Archive for the ‘4 - Inflation’ Category

Oil Rises Sharply on Inventory Report

Thursday, October 11th, 2007

Alex’s Notes: Some of you have heard me predict $9 a gallon for gas. Well then, here we go. Oil will likely go to $200 a barrel if we attack Iran, which I am about 100% sure we will, this is only the beginning.

Ill let you guess what that is going to do to the price of gas.

——————————
The Associated Press

NEW YORK (AP) — Petroleum futures rose sharply Thursday and oil prices passed $83 a barrel after the government reported an unexpected decline in crude oil inventories.

Prices were also supported by an International Energy Agency report that concluded oil inventories held by the world’s largest industrialized countries have fallen below a five-year average, and by concerns that clashes between Turkish forces and Kurdish rebels could affect Iraqi oil supplies.

“No news was bearish today,” said James Cordier, president of Liberty Trading Group in Tampa, Fla. “Really, that’s all investors need right now to push energy prices higher.”

The weekly inventory report from the Energy Department’s Energy Information Administration said crude supplies fell by 1.7 million barrels in the week ended Oct. 5. Analysts surveyed by Dow Jones Newswires on average expected oil inventories to rise by 1 million barrels.

While the report also concluded that refinery activity and supplies of gasoline rose unexpectedly last week, traders focused on the oil inventory number, analysts said.

In part that’s because supplies of gasoline and heating oil remain low despite last week’s increases, said Antoine Halff, head of energy research at Fimat USA LLC.

Traders may also be anticipating that the EIA will revise last week’s crude supply estimates downward, as it has done in the past, Halff said.

Light, sweet crude for November delivery rose $2 to $83.30 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, within striking distance of oil’s trading record of $83.90 set on Sept. 20. November gasoline rose 3.08 cents to $2.0644 a gallon, while Nymex heating oil rose 4.95 cents to $2.2667 a gallon.

In London, November Brent crude rose $1.86 to $80.46 a barrel on the ICE Futures exchange.

Nymex natural gas, meanwhile, fell 2.5 cents to $7.985 per 1,000 cubic feet. In a separate report, the EIA said natural gas inventories rose last week by 73 billion cubic feet, more than the 68 billion cubic foot increase analysts forecast.

In its petroleum inventory report, the EIA said refinery activity rose by 0.3 percentage point to 87.8 percent of capacity last week. Analysts expected a 0.1 percentage point decline.

Inventories of gasoline rose by 1.7 million barrels last week, countering analyst expectations that they would fall by 300,000 barrels. Distillate inventories, which include heating oil and diesel fuel, fell by 600,000 barrels, in line with expectations.

Crude imports fell by 384,000 barrels a day last week to an average of 9.9 million barrels a day, while gasoline imports rose by 169,000 barrels a day to an average of 1.3 million barrels a day.

Demand for gasoline rose last week by about 80,000 barrels, the EIA said.

The petroleum market’s move higher in the face of strong product builds is a sign speculators are plowing money into energy futures, Cordier said.

“When the funds are buying and they’re spending money, it’s really hard to put a fundamental explanation behind it,” Cordier said.

Halff thinks the market saw the EIA report as validation of the earlier IEA report, which concluded that crude inventories held by the 30 nations of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development fell by 21 million barrels in August to 2.66 billion barrels, 70.4 million barrels lower than last year.

The IEA left its estimate of world oil demand growth for this year and next unchanged at 1.5 percent and 2.4 percent respectively.

Despite oil’s recent rally, gas prices continue to fall. At the pump, the average national price of a gallon of gas fell 0.5 cent overnight to $2.76, according to AAA and the Oil Price Information Service. Gas prices peaked at $3.227 a gallon in May.

http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5i5TtajgUpSm7KY5jf-lCJGHBB-tAD8S74QE80


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CHAPMAN: Gold, Silver, Economy & More

Thursday, October 11th, 2007

by Bob Chapman
The International Forecaster
Thursday, 11 October 2007

US MARKETS

As you all know, the government statistics for employment are totally bogus. That said; let’s take an introspective look at the latest machinations.

They tell us that yoy average hourly earnings are up 4.1% and that they are growing at a 5% compound rate for the past few months. We call this simple wage inflation, which was a long-time coming.

Officially 110,000 jobs were created in September compared to a revised gain of 89,000 in July and August. Don’t these massive revisions just warm your heart, 110,000 increases, which is bogus and in and of itself is totally inadequate? The economy needs 150,000 to 200,000 new jobs monthly just to stay in place. Increases over the last three months have only averaged 97,000. In the last four months the ranks of the unemployed have officially risen 400,000. Can you imagine what the real figure is, perhaps 1 million? The BLS has only removed 200,000 from the rolls. That is why we contend the uncounted unemployed are well over 13%. 4.7% is a fairy tale. Of the 73,000 new jobs in the private sector, 58,000 were in healthcare and in the food service industry. Retail and finance supposedly lost 19,000 jobs. 20,000 part-time jobs were lost as well. Why part-time jobs are included we will never know. They should be reported separately. As you can see the private jobs created were all at the lower end of the pay scale. Those jobs are for our fellow citizens who lost their $32.00 per hour jobs to free trade, globalization, and offshoring and outsourcing, so they could take these $10.00 per hour dead end positions.

They expect us to believe that unemployment for 8-19 year old females fell from 14% to 12.4% in one month, which is ridiculous. If they are going to lie at least try to make it believable. Yes, equally as preposterous is the fall in unemployment for women over 55, which fell from 3.4% to 3%. The bottom line is 97,500 of these new phantom jobs were all $10.00 per hour jobs or less in services, bars, restaurants, kitchens, nursing homes, etc., or 89%. Although bogus it is still dreadful. Worse yet the rate of unemployment for all men under 45 is up and that for 18-19 year olds is 16%.

You ask what does all this mean? It means we are already in a recession and have been for some time. Our government lies to us about everything so why should economic matters, such as unemployment be any different?

The FED is creating money and credit at a 14.1% rate or 48% annualized and they cannot readily make the economy grow.

Inflation is over 11% because of the Fed’s policies so we are not gaining- we are losing even if wages are up 5%. Worse yet, next year inflation, real inflation, will be over 15%. Over the last 50 years growth has been 3%. Even with the Fed’s outsized growth of monetary aggregates real growth is running at 1.5%, and it is headed much lower. Payroll jobs growth is only 1.6% and those figures are false. We have had negative job growth for some time. Payroll, real payroll numbers, run parallel to GDP growth. The 4th quarter will be terrible. Lower or no Christmas bonuses and plunging house prices will certainly dampen results. How can real estate prices remain constant when builders sell inventory for 35% to 50% off aggregate prices. Homebuilders are not just losing money many will go under. That is why we are still short suppliers and builders.

Real statistics are mind boggling as the stock market reaches new highs. There are almost three million mortgage holders with ARMs of one kind or another. These subprimes made up $1.3 trillion, or 73% of ARMs in the first quarter and 57% of mortgages in ARMs were unable to refinance loans in August. We still project overall losses at 50% of ARMs for $750 billion to $1.3 trillion, never mind the losses for those holding CDO bonds. Do not forget we projected these figures a year ago while the experts slept. Even they now only project 20% in foreclosures. The do not get it. These people shouldn’t have had loans in the first place. They are unqualified for new loans. They have negative equity and no cash and many, many cannot make the payments. Those payments are going up on reset and interest rates are climbing. Now that Congress is about to reverse the tax liability of debt forgiveness on foreclosed homes, even more homeowners will walk away. Many have seen their neighborhoods deteriorate due to many foreclosures and some see massive numbers of legal and illegal aliens moving into their neighborhoods suppressing prices and destroying the local culture. Most foreigners are here today for the money. They are still Chinese, Koreans, Indians, Pakistanis, Mexicans and Argentineans only in America to make money and leave. One subscriber told us in his development there are many foreign festivals for holidays, but none of the American holidays are celebrated. In real estate you can bypass the early and late 1980s, we are going to the 1930s. The 30 hot area homes are going to correct 30 to 60 percent. Many areas are already off 30%. They will fall for 2-1/2 to 4 more years. We have been right, the experts have been wrong, not only about real estate but everything else. Our next stunner is that 60% of republicans now agree with us that free trade is a loser and that we need tariffs back on goods and services ASAP. Why does it take so long for people to wake up? And, why don’t they listen?

It is important that we note that the dollar has already broken a 26-year support level and that it is headed lower probably to the 72 to 75 area on the USDX. That has been caused in part by lower interest rates. The Fed has effectively abandoned the dollar to rescue Wall Street and the banking and hedge fund industries. Yes, we are in a recession. Now traders and experts believe the interest rates are headed lower. If that is so then the dollar will fall further. The added liquidity will help the aforementioned professionals, but it will do little to help the economy. The Fed has been pouring money and credit into the economy for four years and growth has been slightly above average as inflation has eaten up any gains made in any investments or in wages. The Fed is risking the dollar’s status as the world’s reserve currency, as one country after another begins to sell dollars and unpeg their currencies from the dollar.

The psychology in real estate has been broken. The only event to figure out now is where the bottom in this market is. Real estate is worth $19 to $21 trillion, and in the majority of the market, the former 30 hot areas, prices will fall 40% on average. That reduces the net value to $11.4 trillion or $12.6 trillion. In construction alone this time around we could see 50% unemployment and a 60% drop in home construction. That is 3.3 million people without jobs plus the illegal aliens laid off and all the people in support industries and real estate. The real estate collapse is going to be devastating. We estimate 460,000 have already been laid off if you count the illegals. Thus, the credit crunch and a failing economy, in spite of it being overwhelmed by money and credit, has the Fed, Wall Street and the banks in a state of panic. They know there is no way out. It is no wonder they abandoned the dollar. They are on a sinking ship and they know it. Real estate will fall until the inventory is absorbed and people can again afford to buy homes as places to live and not as investments. Sir Alan Greenspan sees an extraordinary period of disinflation ahead, but he knows the Fed will inflate first until they cannot anymore.

Inflation is coming at us from all angles, but strangely no one at the Fed or Wall Street, in government and in corporate America seems to be able to see it. They should take a look at the Baltic Day Index that over the past year rose from 4,000 to 9,474.

The US dollar is weakening and all major currencies are rising against it. Europe and the UK are slowing down. Their cheap currency days are over. Wait until the world finally realizes that the top 18 of 20 central banks are doing what the Fed is doing in creating massive money and credit. Two and a half years ago gold broke out against every major currency and that is because it is not only the dollar it is all the major currencies that have problems. In time there will be a massive flight to quality from all currencies to gold. It will become the only safe haven.

For now we will have to fight the fed, the Plunge Protection Team and the yen carry trade, but in the end we will win. The Fed can monetize all they want via special deals with other nations, but that will just push gold prices higher and buy some time.

Instead of banks writing loans now a days they originate loans, or warehouse them on their balance sheet for a short time and then circulate, distribute or bundle them to investors using collateralized dent obligations. That means banks require less capital, because they do not hold the loan for the full term. The game is profitable as long as liquidity doesn’t dry up and that is what has happened recently and US banks are stuck with $400 billion in loans. As we said earlier they are lending buyers money and then selling them the CDOs with leverage just to get them off their balance sheets before they are out of capital computation.

What this new money game has brought is elevated risk. As loans are sold off, more loans have to be written and larger volumes are necessary to maintain profitability forcing banks to rely on brokers. As the game goes on volumes increase, which is reduced capital available to absorb risk and the result is lower credit quality. These loans are bought by insurance companies, pension funds, asset managers, banks and private clients. Hedge funds also play in search of higher returns based on leveraged structured credit instruments. These loans have little liquidity and are very risky. Hedge funds borrow from the banks to affect these trades, or they engage in the yen carry trade to raise funds. That is why that trade is so crucial to the US markets. The Japanese fund $1.5 trillion of this action. Our financial markets are debt addicted. This is purely a pyramid scheme. It is no wonder gold keeps hitting new highs. It is only a matter of when before the collapse comes. This is what bank deregulation has brought us. It’s back to the 1930s. The bankers haven’t learned anything more than how to become greedier. They were let loose by the Fed to target the poor and write loans for them that they were entirely unqualified for. As a result of the liquidity perpetuations we saw AAA rated CDOs and ABSs that were really BBB- and the house came trembling down. If you can, get a bid real AAA’s are bid at 80% of face value and AA’s and A’s lower. Most CDOs are bid 15% to 30% on the dollar. The subprime CDO and ABS problems after two months are still frozen and half of the commercial paper has no market.

GOLD, SILVER, PLATINUM, PALLADIUM AND URANIUM

We continue to receive reports of other investment mediums salespeople trying to get people to sell their gold and silver coins and shares. In the final analysis you are going to end up in gold. You are far more vulnerable in other investments. Do not let people talk you out of your gold and silver coins and shares and do not believe the talk of confiscation. It could happen, but probably won’t. Americans do not own enough gold and silver coins or bullion to make it worthwhile. This is not the 1930s and if they want gold and silver they would take the ETF’s assets first. Gold and silver shares have never been confiscated, although for a time markets could be shut down, all markets. Remember, government can take anything it wants from you, including your wife, children and your dog. You are a fool if you are talked out of your gold and silver assets.

Gold ETF’s have set a new high of 759 tons, up 21% since the end of June and valued at $18 billion. Since June the top gold and silver shares are up 28.4% with your AEM, Agnico Eagle, leading the way. The stocks are finally showing leverage to the gold price. Remember, the MS64 Saint Gaudens went from $500.00 to $5,000. This is the time for leverage as we approach $850 and the beginning of phase 2 of 3 or 4 upside bull market phases in gold and silver. Anyone who owns Barrick Gold should sell it. In their hedge book they are still short 9.5 million ounces.

Just as we predicted, the cartel’s rally to wash out protective derivatives is now under way. On Tuesday, after weakening the yen into the 117 handle on Monday and Tuesday morning, they pushed the Dow up 120+ points to a fresh all-time high of 14,164.53, although they also managed to push the XAU to a fresh all-time high of 173.44, which must have ticked them off to no end. The HUI was also pushed to within a few points of its all-time high, closing at 398.39, so it looks like gold and silver will get a lot of PM stock support while the cartel orchestrates its yen-call-destroying, stock-index-short-killing rally of general stock markets by its weakening of the yen to bring in carry trader support. You could see the rally coming after the cartel used the soft holiday, Columbus Day, to hit gold in order to keep it from jumping to new highs on Tuesday when the stock rally was commenced. On Monday they took gold all the way from its Friday close of 741.30 all the way down to 731 before it rallied briefly to 734 and then settled in at 732, still above its 2006 high, while the Dow lost about 22 points. The weakened yen supported the stock markets until the cartel’s jaw-boning, which took the form of minutes of the September 18 Fed meeting at which they agreed to kill the dollar to save Wall Street, a day that will live in infamy, was released to the stock markets on Tuesday. The rate-cut friendly, dollar-killing Fed-talk, together with some typical end-of-day brute force pushing by the PPT, propelled the Dow to new heights, and rallied the general stock markets, including the resource sector as mentioned above. Gold also benefited by the weakened yen and rallying PM stocks as carry traders opted for some safe-haven protection and Indian jewelers took advantage of Monday’s dip which continued in the early going on Tuesday. As the Dow reached new heights on Tuesday, gold almost completely took back Monday’s losses, driving up $14 dollars per ounce all the way to about 740, after receiving a further beating from the cartel which brought it as low as 726+ earlier, before settling in at about 737. Silver has likewise benefited.

After being hammered by the cartel from a high Monday of 13.40 all the way to a low Tuesday of about 13.10, silver had an extraordinary recovery all the way to 13.55 before settling in at 13.43.

We spoke of this coming stock rally in our two previous issues, and warned large specs to get out of any leveraged and/or short-term yen calls and stock index puts and to replace them with un-leveraged, longer-term derivatives. Those who heeded our advice stand to make a fortune when the upcoming follow-up crash occurs, which will happen after the October options expire. To those who did not heed our advice, if the cartel succeeds with their plan, well, all we can say is, we hope your Chapter 11 works out for you, and that its been nice knowing you. The cartel is going to try to wash out the shorter-term protective derivatives which large specs have purchased to protect their PM positions by pushing the Dow to 14,300+ or so by the end of this week and to 14,600+ by the time October options expire late next week in a rally similar to the one they used in July. At least that is their plan. Whether they can pull this plan off is very questionable, given the ongoing credit-crunch and abysmal third crunch-quarter earnings reports which will continue to hit on a daily basis now during earnings season. Also, PM’s and their related stocks could explode from liquidity released to large specs to support the rally which could very well destroy the commercial shorts before the stock rally reaches the cartel’s planned objective. Unlike in July, they will have to weaken the yen to accomplish this since July was pre-crunch and the yen at that time was already at very weak levels, and this will help power PM’s. In addition, in order to help the stock markets to recover after the planned crash, the cartel will have to weaken the yen even further just as they did in July to help the crashed markets recover at that time, providing yet more support for PM’s. Since Monday the yen has hit the 117 yen per dollar handle, a level of weakness not seen since August 15. And now, early on Wednesday morning, the yen has now also weakened against the euro, breaking into the 166 yen per euro handle, a level of weakness not seen since July 24. Both moves in the yen are just as we predicted. Unfortunately for the cartel, the Dow has been down today, Wednesday, by as much as 80 points already as of the time of this writing based on profit warnings and a Chrysler strike while spot gold has rocketed up to the 746 to 747 range, within inches of its all-time high of 747.75, and while the XAU and HUI have already broken their previous all-time intra-day highs like they did not even exist and will probably set new all-time closing highs today as well. OOPS!!!

The reason they are going to try to elevate and then crash the stock markets is because the cartel hopes that this will generate massive margin calls for the large specs after they leverage themselves to the hilt in order to take advantage of the rally. We could see a crash from 14,500+ to just below 14,000 on the Dow before a very quick recovery to 14,200+. Large specs who have had their protective derivatives washed out would then be forced to liquidate their PM positions. We cannot tell how many large specs have heeded our advice. Only time will tell. Large specs might also consider some short-term stock index calls to take advantage of the coming rally. If the large specs are ready for the cartel, gold will blow into the stratosphere as the mountain of shorts created by the commercials does the Mount St. Helens-Mount Vesuvius thing, utterly annihilating the hapless commercial shorts in a short-covering rally without historical precedent. We would like to point out to the non-US members of the cartel and the myriad of other parties who have been screwed and decimated by the fraudulent and diabolical CDO contagion initiated by the US cartel members, that if you were looking for some payback, a chance like this will not happen again in your lifetime. Your participation in the implosion of the US cartel’s gold derivative positions on the COMEX and the TOCOM will provide you with a cherished and most satisfying memory which you can carry with you to your grave. We just thought we would mention this in passing, just in case you were interested.

The cartel’s current objective is to drive PM’s down into the subbasement so they can get out from under their ominous mountain of shorts, which on the COMEX alone has reached new heights as evidenced by the astonishing all-time high in gold futures open interest set on Monday, a mind-blowing 451,753 contracts. If the cartel breaks gold, the Fed will cut rates in October and propel the stock markets higher while they reestablish their mountain of shorts to continue the suppression of gold. If gold breaks the cartel, gold will slash past 850 like a knife through butter and you can forget about rate cuts for the rest of 2007 unless the stock markets threaten to go into a complete meltdown, which very well could happen. So you can see that what happens in the tiny, little gold market is now determinative of what will happen in the much larger stock, bond, currency and derivatives markets. Not bad for a barbaric relic, eh? What few in the world realize is that we are seeing “Clash of the Titans” on steroids in the gold pits right now, and the outcome will influence the future of financial markets like no other event or battle in the world.

The cartel’s desperation is also showing in gold lease rates, which have elevated recently since the credit-crunch to levels not seen in well over a year. This has been caused by both a decrease in supply and an increase in demand. From the supply side, central banks are afraid to loan out more gold as they may never get it back if the bullion banks get blasted in a short-covering rally as their mountain of shorts grows a cauldron and spews out commercial short-annihilating molten gold and silver lava. At the same time, from the demand side, commercial shorts, many of which are also bullion banks, need to get their hands on gold bullion to cover their ever-growing and ever-burdening mountain of shorts without driving up gold prices by purchasing gold in the open market. We believe the commercial shorts are going to be catastrophically decimated, that the gold owed on many gold leases will never be returned to the central banks, that the central banks will then have to write off their phantom paper gold reserves and that this will put the ongoing credit-crunch on steroids and threaten a worldwide meltdown of financial markets. Gold and silver will then become the go-to assets as they blast through the Einstein-DeSitter radius at the outer visible bounds of the universe.

http://news.goldseek.com/InternationalForecaster/1192114980.php


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Your Government Has Stolen Your Social Security Money

Thursday, October 11th, 2007

Alex’s Notes: Ok fine, so Ron Paul didnt really say what the headline says, thats just there to get your attention.

The reality is, if the government has plundered, ok lets be polite and say borrowed, the Social Security trust and left nothing but IOU’s in place of the money, who has to pay it back? YOU DO.

So in other words, the government can move money around from account to account within the Federal government and buy whatever it wants, leave an iou in its place, without really informing the general public about what it is doing, and then MAKE YOU PAY FOR IT.

Better yet, you dont have to pay for it, YOUR CHILDREN AND GRANDCHILDREN WILL.

I find it absolutely appalling that our ‘leaders’ ae willing to pass legislation that virtualy guarantees my childrens slavery.

——————————————————–

PAUL: Keeping Promises to Seniors
by Ron Paul
October 09, 2007

With our country’s finances stretched thin, our credit limit fast approaching, and our currency inflated to the breaking point, there is no indication yet of any urgency on the part of Congress to rein in spending. The predictable answer to the government’s voracious spending habits is this week’s proposal by some Democratic Congressional leaders for tax increases to pay for operations in Iraq . Here at home, however, there are promises our seniors heavily rely upon. We must keep these promises.

An analysis of the Social Security “Trust Fund” shows we are not doing a credible job of keeping these promises. Official reports show the trust fund having assets of $2.1 trillion. In reality, those dollars are just IOUs the government is writing to itself when it borrows from the fund to spend on unrelated programs. There are no real assets in the Social Security Trust Fund. This is similar to taking money out of your savings account, spending it, then replacing it with an IOU to yourself, and calling that IOU an asset.

In addition, this money we owe to our seniors is not even included in official budget deficit figures. In fiscal year 2006 alone, $185 billion was borrowed from Social Security. The official deficit was reported to be $248 billion. The actual deficit for 2006 would be $433 billion when combining the two. This sort of accounting would land private sector executives in prison for fraud.

Yet this is done every year by the federal government. The truth is that while politicians in Washington differ about what programs to spend Social Security money on, they are united in wanting to spend it on something other than benefits for seniors.

This approach can continue only until Social Security stops running “surpluses” the government can raid. Trustees of Social Security estimate this will happen in 2017. At that time, the amount owed to the Trust Fund will be between $4 trillion and $5.2 trillion, depending on the economy.

When that day of reckoning comes, there will no longer be “excess” payroll tax receipts available to prop up government spending, and the risk of financial crisis will be significant. Instead of forward thinking solutions, politicians are discussing alarming proposals, such as an agreement with Mexico to let their citizens collect social security money intended for our seniors. This would break the bank even sooner. But, current Members of Congress will no longer be in office to face the wrath of seniors and their families when the trust fund goes bankrupt. Instead, they will be retired and enjoying their own plush Congressional pensions.

I have been working to reverse this trend. My Social Security Preservation Act, HR 219 would make sure this Trust Fund has real assets such as certificates of deposit in FDIC-insured institutions so that in 2017 and beyond, Social Security payments would continue for those who are depending on them.

Congress must take action now, so we can keep the promises we made to our seniors.

http://www.house.gov/paul/tst/tst2007/tst100707.htm


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Food inflation at its highest since 1990

Thursday, October 11th, 2007

Supermarket checkout bills rising
By Associated Press
October 9, 2007

Food inflation at its highest since 1990

NEW YORK – The forces behind the rise in food prices – China’s economic boom, a growing biofuels industry, and a weak US dollar – are global and not letting up anytime soon. Grocery receipts are bulging because the raw ingredients, packaging, and fuel that go into the price of foodstuffs cost more than they have in decades.

It’s the worst bout of food inflation since 1990, but not yet worrisome to the economy, said John Lonski, chief economist of Moody’s Investor Service. While high food prices can cut into consumers’ discretionary spending, the 4 percent rate of food inflation is still far below the crippling double-digit levels of the 1970s.

Still, consumers anxious for relief in the checkout line may have to wait.

Andrea Williams, 32, can track the rise in prices of the food she buys for herself, her husband, and their three children by looking back at the receipts she says she meticulously saves.

“In 2004, I bought a gallon of milk, it was a $1.63,” Williams said before heading into a Wal-Mart in Savoy, Ill.

A gallon of milk cost nearly $3 a gallon last month in her area.

A couple of years ago, Williams would spend about $250 a month on one big grocery trip. Now she says she spends $250 every two weeks.

It is possible to trace the jump in food costs to the commodities markets, where the price of agriculture products and energy have reached multidecade highs this year. Crude oil, which helps dictate the price of gasoline and plastic packaging, hit a record in September. Wheat prices also climbed to a record.

The run-up in commodity prices has as much to do with short-term supply and demand in each market as with long-term shifts in who produces and consumes those products.

China is the juggernaut. Rapid growth there – and in Brazil, Russia, India, and other developing nations – has led to massive demand for raw materials, including energy to run factories and cars, metals to build infrastructure, and beans and grains to feed livestock and people. China will import almost 50 percent of the world’s oilseeds within a decade, becoming the world’s largest importer, according to estimates from the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.

Oils made from oilseeds such as soybeans are used widely in packaged foods, while corn is used to make high fructose corn syrup, a sweetener found in everything from soda to bread.

China’s oilseed demand reflects another trend: The world is using more of its food supply to make fuel. Corn in the United States and China is being converted to ethanol, a gasoline additive. Europe is using more wheat for ethanol and rapeseed for biodiesel, a cleaner burning fuel that is mixed with regular diesel. Brazil has bulked up its production of sugarcane to make ethanol.

Demand from the burgeoning ethanol industry in the United States helped drive corn prices to a peak this year, setting in motion a domino effect of price increases through the food chain as livestock raisers, food makers, and retailers tried to recover costs.

http://www.boston.com/business/articles/2007/10/09/supermarket_checkout_bills_rising/


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The Question to the Golden Answer

Tuesday, October 9th, 2007

——————————————————————————–

“Using this printing press – or even without it, in this modern, electronic age – the feds can create all the dollars they want. But unless they know something we don’t, they can’t create even a single additional ounce of gold.”
——————————————————————————–

by Bill Bonner

“The Comeback Kids,” is this week’s headline at The Economist. On the cover of the latest issue is a photo of Bill and Hillary Clinton…arm in arm…

“Will Hillary be our next president?” we asked a friend who thinks about this sort of thing.

“Yes, most likely,” came the answer. “People don’t really like her…but those Clinton years are looking better and better. And they think that by voting for Hillary, they’ll get Bill Clinton. And with Bill will come the Clinton years again. No subprime debt problem. No housing slump. No war in Iraq.”

In other words, when the comeback kids come back, peace and prosperity come back with them.

Yesterday brought news of comebacks. For example, it almost looked as though the dollar was coming back. Anyway, that was how the financial media described Monday’s bouncing buck.

But wait…it still takes more than $1.40 to buy a pound (GBP). And the yen (JPY) is still trading over 118. And the Australian currency (AUD) just hit a 23-year high against the dollar. So, reports of the dollar’s health may be exaggerated.

Still, oil fell below $80. And gold lost ground too, when measured against the kind of money you don’t have to dig out of the earth.

(Incidentally, Byron King, over at Outstanding Investments, has discovered a way to get gold out of the ground – and into your hands – for just a penny per ounce. Many a long suffering DR reader have taken advantage of this unique opportunity…why don’t you take advantage of gold’s slight decline and join them? But act fast – you only have until October 23rd…

We are still fascinated by the simple observation that the surest bet you could have made 35 years ago was also the most obvious one. When the dollar was cut loose from gold on August 15, 1971, that gold would rise and the dollar would fall was as certain as anything you ever get in the financial world.

“We have a little technology…the printing press…” says Ben Bernanke. Using this printing press – or even without it, in this modern, electronic age – the feds can create all the dollars they want. But unless they know something we don’t, they can’t create even a single additional ounce of gold.

“Gold is the answer,” we keep saying.

The only trouble is: we haven’t quite figured out what the question is.

What will be higher next year? Gold? We don’t know…

What is the safest place for your money? Gold? We don’t know…

What starts with a G and ends with a D and rhymes with ‘old’? Ah, there…

The Clinton Years look like golden years in many ways. Not because of anything the Clintons did. They came in at the tail end of a huge boom – and managed to avoid messing it up.

The boom had begun during the Reagan Administration, after Paul Volcker got control of inflation. Then, interest rates could fall for the next 20 years. Cheaper, more abundant credit had the usual effect; cautiously at first…then recklessly…people threw money around. The U.S. economy boomed. Stocks rose 12 times – so much that people sold their gold to get in on it. Even the central banks sold gold. The yellow metal was out of fashion.

Lately – say, for the last seven years – gold, too, has been making a comeback. It’s come back almost all the way to where it was in January…when Ronald Reagan first took the presidential oath.

Now what? What will it be? Another ‘golden era’ when the Clintons come back? A final, inflationary blowout bubble in the world’s markets? Or the comeback of tougher times…like the stagflation of the pre-Volcker years?

The big question is probably this: can the Fed now save stocks, housing and the economy by destroying the dollar?

Gold is probably the answer to at least one of those questions.


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Special: Six Reasons to Own Gold

Tuesday, October 9th, 2007

By Alexander Green

In 1999, the price of gold hit a 20-year low near $250 an ounce. It stayed below $300 for the next two years.
But a genuine bull run began in the first half of 2001. Gold reached $720 last year. And the spot price hovers near $740 today.

Is it headed higher still? Although the price of “the barbarous relic” is notoriously unpredictable, there are good reasons to think so. Here are just a few:

1. The U.S. dollar is weakening. That makes the metal, typically denominated in dollars, cheaper to buy in other currencies. (Euro-denominated investors think gold still looks cheap.) Gold traditionally rallies as the dollar falls.

2. Inflation fears. Only a few months ago, Bernanke was openly fretting about the possibility of higher inflation – and saying the Fed’s bias was toward tightening rates. Yet he has cut rates dramatically to lessen the credit crunch resulting from a meltdown in mortgage-based securities. Needless to say, the Fed’s action was inflationary. And gold is an excellent inflation hedge.

3. The emergence of China and India. A flourishing middle class in both emerging giants is increasing the demand for gold. (Jewelry fabrication was up more than 50% in India alone last year.) People everywhere like gold watches, gold coins, and gold wedding bands.

4. Supply constraints. Around the world, discovery rates are falling. Mines are being depleted and mining companies are producing lower grade base metals.

5. Geopolitical instability. There are plenty of hotspots around the world today. But gold is viewed as a safe haven during times of political or economic calamity. (That’s one good reason we own it in our Oxford Anti-Terror Portfolio.)

6. The trend is your friend. Good traders know better than to fight the broad trend in an asset class – and clearly gold is on the rise right now.

So it looks like an excellent time to own gold. But how?

—————————————————————-

For those of you who follow the ideals of Contrarian Investing, consider that paper currency and anything based on paper will not be redeemable if there is a crash of any sort. Part of the idea of investing in gold is as an ‘insurance policy’ so to speak if the whole deal goes to hell in a hand basket. If we have a ‘economic event’ of any sort, anythig that is paper backed may not be redeemable, which includes ETF’s and shares in mining companies. A good strategy to consider is to hold some bullion in allocated storage, some coin on hand, and after that if you so decide some certificates and other paper instruments tied to gold, silver and other metals.

In addition, not everyone realizes that there is a 28% tax burden on gains of anything that is considered a ‘collectible’ – which happen to include Gold ETF’s.

This is where I shamelessly plug Anglo Far-East . Why AFE? Because gold investing if done right, doesnt have to make gains of over 40% just to be ahead of the game when it comes to your gains taxes. Investigate, its good for your wallet.

———————————————————————-

The physical metal – especially in the form of bullion or numismatic coins – is lovely to behold. But keeping a large quantity of the metal at hand is risky. If you store it safely, there are costs associated with that, too.

As a result, many investors are turning to the safety and convenience of exchange-traded funds or ETFs. Two examples are StreetTRACKS Gold Shares (NYSE: GLD) and iShares Comex Gold Trust (AMEX: IAU). These funds hold, store and insure the physical metal. But the ETFs trade like stocks so they offer easy liquidity. (Both have relatively low expenses of .4% a year.)

The tax impact of these funds may surprise you, however. If you sell a gold ETF for a long-term gain, you won’t owe the bargain 15% tax rate you’d owe on a stock. You’d owe 28% on that gain. That’s because gold ETFs are taxed like collectibles, which have special rules.

Another alternative is to own gold shares in an ETF. Why? Historically, gold stock moves are three to five times as much (up or down) as the price of the metal itself.

That’s because gold-price movements create larger moves in the profitability of mining companies, due to their largely fixed costs.

I especially like Market Vectors Gold Miners (AMEX: GDX).

Market Vectors is linked to the AMEX Gold Miners Index and owns all of the world’s leading gold and silver mining companies. That means you can capture the performance of the entire sector in a single, well-diversified investment.

The annual expense ratio is one half of one percent. The shares can be margined or sold short – and there are options available for traders who prefer to play gold more aggressively.

The top 10 holdings include Newmont, Freeport McMoran, Barrick Gold, AngloGold, Harmony Gold, Kinross, Yamana, Gold Fields, and Agnico.

Don’t overdo it, of course. Gold is volatile and often trades unpredictably in the short term.

But the long-term trend is already in place. And there appears to be plenty of upside ahead.

Good Investing,

Alexander Green is Chairman, Investment U and Investment Director, The Oxford Club


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THE WINTER OF OUR DISCONTENT

Monday, October 8th, 2007

by Darryl Schoon
October 8, 2007

It’s the last day’s last hour of the last happy year
Bob Dylan, lyrics from Cross The Green Mountain

As we collectively move towards the economic disaster awaiting us, the investment community is hoping the world’s central banks will be able to save them from the crisis set in motion by this summer’s credit collapse.

If the truth be known—and someday it will be—central banks are at the very center of today’s problems. Indeed, they caused them. Today’s disintegration of capital markets based on debt-based paper began in 1913 with the creation of the US Federal Reserve Bank, the central bank of the US.

Why Save When Money Is Worth Less And Less

It was the US Federal Reserve Bank that first “fed” debt-based paper money into the previous savings-based economy of the United States. This substitution of credit for savings has led us to where the US is now—the world’s largest debtor along with having a national negative rate of savings.

Central Banks Paper Mills And Effluence

Unsustainable levels of debt and economic cycles of expansion and contraction are now everywhere. The spread of central banking—the paper mills of credit—has also caused the spread of central banking’s attendant problems, mounting debt, inflation, recessions, deflation, etc. The US, and indeed the world, is now addicted to a constant and growing infusion of debt-based paper money provided by the world’s central banks.

The paper money is not gratis; it comes in the form of debt with compounding interest attached. This debt-based paper is then released into the economy by commercial banks which profit by loaning funds they don’t actually have and charging compounding interest on those loans. (see my article How To Make Millions By Loaning Money That’s Not Even Yours That You Don’t Even Have)

Debt-based paper money has led nations and the world down a very dangerous path. Facilitating expansion by encumbering future revenues with compounding debt inevitably indebts individuals, businesses, and governments beyond their ability to repay.

In the beginning, production expands, needs are met and everyone goes home happy. In the end, everyone’s home gets repossessed. This is when the amount of debt has grown so large, governments, businesses, and consumers collapse under its collective weight.

That’s where we are today. We lived off tomorrow and tomorrow has arrived. What a surprise.

The $64 million question What do we do now?

For the United States, it is a $5 trillion question—US government debt now totals $5 trillion. For Japan, it is a $6.5 trillion question—Japan’s government debt is the largest percentage of debt per GDP in the world. These are troubling numbers, for the US and Japan are respectively the world’s largest and second largest economies.

The substitution of debt-based paper money for saving-based money (fully backed and convertible to gold or silver) lies at the foundation of the US and Japan’s continuing and about to worsen economic ills—though for different reasons (reasons discussed in How To Survive The Crisis And Prosper In The Process).

And central banks created money in the image of gold and silver and it was not good.

It was the substitution of debt-based paper money that allowed central banks to inflate their money supply beyond previously conceivable bounds. And, when debt-based economies were released from the need to convert or anchor their currencies to gold or silver, this allowed the US and Japan to further plunder their economies by indebting their citizens to levels of indebtedness beyond their ability to ever repay—EVER.

“The gap between future US receipts and future US government obligations now totals $65.9 trillion, a sum that is impossible for the US to reconcile, which means the US is now technically bankrupt.” St Louis Federal Reserve Review July/August issue 2006 Professor Laurence Kotlikoff

Once, US treasuries were deserving of the world’s top AAA credit rating; but the present US economy bears little resemblance to the US economy that was once the world’s most powerful, the nation’s economy that once owned 75 % of the world’s monetary gold and that had a positive balance of trade with the rest of the world.

That economy disappeared in the 1970s, replaced by one that had so squandered its gold that it could no longer back the US dollar. Now, the US is technically bankrupt, the world’s largest spendthrift, its largest debtor with the world’s largest trade deficit and a negative rate of savings.

But, amazingly the US still has a AAA credit rating on its US Treasury debt. Maybe they know someone at Bear Stearns who knows someone at S&P, Moody’s, and Fitch. Some things never change—until they do.

Subprime US Treasuries Not Yet Here But Perhaps Coming Soon

As autumn approaches, this summer’s credit crisis continues to spread through the global grid created by today’s financial wizards—wizards so adept they do not understand what they have set in motion. That this summer’s credit crisis surprised them the most is the most disturbing news of all.

The financial wizards of Wall Street and The City are hoping this summer’s credit crisis is a bad cold at worst, that perhaps a slight fever and time will heal the illness and they can return once again to the task of carving out billion-dollar bonuses from capitalism’s rotting carcass (sic capitalism, any economic system based on central bank issuance of debt-based paper money).

But the wizards of Wall Street and The City will be wrong this fall. This summer’s credit contraction looks increasingly less like a cold and more like cancer which has metastasized and made its way into the lymph nodes of our global economy.

We wait as the inevitable end of a debt-based paper money system approaches. But have faith, for after the fall a resurrection will occur; albeit, at the end of a long and very hard winter.

Financial Sense


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Inflation Adjusted Gold Price, 1970-2006

Monday, October 8th, 2007

This chart shows the price of gold, adjusted for inflation, in todays dollars.

As you can see, we have a ways to go before we reach the last historical top (which, according to this chart, would be at around $2200.00 per ounce) .


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Since 2001, Economic Recovery Weak

Monday, October 8th, 2007

US Recession: By Far The Weakest Recovery
A Daily Reckoning White Paper Report
by Dr. Kurt Richebacher, for The Daily Reckoning

Trying to assess the situation and further growth prospects of the U.S. economy, the first important fact to see is that the U.S. economic recovery since November 2001 has been by far the weakest in the whole postwar period. Just a few tidings composed by the Economic Policy Institute in Washington:

First, inflation-adjusted hourly and weekly wages today are below where they were at the start of the recovery in November 2001; second, median household income (inflation adjusted) has fallen five years in a row and was 4% lower in 2004 than in 1999; third, total jobs since March 2001 (the start of the recession) are up 1.9% and private jobs 1.5% (at this stage of previous business cycles, jobs had grown 8.8%); fourth, the unemployment rate is low only because several million people have given up to look for a job.

US Recession: Grossly distorted figures

And here are some cursory remarks on our part: First, job growth has steeply fallen during the last three months, from 200,000 in February to 75,000 in May; second, all the job growth has come from the artificial net birth/death model, implying that it is booming among small new firms not captured by the payroll survey, while slumping in existing firms; third, private household indebtedness since 2000 has soared by 70%. This compares with an overall increase in real disposable personal income by 12%.

According to the popular GDP accounts, consumer spending in the first quarter has burst by a record rate of 5.2%. That is the fact on which everybody happily focuses. Few people realize, first of all, that this is an annualized figure. The true increase against the prior quarter was 1.3%.

In any case, though, it is a grossly distorted figure. The ugly reality of the first five months of 2006 is that the consumer-spending boom of the past few years has effectively broken down. But to realize this, it is necessary to look at the sequence of monthly data. Here they are, from the same source as the GDP numbers, the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA):

By these figures, measuring spending and income growth from month to month, consumer spending in the first quarter has increased 0.6%, or 2.4% annualized, less than half the 5.2% as reported in the GDP accounts. As we have stressed several times before, the big difference between the figures arises from the fact that the GDP measures changes in averages. The big increase in consumer spending happened in reality in November/December 2005, resulting in a large “overhang” for the following quarter.

To detect a recent change in trend, it is necessary to focus on the changes from month to month, as above. For May, reported retail figures showed an increase by 0.1% before inflation. With a monthly inflation rate of 0.3%, total real spending should be at a minus.

This sudden weakness in consumer spending has an obvious reason. The spending bubble on consumer durables – that is, on autos and housing durables – is going bust. It was largely spending borrowed from the future to be implicitly followed by payback time.

For us, this rapid, steep decline in the growth of consumer spending is the first decisive consideration to expect in the United States’ impending serious recession; and remarkably, this is happening with record credit growth and even before the housing bubble is truly bursting.

That this most important fact goes completely unnoticed says something about the depth of research. Moreover, this sharp slowdown in consumer spending strikingly conforms to the downward shift in the growth of real disposable personal incomes. In 2005, it was already down to 1.3%. So far in 2006, it is zero.

Under these miserable income conditions, the strength of future consumer spending manifestly depends on the possibilities of ever-higher cash-out mortgage refinancing against rising house prices. It hardly requires any intelligence to have realized by now that this is flatly impossible.

Looking at the accelerating credit expansion, we are, as a matter of fact, more than doubtful that the slowdown in the economy and the housing bubble has anything to do with the Fed’s rate hikes. What crucially matters for both is the current credit expansion, and that keeps accelerating. But the problem is that more and more credit creates less and less economic activity, as measured by GDP.

The unrecognized problem in the United States is that economic growth driven by a housing bubble is extremely credit and debt intensive. It needs, firstly, heavy borrowing to drive up the house prices and, secondly, further heavy borrowing to turn the resulting capital gains into cash. Put this together with minimal or now zero real disposable income growth and you have something like a credit Moloch devouring credit and leaving less and less for economic growth.

Yet we are sure that the U.S. economy’s extraordinary debt addiction has other reasons unrelated to the housing bubble. One is the huge trade deficit, and the other is extensive and rapidly increasing Ponzi finance.

US Recession: Trade Deficit

The American consensus view holds that the trade deficit, however large, does not matter because foreigners easily finance it. This view reveals the total absence of any serious analysis of related domestic income and debt effects. The obvious first major harmful economic effect is that domestic producers lose an equal amount of domestic spending and income creation to foreign producers, and that today in a staggering annual amount of more than $800 billion, equal to about 7% of nominal GDP.

Such persistently large and growing income losses from the trade deficit would have pulled the U.S. economy into recession long ago. It has not happened because the Greenspan Fed, by way of loose and cheap money, provided for a compensating increase in domestic demand through additional credit creation. It succeeded, true, but the thing to see is the additional credit and debt creation. This was justified with low inflation rates. Ironically, the import boom in the trade deficit has been very helpful in suppressing U.S. inflation.

Yet there is still a second major harmful effect to the trade deficit that American economists completely ignore. Implicitly, the alternative demand created by the looser U.S. monetary policy is different from the demand that emigrates to foreign producers. The big loser is the export industries in manufacturing. The gains, via the surrogate demand, have been in consumer services and goods.

In essence, the trade deficit alters the economy’s structure in a negative way. The losing manufacturing area is the sector with the highest rate of capital formation, and therefore also the highest rate of productivity growth. For good reasons, it also pays the highest wages. Consider that U.S. manufacturing lost 3 million jobs in the past few years. To be sure, the trade deficit is not its only reason, but unquestionably a major one.

Pondering the U.S. economy’s unusually high addiction to credit and debt growth in relation to GDP growth, we are sure of another evil factor – Ponzi finance. Principally, every increase in spending brings about an equivalent increase in incomes. But this is not true in three cases of spending: first, spending on existing assets; second, spending on imports; and third, Ponzi finance.

Ponzi finance means that lenders simply capitalize unpaid interest rates. Ponzi finance creates credit, but it is bare of any demand and spending effects in the economy. In the conventional American view, balance sheets of private households are in their very best shape because increases in asset values have vastly outpaced the sharp increases in debts. So Americans see no problem.

With such great optimism about the U.S. economy still prevailing, it is a safe assumption that lenders have been more than happy to capitalize unpaid interest rates as new loans, at least until recently. As widely reported, lending standards have been extremely lax for years. Nevertheless, there is bound to come a point where Ponzi lending stops.

US Recession: Debt Growth

The crucial difference is in the ghastly difference between runaway debt growth and nonexistant real disposable income growth as the income component from which debt service has to be paid. In 2000, consumer debt growth of 8.6% compared with real disposable income growth of 4.8%. During the first quarter of 2006, private household debt growth of 11.6%, annualized, compared with zero real disposable income growth.

These numbers suggest that, in the aggregate, all debt service occurs through Ponzi finance. Essentially, borrowing against existing assets is required to service debt. Another striking evidence of extensive Ponzi finance is the unusually large difference between rampant credit growth and much slower money growth. Capitalizing unpaid interest rates adds to outstanding credit and debt while adding nothing to bank deposits (money supply).

To get an idea of the actual extent of Ponzi finance, we make a simple calculation. Total outstanding debts in the United States amount to $41.8 trillion. Assuming an average interest rate of 5%, this implies an annual debt service of about $2 trillion. This compares with an increase in national income before taxes of $616 billion in 2005. Consumer incomes are even stagnant.

Under these conditions, the only question is the severity of the impending U.S. recession. In this respect, we are a great believer in the axiom of Austrian theory that every crisis is broadly proportionate to the size of the excesses and imbalances that have accumulated during the prior boom. Our basic assumption is that the American consumer is bankrupt when house prices fall 20 – 30%.

The most important thing to realize is that the spending and debt excesses that have accumulated in the U.S. economy and its financial system on the part of the consumer during the past 10 years are altogether of a size that vastly exceeds the potential for debt service from current income.

With stagnant real disposable income and double-digit debt growth, the American consumer is caught in a vicious debt trap. What, then, makes most people so optimistic of further economic growth? Apparently, there is a widespread view that households have sufficient equity cushions in their balance sheets to not only weather any storm ahead, but also to continue higher spending.

In our view, the most important thing to see is the fact that the consumer has accumulated debts at a level vastly exceeding his abilities of debt service from current income. Probably many never had any intention of such kind of debt service. The general idea, certainly, has been to settle debt and debt service problems simply by selling later to the highly appreciated greater fool. That is what most economists take for granted.

What all these people overlook is, first of all, the vicious dynamics of Ponzi finance through compound interest on unproductive indebtedness. During 2000, total financial and nonfinancial credit and debt growth amounted to $1,605.6 billion. In 2005, it had accelerated to $3,335.9 billion; and in the first quarter of 2006, it has run at an annual rate of $4,392.8 billion, and this now with zero income growth. Note that this debt explosion has happened with little change in GDP growth.

Given this precarious income situation on the one hand and the debt explosion on the other, it should be clear that at some point in the foreseeable future, there will be heavy selling of houses, with prices crashing for lack of buyers.

As to the level of asset prices in the United States, an additional comment is probably needed. Normally, the money for asset purchases comes from the savings out of current income. In the U.S. economy, with savings in negative territory, all asset purchases essentially depend on available domestic credit and capital inflows. Buying assets on credit used to be the exception. In America today, it is the rule. For good reasons, the Fed is fearful to make money truly tight; it would crush the markets.

A study by the International Monetary Fund published in 2003 under the title “When Bubbles Burst” examined the differences in economic effects between bursting equity bubbles and bursting housing bubbles. It left no doubt that the latter are the far more dangerous specimen:

Housing price crashes differ from equity price busts also in three other important dimensions. First, the price corrections during house price busts averaged 30%, reflecting the lower volatility of housing prices and the lower liquidity in housing markets. Second, housing price crashes lasted about four years, about 1 1/2 years longer than equity price busts. Third, the association between booms and busts was stronger for housing than for equity prices.

The situation today in the United States reminds us strongly of late December 2000. At its previous meeting in November, the Federal Open Market Committee directive had called future inflation the economy’s greatest risk. But then, all of a sudden, the bottom fell out of the economy. At its next meeting, on December 19, the FOMC changed the bias, declaring that the risk of economic weakness was outweighing the risk of inflation.

Two weeks later, Jan. 3, 2001, shocked by worsening economic news, the Fed dropped its funds rate, through a conference call, by 0.5% – twice the usual rate.

As we have stressed many times, the U.S. economy today is incomparably more vulnerable than in 2000. All the growth-impairing imbalances in the economy – the trade deficit, the savings and incomes shortage and the debt levels – have dramatically worsened.

Very rapid interest rate cuts and prompt massive government deficit spending succeeded in containing the recession. The phony “wealth effects” derived from the escalating housing bubble became the key source of demand creation in the United States. But the unpleasant longer-term result of the new policies was an unusually weak and lopsided economic recovery, particularly seeing drastic shortfalls in employment and income growth.

Regards,

Dr. Kurt Richebächer
for The Daily Reckoning

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The Road to Perdition

Monday, October 8th, 2007

Dubai, UAE

The Road to Perdition
By Bill Bonner

How the middle and lower classes in America and Britain lost it…

Alan Greenspan is widely quoted in the world’s financial media. The former head man at America’s central bank is promoting his book, The Age of Turbulence. We espied the book at Waterstone’s in Piccadilly this weekend, in a huge pile right out in the front lobby.

Thumbing through Greenspan’s oeuvre, the first section appeared rather engaging. The great man recounted the details of his early life in a matter-of-fact way. But when he began to write about economics, the words fattened…the sentences stretched…and the thoughts thinned. Pretty soon, the language was so obese you could barely get around it. And if you did, you found nothing on the other side:

“If my suppositions about the nature of the current grip of disinflationary pressure are anywhere near accurate,” he writes, “then wages and prices are being suppressed by a massive shift to low-cost labor, which, by its nature, must come to an end…”

He then continues, “A lessening in the degree of disinflation suggested by the upturn in prices of US imports from China in the spring of 2007 and the firming of real long-term interest rates as this book goes to the press raise the possibility the turn may be upon us sooner rather than later.”

Speaking to the BBC, he made the same point:

“I’m reasonably confident that the inflation tranquility that we have experienced throughout the world actually for the last 20 years is not something we can hope to readily replicate as we move into the future.”

First, we translate: Low cost Asian labor has been holding down prices. Watch out, because this trend may be coming to an end now.

Second, we add value: If you’re not rich, you’re probably not going to like what happens next.

Rest assured, dear reader, what we are working on here is not a serious quibble with modern macro-economic theory; we rise only to mock and ridicule its most famous theorist.

The former chief of the U.S. Federal Reserve system is right about globalization. It suppressed prices; every sentient being on the planet knew it. Labor at $5 a day was bound to build cheaper products than labor at $50 an hour. He’s right too about it coming to an end. Sooner or later the $5 a day man wants $6. The latest news from the middle kingdom tells us of shortages of labor in the coastal cities. All of a sudden, the Chinese working man has some bargaining power. Now, he also wants a little more butter on his toast. We greet the news like a teenager spotting his first pimple; it is a sure sign of ugliness to come.

While wages in India and China increase about 10% per year, real incomes in America and Britain are mostly stagnant. And now the Asians are getting uppity. They want more than
a few pieces of paper with green ink on it. They want the world’s real resources – the kind a central bank can’t print. Meat, corn, gas and gold – all are at or near record highs. All of a sudden, people in the occidental world are not the only ones using gasoline…and eating beef.

In the United States and Britain, too, the proles increased their standards of living. But not like the Asians, who made things and sold them at a profit. Instead of earning more, they borrowed more. And now, while the skinny Chinese and Indians race along at 10%annual GDP growth, our countrymen stagger under the weight of their own heavy debt. How can they hope to compete with the heaving masses of Asia for jobs, for food, for capital, and for fuel?

The Yank and the Brit could not be less prepared or more poorly positioned. They already live beyond their means. They can expect no wage gains. Their costs are rising. And with three billion Asians hard on their heels, they can’t expect a breather – prices will continue to rise; wages will not.

What’s worse, the street value of their most cherished asset – their houses – is going down. Already, house prices in America are down 3.5%, according to the latest Case/Shiller report; futures indexes traded on the Case/Shiller numbers imply further declines through the year 2010. In merry old England, meanwhile, prices fell in September for the first time in nine months…with much more to come. The English have even more debt than Americans…and are more vulnerable to a fall in housing prices.

How did they get into such a tight spot? Who is to blame?

“What are you looking at me for?” Mr. Greenspan seemed to say last week. As to the charges – that he was spotted at the scene of the crime – the former Fed chief pleaded ignorance and impotence:

“It’s really not something which central banks any longer have control over,” said Mr. Greenspan to the BBC, “…we have never really successfully been able to forecast significant turning points in the economy.”

Alan Greenspan told investors in the late ’90s that new communications technology had created a world of higher growth and more permanent prosperity. Then, panicked by a micro-recession in 2001, he cut rates down to their lowest level in 60 years and held them there for over a year. And then, he urged homeowners in 2004 to take advantage of innovations in mortgage finance, such as the new, subprime ARM. And what was he thinking when he claimed that new collateralized debt obligations made the financial world a safer place, because they spread the risk around?

What got the householders into such a fix was a combination of good luck and bad central bank stewardship. As to the good luck, you can hardly blame Mr. Greenspan or Mr. King if the Asians wanted to work for nothing…save their money…and then lend it back to us. But as to the stewardship…our central bankers might show a little contrition. Maybe they did not force the working man down the road to perdition; but they gave him a little shove.


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A Builder’s Version of Paradise Lost

Monday, October 8th, 2007

The Daily Reckoning
Buenos Aires, Argentina
Monday, October 8, 2007

Welcome back, dear reader.

We had an agreeable weekend, mostly spent catching up with old friends in Buenos Aires.

Americans are happy down here; it is one of the few places where the dollar is not going down. You go into a restaurant and you are pleasantly surprised, rather than depressed, as you are in London or Paris.

How come the dollar and the peso stick together? It is partly because the Kirchner government controls the peso/dollar exchange rate – trying to hold the dollar at around 3.15 pesos. And partly because, north of the Rio Grande and south of the Rio Plata, both governments are destroying their currencies at about the same rate.

We have no figures for Argentina, but M3 – the broadest measure of the money supply – has been increasing in the United States at a 14% rate, the fastest in 35 years. Thirty-five years ago, the U.S. government was struggling with trying to pay for “Guns & Butter” at the same time. That is, the Johnson administration had decided that it could have a war in Vietnam and a war against poverty at the same time. It lost both of them. And one of the costs was domestic inflation, which rose throughout the ‘70s to a peak of 12%.

Gold reacted to the rise in inflation by rising too…it went up 20 times – to over $800 an ounce. Imagine if you had just looked ahead at the (now obvious) consequences of the Nixon administration’s decision to cut the dollar loose from gold in ‘71. You could have bought gold at, say, $50 an ounce…buried it in the ground…and you would have beat every other asset class or investment category that we can think of. No commissions. No taxes. No worries. No hassles. You would have avoided the collapse of U.S. stocks in the ‘70s…the rise and fall of Japanese stocks in the ‘80s…the dotcom euphoria of the ‘90s…and the housing bubble of 2001-2006.

Then, if you sold your gold your now…you’d have 15 times as many dollars.

But wait? Why would you want to hold dollars now? And if it doesn’t make sense to hold dollars now…when will you EVER want to hold dollars? And if your wealth just sits in the ground, like a forgotten tomb, what is the point of having it at all?

You’re right, dear reader. You’re better off playing the ups and downs of the markets. It’s more fun…if you like that kind of thing.

But, if you’re like us…and the thought of playing the bipolar markets isn’t exactly your cup of tea, we know of a very interesting way to pad your portfolio with gold – for only a penny per ounce. No joke. So, if you’ve been wary of investing in the yellow metal because of the recent near-record highs, fear not…

Meanwhile, speaking of housing, there are a lot of long faces among house sellers this morning. According to the weekend news, the story just becomes more and more depressing.

“American Dream turns to a Nightmare,” begins the report in the Arizona press.

(A modest suggestion to financial journalists: find a better headline. We’ve read that same headline at least 20 times already. This downturn in the housing threatens to last for years. You can’t keep using that same line. Please try to think of something new.)

The Phoenix market was so hot it attracted buyers from all over the country. Now, the buyers have disappeared. Houses are empty. Foreclosures are rising. Who could have guessed that it would turn out this way? Well, anyone who bothered to think about it…but apparently none of the thousands of people who bought houses did! According to the report, people bought houses in 2006 for $250,000…fully expecting that their places would be worth $500,000 in five years. Prices were rising steeply; they couldn’t imagine that it would ever stop.

In Las Vegas, meanwhile, there are still some 568 subdivisions in various stages of building and marketing. An estimated 48,000 houses are already on the market, with more coming.

How things have changed! Just two years ago, buyers lined up for a chance to pick up lots and houses. People would camp out overnight to be first in line. Sometimes hundreds of potential buyers would show up for only a handful of lots. And builders had to limit the number of lots per customer. Buyers always said “yes” and lenders never said “no.” It was paradise for builders.

But now, Business Week reports that builders are desperate to clear away inventory. On September 14th, for example, Hovnanian, one of America’s big nail drivers, announced a “72-hour Deal of the Century,” in which it cut prices by as much as $100,000 in 19 states.

“Massive…six-figure price cuts” are becoming common, says BW. Standard Pacific offered $20 million in discounts at about the same time.

The builders are making a simple business decision; it’s better to get rid of inventory than to carry it. Houses – and here, dear reader, we let you in on a fundamental insight, are a WASTING ASSET, not an appreciating asset. Let them sit around in the desert sun for a while and you see how fast they waste away. The curtains fade; property taxes must be paid; paint chips and cracks; the lawn must be watered and mowed. They might as well be a crop of lettuce.

Better to make them someone else’s problem, the builders concluded.

And so they unloaded them at steep discounts. And then, all the neighbors got to see what their own houses were really worth.

“China oil imports soar,” comes the headline.

The 1950s…the 1960s – what a great time to grow up in the United States of America! You could drive some huge land barge down the wide-open streets…while smoking a cigarette and drinking a can of beer at the same time. The world’s oil…you had it practically all to yourself. Steel too. And rubber. The good things that came out of the earth were loaded onto ships and sent to the USA. Everybody else was either too broke or too hopeless to be able to use them. The communist Chinese were still going around in dunce caps…and trying to make steel in backyard barbecues. The Indians were making a mess of things too – and everyone thought they were going to starve themselves to death.

You had to worry about keeping these morons alive – not about competing with them for a job! It never occurred to us that they would someday take our factories and our work. Back in the ‘50s and ‘60s, the Japanese were just beginning to make inroads into the U.S. market. But their products were still cheap and often shoddy. If you wanted something good, you had to “Buy American.”

All that has changed. Kids growing up today think that American-made products are cheap and shoddy. They want foreign-made cars…and gadgets that come from overseas too. And they know that for every one of them who can remember what a quadratic equation is, there are hundreds…maybe even thousands…of Asians who can actually do the math better, cheaper and faster.

And they know, too, that every time they drive up to a gas station, there are thousands of Chinese, Indians and other Asians…bidding for that same tank of gas.

Until tomorrow,

Bill Bonner
The Daily Reckoning

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Charge-it America

Monday, October 8th, 2007

Alex’s Notes: Interesting article. Author is missing a few things though.

Low inflation? I suppose this information comes the Consumer Price Index? Which happens to conveniently leave out key indicators such as the cost of housing and food? Dont know about you, but housing and food are pretty large items on my month costs breakdown.

Low unemployment? Respectable growth? Someone has been watching too much TV. I find it ironic how even our news media is fed crap in the dark and then parrots it back to the general populace as the truth.

The thing that I find curious is how we are all so programmed to talk about the ‘National Defecit” instead of the “National Debt”. I encourage each and every one of you to look up the difference, it is quite huge.

In reality, the numbers of the ‘National Defecit’ are so small as to almost be irrelevant when compared to the size of the ‘National Debt’. Its kind of like Congress saying, ‘well we ony added an additonal $200 billion to what we already owe, so its not so bad, arent you proud of us?”, instead of saying “holy crashing dollar batman, we added another $200 billion to the $50 Trillion we have in fincancial exposures already!”

People need to wake up to the fact (including our journalists) that we are borrowing almost $2 Billion dollars a day just to continue to run our government, and if foreign governments such as Japan and China decide to stop giving us loans, we are in deep doo doo.

————————————–

Victor Davis Hanson
October 6, 2007

President Bush’s current approval ratings are about 32 percent. Only 1 in 4 Americans approves of the Democratic-controlled Congress.

So why are we so upset with our political leadership? Despite the housing slump, it is not the worst of times. After all, the economy is still strong, with low inflation, low unemployment, low interest rates and respectable growth.

The Iraqi war remains unpopular, but good news has emerged recently about the surge and Iraqis joining Americans against the terrorists. We haven’t had a repeat of the terrorist attacks on America of September 11, 2001, and the Europeans — especially France and Germany — seem far friendlier.

Instead, our anger with our political leaders more likely originates over money — or rather the lack of it. Americans believe their rich country is either going broke or is seen as a global spendthrift that can’t pay for what it charges. And the worry over insolvency gets worse at a time of conflict — which, as the Roman statesman Cicero once remarked, is often decided by money, “the sinews of war.”

We are servicing $9 trillion in aggregate national debt. China and Japan alone hold over $1.5 trillion in U.S. dollar reserves — the result of a general American trade deficit that usually runs about $700 billion per year. The euro — pegged at less than 90 cents to the dollar in early 2002 — is now more than $1.40. And the historically weaker Canadian dollar now roughly equals the value of our own.

Oil prices were around $22 to $28 in 2000, and are now over $80 a barrel. Over the last seven years Middle East oil exporters — many hostile to the United States — have raked in well more than $1 trillion in windfall profits.

The annual budget deficit is shrinking but still will come in this fiscal year at about $160 billion. Economists and government officials, of course, attempt to explain away all this red ink. Creditor nations, they remind us, simply lend us back money at relatively cheap interest to keep buying their goods. So they can’t really call in their debts without ruining their own best market.

Where else will Japan and China bank their profits but in the politically stable, transparent and honest United States — an atoll of security in a world of political upheaval and corruption — in Africa, Latin America and Asia?

Meanwhile, our weak dollar supposedly makes American goods more competitive and keeps employment here strong as we export products and services to dollar-laden customers. In any case, despite European trade surpluses in the last few years, the U.S. economy has outperformed the European Union’s, and our standard of living remains much higher.

True, oil is outrageously expensive. But in real dollars it cost more in 1979, when petroleum also took a much larger bite out of the total U.S. economy. Billions of dollars in annual deficits are scary, but as a percentage of our gross national product the current yearly shortfall is not historically that alarming.

Still, there are problems with these easy rationalizations about charge-it America. First, we will have to spend trillions of dollars for unfunded Social Security and Medicare commitments in the next few years as our population ages. Ever fewer workers must support more lavish benefits for ever more retirees.

Our military has put off necessary plane and ship replacements, and needs billions to replace worn equipment. At home, neglected bridges, roads, airports and railroads need even more money in fresh investment. So we should be saving now, not going into debt, for an upcoming nasty date with fiscal reality.

Even more critical is the toll on our national psyche. Americans don’t like to read that they are borrowing to pay their annual bills, to import their gas, to buy Japanese cars and Chinese consumer goods — and passing on the ever-larger tab to their children.

When they go abroad they feel embarrassed that their currency is weak — and getting weaker. They are bothered by global whispers that our houses and cars are too large, and that we consume in a manner we haven’t earned.

So our collective debt is not just a problem of fiscal sustainability, but also one of national pride and security. Especially at a time of war, the perception of strength — political, financial and military — is critical to our success.

Instead, Osama bin Laden screams that we are spoiled and decadent. Europe chimes in that our national character is profligate. An ascendant China hopes that if present trends hold, even our military power must — as was true of the cash-strapped British in the 1950s — shrink to meet fiscal realities.

So shamed Americans wait in vain for a leader to tell us that the government will balance its ledgers — and that we the people must spend less and invest more now while we can, rather than later when we must.

Victor Davis Hanson is a nationally syndicated columnist, a classicist and a historian at Stanford University’s Hoover Institution. He is author of “A War Like No Other: How the Athenians and Spartans Fought the Peloponnesian War.”

http://www.americaneconomicalert.org/news_item.asp?NID=2857622


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NOLAND: Financial Structures

Saturday, October 6th, 2007

Alex’s Notes: I clipped quite a bit from the total article, as this thing is huge. Grabbed what I considered relevant and posted it.

You can find the URL to the original article at the bottom if you are into that kind of abuse.

———————–
by Doug Noland
October 05, 2007

Currency Watch:

The dollar index rallied 0.7% to 78.25. For the week on the upside, the Canadian dollar increased 1.1% (31-yr high), the South African rand 0.5%, the Mexican peso 0.4%, the Australian dollar 0.4%, and the Singapore dollar 0.4%. On the downside, the Japanese yen declined 1.0%, the Swiss franc 0.8%, the Norwegian krone 0.8%, and the Euro 0.7%.

Commodities Watch:

October 4 – Bloomberg (Jae Hur and Marianne Stigset): “Wheat rose for a second day on signs near-record prices…aren’t slowing global demand and as Australian crops wither in the country’s worst drought. Japan bought 160,000 metric tons of milling wheat at a tender today, the largest purchase in almost a month by Asia’s biggest importer…”

October 5 – Financial Times (Chris Flood): “Lead prices continued a record-breaking run yesterday with the three-month price spiking to $3,655 a tonne. Profit-taking later dragged the metal down 0.9% to $3,607.5.”

October 3 – Financial Times (Jeremy Grant): “The number of cases involving manipulation and false price reporting in commodity and commodity futures markets caught by US regulators has reached record levels in the past 12 months. The Commodity Futures Trading Commission, which oversees such markets, yesterday revealed it had collected a record $540m in civil penalties, restitution and disgorgement (the return of ill-gotten gains made as a result of a fraud) from cases involving fraud, manipulation and other misconduct. It said this was a record. The disclosures are a sign that unprecedented volumes in commodity markets are giving rise to a corresponding increase in enforcement actions.”

For the week, Gold held virtually all of recent gains, while Silver fell 3.1% to $13.49. December Copper jumped 3.2% to a record high. November crude declined 44 cents to $81.22. November gasoline added 0.4%, and November Natural Gas rose 3.0%. December Wheat ended the week 5.2% lower. For the week, the CRB index declined 1.3% (up 7.1% y-t-d). The Goldman Sachs Commodities Index (GSCI) slipped 0.8% (up 24.8% y-t-d).

Bubble Economy Watch:

October 2 – Bloomberg (Bill Rochelle): “Bankruptcy filings in the U.S. averaged 3,541 each business day in September and are on track to reach 807,000 for the year, a 37% increase over…2006. September had the ‘highest average daily filings in all of 2007 and the largest since’ an October 2005 federal bankruptcy law made it harder to eliminate debt…”

Mortgage Finance Bust Watch:

October 3 – Bloomberg (Jody Shenn): “About 17% of subprime-mortgage balances in bonds are too large for borrowers to refinance into loans from Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac, making them more likely to default, UBS AG analysts said. The loans exceed the $417,000 limit for what government-chartered Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac…can buy… Subprime borrowers with jumbo mortgages ‘will probably have a more difficult time in the coming months… Borrowers are having difficulty refinancing or selling their homes at favorable terms as lenders have tightened standards and U.S. home prices have dropped.”

October 3 – Market News International (Linda Lowell): “There is evidence that for various reasons, the mortgage industry’s enhanced ‘loss mitigation’ effort is still faltering though Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson continues his efforts to push emergency refinancings. While a House committee was hearing testimony on mitigating and minimizing foreclosures…Moody’s announced that most large servicers are still relying on the U.S. mail to initiate contacts with borrowers. According to a survey of subprime mortgage servicers, most servicers had only modified about 1% of loans subject to interest rate resets in January, April or July 2007.”

October 5 – Bloomberg (Elizabeth Hester and Jody Shenn): “Washington Mutual Inc., the biggest U.S. savings and loan, said third-quarter profit fell about 75% after the worst housing slump in 16 years caused more borrowers to default. Earnings may be the lowest since the fourth quarter of 1998 on $1.39 billion of bad-loan provisions and writedowns…”

Foreclosure Watch:

October 4 – Financial Times (Saskia Scholtes): “US mortgage companies are being overwhelmed by the large numbers of homebuyers who need to renegotiate their loans to avoid default… Litton Loan Servicing estimates that costs have increased 20% in the last year for mortgage servicers… The result is that few subprime mortgages are being renegotiated. Moody’s…found that lenders had eased terms on just 1% of subprime loans resetting at higher interest rates in January, April and July this year. ‘Servicers have failed because there’s a huge resourcing issue,’ said Barefoot Bankhead, managing director at Navigant Consulting. ‘As lenders have gone out of business, the servicing arms have been in transition without the resources to handle the enormous number of requests for loan modifications and restructuring.’ The problem could grow more severe as more than $350bn in adjustable-rate mortgages reset at higher rates in the next 18 months. ‘Servicer inactivity could turn the subprime traffic jam into a monumental pile-up, because the longer people wait to make decisions, the worse the situation gets,’ said Don Brownstein, chief executive of Structured Portfolio Management…”

October 3 – ForeclosuresMass.com: “…foreclosures are up in 303 of the state’s 351 communities, with 102 communities experiencing at least a doubling of foreclosures, and a total of 220 towns realizing at least 50% increases. The report also forecasts that Q3 foreclosure filings will set a new quarterly record with at least 7,000 new foreclosure filings over the months of July, August and September. The quarter began with July’s record-breaking total of 2,478 filings. ‘What is startling about our findings is the fact that so many cities and towns are being affected. The foreclosure crisis has no boundaries,’ said Jeremy Shapiro, president and co-founder of ForeclosuresMass.com.”

I’ll remain dangling out on the analytical limb and opine that today’s commanding Financial Structures virtually ensure a future meltdown. I write this not as some nut-ball but as a diligent analyst that is witnessing a system absolutely incapable of moderating excesses or self-adjusting imbalances. Excess begets only and everywhere greater excess. It’s a system of Financial Structures that encourage and subsidize leveraged speculation. Meanwhile, various contemporary Financial Structures work to embolden market participants to remain fully exposed to highly inflated asset prices, while incorporating derivative insurance and other hedging strategies for protection. The resulting enormity of the hedging programs further destabilizes the system, fostering melt-up and eventual breakdown dynamics. As we’ve witnessed of late (recalling the last gasp of the NASDAQ Bubble), short covering and the unwind of bearish hedges provide a most powerful catalyst for a flurry of speculative excess – irrespective of unfolding fundamentals. Again, Financial Structures promote destabilizing excesses.

There is today an incredibly speculative financial sector hell bent on sustaining Credit and asset Bubbles – and perfectly content to adulterate our functional system of “money” in the process. The Federal Reserve is perceived to condone the whole affair and is openly willing to employ all measures to avoid bursting Bubbles. And in a contemporary world of Acutely Fragile Finance Structures, this ensures that bust avoidance translates briskly to Bubble Perpetuation and speculator delight.

And there are, let there be no doubt, prominent Financial Structures – from the gargantuan GSEs and the securitization marketplace; to the ultra-powerful Wall Street investment bankers and money fund complex; to a “banking” community willing to partner with the leveraged speculating community; to the opaque “repo” and “Fed funds” markets; to the ballooning markets in Credit and market risk derivatives; and to the bulging global central banks and sovereign wealth funds – virtually all working to profit from the perpetuation of Bubble excess. And there’s surely nothing like record global equities prices to embolden. Meanwhile, back in reality, the stage is being set for one or both of the following: an eventual run on today’s (ballooning) perceived “money-like” debt instruments and a run on our currency.

http://www.safehaven.com/article-8556.htm

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JUBAK: Our biggest export: Inflation

Saturday, October 6th, 2007

By Jim Jubak
10/5/2007 12:01 AM ET

The sinking U.S. dollar, and the inflation it causes, could throw the runaway Chinese economy off the tracks. And the entire globe would suffer the consequences.

Thanks to a weakening dollar, companies in the United States are selling more goods and services overseas.

But the biggest U.S. export right now isn’t tractors or ball bearings or computer consulting or anything else American industry does. Our biggest export is inflation. And our No. 1 inflation customer is China.

Why should you care? Because the damage to China’s economy could be enough to send it spinning out of control, with grim consequences for the rest of the global economy.

But first, the good news. In July, a weak U.S. dollar pushed American exports up to $138 billion, up 15% year over year. U.S. imports, meanwhile, grew to $197 billion, leaving the trade deficit at $59.2 billion, a small decline from June’s deficit of $59.4 billion. The July decline was the fourth straight monthly drop in the trade deficit.

The absolute size of the trade deficit is less important than the size of the deficit relative to the U.S. economy, and here the news is even better. Thanks to continued growth in the U.S. economy, the relatively minor drop in the trade deficit has produced a big drop in the relative size of the deficit.

From a high of 7% of GDP (gross domestic product), a worryingly high level, the trade deficit has dropped to just 5% of GDP. Another string of months with higher exports and modestly declining imports could reduce the trade deficit to a relatively benign 4% of GDP.

A pain in the wallet
That’s how a falling currency is supposed to work. A cheaper dollar encourages exports and discourages imports, leading to a gradual climb in the value of the dollar.

Ultimately, a high U.S. trade deficit hits you and me right in the wallet. Here’s how:

• When the U.S. is running a big trade deficit, our trading partners wind up holding a larger number of U.S. dollars every month. A trade deficit means we’re importing more goods and services than we export, and we wind up exporting dollars in order to pay for the excess goods.

• As those dollars build up overseas, governments, companies and individuals recycle them by buying U.S. bonds and stocks and other assets.

• This increases the exposure of these overseas owners of dollars to the risks of the U.S. currency and U.S. asset markets. If the value of the dollar declines, their dollar-denominated investments will lose value as well.

• At some point, these overseas owners of U.S. dollars start to demand higher returns — higher interest rates on Treasury bonds, for example — to offset that currency risk.

• Some may sell off a portion of their dollars, producing exactly the kind of fall in the currency that they had worried about in the first place, which leads again to a demand for higher returns.

• The higher interest rates demanded by overseas dollar holders finally start to slow economic growth in the U.S. That slowdown, plus the higher prices consumers have to pay for imported goods because of the weak dollar, takes a painful bite out of family incomes. (Or it halves or eliminates the family income, if one or both family breadwinners get laid off because of the slowdown.)

Though a weaker dollar might be great medicine to reduce the U.S. trade deficit, it confronts our trading partners with a rather stark choice: They can let their currencies rise relative to the U.S. dollar or intervene in the currency markets to keep the value of their own currency relatively stable against the dollar. Both choices hurt but in very different ways.

Canada, our biggest trading partner, is letting its currency rise. The Canadian dollar, the loonie, has reached parity with the U.S. dollar and on some days exceeded its value by a few cents. That’s a huge upward move — a 61% gain — for the Canadian currency, which was worth just 62 U.S. cents in 2002. (The Canadian dollar is called the loonie because, natch, it has a picture of a loon on it.)

That’s a boon for Canadians who want to go on a shopping spree in the United States, but it’s not such great news for the Canadian economy. Canada is on a pace, as of July, to export $550 billion in goods to the U.S. this year. That’s about 50% more than China, our second-largest trading partner. And the number looms even larger when you remember the relatively small size of the Canadian economy: At $550 billion, exports to the United States were on track to make up about 40% of Canada’s GDP in 2007. (Canada’s economy measured $1.2 trillion at the end of 2006).

With the U.S. dollar falling against the Canadian dollar, everything that Canada exports to the United States becomes more expensive. That sends some U.S. customers scurrying to look for cheaper sources of supply, perhaps inside the United States. And it makes some customers shut their wallets completely.

Economic growth in Canada, which came in at 2.6% in 2006, was forecast to drop to 2.3% or 2.2% for 2007 when economists made their projections last December. Forecasts now predict that the economy will slow even more to a 2% annual rate of growth in the third quarter of 2007.

China takes action
China has opted to intervene in the financial markets to keep its currency stable. In July 2005, when China reformed its exchange-rate system to let the yuan move in a bigger price range against the U.S. dollar, it took 8.28 yuan to buy a dollar. On Oct. 2, it took 7.51 yuan to buy a dollar. That’s a move of just 9.3%. Over the same period, the Canadian dollar gained 23.5% against the U.S. dollar, and the euro gained 18% against the U.S. dollar.

Why did the Chinese currency stay so cheap relative to the dollar (and get cheaper versus the euro and Canadian dollar)? The Chinese central bank conducted massive dollar-buying sprees to keep the value of the dollar up versus the yuan.

Without intervention, the huge influx of U.S. dollars into the Chinese economy due to China’s trade surplus with the United States would have depressed the value of the U.S. dollar against the Chinese yuan. Dollars would have been in such great supply relative to demand that the price of the currency would have dropped.

But the People’s Bank of China, the country’s central bank, took steps to make sure the drop was orderly and relatively minor. The bank bought U.S. dollars in China for yuan, removing some of the huge supply of dollars and keeping the price of the yuan from rising too rapidly against the dollar.

Just as choosing to let its currency rise cost the Canadian economy growth, trying to stabilize its currency comes with its own set of costs for China. By buying dollars for yuan, the People’s Bank was injecting huge amounts of yuan into its domestic economy. The bank tried to remove as much of that injection as it could — central bankers call this operation “sterilization” — by selling government bonds for yuan. That had the effect of removing yuan from the economy.

But it’s just about impossible to run a completely successful sterilization; you never manage to sop up all the extra money. And in China that extra money has contributed to runaway growth in China’s money supply.

The runaway train in China
When money supply grows faster than a country’s economy, the result is inflation, which is exactly what is happening to China’s economy.

Consumer inflation grew at a 4.4% annual rate in June. Food was the big culprit, with the prices of eggs and pork jumping 20% from last year’s prices. In response, the People’s Bank ordered its fifth interest-rate increase since April 27, 2006. The 0.27-percentage-point increase on one-year bank-deposit interest rates and on commercial lending took the rate paid on deposits to 3.33%. The one-year lending rate climbed to 6.84%.

In August, the bank raised rates again. That didn’t work. In September, the government reported that inflation for August had come in at a 6.5% annual rate.

So on Sept. 14, the People’s Bank raised interest rates again, to 3.87% on one-year bank deposits and 7.29% on commercial loans. Nobody expects this latest rate increase to have much effect on the runaway train that China’s economy has become. And you don’t have to be a mathematician to see that since June inflation has climbed 2.1 percentage points, while the interest rate on a commercial loan has gone up just 0.6 percentage point. The government has clearly lost ground to inflation.

The People’s Bank recently seemed to admit as much. At the end of September, the bank forecast 4.6% growth in consumer inflation for 2007 and an increase to 5% in 2008.

Why does this matter? What I wrote in my May 1 column, “Why China can’t slow down,” still goes. The faster the train goes, unfortunately, the more likelihood that it will jump the tracks when the brakes are finally put on hard. The signs of overheating continue to flash a warning.

Countries make economic decisions for all kinds of reasons. Few of them are economic in the narrowest sense, and most of them are political in the largest sense. Canada has decided to sacrifice a bit of growth and concentrate on fighting inflation, which has been stubbornly above the 2% target set by the Canadian central bank. That’s politically feasible in Canada, where unemployment recently stood at 6.3%, high by U.S. standards but the lowest in Canada in 30 years, according to Lloyds TSB Bank.

China’s government has apparently decided to sacrifice inflation to growth. A 2% GDP growth rate in China would be regime suicide. Millions of jobless workers would riot in the streets of Chinese cities. A rate of growth near 8% would be ideal, Beijing’s planners said at the beginning of 2007, because that is high enough to generate the jobs the country needs to stay even with its population growth and low enough to keep the economy from further overheating. And if it’s a question of erring on the side of more growth, rather than gambling with the uncertainties of the effect of a stronger yuan on exports — and jobs — then full steam ahead.

Whatever the cost in inflation. And whenever the day of reckoning.

Developments on a past column
“3 hot sectors where shares are scarce”: What do you do when rising prices from a supplier are squeezing your profit margins? One possibility is to buy the supplier. That’s what Steel Dynamics (STLD, news, msgs) did Oct. 2 when it offered $425 million in cash and $462 million in stock for steel-scrap recycler OmniSource, one of Steel Dynamics’ biggest suppliers.

Scrap steel is a key raw material for a minimill steel maker such as Steel Dynamics, which uses scrap rather than iron ore in much of its production. The price of scrap steel has been climbing as more minimills in the U.S. and overseas compete for limited supplies from sources such as junked autos.

This may not be Steel Dynamics’ last venture into the scrap market, either. In announcing the deal, company CEO Keith Busse said it creates “a significant platform” for an expansion into the steel-scrap and recycled-metals markets. As of today, I am leaving my target price at $56 a share by moving the schedule out to March 2008 from December 2007.

http://articles.moneycentral.msn.com/Investing/JubaksJournal/OurBiggestExportInflation.aspx

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Are There Too Many Dollar Bears?

Saturday, October 6th, 2007

by Peter Schiff
October 05, 2007

As a contrarian, it is my nature to worry when too many people start agreeing with me. Currently, many of my most vocal critics, who had previously ridiculed my warnings about the dollar, now concede that it will continue to decline. With so many people now on the bandwagon, some currency watchers have asserted that sentiment now has nowhere to go but up, and that the stage is set for a dollar rally. Although I am unnerved by the company, I take solace in the fact that the conclusions that many of these nouveau-dollar bears draw are completely off the mark.

The group is united by two basic assumptions. First is that the dollar’s decline will be orderly, and second is that the decline will actually be positive for both the U.S. economy and the stock market. Therefore, other ways to confound the consensus would be for the dollar’s decline to be disorderly or for it to be negative for both the U.S. economy and the stock market.

For the dollar to register a significant short-term bottom based on negative sentiment, I feel there would have to be a much greater sense of panic associated with its weakness. However such is clearly not the case. The overwhelming consensus is that a weak dollar is good for America. Ironically there is more worry in Europe over the strong euro than there is in America over the weak dollar. My prediction is that before we get any significant dollar bounce this complacency will need to be replaced by outright fear, and that the dollar needs to fall more sharply as investors actually act on those fears by dumping dollars.

Of course should such a run on the dollar commence, it will not be the orderly decline everyone seems to expect. However, I am still not sure why so many feel a declining dollar is not a problem so long as it does so in an orderly manner. If you’re headed to the poor house what difference does it make how you get there? Whichever road you travel, you’re just as broke when you arrive!

In addition to being wrong about how quickly the dollar will decline and how it will impact the economy, most dollar bears are also wrong when it comes to their explanations as to why the dollar is falling in the first place. Whenever benign inflation statistics are released, ensuing dollar weakness is always explained as resulting from increased expectation that the Fed will cut rates. Lower interest rates are seen as dollar bearish as they reduce the returns on holding dollars, making dollars less attractive relative to other currencies.

In actuality, officially benign inflation statistics (which are coming at a time when actual inflation is getting worse) give the Fed further cover to create even more inflation. So the dollar is not weak because inflation is under control as the consensus believes, but because the opposite is true. Inflation is completely out of control and the Fed, hiding behind phony government numbers that purport otherwise, has the green light to add additional fuel to inflation’s fire. It’s the ultimate irony that the lower the official preferred measures of inflation are (core CPI or the core Personal Consumption Expenditure Index,) the worse inflation actually gets.

For a more in depth analysis of the tenuous position of the Americana economy and U.S. dollar denominated investments, read my new book “Crash Proof: How to Profit from the Coming Economic Collapse.” Click here to order a copy today.

More importantly take action to protect your wealth and preserve your purchasing power before it’s too late.

Peter Schiff C.E.O. and Chief Global Strategist
Euro Pacific Capital, Inc.

http://www.safehaven.com/article-8553.htm

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The Credit Conundrum: The New Loan Shark is the Fed.

Thursday, October 4th, 2007

Alex’s Notes: Ok, I dont know where this came from and I usually like to credit the source, but this is one hell of a rant and you cant really refute what the man is griping about, so here it is.

—————————————-
Posted: 04 Oct 2007 01:03 AM CDT
It is rather obvious that inflation is part of our current economy yet underreported. Multiple articles have discussed this including one we did looking at the overall budget expenses for most American households. I’m not sure why the mainstream media isn’t stating the obvious; that American families need credit to keep the economy running. We aren’t talking about modest ratios of debt to income, but a growing amount of credit is being used as a bridge between the wage stagnation we have been facing and covering monthly expenses. I was skimming over article after article and no one seems to talk about the wage and price gap. Yes, we hear about families having a hard time making their mortgage payments. But do you really need a 10 page analysis on why a person making $14,000 a year can’t afford a $720,000 loan? The true story is in the massive wage stagnation of the nation. At a time when the unemployment rate is at record lows, GDP is growing, and home prices skyrocketing why is it that Americans are having to tap into unprecedented amounts of credit? We saw how dependent the overall global economy is addicted to credit when in August the markets literally went into a screeching halt over liquidity. No credit, no money. In fact, we are witnessing an interesting shift to a credit equals money economy. Think Americans are saving?

Americans actually spend more than they earn. How can this be? For one, we rarely see cash anymore. At least on a large scale. Most people get their paycheck electronically deposited. Then they pay their mortgage with e-Bills. Then they use debit and credit cards for every purchase including items from fast food chains. As if you need to charge a 50 cent donut on your American Express. When was the last time that you cashed your check and had the entire amount in your hands? It is interesting to note that this faith in electronic money hit a few walls when people couldn’t withdraw money from the UK’s Northern Rock online and folks did a mini-bank run. We also had a taste of it here with NetBank having online difficulties. Banks are big and look stately because they are to inspire security. When you see a vault, you know something of value is kept behind there. But what if the vault opened and all you saw was a laptop showing a brief chart of credits and debits on some accounting software? I understand that electronic banking systems are here to stay and they do make life more convenient. You also need credit for daily necessities like buying a home, insurance rates, and sometimes employement. But studies also show that people spend up to 18 percent more if they use their credit cards instead of cold green cash. This leads us into the current predicament, if money is now interchangeable with credit, what happens when the credit markets stop?

You Want Money? Uncle Fed has a Loan for Ya!

Openly the Fed is beating its chest like a Neanderthal stating that it will do everything to stifle inflation. However, when we look at BLS data, inflation isn’t to be found. O where o where are you inflation in government stats? The government wants you to believe that prices are stable but debt to income ratios have never been higher for the country. Why is this? With such a massive boom in housing, you would think people would have equity and diversified wealth management strategies. This isn’t the case with most American’s since most of their wealth is stored in housing. Don’t think so? Take a look at the booming mortgage debt in the US:

Not only is the booming debt a symptom of something larger, but the mentality of the continuous upgrade and moving up places owners in this perpeptual hamster wheel of renewing debt. Case and point. A friend was nearing the end of his car payments. The car is still in excellent condition and he seemed excited. I asked him what he planned to do with the freed up monthly cash flow. “Not sure what I’ll do with the extra money. I think I’m going to trade it in and buy a convertible.” To each their own. But you see how this cycle perpetuates. With housing, if you trade one over inflated asset for another, you are only feeding into the game. And you become dependent on credit as a facilitator. So there are multiple things happening here including the bamboozling of the American pubic that they need larger and larger homes. Oh really? How odd in the face of our declining family size; and keep in mind this is occurring in light of baby boomers downsizing and many people deciding to live solo. Working professionals are holding off on having children since they realize that they probably can’t afford to have children and provide an adequate lifestyle in many expensive metro areas. Many young families are wrestling with the issue of having children. Even with two good incomes, many families run the numbers and realize that it will be a stretch if one partner decides to stay at home for a few years. And then you have future college costs. As you can see, the argument for larger homes is more psychological than economical. The need for larger homes and cars is driven by behavioral marketing and not economic utility. You notice those Hummer commercials? They have the vehicle with gas mileage ratings looking like GPA scores going over mountains and chasing hyenas in the Sahara. When was the last time you had rapid wildlife chasing you in Santa Monica?

This credit psychology is played out well in the casino environment. Why do you think they give you chips in exchange for cash? Why do they give you a credit card instead of cash? It is easier to spend when you don’t think of money as money. If someone is able to see what $500,000 looks like, do you think this would change the impact on buying a home in Southern California? Of course, the Fed is pumping up the money supply while saying they are concerned about inflation. This is absurd since inflation is an issue of too much money floating in the economy. And since credit = money flooding the market with easy credit is going to cause what? So if they are worried about inflation and the root cause of inflation is pumping more money they sure aren’t acting concerned by their policies. I’m not sure the vast majority of American’s really care about inflation so maybe they figure it will just blow over. Folks accept prices going up as a fact of life and as long as they can make the monthly minimum payments to service their revolving debt, they are okay.

Why go to a pay day lender when you have the Fed? Financial institutions don’t need to go to loan sharks when they have the biggest one sitting at the right hand of our government. When things got tough, they speed dialed the Fed and all is okay. But like any payday lender, the interest is what will bring you down. For a short-term fix you harm the stability over the long run. The world markets are reacting and that is why the dollar is at all time lows. Commodities are hitting records and the stock market is also up for the year. Everything is up! Including the debt load on our country. Debt load is increasing:

We’ve read the bills that currently passed. They offer short-term relief to the symptoms of the current housing market but don’t address the root cause. The root cause is we are running the risk of devaluing our currency and possibly creating a hyper-inflationary environment that isn’t reflected in our government numbers except in real world numbers. We are living in a parallel universe apparently. Yet I think the Fed is afraid of deflation and their actions point toward this. When prices start correcting downward, the tools they have will be largely impotent. Some sellers wouldn’t be able to sell even if prices went down 5 or 10 percent. If they have no access to credit or funds, then they are stuck. That is the reason many went with these exotic loans in the first place. They didn’t have the funds to begin with! And buyers are being more cautious by force and their own merit. The force part comes from the fact that there is very little exotic mortgages fueling the current market. The velocity of selling slows down when you have to check documents and verify that prospective buyers’ stated income reflects reality. Things move much quicker when you can mold numbers via stuntman loans. For all other things, you have the Fed.

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Diversify Your Income

– FREE Report “10 Reasons Gold Has Farther to Run”

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A Potent Inflationary Cocktail

Thursday, October 4th, 2007

——————————————————————————–

“But incompetence and inflation is what a central bank is all about! According to the Inflation Calculator, it takes $21 in 2007 dollars to buy the same stuff that $1 would have bought in 1913 when the monstrous Federal Reserve was created!”

——————————————————————————–

by The Mogambo Guru

Finally, the Federal Reserve showed its true inflationary colors, and Total Fed Credit went up by $6.6 billion last week. The significance of this is when you take another $6.6 billion in bank credit and multiply it times the current fractional-reserve multiplier (infinity), this calculates out to (according to my rough calculations) exactly 6.6 jillion gazillion umpty-ump quintillion dollars that can be created by the banks, which is just about enough money to bail out everybody in the Whole Freaking World (WFW), which (according to the bizarre current economic theory and practice) is the new purpose of a central bank; create a bubble by creating too much money and credit (which finances the bubble) and then bail everybody out of the ensuing bust by creating another bubble by creating too much money and credit again and again! Hahahaha!

This is the “genius” of Alan Greenspan? Hahaha! What a moron! Hahaha! I laugh in Utter, Utter Mogambo Contempt (UUMT), which unfortunately sounds like a sick raccoon retching and coughing, and which probably explains why, as John Hoefle at Executive Intelligence Review says in his essay, “The Bankers Know: Something Catastrophic This Way Comes”, that, “By now, most people are aware that former Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan is on a ‘not my fault’ tour, proclaiming to everyone who will listen that he is not to blame for the collapse of the financial system. By saying he ‘didn’t really get it,’ Sir Alan is choosing to cloak himself in the mantle of incompetence, in the hope that he won’t go down in history as the worst central banker of all time.”

But incompetence and inflation is what a central bank is all about! According to the Inflation Calculator, it takes $21 in 2007 dollars to buy the same stuff that $1 would have bought in 1913 when the monstrous Federal Reserve was created! And even using these biased statistics, the dollar has lost half its value since 1984! That’s 14% inflation per year since just before Alan Greenspan took over the Federal Reserve! 14%!

And we are getting ready to create more money and more inflation, as the U.S. Senate approved a bill to raise the national debt limit by another $850 billion, taking the National Debt to a stunning $9.815 trillion dollars, which the government will dutifully spend as soon as they can. As Anthony Cherniawski at the Practical Investor newsletter noted in astonishment, “What is intriguing is that none of the U.S. news services are covering this event.” Indeed!

And it is not that the world needs more money or the inflation it causes, as we learn from the front page of Tuesday’s Wall Street Journal about a rare Puer tea, which went from $5 a cake last April to $35 in China recently. “Puer’s popularity,” the Journal explains, “reflects how China, awash with cash and slim on investment outlets, is primed for speculation.”

In short, too much money looking for somewhere to go! No wonder stock markets are going up, despite the utter idiocy of it!

And now add to this potent inflationary monetary cocktail the news that Chinese workers’ wages rose by 21% YOY in the first quarter, and are even higher now, and how that is going to add to a Chinese wage-price spiral of monetary-inflation, price-inflation, monetary-inflation, price-inflation that they already have, and how that means that the prices of stuff are going to freaking go to the moon for them and everybody else, and how I am going to lead off the Mogambo Evening News (MEN) with this horror tonight, and maybe deserve a Pulitzer Prize for it, that I will not win, again, because 1.) I have no talent and 2.) Everyone is against me.

Now add in the news from Tony Sagami of MoneyandMarkets.com about “The Official Launch of the China Investment Corporation.” He reports, “The China Investment Corporation (CIC) is the new $200-billion sovereign investment arm of the Chinese government.” $200 billion! Wow! The government is going to invest $200 billion sometime soon!

Along with now allowing Chinese citizens to invest in foreign countries, “All this new money is going to add even more fuel to the already red-hot China markets.” And world markets, too!

And if that is not enough, on the same page was a headline that said the same thing, namely that all of this money being created will-nilly means that “Global Scramble for Goods Gives Corporate Buyers a Lift.”

In short, grossly excessive amounts of money and credit are constantly being created and spent with unbelievable abandon, and that means inflation in consumer prices heretofore found only in nightmares, history books and old newsreels is (standing up with a groan and looking out of the window) just over the horizon over there, and is here today in the form of stock markets setting insane records and bond markets setting insane records.

It’s going to get really weird, and really ugly, really soon.

The Daily Reconing

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Inflation Calculator…LOL

Thursday, October 4th, 2007

This is a neat little tool, you can basically plug in any dollar amount in a certain year and see how much you would need in todays dollars to equal it.

Its fun! Do it!

Try the inflation calculator

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David Walker – Comptroller General of the United States

Saturday, September 29th, 2007


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What is Inflation? Effect of Gold Standard

Monday, September 3rd, 2007

April 2005. Simon Heapes
Anglo Far-East

Some would say it is “higher interest rates on loans” – possibly!
Others would say it is “the cost of goods going up” – again maybe!

INFLATION
According to the Oxford English Dictionary ~, the word “INFLATION” means;
Increase in available currency, resulting in INFLATION!
So literally INFLATION means to inflate the currency!

HOW IS THIS ACHIEVED?
First we must look at money itself, which in the modern world is paper currency or it’s official name is FIAT CURRENCY! The word FIAT meaning by Government decree. Basically the Government passes a law that says these notes are exchangeable for goods or services.

One of the attributes of money is a store of value or wealth! What if you were able to print or create electronically extra currency and place it into the community? Well since 1971 under President Nixon the United States has exactly been able to do so! They did this by removing the last remnant of a GOLD STANDARD backing the US dollar.

STANDARD
The key word being STANDARD. You see in a basic sense Fiat currency is a certificate issued against GOLD sitting in a nations treasury. The GOLD STANDARD kept Banks & Governments honest, because the only way they could place more FIAT currency into the system was by having more GOLD in their treasury. The only way a nation could acquire more Gold for it’s treasury is by having a Productive based economy! The basis for a Productive based economy is “Labor”! Labor either directly produced Gold through mining or the produce of Labor could be directly exchanged for Gold! Yet our Western economies today are Service based economies not Productive based. (Production article)

LOSS OF PURCHASING POWER
The more the currency is inflated into the system via the printing press or electronically created through debt, the more it waters down the purchasing power of each monetary unit. Eg; In 1971 one USD would buy you 1/35th of an ounce of Gold, today one USD will purchase you 1/440th of an ounce of Gold! Increased money supply is literally like adding water to paint. The more water you add to the paint the more coats of paint it takes on any given surface to achieve the same coverage.

THE DECEPTION
The general public in all cases of inflation in the short to medium term are always deceived into thinking that their assets are becoming more valuable, yet it is only taking more money to purchase the same goods & services.

DEBT
The main symptom of inflation is DEBT. Think about this, how do Banks & Governments get this extra money supply into circulation? The Banks drop the interest rates, by doing this they seduce the public into borrowing therefore creating the massive debts western governments & it’s citizens have today. Also think about this, they create this extra money out of thin air effectively making the borrower an agent for the Bank, because under law the lender is the true owner, not the borrower!

THE FRAUD
Lets take a look at the Fraud of inflation.

- “The first panic for a mismanaged nation is inflation of the currency;
the second is war.
- Both bring a temporary prosperity; both bring a permanent ruin.
- But both are the refuge of political and economic opportunists.”
- Ernest Hemingway.

Here is an example of the fraud. Remember how I previously mentioned the Gold Standard kept the Banks & Governments honest, it minimized the Inflation rate to practically Zero! Now in WWII, the debt of the United States government was $259 billion dollars by 1945, up from $43 billion in 1940. That’s a $216 billion dollar increase in just 5yrs! This was during the time when gold was officially $35/oz. That’s 7.4 billion oz. of gold equivalent. Gold is usually quoted in tonnes, so, that comes to 230,000 tonnes. That’s the value of the dollar debt of the U.S. government at the end of WWII.

Now according to the World Gold Council FAQ’s all the gold mined in the history of the world up to 2001 is a mere 145,000 tonnes.

Therefore, it is impossible for the U.S. government to have borrowed anywhere near 230,000 tonnes of gold. The loan was a fraud to begin with!

The same is true for Germany before WWII there massive inflation called the Weimar Republic funded their Military arms build up literally by fraud.

STANDARD OF LIVING
What has this fraud & deception done to our standard of living and social well being?

World inflation is running at between 7 & 8% on average, in some countries it is as high as 60%! Yet wage inflation as far back as 1950 is only running at approximately 2.5%! The inflation has been skillfully masked by manufacturing efficiency and formerly productive based nations relocating there productive industries to 3rd world countries over the last 25yrs! In the 1950’s & 60’s countries such as Britain, United States, Canada & Australia had 75%+ productive based economies and now have gone to less than 25% productive bases to predominantly service economies!

I personally believe this has now come to an end and the average individual is not able to keep up with the rising costs of living.

Eg; the cost of electricity, food, beverages, petroleum, gas and medical care! TAXATION are at all time highs! This is creating a situation where individuals are falling further behind, they are using more debt, they are borrowing or extracting more equity from their homes to maintain their standard of living.

TAXATION
Industry & Government are also affected. We currently have Copper, Zinc, Steel, Coffee, Corn, Soy, Platinum, Palladium, Coal, Oil & Gas just to name a few at 25yr HIGH’s! This then filters through to not only the cost of our goods going up but also higher Taxation because the Government has to meets it’s rising costs as well.

However before this happens government has three ways of obtaining money. Unfortunately increasing taxes is not a popular choice. Governments that increase taxes generally are not re-elected in their next terms of office. Because taxes are unpopular with the people, governments resort to an indirect means of taxation. It is what we know as inflation. If the government can find a means of depriving resources without the direct knowledge of its subjects, they will do so. In effect what the government resorts to is a form of counterfeiting. By creating money “out of thin air,” the government is creating its own money that wasn’t deprived directly through taxation. Counterfeiting is simply another name for inflation.

Inflation creates no social benefit for society. It is simply a means of redistributing wealth from producers to nonproducers. Inflation creates no new wealth. No new goods or capital stock are created by it. Wealth is simply transferred to those who benefit first from the creation of the new money. This is usually the bankers and the financial system through fractional reserve banking or the government through debt monetization. It takes time for inflation to work its way through the financial system and the economy. Those who receive the new money first profit the most from it. By the time the expansion of money works its way through the system in the way of higher prices, the people are the last to know. The inflation profiteers have long since made their profits. Society as a whole must now bear the cost of that inflation through higher prices.

However, in order to keep playing the game and transferring the people’s money, the inflation profiteers must keep the people deceived. That is why all government and central bank actions are shrouded with an air of mystery or secrecy. In his book “Secrets of the Temple,” author William Greider says it well by stating, “Like the temple, the Fed did not answer to the people, it spoke for them. Its decrees were cast in a mysterious language people could not understand, but its voice, they knew, was powerful and important…The Public’s confusion over money and its ignorance of money politics were heightened by the scientific pretensions of economics. Average citizens simply could not understand the language, and most economists made no effort to translate for them.”

My point being to maintain the inflation deception, it is important to keep people confused!

INVESTMENTS
The over supply of money causes Inflation which manifests itself in the Investment arena by stealth. For instance most stock market portfolio’s between 1995 & the yr 2000 were returning 15 to 20% per annum, the same has been true from the yr 2000 forward seeing double digit returns in Real Estate! Yet few see this as Inflation.

The present American dollar is only 69% of the value it was in 2000 when we adjust it for inflation! If you adjust the Dow Jones index in the same way, a 10,500 point Dow is really about 7200 points in inflation adjusted dollars, the same is true for people out there holding dollar denominated assets like bonds, stocks and real estate. Yet most people in the markets still think they are making money.

Over time we are looking at a building inflationary period on top of the current inflation, our financial engineers are backed into a corner, they have no other means of defending the existing economy other than to use the printing presses and finding more colorful ways of seducing the public into so called easy credit!

THE SOLUTION
The average people in our communities are starting to recognize it. When this happens we will see extra ordinary high appreciations in GOLD & SILVER as well as gold & silver shares!

I would like to end with a quote from an Author of a book named “Jens O. Parsson’s”. The name of the book is “Dying of Money.” It perhaps explains best where we are today and where we are headed.

I QUOTE;
“Everyone loves an early inflation. The effects at the beginning of inflation are all good. There is steepened money expansion, rising government spending, increased government budget deficits, booming stock markets, and spectacular general prosperity, all in the midst of temporarily stable prices. Everyone benefits, and no one pays. That is the early part of the cycle. In the later inflation, on the other hand, the effects are all bad. The government may steadily increase the money inflation in order to stave off the latter effects, but the latter effects patiently wait. In the terminal inflation, there is faltering prosperity, tightness of money, falling stock markets, rising taxes, still larger government deficits, and still roaring money expansion, now accompanied by soaring prices and an ineffectiveness of all traditional remedies. Everyone pays and no one benefits. That is the full cycle of every inflation.” – END QUOTE.

So on that note I would say to readers and investors alike, “Plan accordingly for the days ahead”.

by Simon Heapes
2005
(c) copyright 2005
www.anglofareast.com

Mr. Heapes has studied,
lectured and written on
Economic and Monetary
Ethics, the role that
gold and silver as
money have played through history,
and the eventual
consequences of today’s
fiat currency.


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