Wednesday 22 April 2009

In Danger of Talking Ourselves Out of Recession

yo!...credit is debt...innit!


PALOOKAVILLE FINANCIAL
capitulation day
+210...


...here in palookaville...

...the talk is all about the green shoots...


THEY THINK IT'S ALL OVER...


...of course they don't...


...but...


...what they think and what they say...


...are two different things...


THE BANKS ARE BUST


...this is not often alluded to...


...there will be no return to boom...


...this time it really is different...


ONCE BITTEN, TWICE SHY


...they say that the consumer will return...

...that banks will lend as before...

...that people will borrow again...

...like they did last summer...


...i don't think so...


We are not even half-way through the

banking crisis - IMF



..."The simple truth is laid out in page 33 of the Global Financial Stability Report , published today in Washington: "if banks were to bring forward to today loss provisions for the next two years, before expected earnings, US and European banks in aggregate would have tangible equity close to zero."In other words, the entire global banking system would be bankrupt - kaput - if its institutions immediately wrote off all the toxic assets still sitting in their vaults without any government assistance...." Telegraph...


...this from the big picture...

..."So we keep the system going. Now, where are we today?

We are at the Great Deleveraging.

We are seeing massive losses and destruction of assets, on a scale that is unprecedented. There was massive destruction of assets during the Great Depression, which caused a lot of problems, and we are seeing the same thing today. We are watching trillions simply being poofed (another technical economics term — which will drive my poor Chinese translator crazy!). We are watching people pay down their credit lines, which is one way of saying the supply of money and credit is shrinking.

This is not just in the US, but all over the world. Because when you start adding European cash-to-credit, and Japanese cash-to-credit, and Indonesian and Chinese cash-to-credit, it becomes multiple tens of trillions, and we are watching a goodly portion of that credit be vaporized. So we — individuals and businesses — are trying to find that $2 trillion in real cash and get some of it to pay down our debts. We are reducing that massive leveraged money supply down to some smaller number. We are hitting the Blue Screen of Death. We don’t know what it is going to reset to, but we have permanently seared the psyche of the American consumer, and it is going to get reset to some lower number, about which I will speculate in a minute.

Now to give you some idea of how important credit was in our recent period of economic growth — and I keep using this slide, but it is an important slide because it shows you what would have happened in the economy without mortgage equity withdrawals. The red lines are what GDP would have been without MEWs. Notice that in 2001 and 2002 we would have had negative GDP for two years, that’s 24 months. It would have been as long as or longer than the current recession. Not quite as deep, because we had the Bush stimulus and Bush tax cuts at the time. The Bush tax cuts were very important in keeping the economy rolling over in 2001 and 2002.

But notice that the recovery for the next four years would have been under 1%. We would have had under 1% GDP for four years running, without mortgage equity withdrawals, without people being able to spend more. That doesn’t even count the leverage we increased on our auto loans, on credit cards — you saw the two charts that Louie [Gave] and Martin [Barnes] used yesterday about the growth of credit, and we are now seeing it in reverse. Do you think George Bush would have stood even a small chance of being reelected without mortgage equity withdrawals?


GREEN SHOOTS


..."The force that through the green fuse drives the flower
Drives my green age; that blasts the roots of trees
Is my destroyer...."
dylan thomas


...IT IS NOW

..."In other words, if you thought the immense amounts of taxpayer cash funnelled into the system over the past couple of years was enough to bring us back to good health, think again.


It is an extremely worrying verdict, particularly coming at a time when many had been assuming that green shoots were starting to sprout and the recession was coming to an end.

But it underlines one simple but undeniable truth:

that this recession is different.

It is the consequence not of a simple one-nation housing crash or a consumer slowdown but a catastrophic collapse of the financial system. And with that system still in a wreck normal service will simply not be resumed without more costly bail-outs - or else we must accept the consequence that money will be far more expensive to borrow in the future, and that economic growth will be far less in the future." Telegraph...edmond conway blog...


petey : it were me wot done the italics an stuff...





Friday 17 April 2009

IT'S THE PENSION, STUPID !

yo!..pay now, pay later...innit!


PALOOKAVILLE FINANCIAL
capitulation day
+210...


...here in palookaville we have pensions paid for by the state...

...they tell us that all pensioners are equal...

...but...

...some are more equal than others...

Vampire pensions could be a corporate nightmare

By Charles Millard

Published: April 16 2009 21:57 | Last updated: April 16 2009 21:57

While economists worry about “zombie” banks holding back lending, vampire pension plans may soon be stalking a company near you. The underfunding of America’s corporate defined benefit pensions poses a daunting challenge, threatening not only their 40m beneficiaries but the entire US economy.

Recently enacted funding rules require underfunded pension plans, and that’s most of the big ones, to suck needed cash from salaries and jobs just when suffering companies need scarce resources to survive. Under 2006 legislation, companies that have underfunded pensions must put extra funds into their pension plan to close the gap within seven years. After precipitous drops in assets, most plans now have serious funding gaps....more...


...heh heh heh...

...of course this is just an american thang...

...innit ?...

Wednesday 1 April 2009

THEN WHAT ?

yo!...over capacity...innit!



PALOOKAVILLE FINANCIAL
capitulation day
+194...


...in palookaville today...

...a great pow wow is taking place...

...as the great and the not so great...

...meet to try and fix the boom that's bust...


...they are to kill some chickens and drink their blood...

..and dance around and loose their selves...

...in a frenzy of fire and liquor...


THE ZOMBIE BOOM



...here in palookaville they just don't get it...


...the money they created yesterday...


...was used to buy tomorrow's stuff...


...now we all shopped out...

...an deep in debt...


...our friends in the east have invested heavily...

...in machinery...

...to make the stuff we want...

...at ever faster rates...

...and ever cheaper prices...


...in order for us to buy their stuff...

...they bought our debt...


AFTER THE MUSIC STOPPED


...all good things must come to an end...

...and in august 2007...

...the band stopped playing...



...the hope today...

...here in palookaville...

...is that by bringing the dead world boom...

...back to life...


...normal service will be resumed...


...but...


...the boom was unsustainable...

...so what next?...


GARAGE SALE OF THE CENTURY


...all over palookaville the garages are emptying out the stuff that no one wants...

...they want to put their new cars in there...

...yes...

...they have a new car already...

...and now they want out of debt...


TOO MUCH IS NOT ENOUGH


...too many factories...

...not enough buyers...


...time to grow your own home markets...


...y'all want to export your stuff...

...an keep the money...


...well...


...where's that got ya ?...



Now taxpayers bail out MPs' pensions


A fresh row over MPs' pay and perks erupted after taxpayers were asked to foot an £800,000-a-year bill to bail out their gold-plated pension scheme.

Under the plans unveiled by the Leader of the Commons, Harriet Harman, the Exchequer will increase its contribution from £12.4m to £13.2m a year. MPs will each have to pay an extra £60 a month to help fill a £51m black hole in the parliamentary pension fund.

The package was published after government financial experts found a growing deficit in the pension scheme because former MPs were living longer.

The Government Actuary said that taxpayer contributions to the scheme – already one of the most generous in the country – would have to increase by £2.1m a year to cover the shortfall.

Ms Harman said she wanted MPs to increase their payments into the scheme from 10 per cent to 11.9 per cent – equivalent to £60 a month – to help limit the extra bill for the taxpayer.

Steve Webb, the Liberal Democrat pensions spokesman, branded the decision a "spectacular own goal for MPs". "The pensions of MPs and other well-paid public sector workers have to be brought in line with reality. With members of the public losing their jobs and seeing their pensions plummet, MPs cannot insulate themselves from the harsh realities of the recession."

Susie Squire, the campaign manager at the Taxpayers' Alliance, said: "Asking for more money to plug the deficit in politicians' gold-plated pensions is an utter disgrace. These pensions have been a bottomless pit for too long, and continuing to pump in taxpayers' money is no solution in the long term.

"Why should taxpayers fund politicians retiring into the lap of luxury when they have seen their own pension reduced out of recognition? If MPs want such a generous pension, they must pay for it out of their own salary and not simply keep dipping into the pockets of hard-working people."...indy


Leading article: Time for root and branch reform




RULE THE PEOPLE : LIVE LIKE THE PEOPLE


...here in the loft...

...beulah an me an the gang...

...believe that the people who make the laws...

...should live by the laws...


...politicians should send their children to state schools...


...politicians should only use public hospitals and services...

...politicians should keep all of their assets on shore...

...and available to normal tax rates...


...they should not be able to make laws for us and avoid them themselves...

...they should have the same pension scheme as those that they rule...


...they should not have ridiculous levels of expenses...

...no government person of any government should get a tax free salary...


...ever...


...no taxation without the taxer's paying the same...