Friday, March 13, 2009

03/13/09 thoughts

And the article of the day is...drum roll please...China Worried After Lending 'Huge Amount' to U.S.. It would also be good to remember what I mentioned in an earlier posting about the efficiency of supply and demand when reading this article. China exports "plunging"? They will quite making as many goods, factories will shutdown. Again, what happens when demand picks up and supply takes some time to follow? I am willing to wager $10 now that we are going to see hyperinflation as soon as the economy picks up...don't worry, when you loose the bet that $10 will only be worth a happy meal.

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Urban Survial...

Buy The Rumors?

An AP headline this morning reminds us that the "Global stock rally continues ahead of G-20 summit." As I sit back and wait for the next dip, eyeing a longer rally if we get a couple of days over 7404 on the Dow, I'm reminded of the rest of the old Wall Street adage: "Buy the rumor...sell the news."


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But there's also the little matter I'd have to call "The China Distraction". The US is now sending a war ship toward China. But, not to be outdone, China has,. in poker-playing terms, just given the west a big 'tell' about its intentions as headlines appear that China is worried about their (massive) US Treasury holdings.

But not to worry says our Commander in Chief - the economic situation is not as bad as we think. And if it isn't, goes our kick under the poker table toward the Chinese, those bonds are going up in value, not down.

As if to underscore that, headlines are about that the retail numbers out yesterday were not as bad as feared - which is putting a way more Happy Talk spin on it than I would have given it, but I only write headlines for my own little one-man e-paper.

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So is the bottom really in? Comments from readers are indecisive - which is a fine place to be. I've been awaiting a rally since December, but it feels to me like one more down leg should happen first. A couple of particularly good reader comments on point: One remind me of the old Bernard Baruch saying "I'll take my 60% out of the middle" - which gets to the strategy of getting in a little late, and get out a little early...very fine concept.

The other reader offered that some of the apparent rally in retail may just be consumers going out and having last-minute shopping flings - maxing out their credit cards - before going down to file bankruptcy later on. Yeah, that's possible too. Lot of tea leaves to consider in this environment.


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Spot The Terrorists Department

Here's a headline I keep forgetting to mention that came out this week: "Secret State Police Report: Ron Paul, Bob Barr, Chuck Baldwin, Libertarians are Terrorists." Yup, dangerous stuff, this supporting of The Constitution. What's the old saying? Something about when the hour is dark, telling the truth is a revolutionary act? Must be that time, huh?


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Coping: More - Free - Million Dollar Ideas

This morning's first 'million dollar idea' came to me as Elaine was clicking through the 'thousand channel wasteland' on the electric Cyclops in the living room, and since we get the odd Gollywood type wandering through here, it's a fine idea worth sharing. The only thing I ask is that if you are able to turn this into a series, a credit "Created by www.urbansurvival.com" before the rest of the credits would be appreciated.

So here's the outline:

Show Title: "Three Minutes for America"

Premise: If we're going to keep moving forward as a country, we've all got to spend more time listening to the ideas of others, coming to a new agreement on how the presently tearing social fabric can be put together. This show is a new vehicle for public discussion of all issues that uses the best of reality TV and combines it with a variant of news 'man-on-the-street' married with Marshall McLuhan's 'everyone gets 15-minutes of fame.'

Operation: Each week, producers 'throw the dart' at all of the continental USA and select 8-people to interview. The people are told that they have been selected for the show and they may say anything they want to the whole country on any topic that they feel would be constructive. They're encouraged to write down and rehearse their comments. Three teams of cameraperson and interviews then fly to the cities involved and interview the people. The video is then produced into the best 6 (18-minutes) for air. With show open, cutaways and credits it'd be about 21-0minutes of content - and would fit in a half-hour slot in early prime.

A host could be used - and he/she could do an intro to each segment along with a few graphics and statistics if it would be useful background to help sort out what the person was saying.

People could dress for the event, but casual is encouraged...a kind of fireside-chat feel - but instead of being from the top-down, it would be bottom-up.

Sponsorship: Ideally, the sponsorship would be an airline, such as American Airlines, which for its part would provide no-charge travel (coach) to the video crews; the name tie-up would be dandy.

What do you think? Would you watch it?


2nd Idea

For example, Nelson was kind enough to supply me with an 1861 paper by the godfather of electronics, James Clerk Maxwell, where he explains that the phenomena that we think of as electro magnetism is really not just two forces (the electric and magnetic) but some third force that operates 'at right angles' to the E or M field - and which is what pushes the M field out in watermelon shape around a bar magnet. So that's what I'm after...harnessing that 'right-angle' stuff if it can be found.

The quest is not without risks. As part of my researches I picked up number of super-strong magnets from www.kjmagnetics.com and promptly discovered that the warnings about wearing goggles and gloves when handling ultra-strong magnets were well-founded. I can attest that these little neodymium suckers if carelessly handle can draw blood...which is what I was repairing and in the midst of stopping the bleeding from, which got me out of the office/lab/shop and over to the living room when the TV show idea appeared.

Once the bleeding stopped (still hurts this morning) I got back to tinkering with a possible ham radio application of magnets to transmit and receive RF fields, as seems to be implied in the Chauncy J. Britten "Atmospheric Generator" patent.

Don't know if you've ever tries to push high-powered magnets similar fields together, but there's a lot of force there - and harnessing that force seems to be the heart of the ZPE design problem, not to mention the possibilities of 'scalar' wave generation if someone could marry up the "Stromerzeuger" (substituting the earth/ground and antenna radiator for the plates shown in Cole's work) with the radio effects noted in Britten's work.

Since I've got darn near every tool known to man, plus a full up electronics bench with gobs of instrumentation (function generators, meters, scope, etc...), feel free to send along comments or designs... george@ure.net.


Thursday, March 12, 2009

03/12/09 thoughts

Please indulge me for a minute. What is the definition of a Ponzi Scheme? I am not going to give my own definition, but I believe we can all agree on something close to each other. If not look here. Now that you have a good understanding of what a Ponzi Scheme is please explain to me how Social Security works. How do ALL Ponzi Schemes end? What do you think will happen to Social Security? What do you think will happen to the US when they cannot meet their obligations? How do you think the "wonderful" President Roosevelt will be looked upon then?

I mention all of this after reading this article, and hearing various talking heads refer to Madoff's Ponzi Scheme as the biggest in history. I know it is wrong to call things out for what they are, and it is noway to get ahead in life, but I use this as my outlet to say what I really think. Why are we all swallowing this tripe? To say this is the biggest Ponzi Scheme ever is to be just plain gullible. Those of you who want to read it are more than welcome, and those who don't agree with me will probably never care to read it.

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Ok, I believe we should spend money on education, but what happens when the government wants to tightly control what students learn? As for health, the best market is an open market. I imagine if we got rid of health insurance companies things would work even better. I recently was rear ended in a car wreck. The first thing the body shop asked me is, "Who is paying for this?" That single question alone let me immediately know that something is terribly wrong with the system in place. Now the quote to fix my car is probably going to be more than it would have been if I was paying. Why? Because who cares if the body shop is screwing over a faceless insurance company? I am not going to fight it because it is not my fight. The insurance company is just going to try to screw me directly, so the high estimate to fix my car stays, and the insurance company will just pass through the inflated cost to fix my car to all of their customers in the way of higher premiums.

If we just get rid of all of it then costs would go down, corruption would go down, the system would function more efficiently.


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from Urban Survival...


Unemployment Building

The expectation was that this week's un employment numbers would come in with just 640,000 jobless added to the rolls last week. We should be so lucky:

"In the week ending March 7, the advance figure for seasonally adjusted initial claims was 654,000, an increase of 9,000 from the previous week's revised figure of 645,000. The 4-week moving average was 650,000, an increase of 6,750 from the previous week's revised average of 643,250.

The advance seasonally adjusted insured unemployment rate was 4.0 percent for the week ending Feb. 28, an increase of 0.2 percentage point from the prior week's unrevised rate of 3.8 percent.

The advance number for seasonally adjusted insured unemployment during the week ending Feb. 28 was 5,317,000, an increase of 193,000 from the preceding week's revised level of 5,124,000. The 4-week moving average was 5,139,750, an increase of 124,250 from the preceding week's revised average of 5,015,500.

The fiscal year-to-date average for seasonally adjusted insured unemployment for all programs is 4.533 million. "

Since I got the monthly unemployment dart right at 8.1% last month, I think this month's dart will hit about (hold on while I throw it...) there....8.4%...we'll see, huh?

Markets

Got my mid-session reversal on Wednesday, but the Dow still ended up a couple of points. Futures just a shade off this morning, but who knows how much is the PPT working the indices behind the scene? Most of Europe is in the red this morning...

Percentage Plays

I'm starting to see stories popping up all over the place about how governments at nearly all levels and planning to increase their percentages taken by taxes of this sort, or that. Not to start off the day on the wrong foot here, but WTF?

The Hamburg, NY Sun reports that the village of Hamburg is looking at a 2.5% property tax hike.

Philadelphia's mayor is floating a 17 percent property tax there. New Castle County, Delaware is looking at the same problem.

Care to make a bet that property taxes won't be going down as fast as property values? That's because things like time-on-the-market and houses in foreclosure don't figure in to how property taxes are figured.

But, it seems to me that if you had a half-million dollar home 3-years ago, that has dropped to being a $375,000 home in today's market, that your property taxes oughta go down accordingly.

of course, they won't: Governments are always fast to grow and slow to get their hand out of your pocket when times get rough. Even, arguably, going to far as to put their hand in deeper on the theory that 'more government' will fix things.

If a government wants a bigger percentage than they were getting at the height of World War II, when Tax Freedom Day was April 4, seems to me someone ought to stand up and say something about it. Especially when Tax Freedom Day was April 23 in 2008 and I wouldn't be surprised to see it move into May again in 2009...something that hasn't happened since 1999 and 2000.

Won't happen, of course. Frogs in constantly warming water tend not to jump out until it's too late.

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Speaking of which: You saw that foreclosures were up 30% in February? And there are tons and gobs more to come. For now, Banks don't have much incentive to clear those homes off their balance sheets that they've taken back. The thinking in most REO (real estate owned) departments seems to be "If we just hold out a while longer....maybe we can get higher prices..." Denial is such a fine thing, especially when bottom-picking has become a national sport and updated versions of "Good times are just ahead..." bombard us from the MSM.

The good news is that if they did clear their accounts, there'd be way more homes on the market. The bad news is, there's tons and gobs in the pipeline yet to come.


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This portion is a little out there, and the Urban Survival author is clearly getting on a rant, but I believe he is probably not too far off if you just look at the cronological order of events. I am not saying all of this will happen in our life times I am just saying this is what happens next.


Coping: And the Next Shortage Is...

Since we were able to tell you about the impending ammunition shortage about three years ahead of its arrival, you'll no doubt have noticed that I am really ragging on folks to get - plant - and begin harvesting their own seed supplies for future food crops from open-pollinated, heritage (non-genetically modified) vegetable seeds.

So it was very much on point that this email arrived today:

"If you and your family plan to start growing vegetables and fruit for your consumption or for sale to your neighbors as the food supply available at the supermarkets begins to dwindle and prices increase in the days and years ago, it would be prudent to buy a large supply of open pollinated seed now, before these seeds become is short supply.

The reader was kind enough to send a link to a story headlined "The Multiple Ways Monsanto is putting Normal Seeds Out of Reach."

The linked story is doubly important because of two stories which are making MSM headlines headlines this morning: The first deals with how scientists think they will be able to create artificial life in the laboratory within five years, while the second advises us that yet one-more-worry for the year 2012 is that the world's population will click over to 7-billion. Both stories deserve special emphasis and a little head-space.

In the case of the genetically modified seed story, my problem with those companies which presently hold 'patents' on particular seeds is that they have no sense of morality and there has been woefully inadequate study of the environmental impacts of such seed. I'm sure you're aware of the Canadian farmer who had to pay damages to a chemical farming outfit because some genetically modified canola seeds from a neighboring farm blew into his field. The chemmie-company wanted dough, while the farmer took the position that it was pollution, not a lottery ticket to give the chemmie-boyz a piece of the action. But the farmer lost. It took from 1999 to 2008 and a battle in the Canadian Supreme Court before Percy Schmeiser won on appeal.

On the other hand, the UN Convention of Biodiversity has been pushing toward a ban of so-called 'terminator seed technology' and at the core of that monstrosity are seeds which would only live once and yield nothing edible in future crops. Sort of like fields of eunuchs.

Nevertheless, the seed companies are continuing to work both sides of the street. On tyhe one hand they are working on technologies which really can increase productivity under certain conditions for this veggie or that gain. The problem is that Ma Nature knows one hell of a lot more about running the world than does any number of PhD's the profit-driven boards of such outfits can hire.

In my recent readings of such books as Gardening When It Counts: Growing Food in Hard Times (Mother Earth News Wiser Living Series), what has become clear to me is that optimizing a GMO plant has boundaries and tradeoffs. Drought resistance might be improved, for example, but at the expense of hardiness. Or, you get back the drought resistance and the fertility/propagation potential drops...that kind of thing.

The bottom line here? Just like I told you a couple of years ago that few things would have 'collector' or 'investment value' like ammunition and guns, and you see what's happening to price and availability on this front? So too, I expect that heritage/open pollinated seeds will be of increasingly high value.

Not that it will stop ThePowersThatBe from trying to put a stranglehold on the very food you eat, of course: It won't.

The problem which always faces those at the top of the socioeconomic heap is that they always maintain control of society through some pretty basic tools: They steal control of the money supply (a slow-motion process that started with the takeover via the Federal Reserve Act in 1913, or they try to control the availability of food, and as we know from the recent Iraqi experience, if people don't use government-issued seeds there these days, they can be jailed.

And worse, of course is the presently pending disaster called HR 875 and S 425 which would essentially end farmer's markets and small farming completely. Go watch this video if you have the bandwidth - less than 2-minutes worth. It's how the chemmie-food lobby is making sure that just in case some upstart like me actually puts together a case that GMO-food is really a form of pollution more dangerous than, say, fluorocarbons (which is well may be) they will have another way to control the food supply: By making all but their own sources illegal.

Of course, the design pattern in this has been around for years. That's why the liquor lobbies have been so down on the growing and sale of pot. While a lot of science says that someone who's partly baked can drive a car better than someone who blows a 'two-oh' on the Breathalyzer, the problem for the PTB is that they may not be getting their pound of flesh on pot which has about zero in the ways of barriers to entry for competition.

So that's why this morning's warning about the collector/investor value of GMO seeds is so important: In order to have a society which has a high level of resilience to catastrophes other than the man-made variety, having things like GMO seeds, many bricks of .22 ammo, maybe even some 7.62 X 39 and a set of good hand tools are all so important to glom onto for the PTB.

A population that is well-fed, well-armed, and Constitution following is just not the easiest thing to rule if you're trying to transition to a socialist-centrally governed model of the world. It's like the PTN (and their shadow government minions) want all the power/authority benefits of a workable UN, but when the UN comes up on the side of smaller carbon footprints, or bio-diversity, well those things clearly need to be co-opted, which is how we come full-circle to beating the global warming drum loudly enough to kick off carbon-credit trading schemes and the like.

Think control and monetize...and you'll do just find if you ever get around the PTB. Thinking like them can also put you ahead of the game a fair bit.

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And that's the governance problem in a nutshell. As the old paradigm (cannibal corporatist globalism) collides with what Lessinger labels "responsible capitalists" and other call sustainable capitalism, we seem destined to see all kinds of frantic power-grabbing/control-freak kinds of thrashing about. Which is why banker bailouts and all manner of misnamed "patriot Acts" get slammed through CONgress without debate. Which means without dissent.

A few patriotic types (who actually read and live the Constitutional framework of the Founders) might ask: "Say, if no one reads the bills, isn't this 'taxation without representation'? And to carry the point one step further along, If a bill was passed by a previous generation, none of whom is alive today, shouldn't we have to reauthorize things like the Federal Reserve Act so that governance under our beloved Constitution is continuously renewed like it's supposed to be?

Well of course! But it's not likely to happen, even though it would make a dandy class-action lawsuit: Especially with recent, crystal-clear and undeniable, examples like passing the Bankster Bailout Bills or the Emergency Stimulus Bills without so much as anyone reading them. Sounds like taxation without representation to me. Oh, and what do you think those tea parties in places like Pennsylvania, Chicago, and California have been all about?

Of course, if you don't hear about them, or see them on teevee, it's not because they didn't happen: It's because the media is another tool of control used extremely effectively by the PTB and it's lobbyist cadre that pulls the strings of 'nominal government' on behalf of the real seat of power - the 'shadow government'.

Presumably, you know all this stuff, but it doesn't hurt now and then to slap ourselves smack in the face and wonder "What's to be done?"

Damn little, it turns out. You don't make progress by stepping on the 'tail of the beast' and getting all uppity about planning a "Second Revolution". We don't need to. It'll come along on it's own account without anyone firing a shot or doing anything else.

Because while folks like Kurzweil right about a dreamlike "Singularity" where invention will be instantaneous and we'll all be able to take the time to evolve into more spiritual beings" the track record of humans argues for the opposite. Kurzweil and other 'singularists' ignore that someone's gonna own those work-saving, instant-inventing machines. And they're going to exploit those who would seek to use them to they very limits of their power and authority, which need to be limited.

A much clearer vision of the "Singularity" comes from contemplating a world with an infinite number of lawyers, auditors, and police, enforcing an infinitely large set of rules, with worthless money at stake, and increasing less nutritious food.

History teaches us, if we take the time to read books like Joseph Tainter's "Collapse of Complex Societies" that complex systems eventually fail on their own when the marginal rate of return falls below zero for any particular group. Which is why we no longer bow down to the descendants of Genghis Khan, why we don't speak Mayan, and we don't write ancient Egyptian.

Militia? Paramilitary? No thanks. I'll just buy more seeds and put up more fencing, and watching the systemic instability from here in the East Texas outback. Guess I'm just a meat & potatoes kinda guy. But ya'll have fun. I'll be back later to pick up the pieces in, say, 2013.

Mine: Your Own Business?

Folks in the mining industry are all worked up over new legislation which, if adopted as proposed, would shut down "All mining in the US'. Yup, geniuses back in DC - and no need to read this one, either, huh?

So I will add a couple of gold pans to my stores here...


If we just get rid of all of it then costs would go down, corruption would go down, the system would function more efficiently.

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Wednesday, March 11, 2009

03/11/09 thoughts

The bureaucratic process hard at work.

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A figure to keep a sharp eye on. This Article looks at how China's exports are doing. They declined sharply over the past couple of months. The problem is these factories are not perfectly efficient. Meaning it takes factories time to ramp up production and slow down production; however, demand is perfectly efficient. When some decides they want a TV, they can immediately go out and try to purchase a TV. So if the factory is slowing production right now the supply will fall to meet current demand. But what happens when the economy starts moving again? Demand will potentially increase rapidly, while supply will take a while to ramp up again. Through in the large increase in money which the government has been throwing at the economy for the past 6 months and you have a recipe for huge price surges. The price increases will reflect a "real" increase (demand increasing while supply stays the same), and an inflationary increase which is not considered a real price increase (at least not in my book).

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Personal definition of inflation:

Inflation - erosion of the buying power of one unit of currency over time, generally associated with an unsustainable, ever growing economy; govt typically controls inflation rates by manipulating money supply

In order to make a "positive return" an investor has to make a higher return than the inflation rate. This gets into further Bullshit when you start to look at what/who measures inflation, and what the measurement is base off of. The CPI index is what many people use to measure inflation, but are they just looking at core inflation (excluding energy?), or are they taking into consideration everything they typically purchase in a single year?

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Interesting that i get into inflation and then I read today's Urban Survival.

Why You Should Pray for Inflation

Guess I got my "Bully Tuesday, huh? But was it what I'd term an "honest" rally? Nope. Reason? A lot of it had to do with the bulls seizing on the remark by representative Barney Frank that the so-called up-tick rule should be restored within a month.

What the uptick rule does, essentially, is to force a short-seller to sell at a higher price (the 'uptick') than the previous sale. Of course, the reality of history is that the uptick rule, which was enacted during the Great Depression, is one of those 'shut the gate after the horse has gone' kind of things. Might make the public feel better, and it might even help the bulls when they are running the shorts like in Tuesday's action, but did it prevent the 1987 near-global meltdown? No. Did it stop the LTCM disaster? No. How about the Herstatt disaster in what was it...1974...a banking disaster that almost ended the whole financial world? That's the one most non-economists have never read about because it's pretty hard to find blame and it underscores that speculative bubbles, when they pop, make loud, ugly noises that sound like the end of the world. Mostly because they get us so close to that very thing.

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So there I was on Tuesday, pondering how far the absurdity of the rally would go and straightening out a few problems here and there for clients and what happens? The phone rings and it's my friend The Bond Dude.

hadn't heard from him for a while and what followed was about a 45-minute lecture on why my praise of Nobel Prize winner Joseph Stiglitz last week - remember Stiglitz is the guy saying that big banks were not really too big to fail, and that there were ways out of the present disaster in financial markets - was all wrong because I hadn't considered the Federal Reserve's Z-1 (Flow of Funds) Report.

Upon admitting I hadn't read it since the December Z-1 report came out - it's a quarterly - and why couldn't my scolding be delayed until tomorrow when the next Z-1 comes out, TheBondDude launched into his scary explanation of why Stiglitz is wrong, and why the big banks really do have to be saved. Virtually no one understands this mess better than TBD...maybe even better than Ben Bernanke and Time Geithner, which is going a fair piece....so I paid close attention.

I'll paraphrase best I can:

"The problem with the Stiglitz approach is that if you try to protect only the small depositors, you will have all that money (brokered CD's and such) which is on deposit from other banks and big players to deal with. Say you've got major bank A and it is holding as part of its asset base certificates of deposits issued by bank C. You see what can happen? See what happens if the banks are allowed to fail? As soon as banks start to lose any confidence in one another's paper, then you get something like the Herstatt effect where counterparties fail to perform and we get a Depression overnight."

But Stiglitz, I argued, would do a better job of keeping Main Street's money whole and the public wouldn't be left holding the bag for the bankster's bad behaviors and gambling addictions. But TBD persisted...and he insisted that there's only one answer: Inflation, and just as fast as we can get it. If housing prices are down 20%, a bout of inflation would blow housing prices back up and fewer people would be 'upside down'.

The problem with housing down 20% to 25% is that the people (that Rick Santelli has no problem with) are now essentially forced to default. You know, those responsible people that didn't lie on their applications, saved and made 20% down payments, and borrowed to buy their houses with a nice fixed monthly payment they could afford. The reality is that there are just as many, if not more, of these nice responsible people now defaulting than there were subprime mortgages defaulting at the peak of the subprime meltdown last year.

How can that be, you ask? Simple, really. There are literally millions of those good credit responsible borrowers that have to sell their houses because of normal life events every year. You know, death in the family, lost job, divorce, new job in another city, whatever. That can happen to 5% to 10% of families every year. Sadly, now they can't sell their houses without writing a five-figure or six-figure check to the mortgage company at the closing table. So what do they do? Hang on as long as they can, and then default, that's what! With the Ure Memorial Layoff Festival really cranking up now, we could see as many as 5 million of these formerly excellent credit borrowers head down Foreclosure Road this year and again next year. That's the real reason Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are insolvent.... not the subprime mortgages. It's the prime mortgages with conservative underwriting that are going to kill them.

That's obviously what all the spending frenzy has been about in Washington - getting all that money borrowed and spent into the system. But TBD is not impressed.

'Look: the problem is that what the government is doing now will work...but it won't work until we are two or three years down the road...and by then, the whole country will be beggared."

"We agree that the only way to fight incipient deflation is with a countermeasure of slightly greater inflation but all the spending coming out of Washington so far has been far to slow-acting to save us - 18-months at best. You saw what happened in the mortgage bonds last week?"

Since I don't sit on a trading desk, and I've had the good sense to be parked in Treasuries, I had to answer "No."

"Well, we had about a billion dollars worth of mortgage bonds come through and even though they were mostly option ARM's, the yields were pushing 25%. Remember where they were the last time we talked?"

"Yeah...weren't option ARM's down around between 15 and 20 percent?"

"Exactly. And that was what, two months back? You see what's happening? Things are getting worse, not better in the market.

I'll give you and even more frightening example...let's look at triple A commercial mortgage backed securities...uh...here's the 8 1/2 year index at 1960 over swaps...that works out to a 22% yield. 22% for triple A priority slice of commercial building mortgage bonds, got it? And it gets worse as you go down the ratings... here's the single A CMBS index trading at 48% yield.

You see how much worse things have gotten?"

Oh, boy, did I ever. "So the market rally on Tuesday isn't real because if the single A commercial yield translates to a market P/E of what, for the hot money? A P/E of 2 maybe on the S&P 500?

"OMG, so we'd be looking at an S&P down around 200 and at those levels, we might really be back in breadlines and our 401(k)'s and even phat public pension funds would be toast...is that it?"

"You're close. But in fairness, that single A 48% yield probably has some defaults priced in, so maybe after those, the market's thinking the yield will be more like 33%."

"But that still means a price/earnings ratio equivalent for the major stock indices around 3 in order to compete with the fixed income gang! I haven't looked at the P/E of the Dow lately, but I'd bet it's still north of 15 since everybody and their grandmother has been whacking earnings forecasts. Have we, like, passed the point of no return where it blows up into Depression 2.0 no matter what the policrats do?"

"Basically, unless they follow the plan I've laid out - and do so instantly, yes.

The only way to really fix this is for the President to declare a financial emergency and give mandate everyone in the whole country gets a 10% mandatory wage increase for all workers....

Of course, there would be hardship exceptions for businesses with a high labor component, so outfits like restaurants could lose money and bill the government for their losses and make a little dough. But we need money in the system yesterday to spin around from the developing deflation dynamics."

"Hold it...Bond Dude...the last time you pitched me this idea a couple of months back it would only take a 5% mandatory wage hike. What happened?"

"Things have gotten worse. The fixed income yields are still climbing, as I explained, and thanks to government doing the wrong thing, the cost of saving the system keeps going up. Two months ago my solution would have cost maybe $100-150-billion - and it would have saved a pile of foreclosures because home prices would be stabilized and climbing again.

Since no one is paying attention and the interest clock is ticking, the cost has probably doubled to the $300 - $350-billion range. And it's spreading into the primes now because banks aren't lending, and with home values falling, the 5% of the prime pool that has to move every year for work reasons, can't do so.

So here's the hard part: what do you want? The alternatives are mandate 10% inflation now and that gets us further on the road to socialism on the one hand, or would you prefer to have the deflation dynamic build for another 18 to 24-months, have all those foreclosed homes picked up for pennies on the dollar and have a kind of New Landlord Feudalism on the other? Maybe those new Landlords will be Chinese repatriating some of their Treasuries, you think?"

Sadly, he's probably right. If interbank holdings are large enough, then yes, maybe 'too big to fail' just might be true...

"And you know that would impact every bank, insurance company, and pension fund, which would then have to be made whole, too, right?

That's the problem: Government's doing something - it's just the wrong something because it's going to be too slow. We need inflation right now and without it, deflation is going to keep whacking us..."

"In spite of markets like today's?"

"Yup."

I then asked The Bond Dude why his helicopter and Gulfstream class friends haven't sent him to DC to fix the problem. But I already knew the answer: Like me, he's probably offended both sides of the political aisle to such an extent that they won't return calls...even though more often than not, we turn out being right in the end.

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Having gotten thoroughly bummed out by that call, I dialed my friend Robin Landry who manages his client accounts from his office sensibly located in Shawnee Oklahoma, to see how his trip out to Vegas was last week and to ask him is this our long awaited rally catching fire?

"Probably not. This looks like it's just Wave 4 of the 5th wave down which should still reach my target around 6,000 plus or minus a couple of couple points. The thing to watch as the next decline starts is if the breadth indicators get worse than they were in the preceding rally. If so, then even the 6,000 +/- 200 area will not hold.

The concern rises because some of the indicators that I use are not confirming that the wave that we've just had, before this rally, is really the third wave. Thus, leaving open the possibility that the market decline is extending itself to the downside."

"So if that his how it unfolds, how soon would we be able to see it, and just how far down is do we go... I'm asking because the predictive linguistics guys are hinting that we may not see much of a rally this spring...and I've been watching since mid-December hoping to make a whole pile of money in gold and oil options in what should be a rally real quick, or to play some long-side stock index options..."

"If the indicators do show that the market is extending downward, then the possibility is that the rally from the November low of '08 to January '09 was not a fourth wave, but was in fact B wave or a wave 2, and we are already in the larger third wave down.

If that is the case, and by the way, even though I don't think so -- yet -- but the concern is there due to some of the indicator readings -- there really is no stopping point until the 4,300-4,400 line in my (Dow) work, and that would just be an area where we would get another bounce before working even lower from there.

The danger on the downside I believe is not understood by 99% of the investing public. There is still too much faith in the government's ability to manage the economy and the stock market.

The psychological aspect that I believe is in charge here, of what we are going through right now, is that the average citizen has seen so much wealth destroyed that they are reverting back to using common sense in their day-to-day activities, i.e. buying only what they can afford and heaven forbid, starting to save money, instead of spending it. ...the exact opposite of what the government is trying to tell you to do.

Thus the government policies, in my humble opinion, are doomed to fail and are like pushing on the proverbial string. Self-survival will cause people to do what's best for them and not what the government wants them to do."

So this morning, taking in all the inputs: Frank on the up-tick rule, The Bond Dude on competing yields for 'hot money' going into fixed incomes, and Landry's system of analyzing markets which he's been perfecting since 1976...it all smells like a little follow through at the open and a run this morning toward 6,979 plus or minus a Happy Meal, and then I'd expect another free-fall.

Or, we could go to 7,404 before free-falling again. But, it would take a day or two over 7,404 to convert Landry - or me for that matter - into believing the alternate wave count that would label the last week or two's downside as a failed fifth and we are going into the long awaited (since mid-December) Fourth Wave.

If it turns out to be a failed fifth, I will have missed my ideal long side entry. But I don't think so...at least not yet. So I will sit back and watch and wait; glad I'm not in the business of giving investment advice on your own there. Mid-session reversals, anyone?

For what it's worth, Pacific Investment Management (PIMCO) has joined Warren Buffett and Dr. Doom Marc Faber is predicting an uptick for inflation.

But the problem is, like The Bond Dude explained, it's probably too little inflation to keep us out of the soup lines. So for now, you might be praying for inflation and be pleased when you get it because it will keep your home price from collapsing and (if you've been paying attention) that garden I told you to plant this year will hedge you against higher food prices when inflation arrives and might even get you a little exercise for a change.

Global Coordination?

Meantime, keep an eye on the Fed's Ben Bernanke which is talking about the need for a new and powerful regulator. Notice how the standard banker and government answer these days is more bankers and more government?

Don't Hold Your Breath

A report on The Hill site this morning says the Obama Budget may not have enough senate votes to pass. I'm thinking "inflation delayed means what?"

And more to worry about that the administration and CONgress are piling on new regulations as conditions for banks...

New Media Wars

Several stories today on this front: "newspapers plan more cuts to cope with downturn."

In my former stomping grounds, the Seattle Post-Intelligencer looks to be on the verge of folding.

If you're old enough, you might remember when the PI's bacon was pulled out of the fire by the Joint Operating Agreement with the Seattle Times. This one looks to be a job-ender for some fine writers... BTW am I the only ex-Seattleite who learned a bit about journalism from ex-writers for the old Seattle Star?

McClatchy is whacking another 1,600 jobs.

Handwriting is on the wall: "Internet sounding death knell for newspapers: Survey" says a MSN News report...


...

Reader who is staying up late watching the late-night Washington spending has been pushing some numbers around:

"George:

The Senate passed the > $400B Omnibus (discretionary) spending bill last night. The bill, with 8-9,000 Congressional earmarks, was passed in toto, setting aside numerous offered amendments, including the one to repeal automatic Congressional pay increases (requiring a bill and debate to raise their own pay). [See "Ominous Omnibus" - G]

Now, the President, who campaigned against earmark spending, has an opportunity to show some fiscal restraint. Americans should have five days to voice their opinion, if the campaign promise to let bills age, allowing comment, is upheld. Bets anyone?

The word is President Obama will sign the bill today.

Please don't confuse this with political wrangling. Of the 8-9,000 earmarks 60% were from Democrats and 40% from Republicans. A pox on both their houses! We need another party (meaning political party).

Personally, I'm thoroughly disgusted. Congress has set a new record for hubris and waste. We (and our children and maybe their children) will be paying for this excessive spending spree for a very long time.

But wait ... there's more! Additional massive spends are needed for other projects: much needed funding for health care (especially for the growing unemployed) and boon-doggle budget busting bucks for climate change.

How can Congress scold any American for their spending habits? We have unlimited borrowing to do. Nothing to see here. Move along ...

For those keeping score, here's the tally (of money we don't have) that Congress can spend, beyond normal budget operations:

$350,000,000,000 (Tarp-2)

+ $787,000,000,000 (Stimulus)

+ $410,000,000,000 (Omnibus)

= $1,547,000,000,000

$1.547 TRILLION ... it should be a heck of a party (meaning party party).

The hangover? That comes later. Signed, Disgusted

ps - there was a (very attractive) young lady on TV this weekend who discussed the way eyes glaze over when explanations suggest dollar bills to the moon and back. This (very attractive) young lady had a novel way of explaining massive numbers.

If you started counting dollar bills at birth, one $ per second, it would take 95 years to reach one billion. A trillion is one thousand billion, so, using the same example it'd take 95,000 years to reach one trillion (or, 1,000 people each counting one dollar per second for 95 years)

... x 1.547 for what Congress just allocated.

[I can't validate the math ... my calculator exploded trying, is it]:

$1 x 60 (seconds) x 60 (minutes) x 24 (hours) x 365 (days) x 95 (years)?

...

Hope everyone is doing well

*
update: in response to your question Hunter, I do not believe this is the real rally to pull us out of the downturn. I am looking for everyone to think it is never going to get better for that shift to occur. It is clearly getting worse right now, but everyone is still thinking, "Oh, it will get better. Maybe at the end of 2009 everything will be fine."

If I had to put a time on it I would say August will be our very worst month (maybe not the DJ low, but sentiment will be the lowest, DJ will be close to the bottom, and there will be "blood in the streets"). I have started to seriously look at opportunities, but am in no hurry. I imagine this summer is going to suck, and this fall will not be much better. I do believe by Christmas we will be on our way back up (slowly I am sure); however, I think this Christmas will be worse that 2008 Christmas. This is because we will have sunk further into a recession by that time, and we will not have recovered everything we lost by December '09.

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

03/10/09 thoughts

Good article from Business Week.

"What is the individual investor trying to save for retirement to make of all this? The patterns of market history are such that stocks are sometimes seen as diamonds and bonds as zircon, and vice versa. Benjamin Graham, the investing legend, wrote in his 1949 masterpiece, The Intelligent Investor: "In the old legend the wise men finally boiled down the history of mortal affairs into the single phrase, 'This too will pass.' Confronted with a like challenge to distill the secret of sound investment into three words, we venture the following motto, MARGIN OF SAFETY."

Diversification is one way to build a margin of safety. It's a hoary lesson oft forgott. The Talmud recommends it: "A man should always keep his wealth in three forms; one third in real estate, another in merchandise, and the rest in liquid assets." Shakespeare in The Merchant of Venice has Antonio explain to his friends why he wasn't spending sleepless nights worrying over his investments.

"Believe me, no. I thank my fortune for it,

My ventures are not in one bottom trusted,

Nor to one place; nor is my whole estate

Upon the fortune of this present year.

Therefore my merchandise makes me not sad.""

...

What could happen; what if we have hyperinflation at the same time? What would the real value of the Dow Jones be then?

...

Urban Survival

Meantime, Ben Bernanke gets up in front of the Council on Foreign Relations this morning (quick, look surprised) and begins by saying:

"The world is suffering through the worst financial crisis since the 1930s, a crisis that has precipitated a sharp downturn in the global economy. Its fundamental causes remain in dispute...."

Remain in dispute? (Is he kidding?) Too much debt, excessive leverage, malinvestment and a lack of regulatory oversight seem pretty obvious to the public. That and the lack of responsiveness from our so-called 'representatives' when calls and emails run 300-to-1 against bailouts. What's to dispute? The crooked trading desks lost their asses when the quant-models blew up and the publics taking the old 'bend-over' on it. What's to dispute?

But don't get me started. That's the lay of things this morning: I figure I can get some projects done around the house and out in the shop while I wait for the rest of the world to come to its senses. So "Bully for Tuesday!" Financial reality is being reframed before our very eyes.


...


Interesting...I wonder why we don't hear about stuff like this that much


Monday, March 9, 2009

03/09/09 thoughts

Economist bicker over correct action.

I am not sure how spending money on anything but Research and Development or infrastructure is going to stimulate the economy. I would love to see something that proves me wrong, but as it stands, I believe the govt is wasting a whole lot of money...our money.

...

Interesting, I wonder if we will start to see more articles like this as time progresses and Obama turns out to be just another politician and the current "recession" doesn't turn out to be just a recession.

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What the global recession has done so far to values.
I imagine this is a conservative estimate since most companies self evaluate. Generally speaking companies will either value their assets as high as they can, or will try to keep values growing consistently with little fluctuation. Either of these cases points to inflated internal values during an economic period such as the one we are in.

...

A great classic article explaining the fundamentals of investing:

Bob Farrell was the head of Merrill Lynch Research for decades, and during that time he established himself as one of the premier market analysts on Wall Street. His insights on technical analysis and general market tendencies were later canonized as "10 Market Rules to Remember" and have been distributed widely ever since. Let's take a look at these timeless rules and how they can help you achieve better returns.

No.1. Markets tend to return to the
mean over time.
In layman's terms, this means that periods of market insanity never last forever. Whether it's extreme optimism or pessimism, markets eventually revert to saner, long-term valuation levels. For individual investors, the lesson is clear: Make a plan and stick to it. Don't get thrown by the daily squawk and turmoil of the marketplace. (You can learn more about how stocks behave in Forces That Move Stock Prices.)

No.2. Excesses in one direction will lead to an opposite excess in the other direction.
Like a swerving automobile driven by an inexperienced youth, overcorrection is to be expected when markets overshoot. Fear gives way to greed, which gives way to fear. Tuned-in investors will be wary of this and will possess the patience and know-how to take measured action to safeguard their capital. (Read more about fear and an omen that predicts sharp corrections in Be Aware Of The Hindenburg and When Fear And Greed Take Over.)

No.3. There are no new eras, so excesses are never permanent.
The tendency among even the most successful investors is to believe that when things are moving in their favor, profits are limitless and towers can be built to the heavens. Alas, as in the ancient Tower of Babel story, it's not so. As the first two rules indicate, markets revert to the mean. Profits have to be taken while they're still profits, lest all be lost! (To read more about statistics, see Five Stats That Showcase Risk.)

No.4. Exponential rapidly rising or falling markets usually go further than you think, but they do not correct by going sideways.
The big money knows to hold on while a steeply profitable move is in effect (as seen in the trader saying, "let profits run") and to patiently stay in cash in the grip of a market panic ("don't attempt to catch a falling knife"). Moreover, these types of sharply moving markets tend to correct equally sharply, preventing investors from contemplating their next move in tranquility. The lesson: be decisive in trading fast-moving markets. And always place stops on your trades to avoid emotional responses. (You can see more about using limit orders to protect you from yourself at A Logical Method Of Stop Placement.)

No.5. The public buys the most at the top and the least at the bottom.
This is the sad truth of the average John Q. Investor. He's incurably impressionable - and innocent to boot. He reads the newspapers, watches market programs on television and believes what he's told. Unfortunately, by the time the financial press has gotten around to reporting on a given price move - up or down - the move is complete and a reversion is usually in progress: precisely the moment when Johnny Q. decides to buy (at the top) or sell (at the bottom). (Read more about stock news in Mad Money ... Mad Market?)

The need to be a contrarian is underlined by rule No. 5. Independent thinking will always outperform the herd mentality. (For more on contrarian investing, see Buy When There's Blood In The Streets.)

No.6. Fear and greed are stronger than long-term resolve.
Basic human emotion is perhaps the greatest enemy of successful investing. By contrast, a disciplined approach to trading - whether you're a long-term investor or a day trader - is absolutely key to profits. You must have a trading plan with every trade. You must know exactly at what level you are a seller of your stock - on the upside and down. Better still, place stops with each buy order, because once the market begins to move, the world becomes a very different place. (To keep reading on this subject, see Buying Fear, Neuroeconomics And The Science Of Investing Fear and Master Your Trading Mindtraps.)

Knowing when to get out of a trade is far more difficult than knowing when to get in. Knowing when to take a profit or cut a loss is very easy to figure in the abstract, but when you're holding a security that's on a quick move, fear and greed will quickly act to separate you from reality - and your money.


No.7. Markets are strongest when they are broad and weakest when they narrow to a handful of blue-chip names.
Many investors are "Dow-obsessed," following with trance-like concentration every zig and zag of that particular market average. And while there's much to be gained from a focus on the popular averages, the strength of a market move is determined by the underlying strength of the market as a whole. Broader averages offer a better take on the strength of the market. Instead, consider watching the Wilshire 5000 or some of the Russell indexes to get a better appreciation of the health of any market move. (Get to know the most important indexes in our tutorial on Index Investing.)

No.8. Bear markets have three stages - sharp down, reflexive rebound and a drawn-out fundamental downtrend.
Market technicians find common patterns in both bull and bear market action. The typical bear pattern, as described here, involves a sharp selloff, a "sucker's rally", and a final, torturous grind down to levels where valuations are more reasonable; a general state of depression prevails regarding investments in general. (Learn about how your portfolio should evolve in bad times at Adapt To A Bear Market.)

No.9. When all the experts and forecasts agree, something else is going to happen.
This is not magic. When everyone who wants to buy has bought, there are no more buyers. At this point, the market must turn lower and vice versa.

No.10. Bull markets are more fun than bear markets.
This true for most investors - unless you're a short seller. (If you want to enjoy the bear markets by short selling, check out our Short Selling Tutorial.)

Conclusion
Many investors fail to see the forest for the trees and lose perspective (and money) unnecessarily. The above listed rules should help investors steer a more focused path through the market's vicissitudes.

by Aryeh Katz,

...

A good article with Warren Buffett. Eventually the economy will turn around; however, yes this recession/depression is a bad one. The best thing the govt can do is make clear decisions, and then stick with them.

"Buffett said the nation needs a clear message from the government about what the problem is in the economy and what will be done. He said all 535 members of Congress should set aside partisan bickering to deal with what Buffett has called an economic Pearl Harbor."

"Fear and confusion has been driving much of consumer and investor behavior in recent months, Buffett said. The nation's leaders need to clear up the confusion about the economy before anyone will become more confident, he said."

...

Urban Survival

Rat #1: National Healthcare Hype: But instead of focusing on the problems that lead to healthcare issues, you dumb humans are working on the wrong end of the problem. You're trying to cobble up a money solution to something that is fundamentally an education and habit change you're too lazy to make.

The way I have it figured is simple: The sociocrats will keep thrashing and trashing the economy (and the automakers) until they can roll in a national healthcare plan which - like the banks - will keep the profitable companies in private hands and which will take the dogs (and you know my feelings on dogs, right?) and sick'em onto the public.

And if crashing the banks and the automakers doesn't do it, I look for the airlines to be the next big things to be semi-nationalized after that.


Rat #2: Hugo Chavez:

You saw the headline this morning over on the Drudge Report that "Chavez calls on Obama to follow the path of socialism"?


Minor Mice

The White House is seeking economic advice from Twitter? You mean like responding to the needs of a target market?

"Never waste a good crisis, Clinton says on Climate" reminds me that we cats can't be herded. You humans on the other hand...well, it's a joke.

The report that "CBS may have to borrow to pay off maturing debt" sure reads like a third-part harmony to Fed buying Treasury securities. Does it take a cat to point out that borrowing to pay debt is not really paying down debt?


...


Then too, the reports that the World Bank has a 'dire forecast' about the whole world's economy doesn't mean that the Second/Greater Depression is here -- yet. It just means that for the first time since World War II the global economy will actually shrink in 2009. But again, it just seems bad.

Have I been touched by a chemically induced bout of optimism, or something? No. I just recognize that at some point, the market will make a bottom and we should get a bounce. It's just the timing of the bounce that seems fuzzy.

...

I will try to tread the middle ground, and attempt to temper overly excitable extremist points of view both on the far left and the far right. That said, here is what some are thinking:

"For ten years I have been warning about a thousand fires coming to New York City. It will engulf the whole megaplex, including areas of New Jersey and Connecticut. Major cities all across America will experience riots and blazing fires—such as we saw in Watts, Los Angeles, years ago.

There will be riots and fires in cities worldwide. There will be looting—including Times Square, New York City. What we are experiencing now is not a recession, not even a depression. We are under God’s wrath. In Psalm 11 it is written"

...

I will have to read into this blog and what it has to say:

One of the best brains out there in the investment world today (besides Jim Rog3ers) is Dr. Marc Faber who writes the Gloom, Boom, and Doom report. In an appearance on Bloomberg this morning, Faber has a couple of interesting points to make:

  • Gold exploration outfits may become good investments. He figures look for the exploration outfits that have deep pockets behind them (backers).

  • Faber thinks ex-government global GDP is probably already down 10% - or more.

  • Healthcare, education, and food prices haven't gone down are still pushing and so as money-printing continues, the foundation is being laid for future inflation.

  • Faber reckons that some industrial commodities will do well going forward.

  • Faber thinks that the dollar will begin to fall and that stocks will be in rally mode by the end of April

I read the "April rally" as a short term rally, and not a trend changer, but feel free to interpreting how ever you feel is best...this may be a good opportunity to get out of investments you do not think will be good in the long run (i.e. the opportunity cost is too great).

...

In 1938, the federal government held a series of hearings into the causes of the Great Depression of the 1930's. And, no surprise, the outcome of the hearings that made it into the history books was the Keynesian version of things which in effect said that "more government intervention and better intervention" was the 'right' course for government. Of course, since telling an already big government that more government was needed, this was very much like pushing drinks at a drunk. In case you haven't noticed, the 'bailouts' that have been passed have about zero job creation power; 3.5 million admits the Obama administration, of of these, some will be counted if jobs are just 'saved' - making accountability all but impossible. But, in case you haven't noticed, the "more government mantra" of the 1930's is being replayed in spades today.