Fuck Off Tories
  • LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - The smell of rotting food and decay inside 10956 South Wilmington Avenue, Los Angeles, was overwhelming.


    A burst pipe in the kitchen ceiling leaked water onto a floor
    littered with half empty cans, razor blades, odd shoes, stained
    clothing and an upturned, mold-ridden sofa. Windows were smashed and
    boarded up.


    The vacant home was foreclosed on in August 2011 by Bank of America, which has done nothing to repair it.


    Of roughly 400 bank-owned homes surveyed in the area, half are in
    a state of blight, with a third "seriously blighted," according to two
    activist groups, Good Jobs LA and the Alliance of Californians for
    Community Empowerment.


    U.S. cities struggle with blighted bank-owned homes(Reuters)

     


    http://news.yahoo.com/cities-struggle-blighted-bank-owned-homes-04110815...

  • Of course, it was doubly inappropriate that Panetta made the
    statement from Indian soil. Equally, it is intriguing that Panetta made
    the much-publicised statement of
    the US “reaching the limits of our patience with Pakistan” in the
    course of a joint press conference in Kabul with Afghan defence minister
    Abdul Wardak. 


    The best explanation that can be given to Panetta’s outburst in
    Kabul is that he was probably deflecting attention away from the latest air strike by NATO on a wedding party
    in Logar province killing 18 civilians. But Panetta couldn’t have
    overlooked the shift in the regional context, which would make it almost
    impossible from now onward for Washington to ‘isolate’ Pakistan. 


    The Shanghai Cooperation Organisation’s intention to play a role in
    Afghanistan; SCO’s induction of Afghanistan as an observer (despite the
    US’ opposition to the idea); President Hamid Karzai’s visit to Beijing
    and the emerging Sino-Afghan strategic partnership; Chinese President Hu
    Jintao’s profound statement on Afghanistan (”We will continue to manage
    regional affairs by ourselves, guarding against shocks from turbulence
    outside the region, and will play a bigger role in Afghanistan’s
    peaceful reconstruction.”); strong push by Pakistan and India
    to seek SCO membership; warming up of Russia-Pakistan ties — all these
    are playing into the US’ predicament in Afghanistan and grating on the
    American nerve.

    http://blogs.rediff.com/mkbhadrakumar/2012/06/08/britain-to-mediate-us-pak-standoff/

    US effort in afghanistan is crumbling badly. It's one large urban offensive away from driven out. It consists only of drone bombing and garbled inteligence. The only things that sustain afghanistan war is Russia's supply route ploy, which surely will be closed when Russia doesn't feel like playing anymore. But at the moment, it is bankrupting NATO military quite nicely. The diplomatic part is largely gone. total laughing stock of the world. (the latest comedy would be: why can't we make India doing the af-pak dirty deed. probably blowing up something/false flag operation to help convince india it's in their interest to fight these terrorists.)

    I for one think this is all going to end up with a big bang in Saudi some how. (energy price melt down, gulf war, Pakistan manpower in Saudi military, Saudi money in central asia, militant flowing back west, Israel middle east war, sunni-shia, saudi meddling in syria..arab spring in GCC part 2, US-europe banking crisis. etc It's gonna get ugly soon.)

    basically, the flawed (non existence) US policy framework in central asia finally tilt the balance of power in western part of Islamic world, manifested yet again in old fractured. Israel-british imperial borders, .. probably Turkey in there somewhere... US will lose its grip of Saudi and surrounding area. for eg. Saudi latest effort to tied GCC together failed, probably a sign of how badly their moral standing has become.

    Thing will slog forward slowly, pressure building up, nothing changes, then one day...everything crumbles... This will be bigger event than any of this so called 'world financial crisis', since it definitely means the end of petro dollar cycle/US control of Saudi oil.
  • For those curious what the latest and greatest estimate of the
    Spanish bank bailout, which at last count was €100 billion and growing
    fast, would look like in US terms, here is a rough and dirty comparison
    of the scale we are taking about here...


    • Spanish GDP of $1.25 Trillion : US GDP of $15.5 Trillion :: Spanish Bank Bailout of $125 Billion : US Bank Bailout of $1.6 TRILLION

    A trillion here... a trillion there...


    Or visually:


    image

    http://www.zerohedge.com/news/if-spanish-bank-bailout-came-us

    --

    That's nothing come on! Just one year of deficits. Surely MDB will
    explain to us that this is great and we can postopone the problem like
    this for another year ?!! Of course this will work as long as they can
    print money, but the people being sheeps love to fund the tools of their
    enslavement and will happily accept USDs until some later time in the
    future when all the wealth has concentrated in the top 0.0001%. Idiots.

    ----------

    That's what I thought too...omg.   been borrowing money at 10% of GDP for several years without blinking

  • “It’s on us to take our fate into our own hands so that we don’t
    learn by watching TV what was signed once again in Brussels,” he said.
    “These people believe they can turn this very big wheel, but they’re
    historically forgetful and don’t remember what they promised two or
    three years ago.”


    Money that people put aside during a life of hard work would be
    “taken hostage by the policies of speculation,” he feared, and would
    “lose its value in a few years because now we calculate in
    trillions....” And he added, “we must create a future for our children
    and grandchildren where not every euro is already in hock.”


    But President Obama, feeling Mitt Romney’s hot breath on his neck,
    didn’t care about German children. He cared about being reelected—and
    any effluent from the Eurozone quagmire oozing into the US economy over
    the next few months would impact his chances. So Friday, he exhorted
    Europeans to act, and as fast as possible. He had a whole laundry list
    of tasks for them. Most importantly: recapitalize the banks—that is,
    socialize their losses across borders. He sounded increasingly
    desperate. Earlier in the week, he’d had a private phone conversation
    with Merkel. Fruitless probably. But the one he’d had with British Prime
    Minister David Cameron led to a message targeted at Merkel and her
    government: come up with an “immediate plan” to solve the crisis and to
    reestablish the “confidence of the markets.”

    http://www.zerohedge.com/contributed/2012-06-09/bailout-rebellion-reawakens-germany

    all these is going to come back around sooner than they think it will happen.

  • In order to successfully emerge on the other side of this this
    painful period with a more sustainable system, he believes the moral
    hazard of bailing out the banks is going to have end:




    [The banks] have to suffer and suffer badly. They
    will have to suffer in such a way that in a decade they will be scared
    in order to never behave in this way again. You have to reduce the financial sector to about one third of its current size and
    we have to also ultimately set up financial institutions and financial
    instruments in such a way that it is no longer desirable from a public
    point of view to borrow and gamble in rising assets processes.


    The real mistake we made was to let this gambling happen as it has so
    many times in the past, however, we let it go on for far longer than we
    have ever let it go on for before. Therefore, we have a far greater
    financial parasite and a far greater crisis.

    http://www.zerohedge.com/news/steve-keen-why-2012-shaping-be-particularly-ugly-year

    Heh heh heh... everybody knows what needs to be done. But can't be done. (US political system is owned by bankers.  politicals candidate main money source are banks. Hell Romney himself is a bankster. You really expect bankster base political machine to produce something that will hurt banksters? (yes, the system is that corrupt. expect few fake investigation and theaters, but nothing really changes.)

    fortunately, in general world economy (goods and trade) is still functioning relatively well.  There is no 30's style factory collapse or WWII style total world trade breakdown... yet.

    However north atlantic banking system is in complete chaos. at this moment nothing happens except hot money running rampage destroying one country after another. This hot money moves faster than politicians and bureaucrats can fix things, shuffling money, bilateral negotiations, etc.

    ..seeriously what medium country can survive $50-80B hot money being pulled under its feet? One day loan and bond are fine, the next day it stops flowing due to panic. things spiking all over the place. Modern economy can't function like that. manucipalities, factories, now sovereigns are all turned upside down.  Forget those houses.. seriously how much those junk really worth in real economy? bunch of empty pile of bricks, so what. big friggin' deal. (there are more un flown jumbo jets worth billion in material than there are junk houses) Houses/mortgages only matters as fantasy banking assets, which where real problem lies.

    on top of this, hot money slosh around between currencies, this create huge fluctuations that disrupt trade. Hence creating even bigger chaos. ( commodity speculation/hot money going in and out/currency fluctuation) It may not be a lot of money from banking point of view, but these are clothing, food, raw materials, trade covers, etc... In a world where global supply chain live in 5% margin or less, 1-2% currency movement kills. Even if Spaniard want to work, they can't get supply chain set up.  Thus we have massive trade slow down.. on top of banksters stop using capital for anything but covering their casino capitalism lost.

     .. well there is the oil war too, creating record oil price in the middle of banking crisis.

    basically, this will keep going until the western banking system truly destroy itself, either destroying euro or creating dollar run. I for one am betting on Argentina style dollar implosion. The combination of currency mis-priced and political grid lock is uncanny. Five to ten years. All the symptoms are so similar. Cheap dollar and easy money for period of time, real productive economy crashing, fantasy asset/casino capitalism to the moon... next thing you know.....huge run and everything collapses within weeks.

    The political corruption needs to carry itself to its destructive logical ends first.
  • US trade deficit shrinks in April even as exports drop

    The US trade deficit shrank in April as a dramatic fall in imports offset the first decline in exports for five months.


    Exports saw their first fall since November as the deepening crisis in the eurozone hit demand for goods.


    US imports, however, also shrank dramatically due to weak
    domestic demand meaning the trade deficit overall fell 4.9% to $50.1bn
    (£32.5bn).


    The deepening eurozone debt crisis exacerbated the gap.


    Exports to Europe were down 11.1% in April. The region accounts for almost a fifth of US exports.


    The US trade deficit, the difference between imports and
    exports, is now at $603bn for the year, already 7.7% higher than last
    year's total imbalance.

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-18369532

    massive slowdown. In time when trade needs to go up. Let's have more war!!!

  • Japan’s Cabinet approved a bill to
    provide sovereign insurance to tanker operators that import
    Iranian oil before the full implementation of European Union
    sanctions against the Persian Gulf nation.


    The government plans to take over coverage for ship owners
    and petroleum refiners because they will lose access to Europe’s
    reinsurance market after the 27-member EU embargo goes into
    effect July 1, the transport ministry said today in a statement.


    The full EU ban covers Iranian crude exports and insuring
    shipments of the oil. The prohibition means 95 percent of the
    world’s tankers will lose insurance if they carry cargo from the
    Gulf state as they’re covered by the 13 members of the London-
    based International Group of P&I Clubs. A law signed by
    President Barack Obama on Dec. 31 blocks countries’ access to
    the U.S. financial system if they can’t show they’re reducing
    oil imports from Iran. Japan and 10 European nations received
    exemptions in March for a renewable period of 180 days.

    http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-06-11/japan-approves-insurance-for-tankers-affected-by-iranian-ban-1-.html

    In one swoop, european shipping insurance industry is relegated into also run/not gonna matter in a few year. Ocean shipping industry is very old. Next to ship building It what makes and break world trade in the long run. (Shipping insurance doesn't matter to US since US has no meaningful merchant ship lines anymore. Neither is US commercial shipyard meaningful. However European banking insurance was still very influential. not anymore.)

  • Spanish CDS Storms Above 600bps

    image

    http://www.zerohedge.com/news/spanish-cds-storms-above-600bps

    lesse what else is going to blow up next because of this... the world is controlled by very evil people. that's for sure.

  • This pretty much says it all:


    • BOE'S POSEN SAYS TIME FOR CENTRAL BANKS, INCLUDING BOE, TO BUY PRIVATE ASSETS
    • POSEN SAYS BUYING PRIVATE-SECTOR ASSETS WOULD HELP ECONOMY

    Buy. Real. Assets. Now

    http://www.zerohedge.com/news/cue-hyperinflation-5-4-3

    I have a pair of sock. left one has hole and right one is missing...  I'll let it go for $1Billion... wanna buy it BOE? sure as hell more valuable than instagram har har...

  • In
    turn, the unprecedented display of Sino-Russian
    partnership during Putin's state visit to China
    just before the SCO summit gave the regional
    grouping's proceedings event much verve. The
    summit was, under the circumstances, destined to
    "succeed" and the only point of debate could be
    about the tangible substance of the success story.


    The United States forced the pace for the
    SCO by a series of provocative moves against
    Russia and China. The US extended an ambivalent
    welcome to the Putin presidency, driven by a nave
    belief - or wishful thinking, depending on one's
    point of view - that the Russian political system
    is facing a terminal illness; this notion has
    prompted Washington to cross the red lines in
    inter-state relations and interfere blatantly in
    Russia's domestic politics, often taking an animus
    against Putin's political personality.

    It
    is hard to believe that the antics by the US
    ambassador in Moscow Michael McFaul ever since his
    arrival in Moscow on the assignment were solo acts
    by an innocent, well-meaning erstwhile academic
    who simply didn't know the ABC of the code of
    conduct in the regimented world of diplomacy.
    (After all, he held a senior position in the White
    House before being assigned to Moscow.)

    http://www.atimes.com/atimes/China/NF12Ad01.html

    Russia is only second biggest world oil supplier and largest european energy supplier, what could possibly go wrong putting bunch of amateurs and clown in charge of diplomacy.  Hit that 'reset' button jingle once again...it'll fix thing right up. (more like world's laugh track button)
  • China's forex reserve growth 'peaked' says Nomura

    HONG KONG (MarketWatch) -- China's foreign exchange reserve accumulation
    is in the process of peaking out, according to research by Nomura
    released Tuesday, which said growth in reserves would gradually diminish
    before net outflows beginning in 2015. The research brokerage forecast
    China's forex reserves growth of $267 billion in 2012, falling to $189
    billion in 2013, and $43 billion 2014. China should experience a decline
    beginning in 2015, with a $32 billion net drop anticipated, Nomura
    said. Nomura sees the nation's balance of payments slowing coming into
    equilibrium, as a stronger Chinese currency undermines China's export
    competitiveness while at the same time making foreign goods more
    affordable. Meanwhile, foreign direct investment inflows are set to
    decline while outflows of investment increase as China seeks to secure
    commodities and invest in building up its own multinational
    corporations, Nomura said

    http://www.marketwatch.com/story/chinas-forex-reserve-growth-peaked-says-nomura-2012-05-29?link=MW_latest_news

    It means Yuan is now defacto a hard currency. It doesn't need to keep buying dollar to sustain its peg. It can sustain yuan price despite export growth. It only need to control exchange flow, which it increasingly has more outlet to play with via swap agreement and market opening. note: yuan has gone down against dollar since the crisis. reverse of what people has been predicting.

    big question for Fed would be, who is going to buy all those external loan needed to pay for supposedly japan style 'lost decade'? Sure as hell not the chinese. ... going argentina fast...

    image

    http://www.zerohedge.com/news/guess-what-else-china-hoarding

  • "There are several reasons for turning down (a meeting with) Lavoy.
    It is to tell the Americans that you cannot be bad-mouthing us day in
    and day out and then expect a meeting with Pakistan's most powerful
    personality," the official said.


    "You cannot trash our sovereignty, threaten us, announce intensified
    drone attacks, kill our soldiers, refuse to apologise when you do the
    same in Kabul, hold back our money (from the Coalition Support Fund),
    threaten to cut off all aid and then pretend that it is business as
    usual," the official added.


    Pakistan has been angered by remarks made by US defense secretary Leon Panetta during a recent visit to India and Afghanistan.


    Panetta said the US had no plans to stop drone strikes despite protests from Pakistan.


    Panetta further said the US was running out of patience with Pakistan
    for failing to act against militant safe havens in the tribal belt
    bordering Afghanistan.

    http://www.hindustantimes.com/world-news/Pakistan/Pakistan-trashed-and-insulted-Kayani-won-t-meet-US-official/Article1-869403.aspx

    dumb and dumber show continues. afghanistan war is about to get nasty. If Paksitan flip, NATO in afghanistan will last about few weeks.

  • Actually, if he’s right about the demographic underpinnings, there’s a
    time bomb lurking in the system quite aside from his concerns about
    inflation running too hot or too cold: eventually, and as I understand
    it fairly soon, those older Chinese who have been frantically saving
    because they don’t expect enough grandchildren to support them will
    become net dissavers, pulling money out of the banks to live on. And
    then, if his basic story is right, the whole system implodes.

    http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/06/11/financial-repression-chinese-style/

    china lived through western imperialism, including opium war, I think few old people in the family is relatively small drag to prosperity than what has happened in the past. I am pretty sure they'll live happily with that knowledge.
  • image

    http://www.ritholtz.com/blog/2012/06/10-monday-pm-reads-21/

    let's have more war... it'll do wonder to export and import.

  • India Could get Junk Credit Rating



    Credit rating agency Standard and Poor's has warned that India may
    become the first among the BRIC - Brazil, Russia, India and China -
    countries to lose its investment grade rating, citing slowing GDP growth
    and political roadblocks to economic policy making as some of the
    factors that could lead to such an action.



    Standard & Poor's raised India's long-term sovereign credit rating
    to 'BBB-' in January 2007, making India the poorest sovereign (in terms
    of per capita GDP) to receive an investment-grade rating. One of the key
    elements contributing to the upgrade, and sustaining the current
    rating, was India's ability to achieve comparatively high rates of
    economic growth. Favorable long-term growth prospects and a high level
    of foreign exchange reserves support the country's sovereign rating,
    while large fiscal deficits, a high debt burden, and a
    lower-middle-income economy constrain it.



    India's economy expanded roughly 8%-9% in the three years before the
    recent global financial crisis. According to data from India's Planning
    Commission, rapid growth contributed to a decline in the poverty rate to
    29.8% in 2010 from 37.2% in 2005, implying a drop of 40 million people
    in the absolute number of the country's poor. Per capita income doubled
    during those five years. In addition, the total fertility rate (the
    average number of children a woman conceives) fell to 2.5 in 2010 from
    3.2 in 2000.



    India's GDP growth in the most recent quarter was 5.3%.

    GDP is expected to grow about 6.5% in fiscal year 2012-2013, similar to
    the rate in fiscal 2011-2012. Both savings and investment rates (as a
    share of GDP) rose impressively, in step with GDP growth, until fiscal
    2007-2008, before declining modestly in subsequent years (see chart 2).
    The public sector savings rate has historically been low, but itrose to
    5% of GDP in fiscal 2007-2008 as the government narrowed its fiscal
    deficit, before dropping precipitously in recent years.The combination
    of fiscal strain and lower corporate profitability could reduce both
    public and private sector savings rates in coming years. Lower savings
    would translate into lower investment and a higher current account
    deficit. The result would be either lower GDP growth or a higher
    external deficit that makes the country more vulnerable to external
    shocks.

    http://nextbigfuture.com/2012/06/india-could-get-junk-credit-rating.html

    They start ass fucking India. This ought to be very interesting. 1) India will retract and prepare for full blown currency war. And they are huge. MUCH bigger capability than spain or italy. 2) they gonna massively changed export-import/capital flow balance 3) it won't be a nice fight. It'll be nasty inter continental industrial/financial sabotages.

    I am not sure if India policy makers are stupid and not prepared for this, but rest of asia has been ready for this day since 97 crisis. Once market signal is out, every government will be in financial battle mode. Capital flow and currency control regimes will be switched on. Liquidity will be gone outside protected area overnight.

    It will be fucking HUGE financial war... I wouldn't be on dollar side. that's for sure.
  • U.S. Treasury Secretary Geithner Visits India This Month

    U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner will travel to India June 27-28 for the third annual
    meeting of the U.S.-India Economic and Financial Partnership,
    the department said today.


    Geithner will take part in a meeting with Indian Finance
    Minister Pranab Mukherjee in Delhi on the first day of the
    visit, the Treasury said in a statement released in Washington.
    Geithner will be in Mumbai on June 28 to meet with Reserve Bank
    of India Governor Duvvuri Subbarao and Indian business leaders,
    the Treasury said.

    http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-06-11/u-s-treasury-secretary-geithner-visits-india-this-month.html

    be very careful, I don't trust this guy one bit. He is out to fuck you. that's "pivot" for you. (but seriously, does what he does to america inspire trust at all? Imagine what he will do to India ... friendly warning.)

    You have only few months at most to prepare for financial attack. Spanish style.  be very ready. Otherwise you will be begging without dignity asking for few crummy dollars to pay delivery of your own product. so... prepare for the worst. Capital control, significantly reduce dollar exposure, review all export import, take out all money reserve from US jurisdiction. Cancel all large contract. Be ready to destroy and create maximum pain in the vent of they make you beg. (eg. expropriation, international lawsuit, fund freeze, cancel all military inteligence sharing, monitor and stop permit for all cover agents etc)

    also, be ready for false flag alert. I have bad feeling about all this. make your guys on the ground work double time.

  • The continuing credit crisis is serious—with the world economy poised
    for a double-dip recession. The current US government policy of
    increasing the national debt by $5 trillion dollars over the past four
    years, keeping insolvent banks from going bankrupt, a Federal
    Reserve zero interest rate policy (ZIRP), causing malinvestment, and
    monetizing the national debt (which is what tin-pot dictators do just
    before they are forced to flee the country) with quantitative easing by
    the Fed, and austerity for the 99% to repay bad bank loans has not
    worked—and doing more of the same will not work—and defines insanity.


    The financial elite are using this “cover-up and pray” policy—hoping that rekindled “animal spirits” will bring the economy back in time to save the status quo. This is impossible because the trust is gone. The same sociopaths control the economy.
    Instead, the financial elite are just protecting themselves with
    outlandish pay bonuses, based on cooked books; while the “real economy”
    flounders with high unemployment, unsustainable budget deficits, a
    struggling real estate market, and low capital formation, crumbling
    infrastructure and high gasoline and food price inflation.

    http://www.zerohedge.com/news/guest-post-everything-you-know-about-markets-wrong

    you forget the "international" dimension of all this. There is "other" people, sovereign nation on the other side, not just some vague/esoteric idea. "market". In other time and era what happens right now would be considered act of war. Let's put it this way, imagine if  China were 10 times the size and doing what US is doing to other country, with all the cover of "free market" jibe, everybody will be up in arm ready for war ..... (note: China right now is only about half the size of US. already currency manipulation, containment, .. bla bla..)

  •  All this is a good idea as far as it goes. But Mr. Krugman
    stops there – as if that is all that is needed today...Thus dumbs down
    his argument, and actually distracts attention from what is needed to
    avoid the financial and fiscal depression he is warning about.

       Here’s the problem: To focus the argument against “Austerian”
    advocates of fiscal balance, Mr. Krugman hopes that economists will stop
    distracting attention by talking about what he deems not necessary. It
    seems not necessary to write down debts, for example. All that is needed
    is to reduce interest rates on existing debts, enabling them to be
    carried.

     Hudson lists a couple items that Krugman doesn't endorse, such as:

    1) Writing down debts, which would cause the banks to lose money


    2) Shifting taxes off labor onto property, an idea which is not just
    morally correct, but good economic policy - endorsed by such economists
    as Adam Smith and John Maynard Keynes where he famously advocates "euthanasia of the rentier"


    The effect of Mr. Krugman’s suggestions is for the
    government to subsidize the existing financial and tax structures,
    leaving the debts intact and ignoring the largely regressive, unfair and
    inefficient system of taxation...

      In Mr. Krugman’s reading, private debts need not be written down or
    the tax system made more efficient. It is to be better subsidized –
    mainly with easier bank credit and more government spending. So I am
    afraid that his book might as well have been subtitled “How the Economy
    can Borrow its Way Out of Debt.” That is what budget deficits do: they
    add to the debt overhead.

    http://www.dailykos.com/story/2012/06/11/1098890/-Krugman-vs-Keen-Rhetoric-vs-Reality

    Writing down debt is "out of the question" in current political machine set up. IT IS THE POLITICAL corruption that people keeps forgetting. EVERYBODY already KNOWS what needs to be done accounting wise. The math is fairly obvious. few details may cause heated arguments, but trivial. But....YOU ARE NOT going to make bankster pay for their mistake as long as current politicians line up is in charge. The status quo has complete grip of current system.
  • MADRID, June 11 (Reuters) - Telefonica SA's
    surprise sale of around half its stake in China's no.2 telecoms
    operator is the latest sign that the company's management is
    taking seriously the reduction of its 57.1 billion euro ($71.4
    billion) debt pile.

    The Spanish telecoms group said on Sunday it would sell 4.56
    percent of China Unicom's shares back to the latter's parent for
    around 1.1 billion euros ($1.4 billion), a move it said would
    increase its financial flexibility."It's overwhelmingly positive ... it points to them being
    willing to do things that are different (to reduce) ... their
    debt," said Robin Bienenstock, senior analyst at brokerage
    Alliance Bernstein.Telefonica needs to raise between 7 and 8 billion euros a
    year through 2015 to cope with debt maturities and is also
    struggling with sinking revenue and profit in its home market,
    where one in four is unemployed and the banking industry is in
    crisis.
    http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/06/11/telefonica-china-unicom-idUSL5E8HB9QW20120611

    how the fuck does a small phone company like telefonica have $50-60Billion debt?  ...? did they have cocaine and caviar party every night? That much money is enough to give half of europe free phone service for life!
    I still need somebody to explain how tiny country like Greece can have $100B+ debt ...

  • Bank of Japan Governor
    Masaaki Shirakawa on Monday called for exchange-rate flexibility
    in major Asian economies, warning that a lack of this may
    trigger abrupt shifts in capital flows.

    Shirakawa also said a solution to Europe's debt problem
    ultimately rests with the ability and efforts of peripheral
    countries to boost productivity and growth.

    In a conference held by the San Francisco Federal Reserve,
    Shirakawa said Asia's economic fundamentals are relatively
    strong and welcomed recent efforts by some nations in the region
    to enhance exchange-rate flexibility.

    "It is ... imperative that each influential economy maintain
    sufficient exchange rate flexibility," Shirakawa said in the
    conference on Asia's role in challenges on global finance, which
    he joined through a live video link from Tokyo.

    "Under economic and financial globalization, inflexibility
    of exchange rates may trigger abrupt changes in international
    capital flows and increase the burden of monetary and prudential
    policies," he added.

    Shirakawa did not touch on Japanese monetary policy but said
    the country's financial system has been stable and resilient.

    http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/06/12/japan-economy-boj-idUSL3E8HC02Z20120612

    fuck off shirakawa. Try capital control instead. You wanna keep buying euro and dollar to maintain peg or have total  free float? lol ... put up or get real. keep cranking out those yen. Otherwise shut up. 

  • Conclusion—this is what to do:


    1. Reenact the Glass-Steagall Act. Allowing investment banks to speculate with savers’ money is criminal.
    2. The daisy-chained, unregulated $707 trillion dollar OTC Derivatives
      market will bring down the world economy, when it goes bust. JP Morgan’s
      recent huge OTC Derivative trading losses are a prelude to this
      eventuality, with many more instances to come. Start unwinding the OTC Derivatives market now, before it is too late.
    3. Insolvent banks are a drain on the “real economy.” Force insolvent banks to go bankrupt. TBTF is an irrational policy. Allow capitalism to work for the 1%.
    4. Public and private debt to GDP is about 360%, and 30% of Americans
      are being hounded by bill collectors for unpaid debts. Americans can no
      longer service their massive debt loads. Allow debt forgiveness for the 99% and institute austerity for the 1%—they can afford it.
    5. ZIRP is destroying capital formation and savers. Allow interest rates to rise,
      which will increase consumer demand. The Fed’s manipulation of capital
      markets causes malinvestment—resulting in crippling long-term penalties
      for the “real economy.”

    http://www.zerohedge.com/news/guest-post-everything-you-know-about-markets-wrong

    If I were in charge... this is what I will do.

    1. declare.: it's time to get real . we have inspectors ready to check all you banksters and your books. welcome to capitalism economy. where is my money?

    2. Overnight interest rate, instantly returning to historical average. Giving money back to savers. and ending debt ridden players. (i seriously think housing problem is fairly trivial, and people will again buy and sell houses, albeit at much lower market prices. The problem is banking fantasy asset derived from fraudulent  housing prices. Fix money flow into real economy, and economy will recover in earnest instead of current zombie recovery.)

    3. Government will guarantee all smaller healthy banks, and provide money directly to "real economy" through all these clean and healthy banks. You make something or do productive works. Have free money. Congratulation. you've been acting responsibly. Have some capitals. The fed will be dissolved and replaced by group as far away from current banking cartel set up. no more few members of banking cabals voting for money price. Price of money will be determined more transparently. Current members of fed will be executed, for incompetency, fail to fulfill public duty, and mismanagement.

    4. ensure critical material for national survivals are protected during turmoil. If necessary nationalized.

    5. all major currencies will be temporarily "peg" (soft peg) to prevent major hot money moving here and there destroying already fragile global trade. probably released gradually after 2-3 years.

    6. Naturally, all those TBTF banks will go bankrupt overnight. instantly. And come running asking for government bail out. At which point. government should answer.. sure. Here is the rate. we know your book. what do you have for us in exchange for our money? Hard and impossible bargain. Specifically designed to kill TBTF. start shooting when bankster even give a hint of acting smart. (national security, economic terrorism, fraud, crime, etc. waste them all. it's not like the world will run out of banksters or anything. They multiply faster than pests. ) 

    7. all OTC derivatives cancelled (obviously, we will know by then all TBTF OTC transaction from their books. most can be safely disposed. have inter government agreements between top 10-15 biggest economy. probably involving less than 20 biggest global banks)

    8. all derivatives will now only be sold via public exchanges. Size and contract form will be regulated proportionally to its risk to public life.

    9. after that one can begin restructuring international regulations.. banking, currency, commodity markets, trades, etc. without interference from by now bankrupts TBTF's. half of their lobbyists probably would be executed or in jail.

    10. Intra government debt will be dealt with directly between sovereign nation ( all those inside TBTF books has become government properties due to their collapse)

    11. destroy current banksters controlled political machine set up. Nicaraguan style death squad seems suitable. works nicely to clean up unpleasant elements in other countries... why not try it at home? After the big crash no one will shed a single tear when these people are exterminated. Works the same way every countries all over the world when big economic crisis hit. Hey, try losing pension, no job, bank run, currency destroyed and public money gutted by corruption...   

    economy will shrink 5-10%, painful, but will recover much faster. There won't be decades long structural unemployment and generational drag from huge debt created by and distributed to only very few players. Money will flow to right places, no more casinos and TBTF.

  • Interesting... second largest polysilicon is backing largest producer.. hmm..

    http://www.pv-tech.org/news/wacker_takes_a_firm_stand_against_us_imposed_trade_duties_on_china


    Munich, Germany-based manufacturer Wacker Chemie has released a
    statement taking a firm stand against efforts to impose trade duties on
    Chinese-made solar modules in the European Union.



    CEO, Rudolf Staudigl, said, “We are convinced that protectionist
    measures will not help the domestic solar industry, but rather impair
    the photovoltaic technology’s future prospects. The US Department of
    Commerce decided to impose tariffs of up to 250% on Chinese-made solar
    modules imported into the US.



    “Some market participants are in favour of a similar move in the
    European Union, too. Experience would show, however, that trade barriers
    were not a suitable way of ensuring open and fair competition among the
    market’s participants. Differences of opinion about balanced
    competitive conditions could only be resolved through political
    dialogue. Imposing sanctions, in contrast, would only inhibit
    competition. They could provoke a trade war, which would end up being a
    disadvantage for every company in the solar industry.”


  • The first non-principal exchange currency swap has been dealt between
    the US dollar and the Chinese yuan, highlighting the liberalisation of
    the foreign currency into the global markets.

    HSBC Bank
    released a statement saying it had traded its first
    non-principal-exchange currency swap between the US dollar and the
    Chinese yuan with a notional amount of $10 million with Industrial Bank.
    The swap puts HSBC among the first banks to trade the new derivative.

    http://www.corporate-fx.co.uk/marketupdates/News/Story/first-dollar-yuan-non-principal-exchange-currency-swap-dealt-1339400091.html
  • India Sets $2 Billion Currency Swap Deal for South Asian Nations

    The swap facility will be funded entirely by India and
    enable the central banks of Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan,
    Maldives, Nepal, Pakistan and Sri Lanka to borrow funds in
    dollars, euros and Indian rupees, the RBI said in a statement
    today. Governor Duvvuri Subbarao made the announcement at a
    meeting of South Asian central bank officials in Nepal, it said.

    http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-05-16/india-sets-2-billion-currency-swap-deal-for-south-asian-nations.html

  • Former HKMA Chief Calls for Review of Hong Kong Dollar Peg

    Yuan Peg?


    Yam’s paper said the trading band could be widened or
    turned into “a corridor” whose width, slope and center could
    be periodically reviewed. The latter option could be managed
    against the dollar, yuan or a basket of currencies, he wrote.


    China ended its own peg to the dollar in July 2005, saying
    it would manage the exchange rate against a basket of currencies,
    and the yuan has strengthened 30 percent versus the greenback in
    that time. Chinese officials told European Union business
    executives that the yuan will achieve “full convertibility” by
    2015, EU Chamber of Commerce in China President Davide Cucino
    said on Sept. 7.


    There has been talk about whether Hong Kong should scrap
    the peg or re-peg to the Chinese yuan, as the current fixed
    exchange rate means the city’s monetary policy is largely
    dictated by the U.S., where a jobless rate of 8.2 percent has
    led the Federal Reserve to pledge near-zero interest rates
    through 2014. Hong Kong’s home prices have gained more than 80
    percent since early 2009, supported by record-low mortgage rates.

    http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-06-12/former-hkma-chief-calls-for-review-of-hong-kong-dollar-peg-1-.html

  • http://www.sacbee.com/2012/06/12/4556508/us-federal-deficit-totals-8445b.html

    The federal budget deficit is rapidly approaching $1 trillion for a
    fourth straight year even though the government is collecting more tax
    revenue than last year.

    The Treasury Department says the deficit
    grew by $124.6 billion in May. That put the deficit through the first
    eight months of the budget year at $844.5 billion, or 8.9 percent below
    last year's imbalance for the same period.

    Still, the
    Congressional Budget office forecasts that the deficit for the entire
    2012 budget year, which ends Sept. 30, will total $1.17 trillion. That's
    only a slight improvement from the $1.3 trillion deficit recorded in
    2011.





    So far this year, government receipts are running 5.3 percent higher
    than a year ago. A better job market and modest economic growth have
    led to higher tax revenue.


  • By comparison, growth since 1980 has been slower, as the share of the
    bottom and middle has diminished. That means that those in the middle,
    ordinary Americans who work for a living, let alone those at the bottom,
    are getting a smaller slice of a pie that is smaller than if we had
    continued growing as we did postwar. The net result is disheartening:
    Most Americans are worse off today than they were 15 years ago.


    Some on the right also assert that those at the top deserve their
    higher incomes. They earned it, conservatives say. Their riches were due
    to their greater contribution to society, from which all benefit.


    I wish that were true — but it’s not. Those at the top aren’t the
    true innovators — people who provided the intellectual foundations of
    the computer, for example, or the Internet. Or those who invented the
    transistor or the laser; or, like James Watson and Francis Crick, who
    unraveled the genetic code laying the foundations of so much of modern
    medicine.


    Much of the top-most wealth instead comes because of successful “rent
    seeking.” Economists use the term “rents” for income derived from
    owning an asset, rather than from effort. “Rent seeking” refers to
    attempts to garner a larger share of the economic pie, rather than
    making the pie larger.


    Monopolists, for example, gain their wealth through restricting
    production — which makes the size of the pie smaller. When we look at
    divided societies abroad, like so many of the dysfunctional oil-rich
    countries, we diagnose their problem as an infliction of excessive rent
    seeking — too much of society’s resources go to attempts to grab a
    larger share of the oil wealth, too little to expanding the economy.
    What we don’t realize is the extent to which the United States, too, has
    become a rent-seeking society.

    http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0612/77280.html

  • I've been playing the same game of Civ II for 10 years. Though long
    outdated, I grew fascinated with this particular game because by the
    time Civ III was released, I was already well into the distant future. I
    then thought that it might be interesting to see just how far into the
    future I could get and see what the ramifications would be. Naturally I
    play other games and have a life, but I often return to this game when
    I'm not doing anything and carry on. The results are as follows.



    • The world is a hellish nightmare of suffering and devastation.

    • There are 3 remaining super nations in the year 3991 A.D, each
      competing for the scant resources left on the planet after dozens of
      nuclear wars have rendered vast swaths of the world uninhabitable
      wastelands.



    -The ice caps have melted over 20 times (somehow) due primarily to
    the many nuclear wars. As a result, every inch of land in the world that
    isn't a mountain is inundated swamp land, useless to farming. Most of
    which is irradiated anyway

    -The only governments left are two theocracies and myself, a
    communist state. I wanted to stay a democracy, but the Senate would
    always over-rule me when I wanted to declare war before the Vikings did.
    This would delay my attack and render my turn and often my plans
    useless. And of course the Vikings would then break the cease fire like
    clockwork the very next turn. Something I also miss in later civ games
    is a little internal politics. Anyway, I was forced to do away with
    democracy roughly a thousand years ago because it was endangering my
    empire. But of course the people hate me now and every few years since
    then, there are massive guerrilla (late game barbarians) uprisings in
    the heart of my empire that I have to deal with which saps resources
    from the war effort.



    -The military stalemate is air tight. The post-late game in civ II is
    perfectly balanced because all remaining nations already have all the
    technologies so there is no advantage. And there are so many units at
    once on the map that you could lose 20 tank units and not have your
    lines dented because you have a constant stream moving to the front.
    This also means that cities are not only tiny towns full of starving
    people, but that you can never improve the city. "So you want a granary
    so you can eat? Sorry; I have to build another tank instead. Maybe next
    time."

    http://www.reddit.com/r/gaming/comments/uxpil/ive_been_playing_the_same_game_of_civilization_ii/

    • Forget ending the war, try and get your front line such that you can
      consistently withstand attack, forcing a stalemate. Basically stop
      wasting production on tanks and planes that are going to get nuked
      anyway.
    • Change to fundamentalism, I remember this was bad for research but
      you don’t need it now anyway, but the people will stop hating you and
      you'll have more coin.


    Diplomacy's failed in this world, you’ve got to hit em hard and take
    over the world for the greater good. Then you can spend turn upon turn
    under the blanket of enforced religious peace fixing it with hundreds of
    engineers if you like!

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

    Dire simulation.

    Next civilization game should contain economic model...I wouldn't be surprised if it simulate current banking foolies with amazing fidelity.


  • "Some of the European banks are becoming short on collateral to
    pledge with the ECB, unless they can delever and sell some of their
    assets, which is difficult."


    http://www.zerohedge.com/news/did-fitch-just-end-europes-hope-ltro3

    what I want to know... what possible thing will banks do with $3Trillion? that's A LOT OF MONEY. instead of spending on collapsing banks, why not simply build tower of babel .. or ANYTHING in europe. That's enough money to create massive european scale construction thst change the very foundation of society. (german green energy doesn't even cost more than few tens billions over years..) $3 trillion probably is enough to give every young workers in europe free houses and free electricity for the rest of his life...

    just for scale $2Billion will get you the biggest polysilicon plant in the world enough to produce several gig worth of solar panel, enough to close down remaining germany nuke plant. 10 of these will solve entire europe electricity problem as far as one can imagine.

    I swear. it's way past time to start exterminating these bankers/pests from the surface of the earth. permanently.
  • The chairman of Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, the world’s
    largest contract microchip maker whose numerous U.S. business partners
    and customers include Qualcomm, reportedly said yesterday the U.S.
    economy appears to have “turned bad” in the past two months, based on
    recent employment data.


    Job growth in the U.S. is only about a third of what it was at the
    start of the year, Morris Chang said at TSMC’s annual shareholder
    meeting yesterday, according to a report in today’s Economic Daily News.
    Adding in the Europe’s debt problem, the situation isn’t favorable,
    the report said.  More than 70% of TSMC’s business comes from the U.S.,
    the Economic Daily News reported.

    http://www.forbes.com/sites/russellflannery/2012/06/12/tsmcs-morris-chang-reportedly-expresses-concern-about-pace-of-u-s-economic-recovery/

    just wait until the european slowdown reached this side of atlantic. this on top of asian retraction ..

    Let's have MORE OIL war...

  • JPM's Bogeyman IG9 Notionals Soar On Most Active Week Of YearThis suggests an unwind of a delta-hedged tranche position with considerably more index impact than tranche impact - which smells just like what we think JPM was struggling with (and it appears is far from over). However, there was a huge jump in the number of trades done in the on-the-run index IG18 - last week was the most active of the year by far which fits with the surge in gross notional that we saw - as it would appear (as we noted previously) that the focus is now on using liquid indices to hedge whatever risk remains on JPM's book - which further helps to explain why IG18 has underperformed so much recently relative to HY credit and stocks.

    http://www.zerohedge.com/news/jpms-bogeyman-ig9-notionals-soar-most-active-week-year

    I wonder if anybody knows what product exactly did they lose... (I mean it got to be pretty shitty and can't be sold in current market at all. So how big was it? I bet it's really still in the book, fudged and all...
  • European Banks Preparing To Boycott Big Three Rating Agenciesa move to reduce their co-operation
    with the big three credit ratings agencies amid widespread
    dissatisfaction with their decision-making
    ."

    http://www.zerohedge.com/news/european-banks-preparing-boycott-big-three-rating-agencies
    once US rating agency power is gone... market making capability is greatly reduced (no insider info yo... flying blind)
  • Bankrupt Saab finds buyer in Chinese-Japanese investment
    group

    A
    Chinese-born Swedish investor with Japanese support has agreed
    to buy bankrupt automaker Saab Automobile and plans to bring it
    back to life as a maker of electric cars, with an initial focus
    on the Chinese market.

    Saab, which has been making cars since 1947, crashed into
    bankruptcy at the end of 2011, less than two years after former
    owner General Motors sold it to Dutch group Spyker.

    Though an admired brand with a loyal fanbase, Saab had
    struggled for years to survive against bigger competitors.

    http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/06/13/saab-idUSL5E8HD1RY20120613



  • Indian navy ships dock in Shanghai on goodwill visit to China as 2 nations try to build trust

    http://www.570news.com/news/world/article/372716--indian-navy-ships-dock-in-shanghai-on-goodwill-visit-to-china-as-2-nations-try-to-build-trust

    lol..

    wrong wrong.. you brown people suppose to blow up the slanty eyed one... not visit and be friend... Pivot, remember pivot..! you suppose to be pivoting and stuff.

    If I were indian leader, at this very point I will prepare an ultra secret delegation to Pakistan. message: Remember that Mumbai attack, we know something. but still have missing bit. Tell us, and we are prepared to forget things and redouble peace effort, was the attack orchestrated from US with US knowledge?

    My bet the answer would be : yes.

    Something is fishy with the whole set up and how event unfold. I can't put my finger what. It's too structured.

  • The economic
    and political chaos in southern Europe would
    create spaces for previously unthinkable new
    geopolitical competition. Russia could come to the
    rescue of Greece and create an axis of the
    Orthodox faith that embraces Athens and reaches up
    to Belgrade, standing then in the heart of the
    Mediterranean, a place she always wanted but
    always failed to reach.

    Moreover, Saudi
    Arabia, Qatar or their satellites could help Spain
    in exchange for transforming the deserted
    skyscrapers of the local busted real-estate bubble
    into minarets. This could lay the foundations for
    a Muslim re-conquest of Catholic Spain, half a
    millennium after the devout Christian kings of the
    peninsula wrested the place from Islam. The
    political geography of Europe could revert to what
    it was nine centuries ago, before the Norman's
    invasion of Southern Italy. Then Islam had reached
    the Pyrenees, the Byzantine Orthodox empire held
    the Eastern front of Europe, the ancestors of the
    western powers, the Germans and Franks, were
    clasped north of the Alps and Italy was the
    battleground of all forces, with Islam in Sicily,
    Greek orthodox up to Naples and from Rome
    northward a flimsy Germanic control.

    All
    of this could be spiced up by cautious yet
    effective Chinese investment. Beijing dreads
    chaos, thus thinks that it is necessary to
    intervene early for stabilization, without
    considering that this could be an opportunity for
    expansion.

    These perspectives perhaps are
    not in the interests of Obama and Merkel - or even
    France and the UK. Here serious economic problems
    can become even more serious political issues.
    Then an immediate intervention by Americans or
    Germans on fragile Greeks, Spaniards and Italians
    is possible. But across the Atlantic, there are
    also those who hope that global economic
    difficulties will cause Obama to lose the
    election. And in this, there is a China angle that
    carries the most serious consequences worldwide.


    America, hit by the backlash of a European
    economic default, without the continuity of the
    Obama administration and without easy, short-term
    solutions, might be tempted to find shortcuts,
    engaging in wars that could, as traditionally wars
    do, remove outstanding debts. Washington may be
    hot toward Iran, or more or less cold against its
    new challenger, China.

    A clash between the
    US and Iran, along with deepening US-China
    friction, would also be useful to the two possible
    beneficiaries of the chaos of Europe: Russia and
    Saudi Arabia, both of which would then have a
    freer hand in Europe and the Middle East.


    Washington should then choose to leave
    Asia to China and regain Europe and the Middle
    East, or vice versa. Fighting on all fronts would
    be very difficult.

    http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Global_Economy/NF14Dj03.html

  • There is too much debt in the industrialized world and the financial
    system is virtually bust. Rea/ disposable personal income is stagnating
    or declining. Employment participation keeps heading south. This
    produces a chain reaction: Weaker consumer demand in the West weakens
    manufacturing in places like Asia, which weakens natural-resource
    producers such as Australia or Brazil.


    As for the euro, it is a misconstruction. As I said in January, I
    expect the disintegration to begin in the second half of this year. That
    should lead the world into financial and economic chaos. My two major
    themes into 2013 are euro disintegration and China weakness, due to the
    bursting of a real- estate boom.


    The global economy is weakening cyclically on top of a highly fragile
    credit system. It is an explosive cocktail. The tower of debt is
    compounded by the gigantic over-the-counter derivatives market. In the
    past 10 years the notional value of derivatives worldwide has grown from
    $100 trillion to almost $800 trillion. The numbers are mind-boggling.
    if something goes wrong in the real economy, it could shake the whole
    credit system dramatically. It is a dangerous situation.



    The euro is not the real problem but a trigger and compounder of the
    structural problems. It could only work if the euro zone entered a
    fiscal and political union, which won't happen, as Europeans aren't
    prepared to give up national sovereignty. Politicians therefore will go
    from one compromise and quick fix to the next, with the crisis deepening
    until some nations at the periphery won't be able to stand the economic
    pain anymore. They will want their old national currency back, and
    devalue to adjust the external account.

    http://www.zerohedge.com/news/david-rosenberg-channels-felix-zulauf
  • In many countries, disappointment with Obama
    appears to be tied to frustration with the United States acting on its
    own: Three years ago, 45% of people polled said they expected that Obama
    would consider their countries' interests. Only 27% now say they
    believe that Obama has done so. Also, 45% said they thought Obama would
    seek international approval for using military force. Now only 29% say
    they think he has done so.


    The idea that the U.S. throws its weight around without consulting
    other countries has persisted. In most of the countries in the survey,
    more than half of the people polled said the U.S. considers their
    interests "not too much" or "not at all."That feeling was strongest in
    Spain and Egypt, where 82% and 80%, respectively, expressed it.



    Using drones to combat militants in countries such as Pakistan or Yemen
    was also deeply unpopular in most of the countries surveyed -- a stark
    contrast to the U.S., where 62% of respondents approved. In 17 out of 20
    countries, more than half of respondents said disapproved of drone
    strikes. (The question was not asked in Pakistan or Yemen.) Drones were
    most fervently opposed in Greece (90%) and Egypt (92%.)

    Despite expressing disappointment with Obama, people in many European
    countries largely said they wanted to see the president Obama
    reelected, especially in France and Germany, the poll found.

    ..

    -- German Chancellor Angela Merkel is seen positively in Germany and
    across much of Europe, with popularity ratings of 70% and 58% in France
    and Britain, respectively. But feelings about her are much more sour in
    Southern Europe, especially in Greece, where only 7% said they have
    confidence in her.

    http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/world_now/2012/06/obama-popularity-abroad-pew-poll.html

    All this gonna matter a great deal soon, as international finance system collapses and everything must be backed by "words" and "shake hand". He gets nothing, since nobody trust him anymore.

    Merkel is the only leader who made tough choice and doesn't fuck around.

  • Geithner calls for more detail from Europe leaders

    Geithner says major economies such as Germany need to provide more
    clarity about their proposals to tighten Europe's financial integration,
    strengthen rescue funds for the most troubled nations and boost growth.

    Uncertainty
    about Europe's crisis has been weighing on global financial markets.
    Investors are nervous about whether Greece will be forced to leave the
    alliance of 17 nations that use the euro and whether other troubled
    nations might follow.



    Geithner was speaking to the Council on Foreign Relations in Washington.

    http://www.sacbee.com/2012/06/13/4560256/geithner-calls-for-more-detail.html

    I didn't seee him giving rest of the world some "clarity" during last turmoil and everybody was fucked. Now he is asking some "clarity.  Hey Tim. shut up and wait until their next big meeting. The europeans are not in the mood to hear US giving order. They are bigger and more important economic entity than America. America needs europe, not the other way around. They really can destroy the entire US banking system with a push of a button if they want. .. and no, nobody cares about US election and how it needs some feel good news.

  • May retail sales fall as gas purchases tumble


    April sales revised lower to mark first back-to-back drop in two years

    http://www.marketwatch.com/story/may-retail-sales-fall-as-gas-purchases-tumble-2012-06-13

  • European steel-plant shutdowns are
    inevitable as overcapacity pushes the price of the metal lower,
    shrinking earnings, regional lobby group Eurofer said.

    http://www.businessweek.com/news/2012-06-13/european-steel-lobby-sees-shutdowns-inevitable-as-values-tumble

    Nucor Corp. (NUE), the largest U.S.
    steelmaker by market value, said second-quarter profit will miss
    its previous guidance after a “surge” in imports undermined
    prices and political and economic uncertainty affected buyers’
    confidence.


    Earnings will be 35 cents to 40 cents a share including an
    impairment charge related to its Duferdofin Nucor Srl Italian
    joint venture, the Charlotte, North Carolina-based company said
    today in a statement. Excluding the charge, Nucor said profit
    will be “somewhat below the qualitative guidance” given in
    April, when the company said it expected “only a modest
    improvement in earnings.” 

     U.S. steel imports were 10.5 million metric tons in the
    first four months of 2012, 77 percent more than in the same
    period a year earlier, according to Census Bureau data. U.S.
    raw-steel production so far this year is up 7.4 percent,
    according to data from the American Iron and Steel Institute.

    http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-06-13/nucor-says-profit-to-miss-guidance-as-steel-imports-surge-2-.html

    Shares of U.S. Steel (NYS: X) hit a 52-week low on Tuesday. Let's take a look at how it got there and see whether cloudy skies are still in the forecast.

    But it isn't just those two regions that are cause for concern. The
    company's European operations have been negatively affected by the debt
    crisis, seeing losses of $34 million and $89 million over the past two
    quarters. Also, as the Fool's Dan Caplinger pointed out yesterday, both it and AK Steel (NYS: AKS) have underfunded pensions and don't have strong enough cash flow to quickly remedy that problem.

    http://www.dailyfinance.com/2012/06/13/can-anything-stop-us-steels-slide/


    still want $1.20 euro?  How about 120Yen? Chinese cheap steel is nothing compared to euro 1.20 or yen 120.


  • G-20 Unlikely to Make Headway on Europe, Official Says

    As the Federal Reserve prepares to
    meet next week, policy makers are under conflicting pressure to
    do more to stimulate the economy and to swear off quantitative
    easing. And that’s just from inside the Fed.


    In congressional testimony last week, Fed chief Ben Bernanke refused to tip his hand. His prepared remarks
    highlighted both positive and negative trends in the U.S.
    economy
    -- a profitable business sector at home and nasty
    headwinds from Europe -- suggesting he’s not ready to pull the
    trigger just yet.

    http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-06-13/europe-may-force-bernanke-to-flip-the-twist.html

    still won't fix the TBTF... no amount of money in the world will be enough trying to prop their imploding book. TBTF has to end.

  • In the meantime, EURUSD has dropped to more than 2 sigma cheap to its swap-spread-implied fair-value
    (though as we have seen in the late summer and fall of last year this
    can remain for longer periods) as the 'chaos' premium hits the Euro.


    image

    http://www.zerohedge.com/news/fx-markets-bracing-major-event

    as I said, europe is a MUCH bigger economy and can take much more debasement pain than US. If they decide to bring down euro, US industry will die within weeks. There is no question about it. The last euro-US trade battle, US still has slave to win the agriculture war. Europe has imperial colonies.

  • Over the past several years, several incidents have made it clear
    that despite the popular belief of the masses that the criminal banking
    cartel is too powerful to defeat, that defeating them is definitely
    within the realm of possibility. The fallout from JP Morgan’s
    media-dubbed “London Whale” this year and the SemGroup bankruptcy in
    2008 aptly demonstrated this.  The story about JP Morgan employee Bruno
    Iksil first broke when traders, using the size of price movements and
    trades they witnessed in a synthetic bond index known as CDX.NA.IG.9,
    suspected one trader of holding a singular massive position. Later,
    Iksil was revealed to be holding up to a $100 billion position in CDS
    (Credit Default Swap)exposure in this particular index. When the
    underlying bond market turned against Iksil’s massive bets in the
    CDX.NA.IG.9, reports started leaking that JP Morgan could be facing a $2
    billion loss. Iksil’s position also revealed JP Morgan’s Blythe Masters
    to be a master liar as she had just appeared on CNBC to refute
    allegations that JP Morgan traders ever engaged in deliberate
    manipulation of markets just before the Iksil story broke. Remember,
    Iksil’s massive position was discovered when other traders witnessed
    that one trader’s moves were influencing the entire behavior of that
    index and put their positions at enormous risk, the very definition of
    manipulation. However, the downside of holding such a deliberately
    massive manipulative position also soon became apparent to the chagrin
    of JP Morgan’s Jamie Dimon and Blythe Masters – a small market moved
    against you could create enormous losses on paper at a very rapid rate.




    Once traders discovered the size of Iksil’s massive position,
    they started taking the opposite side of Iksil’s trade to deliberately
    move the market in the opposite direction, knowing that Iksil would then
    be left facing a huge conundrum. Iksil could choose to assume defensive
    strategies whereby newly assumed positions could hedge some of the
    growing losses on his open positions but unfortunately, would also
    contribute to increasing the spread on the losses of his original
    positions. Because Iksil chose to assume a massive position that could
    only be described as having a goal to manipulate the CDX.NA.IG.9 index
    to make profits for JP Morgan, once knowledge of this position became
    known, it immediately became vulnerable to be manipulated itself so that
    it would eventually implode. And in the financial world of vultures,
    once vultures smell blood, there is no saving the carcass from doom.

    http://www.zerohedge.com/contributed/2012-06-14/blueprint-kill-jp-morgan’s-alleged-massive-manipulative-position-silver-futur

    As there is less and less player, information quality spikes. The few remaining players knows what the others are doing. Ultimately this is where sovereign backing comes into play. small players like UK will be crushed.

  • One thing is sure, any additional stimulus efforts by
    our leaders in Washington will lead to a weakening of the dollar. All
    of the different stimulus efforts revolve either additional debt or the
    printing of money (or both!), neither of which is positive for the US$.
    This is why the currency declined yesterday vs. 13 of its 16 major
    counterparts. The Euro looked like it would finally break out of the
    $1.25 handle, climbing up to $1.2610 before settling back into its
    former range.

    The resilience of the euro is impressive, as
    Greek voters will vote again this weekend with the future of the euro at
    stake. The latest polls indicate Greeks will again back the
    conservative party who is in favor of austerity and staying in the euro;
    but there is a possibility that the margin of victory be too small and
    no majority government will be able to be formed. And the Greek vote
    isn’t the only worry on the minds of investors. Moody’s cut Spain’s
    rating three steps yesterday to Baa3, just one level above junk. And
    the folks over at Moody’s will continue to grab headlines as a story in
    the Wall Street Journal predicts the rating agency will be announcing
    rate cuts on over 100 international banks in the next few weeks. A line
    at the end of the story on Moody’s bank ratings says a lot about our
    current situation as it suggests Moody’s is rushing to get the ratings
    downgrades in place in order to make sure any failed bank is below
    investment grade before a default.

    http://www.dailypfennig.com/currentIssue.aspx?date=6/14/2012
  • Nearly the exact same scenario led to the downfall of SemGroup
    Holdings, a private firm based out of Tulsa, Oklahoma. Based upon
    SemGroup’s eventual declared $2.5+ billion in

    losses in 2008, analysts backward engineered a figure for SemGroup’s
    massive short position in crude oil of 50 million barrels, or
    approximately a whopping 17% of the entire US crude inventory of 300
    million barrels at the time. So what made SemGroup’s short position blow
    up? Again, there is strong circumstantial evidence that another firm’s
    knowledge of SemGroup’s massive short position left it vulnerable to
    attack. Basically, the story goes like this. Citibank, Merrill Lynch and
    Goldman Sachs were all involved in a failed $1.5 billion private

    placement for SemGroup early in 2008. As a result of the standard due
    diligence and forensic accounting required for such a private placement,
    all three firms almost undoubtedly obtained intimate knowledge of
    SemGroup’s massive short position in crude oil during early 2008. Just
    as banks with knowledge of Iksil’s trading position have now squeezed
    Iksil’s failing position and caused Iksil’s losses to likely eventually
    balloon to multiples of the originally estimated $2 billion loss, many
    people familiar with the SemGroup’s contribution to the oil spike from
    $100 a barrel to $147 a barrel in 2008 suggested that Goldman Sachs had
    used their inside information (quite illegally by the way, if this is
    what indeed occurred) to take the opposite side of SemGroup’s position
    and deliberately force oil prices much higher at a time when SemGroup
    could least afford it. By squeezing SemGroup’s shorts and causing
    SemGroup’s already substantial losses to multiply, Goldman
    Sachs allegedly single-handedly was able to engineer the spike in oil
    futures from $100 a barrel to $147 a barrel in 2008
    , and in the process, profit massively from SemGroup’s demise.  

    -------------------
    and that 2008 commodity spike arguably greatly accelerate the collapse of subprime due to gigantic spike of gas that leads to slowing economy.

    But Goldman got a Bazooka bailout. Yay hank paulson... (History will soon demand these people be exterminated, due to market manipulation.)

    I think ultimately this is how dollar collapse will be triggered. The asian players will have more information, more complete picture of global transaction due to Yuan exchanges. And this will enable them to expose a lot of weak positions by rival dollar only players. And then the fight will be at the margin of "trust". Will the yuan new contract be executed or nullified.. etc. (and there is no historical data on this. So it's pure bet. but with much more money than dollar side can put out if lost.)

    So all the chinese has to do to control yuan spread is playing...I'll play or not play. All they have to ask is, if dollar worth more to them alive or dead. Pray hard when the chinese doesn't need dollar anymore, cause then they will play the full spectrum game.

    Imagine the cost of propping up JPM bank run. The money pumped will be so big, it will create economic slow down from stagflation and erosion of dollar credibility. It'll be nothing compared to Spain right now.
  • This dangerous
    embrace of neo-conservative military policy is now
    so widely accepted by both parties in Congress
    that the vote on the resolution was taken under a
    procedure known as "suspension of the rules,"
    which is designed for non-controversial bills
    passed quickly with little debate. Indeed, given
    the serious implications of this legislation, it
    is striking that there was not a single
    congressional hearing prior to the vote.


    The resolution also demonstrates that the
    vast majority of Democrats, like Republicans, have
    embraced the concept of "full-spectrum dominance,"
    the Bush-era doctrine that not only should the
    United States prevent the emergence of another
    rival global superpower such as China, but it
    should also resist the emergence of even a
    regional power, such as Iran, that could
    potentially deter unilateral US military actions
    or other projections of American domination.

    http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/NF15Ak01.html

    DC has been taken over completely by zionists. Permanent war and bigger debt until the empire crash. US is going to end Astro-hungarian style at the moment. slowly bleeding to death from numerous external war and corruption of money system and governing bodies. then rival power finish her off with one blow. History repeats itself... agaiiiiinn...
  • WASHINGTON

    The U.S.
    current account trade deficit widened in the first three months to the
    largest imbalance since late 2008, reflecting a big increase in imports
    in oil, cars and machinery and a drop in U.S. earnings on overseas
    investments.

    The deficit in the current account, the broadest measure of trade,
    jumped 15.7% to $137.3 billion, up from $118.7 billion in the final
    three months of last year, the Commerce Department reported Thursday.

    http://www.usatoday.com/money/economy/trade/story/2012-06-14/current-account-deficit-1Q/55593968/1

    Let's have more war! It does wonder to international commerce.

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