans will create another financial catastrophe on the scale of September 2008.

There's another reason for acting tough now: It's payback time, and not in the petty sense of the phrase. No, the U.S. economy is at a "moral hazard" juncture. Moral hazard is a phrase economists use to describe the likelihood that the incentive to take greater and greater risks grows once management believes the government will bail them out whenever big bets go really bad. Risk-taking in finance means piling on leverage. In a moral-hazard economy, profits are privatized and losses socialized.

Inside Man, the documentary film by Charles Ferguson that delves deeply into the financial crisis, captures the ethos of a moral-hazard economy. "Fifty-billion-dollar deals were not large enough," said a financier. "So we'd do $100 billion deals." Many of these leveraged, swing-for-the-fences financiers are still in the game. With the notable exception of Lehman Brothers, the financial firms that took the biggest gambles, pocketed the most money, and made the most catastrophic mistakes were bailed out by taxpayers (although the cost appears to be a lot less than first feared).

Banks Win; You Lose
The same can't be said for workers, homeowners, and savers. Government statisticians reported that in September, 17.1 percent of the civilian labor force—more than 26 million workers—were unemployed or underemployed (i.e., involuntarily working part-time or otherwise marginally attached to the job market). Home prices are down some 30 percent since the mid-2006 peak, and further price declines are likely, with an estimated 3 million more vacant housing units than usual on the market.

Extremely low interest rates have boosted bank finances over the past two years, but they also cut sharply into the returns savers could earn on everything from money market mutual funds to certificates of deposit. The danger is that bailout is now the basic business plan of finance. "Now look into the future and imagine the next bubble, for we may be confident another bubble will come along unless human nature is totally altered by this experience," wrote the late Peter Bernstein, the dean of finance economists during the fall of 2008.

"Why should any CEO bother any longer to calculate risk vs. return in making business decisions? We can put it more strongly: 'Bailout' has become the operative concept of the new world order. As a consequence, the word 'risk' will soon disappear from the vocabulary of business management, at least large-scale business management." This is an outcome that needs to be averted at all costs. With the breathing space accorded by the stabilization of the financial system, now is the time to put the no-bailout hammer down.




Homeowners Protest HAMP: 'It's Just A Scam And The Banks Are Getting Everything'
by Arthur Delaney - Huffington Post

Judy Stratton said she and her husband Harry have tried since January 2009 to modify the mortgage on their home in Stayton, Ore. after a drop-off in demand for Harry's floor maintenance services. In August, Stratton said, they received a rejection letter from their bank saying they did not qualify for help per the Obama administration's Home Affordable Modification Program. "This was a lie -- 100 percent lie," Stratton said. "We ran off the guidelines. We met every single qualification to get a HAMP mod."

Nevertheless, Stratton said a foreclosure sale is scheduled for Nov. 24 on the home they've lived in for the past 10 years. She reached out to her friend Peggy Merrill, who attends the church where Stratton is music director. "I got together with Peggy and I was in tears: 'We're losing our house over a pack of lies!'" Merrill started doing some research into HAMP and did not like what she learned. "I was concerned about their house, but the more I got into it -- it's my tax money, $75 billion worth," Merrill told HuffPost. "It's just a scam and the banks are getting everything."

So they took to the streets. Merrill helped the Strattons organize what might have been the first grassroots anti-HAMP protest on Friday and Saturday. A group of six people picketed outside the state capitol in Salem, Ore. for six hours each day with signs that said things like "HOMES FORECLOSED - Your Tax $'s At Work."



HAMP was initially funded with $50 billion in Wall Street bailout money and $25 billion from taxpayer-owned Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Struggling homeowners are supposed to be eligible for the program if they live in their home, owe less than $729,750, and their mortgage payments amount to more than 31 percent of their monthly income -- and they have to prove it. Qualified borrowers who successfully make three months of reduced "trial" payments are supposed to be put into five-year "permanent" modifications. It often doesn't work out that way, as mortgage servicers lose paperwork and homeowners discover that the foreclosure process has moved faster than the trial process.

President Obama said the program would help three to four million people modify their mortgages. But through September, 728,686 struggling homeowners have been kicked out of the program; just 640,300 remain, the Treasury Department reported on Monday.

In a separate report on Monday, a federal watchdog said that some people who apply for HAMP "end up unnecessarily depleting their dwindling savings in an ultimately futile effort to obtain the sustainable relief promised by the program guidelines," and that "even in circumstances where they never missed a payment, they may face back payments, penalties, and even late fees that suddenly become due on their 'modified' mortgages and that they are unable to pay, thus resulting in the very loss of their homes that HAMP is meant to prevent."

Judy Stratton said she has reached out to her congressman and her senators but she doesn't know what to do next. She said, "My gosh -- there's no help."




Greece reignites Europe debt woes
by Ambrose Evans-Pritchard - Telegraph

Europe's debt woes have returned to the fore after Greek premier George Papandreou threw open the door to fresh elections and vowed to liberate the nation from "slavery and surveillance". Yields on 10-year Greek bonds jumped 31 basis points to 9.57pc and the euro tumbled 2 cents to $1.385 against the dollar as investors awoke to the risk of political upheaval in Greece, not helped by warnings from bond giant PIMCO that Athens will default within three years.

"We have not yet escaped the danger. I am sounding the alarm," said Mr Papandreou. While he promised to stick to the EU-IMF austerity plan, he threatened to go to the country if upcoming local elections fail to give his socialist PASOK party a clear mandate. "There can no deadlock in democracy, the people have the power to decide," he said. The main opposition group New Democracy has yet to give a watertight pledge that it would abide by the terms of the EU's €110bn (£97bn) rescue, or the "Memorandum" as it is known.
PASOK itself is fraying at the edges in any case. A socialist rebel candidate from the "anti-Memorandum" bloc leads the polls for the Athens region.

Mr Papandreou is responding with populist gestures, granting pensioners a €300 bonus and rejecting calls by Brussels and his own central bank for further belt-tightening. "There will be no new measures on wage-earners or pensioners, they have paid enough," he said. The fiscal picture is extremely delicate. Eurostat is expected to raise Greece's budget deficit for 2009 to 15.1pc of GDP from 13.3pc. Public debt will rise to 127pc instead of 115pc, bringing the country closer to a debt compound spiral.

Mohamed El-Erian, chief executive of Pimco, said the EU-IMF package prevents Greece from growing its way out of the crisis and will test political consensus to destruction. He said it would be healthier for both Greece and Europe to opt for orderly debt restructuring. Most investors seem to agree that the EU-IMF plan is unworkable, merely buying time for German and French banks to shift Greek liabilities on to EU taxpayers. A Barclays survey found that 82pc of clients expect the eurozone to face a debt restructuring, a sovereign default or even a full break-up by 2013.

Hans Redeker, currency chief at BNP Paribas, said global attention may switch back to Europe once the US Federal Reserve clears the air on quantitative easing next week.
"We are seeing a complete failure of the EU to agree on common foundations for how to solve the eurozone's problems. Germany is demanding a mechanism for controlled bankruptcy but the high-debt states refuse to accept this," he said. "And over the next few months we are going to find out what fiscal consolidation in Europe really means."




Pricks
by Garth Turner

In case, like me, you were cleaning your Hummer and missed the news, Canadian house prices are now overvalued by 23.9%. So says The Economist. That’s a national average, covering Bathurst NB and North Bay ON, as well as the places where people actually live. Which means it’s likely closer to 45% in Vancouver and 35% in the GTA. In fact, just above every day that passes now bring another little hunk of evidence that this blog is not totally on crack.

But that’s not the topic. Well, almost not. Those who believe my best-before date was in the Eighties, and that a US-style real estate correction in this country is impossible, often makes these points: (a) our banks are more conservative. (b) Canadians are cautious about debt. (c) We never had funny mortgages. Those are myths, of course. And to help us prove this, we’re joined by the TD Bank.

Here’s the story: Starting last Monday the bank is registering all its new home loans as collateral mortgages, rather than conventional ones. If you have no idea what that means, you’re normal. A collateral mortgage is a loan which is backed by a promissory note which is in turned backed by security. A conventional mortgage, as you know, is just a loan secured by a house. Normally the only people who are asked to sign collateral mortgages are folks who use their houses to arrange lines of credit with balances that can balloon, not a regular mortgage with a fixed amount owing and a standardized payment.

With a conventional mortgage there are strict rules about how much you can borrow determined by the value of the property when you take the loan. Not so with a collateral mortgage, because it’s actually a loan which is backed by your promissory note. That means you can borrow more than your house is worth.

Yes, just like those old fast-talking Ditech.com TV commercials offering American homeowners mortgages worth 125% of their home’s value – the ones we used to snicker at. Well, giggle no longer. TD is now shopping 125% collateral mortgages. In fact, bank customers (I’m told) are being encouraged to ‘register’ for 125% mortgages when they sign up, even if they don’t need all that money. It’s just there, the pitch goes, if you ever need it. Kinda like a built-in line of credit you don’t need to reapply for. (Of course, it should be lost on nobody that the bank just found a way around guidelines on loan-to-value ratios.)

OK, so much for the conservative Canadian bankers part. But it gets better. For the bank. With a conventional mortgage it’s your house backing the loan, which means transferring a mortgage is simple, and can be done for a couple of hundred bucks. But collateral mortgages cannot be transferred, since they’re more akin to personal loans. That means one must be discharged and a new mortgage arranged elsewhere if you want to move. Since that can cost thousands, not hundreds, it pretty much ensures you won’t.

But it gets even better. For the bank. With a conventional mortgage if you miss a payment there are standard procedures, which involve catching up in a timely fashion and maybe having to pay for a lawyer’s letter. But the terms of the loan remained fixed. Miss a collateral mortgage payment, however, and the bank has the right to slap you around with the imposition of a higher interest rate for the life of your loan. Just as the bank is registering these things with 125% principal amounts, so too is it registering interest rates as high as prime plus double digits. Just in case.

And it gets better. Guess for who? When a collateral mortgage renews, and you don’t like the rate being offered, you can’t just walk away and get another bank to lend you the money to pay TD off. Instead, the collateral mortgage/promissory note – which is registered (like a car loan) under PPSA – needs to be discharged legally. And you pay. Or you capitulate and stay a bank customer. Additionally, a borrower may find the collateral mortgage gives the bank the right to dip into any of their other bank-held assets if they happen to miss a payment or two.

Says a mortgage industry insider: "TD Bank’s move is brutal for customers unless they are share holders of the Banks. None mention the true legal / security implications and how it increases the bank’s security and sticks customers with more liability. "I am in the industry but we cannot speak out against this as strongly as we would like for fear of repercussions. Honestly think all banks are headed this direction, using TD Bank as a test case. Don’t think there is a conspiracy? Bet me."

Finally, given Canadians’ track record with debt lately (look at the chart I published here yesterday), is it such a good idea to dangle a 125% mortgage in front of people who are horny for granite, stainless and flat screens? Is this entrapment? So the next time some dinglenuts tells you we’re immune from real estate self-destruction because our banks are looking after our butts, just mimic a TD customer. Pucker and turn green.




Global extinction crisis looms, new study says
by Juliet Eilperin - Washington Post

A growing number of creatures could disappear from the earth, with one-fifth of all vertebrates and as many as a third of all sharks and rays now facing the threat of extinction, according to a new survey assessing nearly 26,000 species across the globe.

In addition, forces such as habitat destruction, over-exploitation and invasive competitors move 52 species a category closer to extinction each year, according to the research, published online Tuesday by the journal Science. At the same time, the findings demonstrate that these losses would be at least 20 percent higher without conservation efforts now underway. "We know what we need to do," said Andrew Rosenberg, senior vice president for science and knowledge at the advocacy group Conservation International and one of the paper's co-authors. "We need to focus on protected areas, both terrestrial and marine."

The survey, conducted by 174 researchers from 38 countries, came as delegates from around the world are meeting in Nagoya, Japan, to debate conservation goals for the coming decade. The researchers analyzed the International Union for Conservation of Nature's "Red List" - a periodic accounting that classifies mammals, birds, amphibians, reptiles and fish along a spectrum depending on how imperiled they are.

While many industrialized countries have undertaken conservation efforts at home and helped fund this work overseas, "the reality is we're still exporting degradation across the world" by taking food and other resources from the developing world, according to co-author Nicholas K. Dulvy. "We've transformed a third of the habitable land on earth for food production," said Dulvy, who co-chairs the IUCN's shark specialist group. "You can't just remove that habitat without consequences for biodiversity."

Southeast Asia's animals have experienced the most severe hit in recent years, stemming from a combination of agricultural expansion, logging and hunting. Species in parts of Central America, the tropical Andes of South America and Australia have also all suffered significant population declines, largely due to the chytrid fungus killing off amphibians. Forty-one percent of all amphibians are now threatened with extinction. Norway's environmental minister, Erik Solheim, who is attending the talks in Nagoya, said in an interview that this sort of accelerating biodiversity loss, coupled with climate change, should compel nations to act boldly: "Very clearly, there's an increasing sense of urgency here," he said.

The grim study underscores the failure by parties to the Convention on Biological Diversity to fulfill a 1992 pledge to achieve "a significant reduction in the current rate of biodiversity loss at the global, regional and national level" by this year. The convention's 193 signatories meeting this month in Japan will set a conservation target for 2020; a U.S. delegation is attending the two-week session even though the United States has not ratified the pact.

Environmental groups are pushing for a goal of protecting 25 percent of all land on earth and 15 percent of the sea by 2020. At the moment, roughly 14 percent of terrestrial areas and less than 1 percent of the ocean enjoy some degree of environmental safeguards. The new study documents the impact of such policies - 64 vulnerable species have begun recovering due to concerted conservation efforts, the article says. It provides a snapshot of how the world's birds, mammals and amphibians has evolved over three decades.

Two American species that had become extinct in the wild, the California condor and the black-footed ferret, have both made gains after being reintroduced, while several island species have boosted their numbers after humans took steps to shrink populations of invasive predators that were targeting them. The global population of the Seychelles Magpie-robin, for example, rose from fewer than 15 birds to 180 between 1965 and 2006 after the island's brown rat numbers came under control.

In some cases, a disparate combination of policies have helped species regain a foothold: the Asian crested ibis went from critically endangered in 1994 to endangered in 2000 due to protection of its nesting trees, controls over chemicals used in nearby rice fields and a prohibition of firearms. In some instances, policymakers and scientists are just beginning to grapple with the challenges faced by some species - such as sharks, skates and rays. Jack Musick, professor emeritus at the Virginia Institute of Marine Science, helped oversee a global study that suggests roughly 33 percent of cartilaginous fishes are threatened.

Musick, who started studying sharks in the Atlantic a half-century ago and began a shark survey in the Chesapeake Bay and Virginia's coastal waters in 1973, said he started seeing declines in the 1980s. While the United States has cut back on shark fishing off its coasts, Musick said, "I can't say the same for international management."

Researchers in the IUCN's shark specialist group made assumptions about the state of some shark species because data is lacking for nearly half of them; they extrapolated what they knew about well-studied species and applied the same ratio of threats to lesser-known ones. Sonja Fordham, the group's deputy chair and founder of the D.C.-based Shark Advocates International, said that gaps in data should not hold the world back from protecting sharks. "Around the world, we see similar cases of boom and bust fisheries, and management that is too little, too late," she said.




Alaska's untapped oil reserves estimate lowered by about 90%
by CNN Wire Staff

The U.S. Geological Survey says a revised estimate for the amount of conventional, undiscovered oil in the National Petroleum Reserve in Alaska is a fraction of a previous estimate. The group estimates about 896 million barrels of such oil are in the reserve, about 90 percent less than a 2002 estimate of 10.6 billion barrels. The new estimate is mainly due to the incorporation of new data from recent exploration drilling revealing gas occurrence rather than oil in much of the area, the geological survey said.

"These new findings underscore the challenge of predicting whether oil or gas will be found in frontier areas," USGS Director Dr. Marcia McNutt said in a statement. "It is important to re-evaluate the petroleum potential of an area as new data becomes available." The organization also estimates 8 trillion cubic feet less gas than a 2002 estimate of 61 trillion cubic feet of undiscovered, conventional, non-associated gas -- meaning gas found in discrete accumulations with little to no crude oil in the reservoir.

"Recent activity in the NPRA, including 3-D seismic surveys, federal lease sales administered by the Bureau of Land Management and drilling of more than 30 exploration wells in the area provides geological information that is more indicative of gas than oil," the geological survey said. The petroleum reserve in Alaska has been the focus of significant oil exploration during the past decade, stimulated by the mid-1990s discovery of the largest onshore oil discovery in the U.S. during the past 25 years, the organization said.


110 comments:

jal said...

The truth has been told to the lawmakers. These lawmakers have been trained as lawyers. Their assistants have law training.



Surely they can see that what has happened to J6P CAN AND WILL end up on their doorstep. It "pay" a lot more to "steal" from the wealthy than to steal from J6P. The lawmakers are wealthy.

They will fix the mortgage problem to save their own wealth/assets.



If they cannot see the danger then they will end up being part of the wealth distribution.

Do these lawmakers have any assets into the MERS system.

Why don't you find out for them and let them know that their asset ownership are in danger of disappearing.

That could motivate them to make sure that they make different decissions.

See
http://www.c-span.org/Watch/Media/2010/10/27/Congress/A/39935/Congressional+Oversight+Panel+Meeting+on+TARP.aspx

or

http://cop.senate.gov/hearings/library/hearing-102710-foreclosure.cfm
Testimony of Katherine Porter
Before the Congressional Oversight Panel Hearing on the TARP Foreclosure Mitigation Program

October 27, 2010

Look at the other testimonies in the link.

===
Budgets forecast Fiscal austerity measures.
Expenditures are “business as usual”.
----
Welcome to the new world order.

It use to be Zombie-eating USA.

Now its Zombie-eating China.
---

Ilargi said...

Free No Impact Man Winter Retreat.


We invite you to join us in the mountains of upstate New York for our Eco-Leader Training all-expenses paid weekend


.

scrofulous said...

Ho ilargi!

About that free weekend I am very interested but to apply it says to 'click here' and enter your name and email to receive a link to the application.

Will you please click the ' click here' link for me. You see, I have a recurring dream that starts with me clicking a 'click here'. The dream starts out fine but then ...!

A Fall Guy said...

From the Hilsenrath and Cheng WSJ article:

Mr. Bernanke has used the analogy of a golfer with a new putter: Unsure how it will work, he finds best strategy is to tap lightly at first and keep tapping until the golfer figures out how best to use the putter.

When reading this, I had an image of Bernanke teeing off with his putter on the longest fairway of the financial golf course.

Ilargi said...

Logout, try this.


.

Bigelow said...

zerohedge seems to be down.

Ilargi said...

"Bigelow said...
zerohedge seems to be down"


The front page, yes, but this page works, for instance.


.

Greenpa said...

from last thread, so no one is deprived:

apropos of nothing in particular, I just wanted to observe that I'm still having trouble with "QE2".

Rather than conveying to my inadequately caffeinated brain the vision of well lubricated money zipping through the digestive tract of the world, like grass through a goose; it keeps bringing to me the vision of a vast ocean liner.

It's hard to keep all the dots connected.

Greenpa said...

Ilargi and Stoneleigh - the stories and hard facts you report here, day after day, are beyond being stupefying, for me. I suspect that's true for many folks, and perhaps particularly for neophytes; the extent of the deceptions and betrayals is incredibly hard to grasp.

My feeling at this point in the debacle is that the main actors, eg. the Fed/Golem Sucks complex, et.al., are becoming more and more careless about the broad impacts of their actions; and about any legalities involved. Partly because they've gotten away with it so beautifully so far, and partly because they're actually getting more desperate, and probably because they're enjoying themselves.

Do you also see an increase in recklessness?

Not that there will be any additional consequences, which already are beyond remedy. Just an interesting part of the dynamics of "assisted global economic implosion".

Would make a good addition to the graphs: "Rate of Insane/Corrupt/Demented/Moronic Actions". I think the curve is going vertically asymptotic.

Hombre said...

Remember Sarah's (and other so called experts) "...drill baby drill"?
LOL

Alaska's untapped oil reserves estimate lowered by about 90 percent ALASKA
The U.S. Geological Survey says a revised estimate for the amount of conventional, undiscovered oil in the National Petroleum Reserve in Alaska is a fraction of a previous estimate.
The group estimates about 896 million barrels of such oil are in the reserve, about 90 percent less than a 2002 estimate of 10.6 billion barrels.
The new estimate is mainly due to the incorporation of new data from recent exploration drilling revealing gas occurrence rather than oil in much of the area, the geological survey said.

http://tinyurl.com/2anuj98

EconomicDisconnect said...

I get a weird feeling something like the durable goods number comes out and it is terrible except for a monster set of aircraft orders (both military and civilian). Seems like a convenient way to goose numbers, then later they are revised way down but no one cares at that point. Hard to trust much out there these days.

scrofulous said...

Okay ilargi maybe that program is a good thing after all, now all I have to worry about is if I can walk there in time for that free weekend.

BTW have you checked out Sprott's silver trust, the one that's been played up mightily as redeemable in bullion? Kicker there is that the minimum redemption is 10 London good bars (750 - 1100 troy ounces each). Not for the likes of me, how about thee? I will send you the prospectus if you are interested.

el gallinazo said...

From Wikileaks

"The slang term "bogarting" refers to taking an unfairly long time with a cigarette, drink, et cetera, that is supposed to be shared (e.g., "Don't bogart that joint!"). It derives from Bogart's style of cigarette smoking, with which he left his cigarette dangling from his mouth rather than withdrawing it between puffs.[126]"

Even I am getting a little nervous that the transition time from deflation to hyper-inflation may equal the average hold of a S&P stock transaction, i.e. 11 seconds. I am not ready for hyper-inflation, I don't know how to buy and safely store silver in Argentina (or anywhere else for that matter (at least as to the second part).

-P

Gravity said...

All better now, I somewhat prefer the imagery of the latter interpretation.

"There is the possibility... that after the rate of interest has fallen to a certain level, liquidity preference is virtually absolute in the sense that almost everyone prefers cash to holding a debt at so low a rate of interest. In this event, the monetary authority would have lost effective control.”

There is the theory of the monetary mobius, a twist in the fabric of the moneyfold where involute interest intersects and debt becomes a loop.

Indeed so. What of Minsky moments, can these coincide with or be precipitated by a liquidity trap, can these be causally related or reinforcing? And movement in factors of carrying costs, the cost of carry, or carrying charge, anything significant happening there during a liquidity trap?

el gallinazo said...

Just a note for anyone here who doesn't have broadband in their house and occasionally uses a free quickie drive-by wifi hotspot in town for their TAE fix on an iPhone or iPod touch. I have a favorite bench to do this. Use iCab Mobile - $2 at the iTunes store. Blows Safari out of the water. I emailed the author in Germany on how to download an mp3 for later listening, and he got back to me with detailed instructions within 24 hours. Talk about service!

scandia said...

There is a Roubini article on FT. I was disappointed he didn't utter a work about FRAUD.

Hombre said...

El G - Thanks for the wikispeak
--Charlie Allnut

scrofulous said...

@Scandia

My apologies, it looks like I was incorrect on that Bogart/Bone guard lyric. Funny though, I guess we must have had early onset hearing loss up here, as we sang it in the sixties as bone guard. A jolly thing, but my favourite, when they played in the Retinal Circus in Vancouver, was Please don't drop that H-bomb on me. Heh!

(sorry i have looked and looked and can't find a worthy rendition of The Bomb Song online, if someone can, I would love to hear it again)

Pocampo said...

Can one of you good people please explain how QE2 works. Where does the money come from and where does it go? Does it go directly to the banks? If it does, isn't it just another bailout for the banks? Thanks in advance for your response.

scandia said...

@ Logout, Actually bone guard is very clever! Seems we can expand our vocabulary and use both.

Ilargi said...

" Pocampo said...
Can one of you good people please explain how QE2 works. Where does the money come from and where does it go? "


It comes from the Fed. Well, it's not money, it's credit, and it comes from a black hole.

"Does it go directly to the banks? If it does, isn't it just another bailout for the banks? "

To be precise: it depends on who the Fed buys from, but yes, the vast majority goes to the banks, and yes, as I've been saying all along, it's just another bail-out. There is no chance of it reaching Main Street, and they know it.


.

scrofulous said...

el gallinazo

That is rather bizarre, you are living in a a country whose name derives from the word silver, Argentina and you can't find or hide it?

More seriously, if you fear an unannounced inflation, as I do from time to time, then why not gold ? Easier to hide and can be stored with your papers in a small safety deposit box. Do you feel that if a bank closed there, that you would not have access to your box, passport etc?

Scandia,

You are kind:)

Fuser said...

Greenpa,

I've noticed that too. They've been given an inch and they're taking a mile.

Greenpa said...

logout: "then why not gold?"

A matter of opinion, to be sure; but: gold is too valuable; too tempting to thieves, and too difficult to get "change" for in an emergency.

"Gosh, sorry, mac, but I ain't got change for your gold ounce. You want gas, or don'tcha?"

With a big smile.

Of course, if you're bribing officials or soldiers, it's better.

Nassim said...

It is a long while since lived in Paris, however, I think I know the French character a little better some. The riots were not so much about the change in retirement age but about the "in your face" extravagance of their president, Sarkozy, and the financial elites.

Nicolas Sarkozy warned by German Chancellor not to unveil £150m 'bling' presidential jet

Sarkozy Denies Claims That L'Oreal Heiress Gave Him Cash

Sarkozy’s Ministers Quit as Bettencourt Tax Disclosures Loom

Bettencourt is the richest person in France and owns a big chunk of L'Oreal - the biggest private company in France so it is a little galling when she gets a huge tax refund. An American would probably not understand what I mean. :)

Essentially, France is a very conservative society - they don't like bling. Many houses in Paris and in the provinces look pretty dark and gloomy on the exterior but are stuffed full of artistic treasure on the inside - common-sense in that society. I read somewhere once that half of the world's art, by value, is in France.

When I was there, one hardly ever saw a red Porsche - plenty of grey, black and brown ones though. I drove a red one and that is why I noticed. However, I had foreign number plates so it was left unscratched. Although it was in secure parking they did steal all four wheels once and damage the underside. The insurers were not happy.

Nassim said...

el gallinazo,

If you have trouble storing silver securely, you may want to check out the Perth Mint. You can buy unallocated silver and gold and they will store it for free. It all works by phone. This private mint is guaranteed by the government of Western Australia - a pretty solvent one. Furthermore, they are forbidden from speculating with your metal. The catch is that for non-residents they won't open an account for less than AUD250,000. It seems that eveyone is ganging up to ensure that the formerly middle classes are well and truly fleeced. Australia produces 400 tons of gold each year so I can't see them banning or confiscating it anytime soon.

BullionVault is another possibility - they offer keener pricing and it is all done online - you can choose their Swiss depository. The New York and London depositories are a bit risky, IMHO. I think there is no minimum deposit and they will even give you 1 gram of gold ($43) to start the ball rolling.

I wish you good luck on your happy event. When can we look forward to the chicks hatching? :)

Jerry McManus said...

From the Chicago Fed:

"A key aspect of the current situation that concerns me is the growing evidence that we are in what economists call a “liquidity trap.” In a liquidity trap, the supply of savings continually outstrips the demand for investment, but interest rates near zero can’t fall to equate supply and demand. Liquidity traps are exceedingly rare. The last time the U.S. economy was in a liquidity trap was during the Great Depression, some 80 years ago."

http://www.chicagofed.org/webpages/publications/speeches/2010/10_19_evanston_speech.cfm

While you're there don't miss the Chicago Fed National Activity Index (CFNAI) which just went negative again:

http://www.chicagofed.org/webpages/research/data/cfnai/current_data.cfm

Double dip, anyone?

Cheers,
Jerry

NZSanctuary said...

Greenpa said...
Ilargi and Stoneleigh - the stories and hard facts you report here, day after day, are beyond being stupefying, for me. I suspect that's true for many folks, and perhaps particularly for neophytes; the extent of the deceptions and betrayals is incredibly hard to grasp.

Yep

Hombre said...

Greenpa - "... the extent of the deceptions and betrayals is incredibly hard to grasp."

Amen to that! The last couple of years has been extremely... er... shall I use the word enlightening? I always thought that learning was such a positive experience, but the more I find out about our evolved financial and economic reality the more disasterous and criminal it appears to be!
The other thing is, usually knowledge and "heads up" information gives you the tools you need to make repairs or amends. (I was a troubleshooter for decades) But in this case the predicament is too comprehensive and quite beyond repair. As they say... "it's a whole new ball game."

zander said...

Good observation Greenpa, most CID/drugs squad etc. officers over here will tell you 90+% of major criminal activity and operations are eventually thwarted by the hubris and supposed invulnerability of the perpetrators, I reckon this is what is happening here, and would have led to a downfall already had the public not been so timidly acquiescent of the propaganda onslaught i.e. "they fall, you fall" but as that myth is slowly recognised for what it is, the recklessness and disregard for consequence will also been seen for what it is,
broken rules, broken laws, and the greatest fraud to be committed in modern history.
Also agree about the stories/anecdotes/facts that have come to light since the beginning of this debacle, leaving one slackjawed and catching flies, it's beyond belief sometimes.

Z.

scrofulous said...

Hi Geenpa,

"Gosh, sorry, mac, but I ain't got change for your gold ounce. You want gas, or don'tcha?"

A fair point but actually it is possible to buy a 1/20th ounce Maple leaf ($92 Can), but as you can see, the premium is quite steep. If I have it right, I think el gallinazo's thoughts on buying PMs is more as currency insurance rather than as currency itself.

jal said...

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2010-10-27/mortgage-lenders-may-meet-with-states-over-foreclosure-probes-this-week.html

Banks `Want to Sit Down' With States to Discuss Foreclosures

By Margaret Cronin Fisk - Oct 27, 2010 9:01 PM PT

“There is a meeting scheduled for Thursday,” Greenwood said. “It would not be appropriate to disclose the meeting participants, the mechanics of the meeting, or the nature of the planned discussions.”

Ka said...

On "the extent of the deceptions and betrayals", I suspect that one needs to replace that line about the receding tide showing who is naked, to something like: the receding tide shows naked privilege. There has always been a privileged (= "private law") class, but as long as the non-privileged could see themselves as "doing ok", that privilege could be hidden. But now, with the ponzi collapsing, and a future without cheap energy, no one but the privileged will be ok, which makes their exercise of private law visible.

Punxsutawney said...

OK,

Alaska's untapped oil reserves estimate is now estimated to be 896 million barrels.

Assuming that every last drop is recoverable, and it all magically ends up in pipelines or storage, with no energy used to recover it. What do we end up with?

896 barrels / 21 million barrels of consumption per day = ~43 days of US Consumption.

If we lower consumption to 19 million barrels due to a slow economy we get ~47 days.

If it is 10.6 billion, we get between 15 and 18 months of US Consumption with the same magical thinking.

Yeah, “Drill Baby Drill” will solve all our energy needs…..

None of this is news to readers here though.

jal said...

http://nationalmortgageprofessional.com/news21504/class-action-suit-filed-against-banks-foreclosure-proceedings

Class Action Suit Filed Against Banks in Foreclosure Proceedings
Thu, 2010-10-28 14:4

The Ferraro Law Firm, Daniels Kashtan and The Burton Firm have filed a class action lawsuit against BAC Home Loans Servicing LP, a subsidiary of Bank of America Corporation, and successor in interest to Countrywide Home Loans Servicing LP, Deutsche Bank National Trust Company, and U.S. Bank on behalf of all those property owners who lost title to their property in foreclosure proceedings based on false and perjurious affidavits filed by the banks and their servicing companies. They seek to restore title to the property owners.

Are you still interested in buying that great foreclosured house?
jal

Hombre said...

Punxsutawney - "None of this is news to readers here though."

I was merely sharing the (new) news item that the reserves were far less than even the previous estimations and that the Alaskan reserves are totally insignificant regarding our predicament.

Some interesting data on silver...
http://www.silverbarter.com/silver_facts.html

Punxsutawney said...

Coy Ote,

I didn’t mean to appear to be taking a jab at you. I was just trying to add to the point you are making, - that ~1 billion, or ~10 billion, it’s insignificant compared to what we use daily here in the US. The first thing I do when someone says there all this oil somewhere is divide the total reserve by our daily use. It’s usually very sobering. Often expanded drilling is just a political ploy used by one political party to bash the other, and to maintain the status quo.

My final comment was to acknowledge that a lot of the posters here are well versed in these things.

Those Canadian Tar Sands are looking more desirable every day. Don’t be surprised Canadians to wake up to the “One-O-Worst” Airborne camped outside some morning, and a phalanx of M1 Abrams cruising up Hwy 2. Ok, not funny – my apologies to Canadian readers.

Anonymous said...

EL G-

Would you please elaborate on why you feel it is possible the deflation/hyper inflation transition could be so much shorter then Stoneleigh thinks. I.e, how might she be so wrong? An example often helps. Ilargi-any come back?

mercutio said...

Paul Farrell writes: "Now that same Zombie Capitalism is being resurrected by the Goldman Conspiracy of Wall Street Banksters and their new partner, the GOP Tea Party of No-No."

Where does Farrell or anyone get Goldman and Tea Party as partners? As far as I can tell, the Tea Party is indeed the party of "No," meaning no bailouts and no crony capitalism, i.e., the enemy of Goldman and ilk.

scandia said...

Something WONDERFUL to view on Max Keiser. A flash mob protest against Vodaphone for not paying taxes. No need whatsoever to sell off Britain's forests!!!
GE in the US pays less that 4% taxes. If we did the rounds in the first world there is no need for austerity measures. Just impose and collect corporate taxes!!!!

scrofulous said...

Hey Coy Ote, fine site but my man on silver and gold, a real all in player if ever there was one!
;)

Gravity said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Draft said...

From the archives - when Stoneleigh accurately called the stock market bottom in March 2009:

"Stoneleigh said...
When the coming rally finally arrives it could well be sharp, which could leave the shorts very exposed. In fact short covering is a main reason why bear market rallies are so sharp. Be very careful trying to play the market now. The bulk of this particular downward move is probably over, so you stand to gain relatively little and are taking a high risk. March 3, 2009 4:16 PM"


I dug it up because she and Doug Kass are the two people from what I can tell are excellent at seeing market movements and timing. Doug Kass has said he thinks we're at a top right now. I don't remember Stoneleigh being quite that forceful, but maybe she has been / will be soon.

Greenpa said...

logout said...

"A fair point but actually it is possible to buy a 1/20th ounce Maple leaf ($92 Can), but as you can see, the premium is quite steep. If I have it right, I think el gallinazo's thoughts on buying PMs is more as currency insurance rather than as currency itself."

$92 for a tank of gas is still gonna be steep! :-)

A few more points to ponder: a one ounce silver coin might still be easier for the recipient to take than the gold; for some non-physics based reasons.

The 1/20th oz coin is just REALLY damned SMALL. It doesn't look like much in your hand. An ounce of silver, on the other hand, feels good and solid; hefty. Just more primate satisfaction in it.

Fakery will become widespread. Copper with some tin in it can be made to look like gold, pretty easy. Sure, you can check it, use the touchstone, etc, etc; but it's always a bit questionable, making the recipient hesitant (and you may not have time for hesitant). Counterfeit silver is also possible- but considerably less worthwhile for the counterfeiter; so, less common; so, less suspected by the recipient...

Obviously, I've talked myself into silver, mostly. Of course, part of that is I just don't have enough money floating around to buy gold, anyway...

:-)

History: in China, anyone with this problem always used both, as far back as we have stories.

Greenpa said...

An interesting story; one to follow in the coming years:

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/10/29/world/asia/29mumbai.html

One of the world's wealthiest men has build a 27 storey "house"; in the middle of Mumbai; for 5 people. An extreme "in your face and up yours" statement about wealth, and power.

In the coming age of chaos, will it be allowed to stand? Can it actually be protected? I'd have to doubt it.

I remember years ago reading a science fiction story, all other details lost to me, except this one; the author projected a world very much like the one we're in; over crowded, vast wealth inequities and iniquities; rampant political instability. In his story, a common phenomenon was erratic outbreaks of violence; individuals and groups finally cracking, and running "amok". "also spelled amuk, from the Malay meaning 'mad with uncontrollable rage' " (Wikipedia)

We see it beginning, but with incentives like the 27 storey "house", I can only see more in the future.

In the SF story, such people became known as "muckers", and it became a piece of common language.

My question; what will the wealthy do when the muckers decide to get organized? Really not that difficult for them to do; and so much more effective; how could they not?

Draft said...

Denninger has a remarkable plan (in its clarity and comprehensiveness) for the banking system. I'm not an expert on this stuff, but from everything I've read, he's right, and I desperately hope someone in the administration/FDIC is thinking this too and just waiting for the right time to strike (hopefully soon):

Let's Talk About A Bank Holiday

Draft said...

Follow up question on the Denninger link I posted: He seems to be suggesting that if we declare a bank holiday, resolve the debts, mark the worthless paper to market, etc. we can avert a major long term decline by having a short-term (few month long) painful period and then bounce back much stronger.

Stoneleigh - how does that comport with your projections? I'm trying to figure out whether your projections are based on the assumption that what Denninger suggests would never be done by those in power or whether you think they would be insufficient for some particular reason.

Archie said...

@ Scandia-
The Vodaphone protests are indeed encouraging. Expanding on that thought, this excellent piece from Johann Hari should buoy your spirits even more.

@Draft-
The "Denninger Solution" indeed makes a lot of sense from an egalatarian viewpoint. That is precisely why it will not happen now or in the near future. No, it is more important that we have QE2,3,4, ad infinitum. Still, it's a nice fantasy to think that government, any government, would pre-occupy itself with the public good.

Greenpa said...

scandia said...

"No need whatsoever to sell off Britain's forests!!!
GE in the US pays less that 4% taxes. If we did the rounds in the first world there is no need for austerity measures. Just impose and collect corporate taxes!!!!"

Yeah, but. :-)

They way they've got the system working right now; and for the foreseeable future; if you DID succeed in collecting realistic corporate taxes - uh- that would just be an excuse for them to raise ALL their prices, right down the line, sticking it to... you. And me.

And, in case you haven't figured this lovely bit out, the way price increases work is: your costs go up $1 per gizmo. So you scream to the consumers, "Our costs have gone up!! It's awful! We're all going to die! We'll go out of business, and you won't have ANY gizmos, ever again! (well, or, we're going to have to raise prices, as much as we HATE that...)"

But, you see, the consumer is not privy to your REAL actual costs. They just know, "up". So - you jack their prices up $1.50. The consumers groan, and pay it. And guess what? You're now pocketing and additional $0.50 profit, on every gizmo, and nobody knows it. Tee hee.

This has been standard, absolute standard, business practice since the butcher discovered his thumb; which was a good long time ago.

More seriously. Sure, it's worth while working to get corporations to actually pay their taxes. But be aware of the morass, or you'll just get more ass kicked.

:-)

scandia said...

Has anyone read any numbers about how much money is expected to be raised by the sell off of Britain's forests? Would the 6B in taxes owed by Vodaphone cover it leaving the forests to the commons? Or is the sell off some other scam unrelated to reducing the sovereign debt?

scrofulous said...

Greenpa

92 buckeroonies expensive for a tankful? Listen to Embry and and Shick on King.

Hombre said...

Punxsutawney - IC. Thanks

Mercutio - Yeah, I don't quite get that connection either. I am not a fan of either, but... curious?

Logout - That Townsend is an interesting guy. I think most folks who can afford even a small stash of silver are doing it.

Draft - Denninger's close-the-banks plan has a lot of moral, ethical, and legal legs, but it, IMO, would be a political H-bomb! Most folks are STILL UNAWARE of what you, and I&S, and the peak oil and economic corruption sites have brought to light. It might well just blow the whole shebang sky high.

scandia said...

To put it another way how many trees could each unpaid Vodaphone tax dollar save? How many trees could 6B unpaid Vodaphone tax dollars save? How many vodaphone corporate species could save how many forests if they paid taxes?

scandia said...

@Draft, a remarkable plan indeed. I have become so cynical in that the banksters and all make money breaking things.They don't want a fixed system.Nor does the government.

Starcade said...

Karl Denninger has openly called for a bank holiday.

[url]http://market-ticker.org/akcs-www?post=170706[/url]

What I think he fails to realize is the question which ends this nation once everybody realizes the question has no sane answer.

How do you maintain social order in the interim of a complete bankruptcy of the entire United States Economy?

A bank holiday ends the present banking system, and all of the banks. Those that aren't completely wiped out in Karl's proposed resolution would get wiped out immediately in the runs that follow once those which remain would reopen.

scandia said...

@Greenpa, Can't argue with you there. Damn!

Fuser said...

If the third quarter GDP revision percentage matches the second quarter revision percentage, the 1.25% GDP prediction is going to be as close to perfect as you can get.

scandia said...

@Frank A, thanks for the Hari article. Right on. What makes this flash mob protest against Vodaphone so exciting is the flash bit. Now the facsists won't know where to deploy police as they won't know where the next obstruction will be.
MORE FLASH PROTEST PLEASE! And look how few people it took to shut down that Vodaphone store on Oxford St!!!
You are absolutely right in assessing my mood as bouyed.
I have hope again just not the fake Obama brand.
Yippee!

Ka said...

@Draft, re Denninger bank plan. I don't see the bouncing back happening "fairly quickly", as I'm not sure anyone would have money to invest on the scale needed. Especially if it is all being spent on lawyers. And didn't it take 8 years and a war to bounce back from the last bank holiday? But I'm just guessing.

I would also want to know who would be handing out letters of credit.

Archie said...

He is villified in his homeland in the South, but IMO Jimmy Carter was the last honest President of the USA. He was on Real Time with Bill Maher tonight and you can watch the interview here.

Carter's comments are that much more interesting when they are considered within the context of Chris Hedges condemnation earlier this week The World Liberal Opportunists Made.

side pocket said...

The science fiction story Greenpa referred to is Stand on Zanzibar by Brunner.

snuffy said...

Greenpa,

Every time I force myself to take the time and mental energy to really dig into one of the posts here, I come away with variations of what you describe.
I can only take so much now.Sunday night I am back on a 12/7 for 26 days that will leave me with a few more gray hairs,a bit more green folding,and a totally exhausted bod.Then home for a 2 month nap.

I just wonder now,when all the lies,and shame,and wrenched excess we have seen for so long will "poison the pool"we all must drink from.
I agree with those statements about hubris being so very evident in the actions of our financial "elites"It has/is becoming a expected way of life for them.Whatever their need...insistently fulfilled,no matter what the cost to the little folks like thee and me.I can also ,in the background, smell rank fear and desperation of a kind that eventually leads to mistakes in judgment.
These constantly shifting currents of power,and privilege,and exemption of all restraint and responsibility,with no thought/care/concern for the effects of their actions on the health and well-being of the nation that spawned them, will lead to a cataclysm biblical in its scope and scale.

And,I,and so very many others ,see it coming and cant do a damnthing about it,besides setting up a little liferaft and some ,few, supplies as I can afford,and just wait for life to get really weird,[forget about retiring]and wondering just how bad is the medical care going to get...how soon?

And there burns in me a rage that soon will fill the very soul of every American citizen...that of the un-met expectations...the lies,the broken promises,and the gut wrenching knowledge that you have been had...you are the chump,and your children will rot in a poverty like those now in china...if they live at all

We all die,and thats the end of each of our stories.In my heart of hearts I fear to see the complete destruction of america,most likely by a combination bio-nuke strike when we are in the midst of the coming unrest.
And I expect to see the unrest soon,in such a way as to be impossible to hide or shout down as is the case now.If you listen in the empty stores,around the burning 55gal drums,or on the streets...or at a little cafe at coffee...you hear it.Its there,and so bitter,and so hot,the words could melt iron.

We played by the rules.
And they cheated...
And they stole our dreams

And in the background you here a dull roar.And I do not want to think about where things go after that.

Bee good,or
Bee careful

snuffy

zander said...

@ Scandia.

OK, I'm with you all the way re. your concern about UK forest sales, but here are some reasons why I'm not as acutely concerned as you are.
My little chill out place is slap bang in the middle of the Scottish borders, this region is the most heavily forested in the UK, and I'm talking FC plantation here.
On the hill immediately behind my place they were clearfelling Sitka and suddenly stopped the operation half way through, FC. refused to answer my Emails on the subject but a local worker said every sawmill and timber yard throughout the UK is crammed to bursting with timber, I believe global timber prices have risen about 20% ish in the last year, but here in the UK there seems to be a glut, the housebuilding industry is near standstill ( big timber consumer) and IKEA is probably the biggest furnishings supplier, with wood for their products coming mostly from Scandinavian forests as I'm sure you know :)
Now, you and I are both on board with TAE prognosis going forward, imagine the slump in timber demand AND a further shrinkage in building developments of all types, I'm thinking this sale won't find buyers who are planning on felling forest where the extraction costs (think fuel) will outweigh the potential logged timber price, I'm also toiling to envisage newly built holiday village style theme parks being viable in the economic climate we are heading into, and these seem to be the focus of most fears for the sold-off land, buy and hold seems to me to be the most likely outcome here, that is not to say that after the great levelling they won't start to rip into these woodlands with abandon, but wouldn't the government have done that anyway? as fuel becomes scarce forests and woodland the world over will be plundered IMO. and the only hope is that fuel becomes so scarce the worst excesses of destruction (industrial scale logging) are avoided, on the other hand, that might just mean more of the reachable woodland and forest is cut down as fuel scarcity drives humankind to desperate survival measures.

And there I was, wondering why I never did get that job with the Samaritans ;-)


PS. sorry can't find a projected sale figure for the forest to be sold off.


Z

zander said...

@ Scandia.

OK, I'm with you all the way re. your concern about UK forest sales, but here are some reasons why I'm not as acutely concerned as you are.
My little chill out place is slap bang in the middle of the Scottish borders, this region is the most heavily forested in the UK, and I'm talking FC plantation here.
On the hill immediately behind my place they were clearfelling Sitka and suddenly stopped the operation half way through, FC refused to answer my Emails on the subject but a local worker said every sawmill and timber yard throughout the UK is crammed to bursting with timber, I believe global timber prices have risen about 20% ish in the last year, but here in the UK there seems to be a glut, the housebuilding industry is near standstill ( big timber consumer) and IKEA is probably the biggest furnishings supplier, with wood for their products coming mostly from Scandinavian forests as I'm sure you know :).........

zander said...

@ scandia cont.

Now, you and I are both on board with TAE prognosis going forward, imagine the slump in timber demand AND a further shrinkage in building developments of all types, I'm thinking this sale won't find buyers who are planning on felling forest where the extraction costs (think fuel) will outweigh the potential logged timber price, I'm also toiling to envisage newly built holiday village style theme parks being viable in the economic climate we are heading into, and these seem to be the focus of most fears for the sold-off land, buy and hold seems to me to be the most likely outcome here, that is not to say that after the great levelling they won't start to rip into these woodlands with abandon, but wouldn't the government have done that anyway? as fuel becomes scarce forests and woodland the world over will be plundered IMO. and the only hope is that fuel becomes so scarce the worst excesses of destruction (industrial scale logging) are avoided, on the other hand, that might just mean more of the reachable woodland and forest is cut down as fuel scarcity drives humankind to desperate survival measures.

And there I was, wondering why I never did get that job with the Samaritans ;-)


PS. sorry can't find a projected sale figure for the forest to be sold off.


Z

scandia said...

@Zander, I have some small awareness of the forest industry in Canada, the closing of economically unviable mills etc.
Up north here in Ontario a friend of mine has been fighting the privelege afforded exclusive camp owners whose rich clientale fly in for some fishing,hunting and deal making. My friend has actually photographed the no trespassing signage posted on public land and rivers warning the locals to stay off. Why? "Cause rich people won't anti up big money to go to a fishing lodge when locals who have hunted and fished the area for generations show up for free. My friend has been stonewalled in his protests. The ministries involved don't respond. Public land here in Canada is not really public land anymore and the public don't even know it.
Whether there is a market for the forest harvest is one issue. The other more significant issue for me is tapping the commons to cover tax evasion and fraud from corporations, tapping the commons while they're down to finance war and mega bonuses for the very ones who have brought the world to it's knees.. Kind of like what's mine is mine and what's yours is never yours. When we want it we'll take it. Osborne giving Vodaphone a 6B free lunch is obcene. And Vodaphone is just the one we know about, What sickens me is the political posers saying they are working so-o hard, under so much pressure to balance the budget etc, that they've looked hard and everywhere for funds to pay down the nation's debt. A free 6B gift to vodaphone makes that a big fat well spoken lie! Seems there are many pockets to check for some loose change that just keeps jingling in the most tantalizing way, money safe from the taxman. There are 2 classes of money. One pile gets bigger and bigger and bigger. The other pile of " readies" shrinks and shrinks and shrinks....this injustice gets right up my nose!
Time to revisit Tony Blair's intentionally byzantine ,complex, opaque business structure, Could be some tax revenue there?
And if Britain is so-o broke,so-o down and out of pocket that the only asset left is the commons is it not time for the Queen and royal hangers on to anti up some of their vast estates to save the nation? Why should their servants foot the bill?
Didn't The Beatles write a song, The Taxman? Or was it another group? Be well, friend...

Hombre said...

Frank A - Thanks for the links, I viewed both of them and there is certainly much to appreciate there, and also a few things a little too self-righteous perhaps.
I could only think to myself of possibilities lost and the many remembrances of experiences gone by. A lot of my adult life was spent disparaging U.S. militaristic presences and the false patriotic conceit of many fellow workers and neighbors, in part due to my association with local Quakers.
But I am also one who has hopes that after the chaotic crash on the horizon a positive rebirth or renewal will be possible. The key here, to me, and the monumental query regarding our human history is... will the nukes be avoided?

Alexander Ac said...

Mish informs that Cina monetary policy makes that one of FED only a pink garden:

„Total Chinese money supply is up over 4 times since '03, a 17%/yr. rate at a doubling time of just 4 years; up 66% since Jan. '08, a 19%/yr. rate at a doubling time of 43 months; and up 40% since Jan. '09, a 20%/yr. rate at a doubling time of 40 months.

Knowingly or otherwise, China has experienced a textbook faster-than-exponential money and debt/asset blow off or crack-up bubble that mathematically cannot continue. All faster-than-exponential bubbles burst and collapse…“

This situation is INSANE, and the crash coming in China-Asia will be unprecedented in world history.

And Mish continues:

„I am a firm believer in peak oil. I don't know how anyone can deny it. Given peak oil, and given the demand from China for oil and other commodities, the world is on a crash course of demand that cannot be filled.

China is growing at 8-10% a year (assuming you believe the stats). Can China keep growing at that rate forever? For even 10 more years? What about India? Brazil?

Historically these situations end up with war. That is an observation, not a prediction.

http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com/2010/10/misguided-love-affair-with-china-chinas.html

Linda said...

@ Frank A. Thx for the Jimmy Carter interview. Personal hero & so forth. Great interview, incredible man. Linda.

scandia said...

@ Zander, I think the dog just ate my response to your comment! A long response that I just can't conjure up for the second time at the moment. Maybe it will miraculously appear later...

However I do have some living history that I want to share with the board and I have permission from the teller to pass it on.
I was feeling the joy that a flash protest brings last night and looking for someone to celebrate with. I packed up a couple of bottles of my home made wine and went to visit Jutta. Jutta is originally from Germany, 90 years old now but still sharp, witty,cultured and informed politically. She also enjoys cigarettes and a few drinks when the sun goes down.
During our discussion on Britain's forests and finacial corruption she said she still holds resentment in her heart against farmers. An odd comment from my perspective so I asked for an explanation.
She spoke of being in Wiesbaden, hungry, down and out with a child when, near the end of the war the American zone was established. She had money but couldn't buy much so she swallowed her pride and applied for the food stamps from the Americans. However the Americans were so rude, the experience of collecting those meager rations was so humiliating, she decided she would find some other way to feed her daughter. I had tears in my eyes as she described the very beautiful and costly items she would take out to local farmers in an attempt to barter for food. Her detailed description of the Russian silver tea service, bartered for potatos and eggs, was so eloquent and raw it materialized before our eyes. Jutta's fluttering frail hands formed its size and shape in the air between us.
However the good farmers drove hard nasty bargains so she had to return to the Americans with her tail between her legs so to speak. The American record keeping noted that she hadn't shown up the previous month and made her eat crow before she received anymore food stamps. I was curious that the farmers had food but no security. Her explanation was there were no men only desperate women and malnourished children who were no threat to farmers.
Jutta had also said that the money had no value and then one day there was a new currency- an exchange of 100 German marks for 10of the new money and the new money had some purchasing power. She didn't understand how that happened so I suggested the Marshall Plan. Yes, that's it, she said.
Talking with Jutta has been part of my psychological preparation. She began life in privelege, the daughter of Herr Doctor with inherited family estates and servants. She recalls the impact of the family losing everything in the market crash of the twenties and their move to a flat in town. Actually as a child the move to town was a happy time as she now had lots of friends. The rarified life on the estate had been a lonely life.
In the 30's walking to school became frightening with so many angry and unemployed mobs of men in the street. She was so frightened that her Dr. father had to walk her to school to protect her.
What became clear to us is that there are no more local farmers for a mother attempting to feed her children to go to. They have either been replaced with suburbia or bought up by big Ag. We did a quick calculation of what the back yard gardens in our neighbourhood could feed. It is laughable really that all those large green lawns won't feed anyone including the homeowner.
Jutta is smart and has maintained friendships with people who live on farms. When the shit hits the fan they will come and get her, offer her a home. I expressed my envy that she has this safety net. Don't worry, she says, I'll take you with me.
Whew! That's good to know.It is selfish of me to wish a frail 90 year old a much longer life but I need her!I need her wisdom and grasp of the realities.
I know this history is recorded in many books but it comes to life when told as living memory and we can learn from it.

zander said...

Scandia you are a joy.
And now it's my turn to quaff my fave tipple with friends so I'm off to my local for the evening and whilst savouring my first Guinness I might just put a Lennon/Mcartney classic on the jukers.

slainte

Z.

Hombre said...

Likely a stretch, but an interesting thought,
ZeroHedge article by John Taylor-- "After the Republican victory things will change. The Fed will be hamstrung, as Ron Paul, a conservative standard-bearer and harsh critic of the Fed, will head the sub-committee overseeing its actions. Liquidity expansion or new programs will probably drop sharply under his watch. Paul would argue that the Fed’s unfettered ability to “debase” the currency is about to come to an end."

http://tinyurl.com/32tvvqb

memphis said...

Couple of things.

Firstly, since I've been skimming the columns d/t time constraints, why would the Brits sell the forests? There's no demand for lumber right now.

Secondly, a question for Stoneleigh.

Nicole, locally there've been NG leasing companies snapping up rights and paying big bucks for the privilege to drill deep in the shale. I've heard that the NG is different than that of the Clinton Formation; called a "hot" gas.

Is there some new technology possibly becoming available to provide a huge incentive to drillers? These leasing companies could almost buy the property for what they're willing to lease it for. Of course, I understand the landowner has to be very careful (of the fine print) in regards to WHEN they actually see any monies.

I've learned that when something sounds to good to be true...

Memphis

Jill said...

Draft said:

How do I find a good, safe, stable small bank? One that didn't do a bunch of liars loans, didn't derivative it up during the bubble, etc.

(Specifically I'm trying to assess this for the East Bay / San Francisco Area, but in general I'm wondering how you'd go about it.)

Mission National Bank is rated 5 star by Bankrate.com. It has two branches in SF and one in Berkeley.

Jill said...

Draft said on Oct 26:

How do I find a good, safe, stable small bank? One that didn't do a bunch of liars loans, didn't derivative it up during the bubble, etc.

(Specifically I'm trying to assess this for the East Bay / San Francisco Area, but in general I'm wondering how you'd go about it.)

Mission National Bank is rated 5 star by Bankrate.com. It has two branches in SF and one in Berkeley.

Archie said...

Scandia, Linda, Coy Ote -

My pleasure in sharing the links. Glad you found them of value.

scrofulous said...

Just watched a bit of the "Rally for Sanity and Fear".

Immediate reaction was that I was watching Sesame Street for adults. But then maybe I am just getting old and cranky.

Gravity said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Gravity said...

I find that chicago Fed speech most revealing, I did a search for any instance of 'debt' in the text and there's not a single mention, althought servicing of excessive debt is a relevant concept when considering the general reluctance to spend and the immoveable weight of general overcapacity.

"This higher inflation rate would decrease the real interest rate, raising the opportunity cost of holding money. This would provide an incentive for banks and corporations to release funds for investment, and in the process spur job creation."

We've just witnessed the greatest assault on property-rights since the communist revolution, which isn't conductive towards a confident investment climate, but naturally this should be ignored.
Here, 'opportunity cost of holding money' ought to be described in contrast to the arbitrary imposition of upholding a debt, didn't that one guy say something similar? But this price-level targeting is delusional. Many people are on the very edge and simply can't take any 2% price rise to begin with. This would act defaultionary, further forment unrest and starve the poor long before any jobs appear by this mechanism, if ever.

bluebird said...

Also watching the Jon Stewart. Isn't the point of the rally that it isn't political, nor religious, nor bigoted, nor whatever. Just people for sanity.

I thought it ironic that there is a huge terror threat this weekend. Makes one go hmmm.

Gravity said...

some more misery with monetarists

"Practically speaking, price-level targeting in the current environment would call for a series of large-scale asset purchases to recover the shortfall in inflation. At the same time, we would continue to carry a large balance sheet in order to maintain low interest rates for an extended period. Most important, we would clearly communicate the path for prices that we expect to attain, in order to enhance the public’s understanding of the Fed’s intentions."

Best not enhance that understanding too much, whereas any sufficiently advanced form of malice is almost indistinguishable from incompetence.

"We do not want to lose what the Fed under Chairmen Volcker and Greenspan won for the American people by fighting inflation and achieving price stability"

Some say this was achieved by purposefully inducing additional unemployment, this being the least savage tool appropriated for such ends. Others argue that nothing remotely resembling price stability was achieved at all.

I can see Stoneleigh's professional antagonism towards monetarism is well founded, yet remaining duly detached and polite, whereas in the past week I've managed to call monetarist policy dishonest and dysfunctional, price level targeting delusional and possibly malicious, while arguing that monetarist policy is the only macroeconomic platform that pretends its not influenced by ideology, its very authority and legitimacy being based on this pretence of objectivity and political neutrality.

Hombre said...

Logout - On Colbert and Stewart's rally... "Immediate reaction was that I was watching Sesame Street for adults. But then maybe I am just getting old and cranky."

Well, I know the feeling, but I have, shall I say, a Hegelian perspective...

thesis - Glenn Beck has a comical rally full of pompous and simplistic nuances.

antithesis - Colbert and Stewart have a comical rally full of pompous and simplistic nuances

synthesis - one of them was billed as serious!

;-)

Ruben said...

@greenpa

I read The Sheep Look Up about twenty years ago now. The muckers stood out for me as well, and I remember thinking how awful it would be to live in a world like that. And I remember the feeling as it dawned on me that I already lived in that world....

Draft said...

Stoneleigh - I was thinking today that two of the biggest issues that get media attention - economic scares and security scares - have so much more to do with psychology than they have to do with "economics" and security. Bruce Schneier often talks about how security today is about psychology, just as you've talked about the psychology of the markets. While it's great you're giving talks around the country, it's too bad you haven't been around to provide more of that perspective. (I look to Ilargi's perspective on the graph crunching and your perspective on the big picture and trend changes and inflection points - in March 2009 Ilargi was expecting the markets to keep going down while you exactly called the bottom.)

I just set up a Treasury Direct account - it's remarkably well designed. (Better designed than any bank websites I've used, and it's by the government...) I've put money into 26-week Treasury bills. Doesn't look like I'll make much from the investment, but I probably won't lose it either.

Also, Jill - thanks for the bank info, I will take a look.

Ilargi said...

Draft said...
"(I look to Ilargi's perspective on the graph crunching and your perspective on the big picture and trend changes and inflection points - in March 2009 Ilargi was expecting the markets to keep going down while you exactly called the bottom.)"


We're going to have to see details, dates, etc on this one.


.

Bigelow said...

“If the two parties both lie down for Wall Street in roughly equal measure, but fight viciously over other issues, it is possible to construct a stable strategic equilibrium.”
Barack Obama: The oligarchs' president The director of "Inside Job" writes about Obama's depressingly rational decision to give in to Wall Street
-Salon

Gravity said...

I watched a clip of Obama's appearance on Steward's show, where he seemed to attenuate his slogan to 'yes we can, eventually', disheartening to see idealism crushed so consistently into the same old pragmatic stance, hesitant to change.

But liquidity traps, then, shouldn't the manner in which we'd successfully crawl out of one depend on the way we stumbled into it? They come in various depths I suppose, what's the escape strategy for such a trap which is also concomitant to a debt deflation snare? I remember reading about the threat of liquidity traps for several years now, it's not as if no one saw it coming, this was entirely foreseeable.

Draft said...

Ilargi - I didn't mean that as a "gotcha" but rather as a compliment of your different but complementary strengths. (For the record, check out your post on March 9, 2009, "Sucker Bears and Grim Pipers")

scandia said...

Remember the 5th of November....

anon10 said...

Armed security guards will be on hand at 36 unemployment offices around Indiana in what state officials said is a step to improve safety and make branch security more consistent.

No specific incidents prompted the action, Department of Workforce Development spokesman Marc Lotter told 6News' Norman Cox.

Lotter said the agency is merely being cautious with the approach of an early-December deadline when thousands of Indiana residents could see their unemployment benefits end after exhausting the maximum 99 weeks provided through multiple federal extension periods.

"Given the upcoming expiration of the federal extensions and the increased stress on some of the unemployed, we thought added security would provide an extra level of protection for our employees and clients," he said.

Some offices have had guards for nearly two years but those guards were hired on a regional basis, meaning some offices had armed guards while others did not, Lotter said.

The cost of the armed guards varies dramatically around the state. Lotter said the agency is trying to be more consistent and that it plans to employ armed guards in all 36 offices where unemployment insurance benefits are handled.

Unemployment Offices To Add Armed Guards - 36 Offices Beefing Up Security Before Benefits Set To End

Unknown said...

Another layover?

http://calculatedriskimages.blogspot.com/2010/10/investment-contributions-to-gdp-q3-2010.html

Unknown said...

http://calculatedriskimages.blogspot.com/2010/10/investment-contributions-to-gdp-q3-2010.html

this maps interestingly as well

scandia said...

I haven't heard any debate about the oil spill in the Gulf during the mid-term campaign. here is an update on the effects of dispersants.
http://english.aljazeera.net/indepth/feature/2010/10/20101027132136220370.html

scrofulous said...

What Ho Coy Ote,

Hegel, eh?, Well you know best, but personally I find this second link more to my understanding of US politics!

scrofulous said...

PS Coyote,

The guy in the Grey suit is a Canadian politician from Canada.

Gravity said...

Stewart had this bit about the sociodemographic composition of the crowd, referencing the derogatory criticism towards the tea party constituency, but the ironic nuance was somewhat lost on them. Sanity is not satirical.

Ilargi said...

"Draft said...
Ilargi - I didn't mean that as a "gotcha" but rather as a compliment of your different but complementary strengths. (For the record, check out your post on March 9, 2009, "Sucker Bears and Grim Pipers")"


Give us the details. Don't refer to some 18 month old post for one part and leave the rest up to anybody's guess. It doesn't go anywhere.


.

Gravity said...

http://www.zerohedge.com/article/fed-trying-force-surge-commodity-prices-and-input-costs-diapason-explains-why-precisely-case

"In other words, this strongly insinuates that the Bernanke Fed actually welcomes the current surge in the prices of many of the staples of everyday life; that it actually exults in the drain being exerted on family budgets; that it revels in the squeeze on profit margins being suffered by already-struggling small businesses, because it imagines this will serve to lower the reckoning of the ethereal construct of a generalized, future real real interest rate and that this alone will serve to shower riches upon all who are presently suffering, in comparison for the present woes."

Very verily, Bernanke shews us that one pain may lessen another, till underverse come.

Archie said...

A very good article from Ralph Nader Road to Corporate Serfdom leaves much to ponder.

The U.S. won World War II. Germany lost and was devastated. Yet note this remarkable headline in the October 27th Washington Post: “A Bargain for BMW means jobs for 1,000 in S. Carolina: Workers line up for $15 an hour—half of what German counterparts make.”

The German plant is backed by South Carolina taxpayer subsidies and is not unionized. Newly hired workers at General Motors and Chrysler, recently bailed out by taxpayers, are paid $14 an hour before deductions. The auto companies used to be in the upper tier of high paying manufacturing jobs. Now the U.S. is a low-wage country compared to some countries in Western Europe and the trend here is continuing downward.

Workers in their fifties at the BMW plant, subsidizing their lower wages with their tax dollars, aren’t openly complaining, according to the Post. Not surprising, since the alternative in a falling economy is unemployment or a fast food job at $8 per hour.


It is important to consider that this is South Carolina. It is the same state where the Governor goes AWOL to see his Argentinian cumad. It is also the home state of Senator Jim DeMint, tea bagger ideologue par excellence. I frequently ruminate about where we Scamericans would be today if Lincoln had just let the South secede.

Archie said...

Re: The Rally To Restore Sanity and/or Fear.

Excellent slide show here of signs and scenes at the rally. My favorite:

I am ambivalent and I'm not going to take it anymore!!!!

i think.

Anonymous said...

Frank A,

Thank you for both links. Hedges is right on!

Hombre said...

"These are hard times, not "the End Times". --Jon Stewart

Science trumps superstition, as in why, after an accident, the ambulance takes you to the hospital, not the church.

Hombre said...

Campbeln - from your link to seekingalpha...
"Selection bias is the phenomenon of potentially erroneous sampling. Yesterday, retail "same store sales" (SSS) numbers came out, up 9% year over year, blowing away expectations. Now, there is an inherent selection bias embedded in the SSS numbers - it only counts data from stores which have been open for at least a year.
So, we have another embedded bias: survivorship bias: the data from stores which went out of business isn't counted...
...Why not just use total retail sales?" Well, there are good reasons: most of the time, during normal, stable or growing economic periods, the same store sales numbers probably provide a much more smooth, accurate depiction of the economic situation."

The trouble with statistics is they can be helpful or they can be, at minimum, a distraction, at worst a distortion.

If, in a town of, say, 50,000 there are empty storefronts from closed businesses and half of them closed THIS YEAR then I would argue that statistics which left out these stores would be somewhat off the mark as to the trend or business climate.
In fact, I suggest that if the average economist would take a cross country tour, anually, they would be able to better renlate their collected data to the real world.

Phlogiston Água de Beber said...

Damon Vrabel's Debunking Money #4 and #5 are now available for your viewing pleasure.

zander said...

Couldn't help chuckling at Guy Mcphersons dig at Bernanke in his latest post, describing him as "Benny and the inkjets"
a '77 comedy punk band perhaps?? minus the comedy of course.

Z.

Jim R said...

Upthread somewhere, there was a discussion of forests, of trees.

So far, the financial crisis is good news for the forests, as economic activity declines and there is less demand for lumber and paper.

Forests are in extreme jeopardy later on, however. As the broken economy bumps along the zero line, surviving humans will likely attempt to re-establish the old ways of living. Trees will be consumed as fuel. And the trees-to-population ratio is likely to be much less favorable to trees, even if there is some decline the denominator..

Chaos said...

Check out Numerian's letter to Obama, over at The Agonist, in his latest post:

http://agonist.org/numerian/20101031/an_open_letter_to_president_obama

excellent stuff...

Hombre said...

cont: ...on the other hand, if you take a thoroughly researched body of data and chart it, one can almost predict the near term future. for example, the pink, yellow, and red lines heading south at the far right of this one in Ilargi's post:

http://dshort.com/charts/Consumer-Metrics-Growth-Index.html?CMI-shift-series-04

Greenpa said...

Coy Ote said...

Science trumps superstition, as in why, after an accident, the ambulance takes you to the hospital, not the church.

For crying out loud don't pass that around! I guarantee you, if the Religious Rong hears that one, they'll launch a movement to amend the Constitution so that the ambulances have to go to the church first!

Ilargi said...

New post up.



Night of the Living Debt



.