Fuck Off Tories
  • WTO: Global trade will slow down in 2012

    With signs that the European Union
    “may already be in recession” and the U.S. playing catch-up with the
    labor market, exporting activity from industrialized countries will
    expand just 2%.


    The developing world will have a stronger 5.6% bump in trade.


    Last year, U.S. exports swelled 7.2% but were still down from 15.4% growth the previous year.


    Japan’s exporting didn’t grow at all – it declined 0.5% after rising 27.5% in 2010.


    China, whose export activity soared 28.4% in 2010, hit the brakes and
    decelerated down to 9.3% growth. Even India, the strongest performer in
    2011 with 16.1% growth, still suffered a letdown from the year before.


    Lamy cautioned governments against “economic nationalism” and the
    “steady trickle of restrictive trade measures” that he said are already
    undermining open borders.


    “It is time to do no harm,” he said.


    If the economic environment stabilizes – and oil prices don’t
    continue their rapid run-up – the WTO predicts that trading will
    improve, growing 5.6% in 2013. The U.S. will likely experience a
    moderate recovery.

    http://www.latimes.com/business/money/la-fi-mo-wto-global-trade-2012-20120412,0,1053045.story

  • Therefore, in LEAP/E2020’s view, five devastating storms will mark the
    summer of 2012 and thus accelerate the process of world geopolitical
    swing:





    . US relapse into recession against the background of European stagnation and BRICS slowdown


    . dead end for the central banks and interest rate increases


    . storm on the foreign exchange and Western sovereign debt markets


    . Iran, the war « too far »


    . new crash in the markets and financial institutions.





    In this GEAB issue our team analyzes these five shocks of summer 2012 in detail.





    At the same time, in partnership with the Anticipolis Editions, we
    are publishing a new excerpt from the book by Sylvain Périfel and
    Philippe Schneider, “2015 - The great fall of Western real estate”, at
    the time of the French version going on sale; dealing with the prospects
    for the American residential real estate market.


    http://www.leap2020.eu/GEAB-N-63-is-available-Global-systemic-crisis-The-five-devastating-storms-in-summer-2012-at-the-heart-of-the-world_a9601.html

    They gonna print massive amount of money to prevent this.


  • France Tests US Navy’s Supersonic Sea Skimming Target

    I guess french will join the upcoming Iran war.

  • Commodity exporters should brace for lower prices: IMF

    The IMF said baseline projections foresee a
    decline in commodity prices during 2012-13. "Sizable downside risks to
    global growth also pose risks of further downward adjustment in
    commodity prices," it added.

    Economic
    data on Tuesday showed that China's imports of major commodities are
    down. Still, data released so far shows that China's appetite for
    commodities is likely to grow although at a slower pace as companies
    stockpile. L3E8FA3AX

    http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/04/10/us-imf-commodities-idUSBRE8390Z820120410

    Hilarious. RMB is going up, everything else will go up as well.

  • China Doubling Yuan Band Signals Drive for Convertible Currency

    The increase to 1 percent from 0.5 percent takes effect
    tomorrow, the People’s Bank of China said on its website
    yesterday. This month, regulators raised quotas for foreigners
    buying onshore stocks and bonds to $80 billion from $30 billion
    and increased the amount of yuan held offshore that can be
    invested locally.

    http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-04-14/china-widens-yuan-band-to-1-percent-people-s-bank-says.html

    non dollar money movement will become less and less predictable from dollar point of view. It will simply be larger.

  • Bo Xilai's Son Leaves Apartment Near Harvard

    This clown is going to be in a lot of pain soon. enhanced interrogation / worker reeducation type of pain. Probably seeking asylum soon. of course he is practically a useless c1 a asset now.

  • image

    http://www.businessinsider.com/joe-stiglitz-on-mercantilism-2012-4?op=1

    last time I check all mercentalism countries are all in positive and either thriving or at least no collapsing.
    US implement mercentalism against all pre war trade rival. And everybody who implement mercentalism win the post war trade race.

    Mercentalism works. It works very well in fact.

      United states currently IS also implementing a form of mercentalism (free trade rule, IP international law, standard, embargoes, military intervention, treaty that clearly rigged against everybody else ..etc) ... So no sense complaining. Everybody is just doing what United states has been doing since 20th century. I don't expect anybody care if one player or another lost few position in global race. United states choice is very clear: lose the global reserve/petro dolar cycle then devaluate to create price advantage or maintain reserve status/energy cost advantage and lost trade war. Can't have it both way. This status quo must increasingly be enforce with threat of military attack or other form of coercion, since there is almost no goodwill and sympathy left toward United states globally.

    As of now Euro-Dollar economy are not big enough to maintain status quo. It's one small explosion away from total collapse. So monetary tricks are not going to be enough to patch thing up like the 70's.

    United State situation is Argentina after peg, not Japan after bubble burst. The only path to maintain status quo is to keep borrowing money in ever debased currency unless the reserve status (peg) is removed. Sooner or later all the preaching about "free market capitalism"  will be tested. Every move United states make to counter free trade will face exact same and harsher retaliation. Until finally petro dollar cycle collapse. then shit gets real. hyper inflation, gasoline line, riot, .. then more war.
  • image

    I assure you, it will not be  japan deflation pathg (ever lower wage,massive industrial productivity increase, constant purchasing power, positive trade balance) basically.......take less pay, work harder, stop consuming natural resource, win global trade market share.

    It means massive public transport infrastructure, insane population density, capital control, hyper competitive work force... (Japan in the 00's)   It'll be $100 watermelon, $7minimum wage, and you have better get a college degree with your combini job. No car. do it for 2 decades. ...
  • image

    I think the rest of world answer to this is fairly basic: FUCK YOU and your economic theory. EAT the same medicine that has been prescribing other countries by your ilks at IMF during exact same national difficulties. (basically, neo-liberalism bitchez. and you better like it.)

    1. privatization
    2. balance budget
    3. liquidate national asset
    4. open market
    5. stop all subsidies, social program, etc.
    6. obviously things are still not bad enough to stop gigantic military spending and adventurism. 

    (I really don't see how anybody else in the world shed a tear over US budget plight)
    to which the world already thinking "these idiots probably will go to war again soon enough"
  • The Maastricht Treaty also assumed that
    only the public sector is capable of producing unacceptable imbalances;
    the market was expected to correct its own excesses. And the Maastricht
    Treaty was supposed to have established adequate safeguards against
    public sector imbalances. Consequently, when the European Central Bank started operated it treated government bonds as riskless assets that
    banks
    could hold without allocating any capital reserves against them. This
    encouraged commercial banks to accumulate the bonds of the weaker
    countries in order to earn a few extra basis points. This caused
    interest rates to converge which, contrary to expectations, led to
    divergences in economic performance. Germany, struggling with the
    burdens of reunification, undertook structural reforms and
    became
    more competitive. Other countries enjoyed a housing boom that made them
    less competitive. Yet others had to bail out their banks after the crash
    of 2008. This created conditions that were far removed from those
    prescribed by the Maastricht Treaty with totally unexpected
    consequences. Government bonds which had been considered riskless turned
    out to carry significant credit risks. 


    Unfortunately the European authorities
    had little understanding of what hit them. They were prepared to deal
    with fiscal problems but only Greece qualified as a fiscal crisis; the
    rest of Europe suffered from a banking crisis and the divergence in
    competitiveness also gave rise to a balance of payments crisis. The
    authorities did not even understand the nature of the problem, let alone
    see a solution. So they tried to buy time.  


    Usually that works. Financial panics
    subside and the authorities realize a profit on their intervention. But
    not this time because the financial problems were reinforced by a
    process of political and social disintegration. While the European Union
    was being created, the leadership was in the forefront of further
    integration; but after the outbreak of the financial crisis the
    authorities became wedded to
    preserving the status quo. This has
    forced all those who consider the status quo unsustainable or
    intolerable into an anti-European posture. That is the political dynamic
    that makes the disintegration of the European Union just as self-
    reinforcing as its creation has been.  At the onset of the crisis a
    breakup of the euro was inconceivable: the assets and liabilities
    denominated in a common currency were so intermingled that a breakup
    would have led to an uncontrollable meltdown. But as the crisis
    progressed the financial system has been progressively reoriented along
    national lines. This trend gathered momentum in recent months. The LTRO
    enabled Spanish and Italian banks to engage in a very profitable and low
    risk arbitrage in the bonds of their own countries. And the
    preferential treatment received by the ECB on its Greek bonds will
    discourage other investors from holding sovereign debt. If this
    continued for a few more years a break-up of the euro would become
    possible without a meltdown – the omelet could be unscrambled – but it
    would leave the central banks of the creditor countries with large
    claims against the central banks of the debtor countries which would be
    difficult to collect. 


    The Bundesbank has become aware of the
    danger. It is now engaged in a campaign against the indefinite expansion
    of the money supply and it has started taking measures to limit the
    losses it would sustain in case of a breakup. This is creating a
    self-fulfilling prophecy. Once the Bundesbank
    starts guarding against a breakup everybody will have to do the same. Markets are beginning to reflect this.

    http://www.businessinsider.com/george-soros-on-the-eurozone-crisis-2012-4

    Unfortunately, euro has to keep printing to match Ben Bernanke speed, or else Euro zone industry will be destroyed. And ben bernak will keep printing in the next 2-3 yrs. That much is obvious.

  • Summit of the Americas ends without final declaration

    http://news.nationalpost.com/2012/04/15/division-on-cuba-ends-summit-of-americas-on-frosty-note/

    This is much worst than I thought. No wonder they created  that "hooker" diversion controversy to cover the summit failure. This after Asean failure and unproductive G8. Talking about Bush size failure.

    --------------------

    Washington’s southern neighbours, who are now showing unprecedented
    independence from the United States on many levels, appear no longer
    willing to take no for an answer.  

    This time around, the absence
    of Cuba is on the front burner. To keep the image of harmony , even
    conservative Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper is
    reportedly willing to sign a final declaration - with reservations -
    that includes two clauses calling  for Cuba’s reincorporation into the
    OAS, without prior conditions.  

    Washington, however, won’t sign,
     arguing that Cuba is not a democracy and has no place at the table.
    Because of this, at the time of this blog being written, there will be
    no final declaration of the Sixth Summit of the Americas.  

    Obama
    attempted to deflect attention from the thorny issue by blaming the
    messenger -  using an argument that he now probably regrets.

    “Sometimes
    I feel as if in some of these discussions, or at least the press
    reports,  we are in a time warp going back to the 1950s, with gunboat
    diplomacy and Yankees and the Cold War. That’s not the world we live in
    today,” said Obama, when asked about Cuba during an economic forum
    preceding the presidential summit inauguration.

    The reference to times changing and the Cold War soon backfired on the US President.  

    Opening
    the summit , host President Juan Manuel Santos of Colombia not only
    turned the tables on Obama, but he also made it clear there  would
    likely not be another Summit of the America’s if  Washington does not
    change its mind.

    http://blogs.aljazeera.com/americas/2012/04/15/obama-casualty-cold-war


    Latin America's
    militant opposition to the decades-old U.S. isolation of
    communist Cuba put more pressure on President Barack Obama at
    the Americas Summit on Sunday and threatened to sink a final
    declaration.
    ..


    For the first time, conservative U.S-allied nations like
    Colombia are throwing their weight behind the traditional demand
    of leftist governments that Cuba be in the next meeting of the
    Organization of American States (OAS).



    Diplomats said the dispute could block the final declaration
    planned for Sunday at the closing of the meeting, and originally
    intended as a hemispheric show of unity."The isolation, the embargo, the indifference, looking the
    other way, have been ineffective," summit host and Colombian
    President Juan Manuel Santos said of the Cuba issue.

    There may not even be another representative Organization of American
    States (OAS) summit if the US does not change its ways. Already, the
    more left-leaning nations vow to boycott OAS events unless Cuba is given
    representation (it bears remembering who came up with the OAS in the
    first place):


    Ecuador's President Rafael Correa boycotted the
    meeting over Cuba, and fellow leftist Daniel Ortega of Nicaragua also
    stayed at home. The leftist ALBA bloc of nations - including Venezuela, Ecuador, Bolivia, Nicaragua and some Caribbean nations - said they will not attend future summits without Cuba's presence.

    http://ipezone.blogspot.com/2012/04/pope-1-obama-0-latam-united-vs-cuba.html
  • Bolivian President Evo Morales said earlier in the weekend that all
    the Latin American countries wanted to invite Cuba but were stopped by
    the U.S.


    “It’s like a dictatorship,” said Morales, adding: “It is just
    impossible for one country to oppose the will of others and not listen
    to them.”


    Argentine Foreign Minister Hector Timerman blamed both the U.S. and
    Canada for using a “veto” to stop a consensus in favour of Cuba’s
    participation.


    Meanwhile, another issue — illicit drugs — captured the attention of the summit.


    Harper said the leaders had a solid discussion on the issue.


    “I think there is almost a universal agreement that we should
    continue to fight transnational criminal networks. There is increasing
    doubt about whether we are taking the best approach to doing that.”

    --------------

    The OAS was created as anti communism organization. whaddya expect. The same trick was tried in Asean few weeks back and he was not invited back.. The line was simple, lift Burma sanction or don't come.

  • What a difference a month makes. About 4 weeks ago the European crisis was "over" - French President Sarkozy exclaimed that: “Today, the problem is solved!” Christine Lagarde, former French finance minister, and current IMF head following the framing of DSK, added that “Economic spring is in the air!”... Fast forward to today when following the inevitable end of the transitory favorable effects of the LTRO (remember: flow not stock,
    a/k/a the shark can not stop moving forward), the collapse of the
    Spanish stock market, the now daily halting of Italian financial stocks,
    the inevitable announcement that shorting of financials in Europe is
    again forbidden, and finally the record spike in Spanish CDS, Europe is
    broken all over again. Which brings us again the Sarkozy and Lagarde.
    The Frenchman who is about to lose the presidential race to socialist
    competitor Hollande (an event which will have major ramifications for
    Europe as UBS' George Magnus patiently explained two
    months ago), no longer sees anything as solved, and instead is openly
    begging for the ECB to inject more, more, more money into the system to
    pretend that "problems are solved" for a few more months.

    http://www.zerohedge.com/news/europe-broken-again-sarkozy-and-lagarde-are-back-begging#comments

    Nothing has been fundamentally fixed. Housing is still largely in legal limbo, the shadow banking is larger and deadlier than ever, computer going crazy in commodity market, massive global trade imbalance, political gridlock... and now add all this to sharply increasing global military tension - oil crisis.

    just one random jitter somewhere it will trigger massive computer transaction that will spike or dump everything. Then it will cascade everywhere else within minutes.

    Since this is the most obvious scenario, people are going to prepare for this and this preparation is what make uncertainty higher. (eg. money draining out from places to safer destination outside dollar.)
  • Heavy fighting continues on Kabul streets

    afghan version of tet offensive. And this while the southern supply line is completely cut off. Meanwhile in north africa another regime change. So, I don;t know how they expect global recovery with so many instability.

  • Puri made the following points: 


    A) India fully supports Annan’s mission. India appreciates that
    Annan’s mission has made progress and “resulted in cessation of
    violence.” 


    B) India welcomes Syrian government’s acceptance of the Annan
    plan. India hopes that the opposition too would “adhere” to the relevant
    action points in the Annan plan and “renounce violence and cooperate
    fully.” (Comment: The onus is on the opposition to show sincerity.) 


    C) India supports the UN supervision mission’s deployment and hopes
    that “all parties, including the opposition” will cooperate with the
    mission. Having said that, the UN supervision mission too should work
    “impartially, fairly and independently” and should give due respect to
    Syria’s sovereignty, unity and territorial integrity.” 


    D) India calls for an “inclusive Syrian-led political process”. The
    process should start as soon as possible. “We have noted the commitment
    of the Government of Syria to such a process. We expect that the
    opposition will also engage seriously in this process so that the crisis
    is resolved without any further bloodshed.” (Comment: Delhi’s
    endorsement of the Syrian government stance stands out.) 


    E) India feels that a special responsibility lies with “all
    countries in Syria’s neighborhood and beyond” to facilitate the success
    of the Annan mission. (Comment: A mild stricture of countries like
    Turkey or some Persian Gulf monarchies?)

    http://blogs.rediff.com/mkbhadrakumar/2012/04/15/india-carries-brics-flag-on-syria/

    This might explain the non existence G-8 statement. I don;t understand what happened there...
  • Today's market action in USD (DXY Inverted - green), TSY yields
    (red), S&P 500 futures (blue), and Gold (gold) broke into 5 specific
    phases...


    image


    Phase 1 - markets were drifting until the release of the major US macro data (retail sales beat and empire manufacturing missed). The better-than-expected retail sales data spurred risk-on
    and Treasuries were sold and Stocks bought as the USD was reflexively
    sold (on correlations) and gold rallied (a little odd but looked like
    modest high USD beta move). Consistent


    Phase 2 - US markets opened and started to slide, only helped by a notable miss on NAHB and commentary - risk-off.
    This Long USD, Short Stocks, Long Treasuries, Short Gold move all fit
    as bad news is bad news (no longer good enough to prompt a pre-emptive
    QE3 hope trade). The move was nicely in sync and these risk-off flows
    petered out after the first hour or so of the day-session. Consistent


    Phase 3 - From mid-morning to the European close, markets generally drifted sideways but the sniff of USD selling was apparent and picking up. Consistent


    Phase 4 - From the close of Europe's equity markets to
    shortly after their FX market closed (and notably market sweeps and
    funding needs are comprehended), the USD was sold hard and aggressively.
    The reflexive move of this forced USD selling / EUR
    repatriation flow was to push risk-assets up (as correlation algos
    reacted). The significant thing is that stocks moved on little volume
    (algos not flow) and the selling in FX was heavy and rapid (we need
    these EUR now). Inconsistent


    Phase 5 - After the European markets had closed is when the
    effect of the real asset selling and repatriation flows hits the US
    markets.
    The need to bring EURs home in a hurry likely meant
    European banks traded away their US stocks and US Treasuries but this
    selling pressure was held back by the algos reacting to USD weakness. As
    soon as the FX trades were done and the USD stabilized the buying
    pressure disappeared at the margin and so Treasuries and equities sold
    off as the marginal algo buyer had gone and all was left was the flow of
    the EUR-based sellers left with dealers trying to unwind their
    positions. Also note that there was no flow back to Gold or the USD
    safety as USD-assets sold off (as they had already been shifted and were
    now being reracked by dealers offloading). Inconsistent

    http://www.zerohedge.com/news/eurocalypse-now-i-love-smell-repatriation-afternoon





  • Today, the Argentine government proceeded with that plan as a matter of
    "public interest," sending shares of YPF plunging more than 11% in late
    mid-day trading. As of 1:30 PM Eastern time, ARGT had yet to trade a
    single share today. Soon after, 1,500 shares in ARGT changed hands,
    sending the $3.5 million fund down 3.2% in the process.








    Regarding the YPF nationalization, Spanish financial institutions hold a
    large percentage of the company. Spanish fired back, stating that they
    viewed the firm's interests as being in line with Spain's national
    interests, Benzinga reported.


    http://www.marketwatch.com/story/time-to-cry-for-argentina-etf-argt-ypf-2012-04-16

    There goes another european oil source. Good luck with that oil embargo europe. Next thing you know Russia decide not to sell oil anymore because they have enough useless currency.


  • Under the motto “Connecting the Americas: Partnering for Prosperity,”
    33 heads of government met at the sixth Organization of American
    States’ Summit of the Americas in Cartagena, Colombia. But the mantra at
    last weekend’s OAS summit was an oxymoron. Instead, the summit merely
    demonstrated the decreasing influence of the U.S. in Latin American
    affairs. Not surprisingly, the sheer disagreement among its parties on
    the issues of drug decriminalization and the reintegration of Cuba in
    forthcoming summit led to the absence of any final declaration.


    This hemispheric divide was already foretold when Cuba was ruled out
    once again from attending, which in turn triggered Ecuador, Venezuela,
    and Nicaragua’s reluctance to participate. Additionally, Bolivia and
    Argentina suddenly departed early after complaining about the lack of
    overall consensus and Washington's neutral position on Argentina’s claim
    over the Falkland Islands. Even with President Barack Obama’s second
    consecutive attendance, the Summit was a poor copycat of previous
    meetings. Washington’s pressure to ostracize Cuba, the persistent lack
    of consensus in approaching the security troubles of its neighbors led
    to another failed opportunity for the U.S. The old hegemon of the
    Western hemisphere who once toppled leaders and bullied governments will
    face stiff competition when juggernauts like Brazil, as well as
    multilateral entities like CELAC, UNASUR, and ALBA, demand more of the
    region’s diplomatic pie.

    http://www.worldpolicy.org/blog/2012/04/16/cartagena-romancing-undone

    This is going to be bad for trade soon enough

  • U.N. council mulls Sudan, South Sudan sanctions to end clashes

    http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/04/17/us-sudan-southsudan-un-idUSBRE83G1BX20120417

    Another Clinton era "let's steal those nigger's oil" gone totally haywire.  I suppose, that's Argentina, South sudan are now off line. Saudi better start pumping hard before the big gulf war and gulf of mexico hurricane season come.  It's going to be a very hot late spring

  • Overall, the predictions are not dire for 2012. The season is being
    forecast to be relatively tame. Forecasters seem to agree mostly that
    there is a probability of 12 named storms and out of the 12 named
    storms, seven possibly will develop into hurricanes.


    Out of the seven hurricanes, three of these are being predicted to be
    "major" hurricanes in scope with winds sustaining 111 mph or more. This
    would place them at a minimum at Category 3 status on the Saffir-Simpson scale.


    Most the landfall models are predicting fairly close or normal
    landfall of storms along the United States coastline. The Gulf of Mexico
    coastline and the coastline of Florida are being given an elevated
    chance of landfall over the East Coast in 2012.


    When on calculates the "averages" for the Atlantic-Caribbean
    hurricane season, we come up with the numbers that reflect 12.1 tropical
    storms with 6.4 maturing into hurricanes annually.

    http://dalehyde.hubpages.com/hub/Hurricane-Season-2012-Predictions-and-Names

  • Japan, Nordic nations boost IMF cash drive $86-billion

    http://www.theglobeandmail.com/report-on-business/international-news/japan-nordic-nations-boost-imf-cash-drive-86-billion/article2405639/

    Another $80Billion to go... can't they just raid Goldman sachs or something?


  • Now, if you happen to have a tattoo (or two, or three), don’t
    take this the wrong way, but… tattoos are a highly reliable indicator of
    risky behavior.
      There are numerous studies in well regarded social sciences publications (see here:  http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S089932890100061X, and here: http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1054139X02004469, and here http://www.jfponline.com/Pages.asp?AID=4762
    ).  OK, the last one is really more about body piercing, but the idea
    is the same.  Teenagers and young adults with tattoos are significantly
    more likely to engage in risky behaviors such as intravenous drug use,
    risky sex, and smoking.  There is, of course, a big
    ‘Correlation/causation” problem here.  Do risk-loving young people
    cluster around the tattoo parlor because they see it as adventuresome? 
    Or do they simply get a tattoo as a matter of social solidarity with
    their like-minded friends?  Hard to know.  But take one look at the
    Google Trends data for the number of people searching the phrase “Get a
    tattoo” – we’ve included the chart below.  As you might guess, it is
    essentially straight up and to the right.

    http://www.zerohedge.com/news/risk-takers-and-tattoo-haters

    just hope gen X leader will be nice, cause I for one have no problem   proposing soylent green - mass genetic engineering solution to boomer retirement. If you think boomer created some whacked mutant like Bush, I am afraid you haven't seen twisted yet. Forget GWOT, bullshit economic theory, middle east regime change, global financial fraud, or radiation leak level of stupidity. They all are 60's level of social engineering and cold war era institutions. kindergarten play. Next phase should be total genetic data mining and reengineering. Remove defective speciment from the pool and prevent things like baby boomer dr00ls to ever emerge again.. deep social shaping. And skip the stock market already. jeebus... It's pennies crap shoot table. Do people really think all that gonna pay retirement?  It doesn't make sense! Look at all those state retirement funds.  At current inflation rate and money printing, the country gonna need something like 5% population growth on top of double digit GDP growth just to keep the social security scheme whole. Probably it'll be dow 100K just to pay boomer retirement .. Fantasy scenario.
  • Incensed Spain threatens Argentina after YPF seizure

    An incensed Spain
    threatened swift economic retaliation against Argentina on Tuesday
    after it unveiled plans to seize YPF, the South American nation's
    biggest oil company which is controlled by Spanish energy group Repsol.


    Madrid called in Argentina's
    ambassador over the nationalization order on Monday by Argentina's
    combative president, Cristina Fernandez, a move that sent Repsol shares
    tumbling but delighted many ordinary Argentines.

    "I must express my profound unease. It's a negative decision for everyone," Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy said.

    http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/04/18/us-spain-argentina-ypf-eu-idUSBRE83G0QU20120418

    oh yeah... let's go to war... Nice move Spain, how you gonna pay a trade war against Argentina backed by entire latam block? borrow more money from ECB? Watch Argentina pull the plug on Spain banks and repatriating all asset.


  • Germany wants IMF funding raised to $1 trillion


    BERLIN (AP) -- Germany wants the International
    Monetary Fund's lending capacity to be brought to some $1 trillion,
    meaning adding another $400 billion to its coffers, a senior official in
    Berlin said Tuesday.


    The official, speaking on condition of anonymity
    in line with government policy, said bringing the IMF's war chest to a
    "similar" level as the European financial firewall of 800 billion euros
    ($1.1 trillion) would send a strong signal to markets.

    http://mainichi.jp/english/english/newsselect/news/20120418p2g00m0bu087000c.html

    Merkel is smoking crack. Either she backed changing the IMF voting proportion or make France agree on china status in return of direct injection. No free money.

  • Intel, IBM See Sales Stall as Europe Crisis Crimps Orders

    Intel Corp. (INTC) and International
    Business Machines Corp. (IBM)
    , two of the computer industry’s biggest
    bellwethers, posted the slowest sales growth in years as the
    European slump weighed on orders last quarter.


    IBM’s revenue climbed 0.3 percent to $24.7 billion in the
    period, while Intel sales rose 0.5 percent to $12.9 billion.
    That was the smallest increase for either company since the
    third quarter of 2009, when the U.S. economy was just emerging
    from recession. Even so, Intel predicted a pickup in sales for
    the current quarter.

    http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-04-18/intel-ibm-see-sales-stall-as-europe-crisis-crimps-orders.html

    Let's have more oil war.

  • PARIS (Reuters) – French President Nicolas
    Sarkozy’s re-election hopes suffered a double setback four days from the
    first round of voting when a string of public defections compounded the
    impression that his tumble in opinion polls is pushing victory beyond
    reach.

    http://www.euronews.com/newswires/1486350-frances-sarkozy-hit-by-defections-and-poll-plunge/

    Yet another ugly day in financial markets: around the world stocks fell, the euro weakened, and commodity prices fell on fears that world growth will stall. The source of the problems was, again, Europe.

    In the Netherlands, the center-right government of Mark Rutte fell,
    unable to cobble together a coalition to pass budget cuts required by
    EU fiscal rules – rules that mandate that eurozone countries run annual
    deficits no more than 3% of GDP, which would force stringent austerity
    upon the Dutch to bring down a deficit that is currently projected to be
    4.6% of GDP in 2012. Rutte, along with Merkel of Germany, was a hardline advocate of the 3% fiscal discipline rules.

    But
    given that the sober Dutch are in no danger of defaulting on their
    AAA-rated bonds, why the turmoil and panic? Because, perhaps, the Dutch
    are indeed sober – and a significant number of them have said "enough".
    Having seen the devastation inflicted on the Greek, Irish and Spanish
    economies by tough austerity measures, many have concluded that the pain
    is simply not worth it to meet an arbitrary 3% deficit rule.

    http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/cifamerica/2012/apr/24/european-turmoil-american-collateral

    European political landscape is massively changing again, just like when Bush/rove starting regime change in europe (suddenly wingnut wacko popping all over europe overnight)

    Now it's reaction of merkozy policy. It';ll be mix of ultra right and return of center left, rejecting Bush era wackos. Spain turns center right, waiting for new Franco-germany new pairing. Merkel probably will survive and her true instinct to make germany strong in europe will re-emerge, paired with new more independent/zionist free France. Merkel will once again come out as the last leader that provide european with much needed leadership. (once she can sort out her bankers)

    Netherland will turn complete wacko and fractured. Center anything (left or right) will be removed from office.

    If I have to guess, it will be Germany-france new alliance combined with Russian-Chinese money, the fringe will fall into new orbit. US role will be greatly diminished in europe, as US is considered the new idiot of world order. (bunch of redneck bickering in DC and constant zionist war in middle east plus total mess in pacific. Huge budgetary mess, bigger than vietnam era stagflation. colllapse of dollar credibility in global trade by 2020.)
  • That's point number two, though. Point number one is that I wouldn't trust those inflation figures in the first place.
    The governments of Western Europe and the U.S. fudge inflation figures
    as certainly as the Argentine government fudges them, just less overtly
    and outrageously. They do that because they want to keep the perception
    of inflation down; they don't want people panicking, which is a pity,
    because the public should urgently do something to protect their
    capital. They also don't want to see Social Security payments and other
    payments that are tied to the consumer price index go up. They don't
    have the tax revenues to pay for them and will have to print even more
    money, which just exacerbates the problem. Official inflation numbers
    are unreliable; only somebody very naïve—like a TV anchorperson—could
    possibly believe them.


    If you think of inflation as an increase in the money supply
    above the increase in real wealth—which is actually what the word
    means—the inflation rate is actually quite high at the moment.

    Real wealth is being created at lower rates than it historically has
    been, while the money supply is increasing tremendously. It's just a
    question of when that inflation rate manifests itself on a retail level.
    You've got to think like a real economist, not a political hack like
    Joseph Stiglitz or Paul Krugman. You have to see not just the immediate
    and direct consequences of something, but the indirect and delayed ones.

    http://www.zerohedge.com/news/guest-post-how-speculate-your-way-success

    Trust in anything official has degraded considerably. It doesn't jibe with reality on the street.

  • Rising gas prices hit hard

    Monthly
    averages have increased across the country impacting faculty, student
    commuters; production costs could contribute to prices
  • Structural Changes in Global Price Levels


    Inflation has been running fairly hot in developing markets for some
    time. In regions like Asia, pressured to source food as growing
    populations bump up against limits to available arable land, the amount
    of capital devoted to food, shelter, and transportation remains high.
    However, if we think of lower-earning populations across the globe as a
    single class, there has been no protection from higher prices offered by
    developed economies to their poorer populations. The bottom two
    quintiles of US wage earners struggle with food and energy costs just as
    much as their counterparts across the globe.


    These structural changes in price levels, along with the increasing
    inability of every population to endure them, have fallen into a
    statistical gray area. Headline measures of inflation in OECD countries
    churn out benign readings, while at the same time, poverty grows. But
    this is a particular kind of poverty, a food and energy poverty, which
    saps the power of consumers to spend disposable income on an array of
    other items.


    This emerging resource poverty is going to drive further changes in
    price levels, and in particular it will restrain many forms of
    consumption, including real estate prices. Cities will find, for
    example, that with the price level of food rising and real estate prices
    stagnant with rising transportation costs, urban farming is going to
    advance very strongly. Note, for example, the resurgence in urban
    farming in places like Brooklyn, NY, where large tracts of industrial
    land have lain fallow for decades. Indeed, a classic pattern of 'hot'
    inflation is that it quickly begins to drive out spending for
    discretionary goods in favor of true basics, like food.

    http://www.zerohedge.com/news/risk-hot-inflation

  • How Long Before America Hits the Wall?

    But there will be two important differences vis-à-vis
    2008-2009. First, it will be happening with the US government far
    deeper in debt than it was when the last recession began. In the
    tightening phase, the government's interest expense will move above $1
    trillion per year, and the budget deficit will jump to new record highs.
    Second, it will be happening with the rate of price inflation already
    at a troubling level. Another round of the monetary therapy the Fed
    applied to cure the last recession would push price inflation to levels
    beyond those reached in the 1970s. They'll do it anyway.

    This
    gets us to 2016 or 2017 with the system in turmoil but still
    functioning. No wall yet, and there will be room for at least one more
    cycle of reflation. But it will be a fast cycle, since in an
    environment of already high inflation, people will be quick to spend
    the newly created cash. That means a quick recovery from the 2017
    recession and a catapult into the 20% plus range for price inflation.
    Then the wall may be in sight.

    http://www.financialsense.com/contributors/terry-coxon/how-long-before-america-hits-the-wall

    The most "real" one will be when long term supplier contractor in the far east start demanding contract in non dollar denomination. From then, things will spiral out of control VERY quickly. (all those crappy currency swap, interest, etc. won't matter since those are all fantasy trade between banksters. Only lasting few micro second, fleeting bet.)

    But if supplier start demanding non dollar, Walmart, HP, dell, GM/Ford, best buy...garment, consumer electronic  ...APPLE! ....then we have supply chain disruption, contract cancelation, firing, factory clossing, etc..

    The entire US retailers will die overnight, literally. none of these idiots are prepared or know what to do in the event of dollar overnight change..

  • China to launch crude oil futures this year: Xinhua

    China is expected
    to begin trading in crude oil futures within the year, a senior
    government official said on Wednesday, as the world's second-largest oil
    consumer and crude buyer aims to increase its say in oil pricing.


    "Within this year, China will
    launch an international crude oil futures market, the third such market
    in the world after the United States and the United Kingdom," state news
    agency Xinhua quoted Guo Shuqing, chairman of the China Securities
    Regulatory Commission, as saying.

    He
    said most of China's new demand for crude oil is now met by imports,
    adding that Chinese imports accounted for 70 to 80 percent of newly
    added global oil production.

    Local
    media said plans for crude oil future trading on the Shanghai Futures
    Exchange have been completed and are awaiting the approval of Chinese
    authorities.

    http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/04/18/us-china-crude-futures-idUSBRE83H0CF20120418

    Oil and taiwan will be big, then China dollar reserve really doesn't have big meaningful trade function anymore. It will mainly be financial weapon... probably stabilizing world trade if they feel nice. But all their vital trade is done  directly in yuan.

  • ASEAN, China to become top trade partners

    Last year, ASEAN overtook Japan to become China's third-largest
    trading partner, having $362.3 billion in trade with the country, up 24
    percent from a year earlier.



    China had $446.6 billion in trade with the United States in 2011 and $567.2 billion with the EU in the same year.



    China's trade is increasing rapidly with emerging economies at a time that it is slowing down with developed countries.



    Data from the Ministry of Commerce show that the value of trade
    between China and the EU increased by 2.6 percent year-on-year in the
    first quarter of 2012, and trade with Japan declined by 1.6 percent in
    the same period. Trade between China and ASEAN increased by 9.2 percent
    in the first quarter.



    "China's trade with ASEAN will increase faster than with the US and
    EU, and ASEAN is likely to become China's largest trading partner in the
    coming years," said He Weiwen, co-director at the China-US-EU Study
    Center at the China Association of International Trade.

    image

    http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/cndy/2012-04/20/content_15094898.htm

    There goes dollar velocity

  • Top U.S. trade official hopes Japan still interested in TPP talks


    WASHINGTON (Kyodo) -- U.S. Trade Representative
    Ron Kirk voiced hope Wednesday that Japan's interest in the
    Trans-Pacific Partnership free trade talks remains unchanged despite
    Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda's decision to forgo a formal decision to
    join the negotiations prior to his visit to Washington from April 29.


    In an economic forum held in the U.S. capital,
    Kirk said when then Japanese Prime Minister Naoto Kan announced Tokyo's
    interest in the trans-Pacific free trade talks in fall of 2010, it
    advanced the credibility of the framework.


    "We certainly hope their interests will still be the same," the top U.S. trade official said.


    Kirk also urged Japan to make a decision on its
    formal entry into the TPP talks, saying it is "the surest path for Japan
    to open up its economy."

    http://mainichi.jp/english/english/newsselect/news/20120419p2g00m0bu062000c.html

    LOL... and they say this suppose to be signed by this week, 3 months ago.. coincide with feel good campaign season/green shoot/improving economy.   (whatta bunch of clowns. total wishful thinking and fantasy.)

  • Nonetheless, it’s an important article, because Krugman is one of the
    few thinkers who tries to grapple with a lot of the bigger picture
    issues that I try to grapple with here:


    What would the effect be if China decided to sell a chunk
    of its Treasury bill holdings and put them in other currencies? The
    answer is that China would, in effect, be engaging in quantitative easing on behalf of the Fed. The Chinese would be doing us a favor!


    Krugman has it upside down: QE works (in theory) by decreasing the
    amount of Treasury debt in circulation, forcing investors into
    “riskier” assets. We have seen (quite predictably) that as the Fed
    removes treasuries from the open market, bond prices have spiked to all-time highs.

    http://azizonomics.com/2011/11/06/quantitative-diseasing/

    .. The correct question is ...what happen if china put those "treasury" in hole soo deep, it won't see the light of day for next 10 years?  (long term commodity, oil and mineral contract in non dollar region)

    Or what happen if China put those dollar in economies that has almost no connection to dollar...

    Those are the standard "kill dollar velocity, thus easing dollar inflationary effect.

    or worst...what happen if those "dollar" is being used to purchase resources that US economy is competing for..

    or.ultimately, just buy every single idiot politician in DC... with their money they can buy DC 20 times over.

  • Gasoline Is Expensive 
    imagehe White House announced it was getting into the commodities game
    in an effort to protect consumers from some of the geopolitical
    factors spilling over into the retail gasoline market. OPEC and the IEA
    both said in their monthly reports that market perceptions were behind
    higher energy prices, not physical shortages. High gasoline
    prices make for angry constituents. That means politicians, especially
    politicians fighting to keep their paychecks, start pointing their
    legislative guns at Wall Street almost as soon as the gavel strikes.

    Apart from the murky waters of economic nuance, however, President
    Obama said that, no matter what, American commuters need gasoline.
    Speculation aside, maybe that's the problem. Gasoline is a
    necessity and that's in part why the debate ensues. Without massive
    subsidies, gasoline is going to get more expensive no matter what the
    politicians say.
    And until commuters move beyond the carbon mindset, that ride to work will continue to be a rough one.
  • image

    http://www.ritholtz.com/blog/2012/04/discontents-in-nothing-we-trust/

    Everybody sense it. Those numbers in the news are all BS.
  • 9 Biggest Banks = $228.72 Trillion in Derivative Exposure

    image


    This shit is going to blow up spectacularly soon. just watch.. It'll make 2008 blow up looks like kiddie fountain spurt to a fire hydrant explosion.

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