Wednesday, 9 June 2010
NOT IF
Saturday, 20 March 2010
DANSE MACABRE
...capitulation day postponed...
...here in...
...palookaville...
...all bets are hedged...
...as we await the resumption of normal service...
...a V shaped recovery has been achieved in the financial markets...
...and the puppet masters have made loads-a-money...
IT TAKES ONE TO TANGO
...the states within the Eurodisunion...
...are locked in a dance of death...
...those that sell and those that buy...
...those who sell will not buy and those who buy must borrow to do so...
...those who lend fear they will not be repaid...
...the price of borrowing must rise for those who buy...
...those who sell...will not lend...
...round and round we go...
...until the music stops...
...when all must find a seat at the table...
...or fall to the floor...
...and must then sit out the game...
...in the corner...with the dunce's hat...
WE TWO KINGS
...Chi Na and Berlin...
...are kings of the castle...
...all the rest are dirty rascals...
STANDS WITH A BOWL
...our great leader...
...is asking for more...
...more time to rule...
...more money to spend...
...he can't get enough from all us palookas...
...so he stands with a bowl...
...begging for more money...
...so that he can pay the interest...
...on the money he has borrowed...
...mr bumble the beedle...
...wants to give him to the undertaker...
...who will bury him for good...
FATAL ATTRACTION
...but he just keeps emerging from the dead...
...consumate zombie that he is...
...the people of palookaville...
...will vote for death...
...so long as somebody else will pay for it...
All we want is a limousine and a ticket for the peepshow.
Their knickers are made of crepe-de-chine, their shoes are made of python,
Their halls are lined with tiger rugs and their walls with head of bison.
John MacDonald found a corpse, put it under the sofa,
Waited till it came to life and hit it with a poker,
Sold its eyes for souvenirs, sold its blood for whiskey,
Kept its bones for dumbbells to use when he was fifty.
It's no go the Yogi-man, it's no go Blavatsky,
All we want is a bank balance and a bit of skirt in a taxi.
Annie MacDougall went to milk, caught her foot in the heather,
Woke to hear a dance record playing of Old Vienna.
It's no go your maidenheads, it's no go your culture,
All we want is a Dunlop tire and the devil mend the puncture.
The Laird o' Phelps spent Hogmanay declaring he was sober,
Counted his feet to prove the fact and found he had one foot over.
Mrs. Carmichael had her fifth, looked at the job with repulsion,
Said to the midwife "Take it away; I'm through with overproduction."
It's no go the gossip column, it's no go the Ceilidh,
All we want is a mother's help and a sugar-stick for the baby.
Willie Murray cut his thumb, couldn't count the damage,
Took the hide of an Ayrshire cow and used it for a bandage.
His brother caught three hundred cran when the seas were lavish,
Threw the bleeders back in the sea and went upon the parish.
It's no go the Herring Board, it's no go the Bible,
All we want is a packet of fags when our hands are idle.
It's no go the picture palace, it's no go the stadium,
It's no go the country cot with a pot of pink geraniums,
It's no go the Government grants, it's no go the elections,
Sit on your arse for fifty years and hang your hat on a pension.
It's no go my honey love, it's no go my poppet;
Work your hands from day to day, the winds will blow the profit.
The glass is falling hour by hour, the glass will fall forever,
But if you break the bloody glass you won't hold up the weather.
Louis Macneice
Malcolm Evison (9/16/2005 9:59:00 AM) | |
Humorous as it may be with regards to Class and social mores, flirtations with theosophy etc., one is brought up with a start... the realization that this was written in 1937 and, the more specific social unrest in Spain and Germany... the fall of the glass is unstoppable! |
...petey...
the more things change...innit!
Thursday, 3 December 2009
THE SILVER BULLET
...here in...
...palookaville...
...a great hero rides to the rescue...
THE LOAN ARANGER
...even though the banks are all bust...
...and the government coffers are empty...
...public spending will rise...
...government debt will increase...
...suckers will keep us all afloat...
ONLY A FOOL WOULD SAY THAT
...when you have the lone ranger on your side...
...nothing can go wrong for long...
...he will fire his silver bullet at the debt...
...and it will disappear...
I HAVE SEEN THIS WITH MY OWN EYES
...it's all recorded in black and white...
...we used to see him every week on tv...
...even his horse is silver...
...he wears a mask...
...and has a native american sidekick...
...together they make the quantum jump...
petey...hiho silver aaaawwaaaaayyyyyyy!
Friday, 27 November 2009
THINGS TO DO IN DUBAI WHEN IN DEBT
black friday
...in japan...
...In the deserts of Sudan...
...And the markets of Japan
From Milan to Yucatan
Every woman, every man
Hit me with your credit stick.
Hit me! Hit me!
Je t'adore, ich liebe dich,
Hit me! hit me! hit me!
Hit me with your credit stick.
Hit me slowly, hit me quick.
Hit me! Hit me! Hit me!
In the wilds of Borneo
And the banks of Bordeaux
Eskimo, Arapaho
Move their money to and fro....
THE BITCH IS BACK
...here in palookaville...
...people think it's all over...
Global markets hit by fresh bout of selling
Yen hits fresh 14-year high as investors dump stocks
Darling to admit recession is worse than he forecast
Ports face crisis as volumes fall
Dubai is just a harbinger of things to come for sovereign debt
..."Small wonder, though, that this minor tremor has sent such shock waves around the wider capital markets. The fear is that threatened default in this tiny desert kingdom is just a harginger of things to come for government debt markets as a whole. According to new estimates by Moody’s, the credit rating agency, the total stock of sovereign debt worldwide will have risen by nearly 50 per cent between 2007 and 2010 to $15.3 trillion. The great bulk of this increase comes not from irrelevant little states like Dubai, but from the big advanced economies – America, Europe, and Japan"....
...in japan...
...Tokyo warns of double-dip recession...
..."Fears that figures suggesting an economic recovery may have been a false dawn were intensified yesterday when Japan’s Prime Minister sounded an official alarm that the country risked falling into a “double-dip” recession.
With the bedrock of Japan’s export industry ravaged by both a recent plunge back into deflation and the soaring yen, Yukio Hatoyama said that “measures are required so that the economy will not fall into a double-dip recession”.
His comments are expected to spark alarm as other governments have quietly begun to acknowledge the possibility that the worst may not be over"....
Monday, 19 October 2009
FREE BUT DOWN IN THE GUTTER
capitulation day+a year or so
...government sucks...
...the well known treasury department...
...has taken over the country...
...read mish...
Monday, 22 June 2009
DEBT AND BET
capitulation day
+274...
...In palookaville today...
...everyone is a winner...
...the chinese have made all this cheap money available...
...for their many millions of gamblers...
...to play with...
...Chinese bail-out cash heads for Macau’s casinos rather than Guangdong factories...
and
...Xie: Chinese Banks Funding Commodities Speculation, Casting Doubt on Recovery...
...so...
...funny how so much of what we are told...
...by those pollyanna people...
...is proved bollox...
...eventually...
HERE IS THE NEWS
...the fruit machine has stopped...
...payouts are history...
...get a job...
...if you can...
IN GERMANY THEY DO IT DIFFERENTLY
...Berlin weaves a deficit hair-shirt for us all...
!NON!
...Sarkozy rejects austerity measures...
Saturday, 6 June 2009
Brown But Not Out update 1
capitulation day
+255...
...it's election time today...
...here in palookaville...
OUT BUT NOT BROWN
...nobody voted him in...
...but he's still here...
...all his ministers have gone...
...but he's still here...
...all his labour councils have gone...
...but he's still here...
...he robbed our pensions...
...let the banks bust the country...
...raised taxes...
...even on the poor...
...his agenda is...
...a client state...
...well...
NOBODY LIKES BIG BROTHER
...tax credits...
...state control...
...our money is their money...
BUY TO RUIN
...without this unfair system...
...there would have been no property bubble...
...people who lived in a town or village...
...could have afforded to buy homes where their parents lived...
...but nobody in government wanted to legislate...
...to stop this disasterous game...
...they did not want to tax it...
...they were all doing it themselves...
...big time...
PALOOKAVILLE FINANCIAL
capitulation day
+256...
...liam...
..."We're paying a heavy price for Brown's successes
Everyone knows, of course, about Gordon Brown's policy failures. During his 10 years at the Treasury, the Prime Minister clearly spent recklessly and stored up massive future liabilities (many buried off balance sheet).
It would be tough to design a worse way to tackle poverty than Brown's complex, fraud-ridden tax-credits.
His annual raid on pension schemes, a policy buried in his first Budget, has also gained pariah status – depriving our retirement funds of some £130bn and counting, a stealth tax they can ill afford.
What's happening now, though, is that even Brown's policy "successes" – the basis of any claim he has to a "legacy" – are starting to unravel.
The 1997 Bank of England Act has often been cited as his masterstroke. Handing the Bank "operational independence" to set interest rates was clearly the right thing to do.
The Monetary Policy Committee hasn't been truly independent, featuring too many of Brown's stooges for my liking, but has worked quite well. Over the past 12 years, inflation has generally been lower than it otherwise would have been because populism has been tempered by economic common sense and rates set with at least an eye on price pressures.
In recent months, though, quantitative easing has destroyed even the pretence of independence. Brown and his henchmen have yanked control back from the Bank – creating money to buy government debt, a policy doomed to backfire.
Last week the other aspect of Brown's once-lauded 1997 legislation came under attack as the House of Lords' Economic Affairs Committee laid into his decision to strip the Bank of responsibility for banking supervision and transfer it to the newly-created Financial Services Authority.
This resulted in "an inadequate definition of roles and responsibilities of the Bank of England, the Treasury and the FSA", said the committee, causing "failures of regulation and supervision that contributed to the UK financial crisis".
Their Lordships infer the Bank was deprived of crucial information about specific institutions, hindering its ability to make well-informed decisions on overall financial stability.
A separate paper on the same subject by Sir Martin Jacomb, also published last week, went further. Brown's tripartite regime has been "disastrous" said the one-time Prudential Chairman, accusing the former Chancellor of splitting supervisory responsibilities between the FSA and the Bank in order to "divide and rule".
As Sir Martin says: "Brown's desire for ultimate control was decisive, and ultimately ended in failure"....liam...
THEY STILL THINK IT'S ALL OVER...ambrose..."
Those of us who still question whether the world has purged its toxins are reduced to the same tiny band of moaning Druids from early 2007, when we shook our heads in disbelief as the carry trade swept Iceland to fresh madness and bankers laughed off sub-prime rot at Bear Stearns.
We learned then to thicken our skins with walnut juice, lie down in dark rooms, and dissent from Goldman Sachs. Such seclusion is called for once again as Goldman replays its BRIC anthem and raises its oil forecast to $85 a barrel this year, betting that the world will roar back on a tidal wave of liquidity....
...The elastic was bound to snap back, just as it did in the bear rally of early 1931. Whether the underlying economy has begun to heal is another matter. World Bank chief economist Justin Yifu Lin said capacity utilization is running at an historic low of 50pc-60pc. Companies will have to fire a lot of workers. This is where the danger lies, and why he fears that deflation is creeping up on us.Trade data from Asia are flashing warning signals again. Korea's exports were down 28.3pc in May, reversing the April rebound. Malaysia has slipped to -26pc, and India has touched a new low of -33pc.
US freight data is getting worse, not better. The Association of American Railroads said traffic was down 22pc in the third week of May from a year earlier. Canadian freight was down 34pc.
The American Trucking Association (ATA) said it saw fresh drops of 4.5pc in March and a further 2.2pc in April. Tonnage is down 13pc over 12 months. Bob Costello, the ATA's chief economist, said companies have not cut inventories fast enough to keep pace with declining sales. The contraction in truck volume has "accelerated".
Yes, the Baltic Dry Index for bulk shipping of resources has quadrupled since January, but this reflects China's bid to stockpile metals while prices are low....ambrose...
MIND THE DEBT
...irwin..."...Treasury IOUs are flooding the market to finance deficits that by White House estimates will take the national debt from 40% of GDP to 70% (the Congressional Budget Office puts the figure at 80%) by 2011, the highest level since the second world war. Throw in the printing of money to support the Fed’s efforts to prop up credit markets and investors have good reason to fear inflation and a decline in the value of the dollars with which the government will repay their loans. So they are driving up long-term interest rates. And dumping dollars.
If those trends continue, the green shoots will wither as higher rates abort the housing recovery, and make it more expensive for businesses to make job-creating investments. Bernanke told Congress that “we, as a nation, [must] begin planning now for the restoration of fiscal balance . . . [that] will require a willingness to make difficult choices”. This can only be interpreted as a warning to the administration that if it doesn’t get the deficit under control, the Fed will start contracting the money supply and allow interest rates to rise. Just how the president and Congress can be persuaded to make those “difficult choices” remains unclear.
Perhaps that friendly persuasion will come from the folks who, like the Fed, pose a threat to the Obama agenda: the Chinese who are sitting on about $1.4 trillion of America’s IOUs. On last week’s trip to China, Tim Geithner, the Treasury secretary, was greeted with derisive laughter when he assured students at Peking University that “Chinese assets are very safe”. Their elders were more polite. Guo Shuqing, chairman of the China Construction Bank, helpfully noted that the dollar will remain the world’s reserve currency “in the short term” because the American “economy is No 1 in terms of competitiveness, in terms of innovation”. Longer-term prospects are being made clear by Chinese officials who are warning that unless America puts its fiscal house in order they will seek to reduce the role of the dollar in world trade and will not buy IOUs at anything like current interest rates....irwin...
THOSE GREEN, GREEN SHOOTS OF HOME
...david..."For me, one of the central questions is whether a pick-up in growth can be sustained even when bank lending remains weak. Amid the flurry of stronger news last week was some downbeat evidence from the Bank of England on lending.
Lending to households rose a modest 0.2% in April, the Bank said, and was up by 3.4% on a year earlier. But lending to nonfinancial companies fell by 0.9% and was a tiny 0.8% up on a year earlier.
This chimed with a survey from the Engineering Employers’ Federation, which showed that 45% of firms had seen an increase in the cost of their finance and only 4% had seen an improvement in credit availability in the latest three months. It is a familiar story throughout business.
Charlie Bean, the Bank’s deputy governor, buys into the story of a resumption in growth before the end of the year, but he also warned in a recent speech that bank lending was likely to remain subdued, at best, for some time.
“We are still some way from having banks feel sufficiently secure that they can lend normally, and from investors that have enough confidence in the banks to provide them with sufficient funds,” he said.
The government’s October banking measures were a straightforward rescue operation but its subsequent actions, particularly in January, have been intended to get lending flowing again. Quantitative easing, confirmed last week at £125 billion for now, was intended to boost lending and, while it is early days, is not doing so"....david...
...petey...
...inquirin minds should visit the links an read the lot...innit!
Friday, 29 May 2009
Rising, Rising, Rising...
capitulation day
+247...
...the story so far...
...the clever b*stards that run the financial world...
...have bust the banks...
...in turn...
...the banks have bust the sovereign states...
...the sovereign debts...
...have spooked the bond market...
WELCOME TO THE END OF THE WORLD
...apparently...
...it all started with property speculation...
...caused by bubble money...
...when the bubble burst...
...many, many, many...
...suckers got taken out...
...the politix...
...were busy with their expences claims...
...and their business interests...
...they are either responsible for the current mess...
...or incompetent...
...that is...
...guilty...
...or...
...stupid...
KEEP THEM RATES A RISING
..."Yields on 10-year Treasury bonds have risen relentlessly since March when the Fed first announced its plan to buy $300bn (£188bn) of US government debt directly, a move that briefly forced rates down to nearly 2.5pc, a level thought to be the Fed's implicit target.
Yields have jumped to 3.69pc – after spiking as high as 3.74pc on Wednesday – pushing up the standard 30-year mortgage loan to 5.08pc and lifting the borrowing cost for corporations...."
...Daily Telegraph...
LOSE THE DOLLAR
...here in...
...palookaville...
...we can't gloat...
...as we have our own currency problems...
...we could all go down together...
SLOW BOAT TO NOWHERE
...in China...
...they are hoping for a new world currency...
...and a new world order...
...first though...
...they may have to start buying some of their own stuff...
RALLY ROUND THE RALLY
...sucker, sucker...
...off the wall...
...will still be long...
...when markets fall...
THEY ALSO THINK
...that have no brains at all...
...it's the property stupid...
...the collateral is not what it was...
...every time it falls...
...well it's not...
...pennies from heaven...
Wednesday, 13 May 2009
Remorse : The New Bull Market
capitulation day
+231...
...here in palookaville this morning...
...the talk is all about...
...forgiveness...
SERIOUS REMORSE
...the recession...
...caused by the ending of polititions expence claims...
...is almost over...
...as new money will be created...
...by...
...increasing their salaries...
...to compensate for their loss of privilige...
THE GOOD NEWS
...is that...
...this will increase their pensions...
...and this is a much more secure form of income for them...
...maybe now that they won't be spending all their time...
...working out how to claim maximum benefits...
...they will be able to find jobs for the 2.2 million newly unemployed...
TAKE AND GIVE
...the great debt...
...caused by the massive cost of MP's expences and pensions...
...is to disappear...
...they are to give back all of their extravagent takings...
...the national debt...
...will now not be...
...£240,000,000,000,000...
...after all...
Wednesday, 22 April 2009
In Danger of Talking Ourselves Out of Recession
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
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...
Saturday, 28 February 2009
A TRUDGE IN THE SLUDGE
capitulation day
+160...
...here in palookaville we drag ourselves forward...
...against the tide...
...the politix have seized the means of production...
...they have used this crisis to implement their own agenda...
...brown and obama plan to entrench social control of the economy...
...more taxes, more regulation, more state control...
SWAMPTHING
tim : ..."In my view, 1982 through 2007 was the golden age of capitalism. No one announced its beginning, and very few people realized its end, but as measured by the pendulum of social and economic change, I believe the generational timespan of that quarter-century embodies the resurgence, and then self-immolation, of American capitalism.
Off the top of my head, those years, we had:
- Reagonomics;
- Yuppies;
- The great bull markets of 1982-1987 and 1991-2000;
- Lower taxes;
- A more docile IRS;
- A resurgence in Republican strength (think Newt Gingrinch);
- A strong America capable of winning major wars in 72 hours;
- Historic IPOs like Netscape and Google;
- The rise of Silicon Valley from obscurity to the center of the world;
- Economic globalization (think BRIC);
- The collapse of the USSR;
- Hero-worship of the rich (including hedge fund managers);
- Widespread popularity of books about money and assets;
I could go on and on, but you get the idea.
The pendulum has just started to swing the other way, and I don't think it's a little bobble before we return to the above. I seriously think we are in for just as long as period - - and just as deep a change - - as the era above. We'll be stumbling our way back to where things were in the late 1970s..........malaise, weakness, and Billy Beer.
What would people think if, just six months ago, you speculated that Citigroup would be a nationalized institution? Would they laugh at you? Look at you as if you were insane? Cart you off to a rubber room?
That, of course, is just the tip of the iceberg. When Obama speaks of a "once-in-a-generation opportunity" to change the government, he isn't talking about remodeling the oval office. The "opportunity" is the most dramatic expansion of the government and its instrusions than any of us have seen in our lifetimes.
All I'm saying is that the market's 50%+ plunge is signaling the changes to come, and then the market finally bottoms (and my best guess is that this is going to be in the 4000 area on the Dow), we will have been witness to exploited "opportunities" that we can scarcely imagine today." slopeofhope.comirwin: ..."Some features of the Obama plan make sense. The tax-deductibility of mortgage interest distorts investment flows, directing too much money to housing, as Margaret Thatcher realised. Taxing pollution makes sense, although cap-and-trade is a flawed means of reducing carbon emissions. Profits from the operation of hedge funds more closely resemble income than capital gains, and should be taxed as such. And estate taxes fall on the undeserving winners of the sperm lottery.
But
...these virtues are more than offset by the more radical features of Obama’s plan: spending at levels previously thought unimaginable, deficits as far ahead as the eye can see, a significant redistribution of the nation’s income from wealth creators to dependants on the state, government takeovers of significant sectors of the economy, more regulation of almost every business...."sunday tim
SHOCK AN AWE III
ambrose : ..."Judging by the latest Merrill Lynch survey of fund managers, investors have a touching faith that China is going to rescue us all and re-ignite the commodity boom. How can this be? Taiwan's exports to China fell 55pc in January, Japan's fell 45pc. These exports are links in the supply chain for China's industry. Manufacturing output in the Shanghai region fell 12pc in January.
My favourite China guru, Michael Pettis from Beijing University, is in despair – as you can see on his blog (http://mpettis.com). The property bubble is bursting. Developers have built more offices in Beijing since 2006 than the entire stock in Manhattan. There is a 14-year supply glut. We have seen this movie before.
Factory output is collapsing at the fastest pace everywhere. The figures for the most recent month available are, year-on-year: Taiwan (-43pc), Ukraine (-34pc), Japan (-30pc), Singapore (-29pc), Hungary (-23pc), Sweden (-20pc), Korea (-19pc), Turkey (-18pc), Russia (-16pc), Spain (-15pc), Poland (-15pc), Brazil (-15pc), Italy (-14pc), Germany (-12pc), France (-11pc), US (-10pc) and Britain (-9pc). Norway sails blissfully on (+4pc). What do they drink up there?
This terrifying fall has been concentrated in the last five months. The job slaughter has barely begun. Social mayhem comes with a 12-month lag. By comparison, industrial output in core-Europe fell 2.8pc in 1930, 5.1pc in 1931 and 3.9pc in 1932, according to RBS.
Stephen Lewis, from Monument Securities, says we have been lulled into a false sense of security by the lack of "soup kitchens". The visual cues from Steinbeck's America are missing. "The temptation for investors is to see this as just another recession, over by the end of the year. But this is not a normal cycle. It is a cataclysmic structural breakdown," he said."...
EURODISNEYLAND
Breaking point for the eurozone?
Ireland's 'miracle' economy has turned terrifyingly sour - and as it strains against the inflexibility of the euro, its next crisis may shake the entire EU.
"Joschka Fischer, Germany's former foreign minister, darkly suggested that we would soon find out whether the eurozone would turn out to be "a disaster", while the German finance ministry is vacillating on whether it would be prepared to bail out insolvent states.
The current thinking is that Germany and France, as the strongest economies in the zone and "lenders of last resort", would have to bail out failing states: the prospect of the eurozone breaking up would bring the future of the EU into question.
But the most startling fact to emerge this week is that the country which is seen as the most vulnerable, and therefore the most likely to ditch the euro, is not Slovenia, or Cyprus, or Greece, but Ireland."
Daily Telegraph
Golden Parachute
Dire data and bank fears drive down sentiment
Unrelenting market gloom
Sunday, 22 February 2009
BYE BYE EURO GOODBYE
capitulation day
+153...
..all the talk here in palookaville is about...
...the euro...
WHO PAYS THE PIPER...INNIT!
...will it be saved by german largesse?...
...or sunk by revolt at german diktat?...
...don't panic! don't panic!...
...they won't like it up em!...
...who the germans or the 'others'..?
...this thing has further to run...
...has legs as they say...
...everybody march in step...
...and don't mention the goose..!.
HOLIDAY OF HOLIDAYS
...beulah an me are lookin forward...
...to more holidays in italy and spain...
...it really is ridiculous that we should have to buy euros...
...to spend there...
...what idiot made prices the same in all the european countries???
...but not wages!..?
...we want our cheap holidays back...
...and you want to keep your jobs...
...so come on guys...
...get with the plan...
...bring on the lire and peseta..
...set your own interest rates...
...and float...
...let the market decide what your currency is worth...
YOU KNOW IT MAKES SENSE
...so what is wrong with flexibility?...
...if the trees don't bend in the wind...
...they snap...
...we love to visit you and eat your food...
...but you are pricing us out of your market..
...let the germans and the french...
...be the expensive destinations...
...
Saturday, 21 February 2009
THE CALL OF THE WILD ONE
capitulation day
+152...
...here in palookaville we take our stash seriously...
...we always lookin out fo squalls...
...we usta read the msm until the blogs got goin...
...this bloke bill adlard usta get a shout...
...inna paper called 'the business'...
...me an beulah usta like it a lot...
ANYWAY
...this bill geezer was always bangin on about a commin crash...
...an you know me...
...ol misery guts...innit!...
...I knew he would be right sooner or later...
...itz a pity that 'the business' went out of...
...but here is bill...
FTSE 100 'to fall by more than 40%'
Philip Scott, This is Money21 January 2008
The double whammy of poor economic data and the ongoing global credit crunch drove the FTSE 100 into meltdown today, wiping off some £60bn in shares - the steepest fall since 9/11 in 2001.
And one industry expert is urging investors to prepare for more sharp falls and a return to the lows of the bear market between 2000 and 2003.
Bill Adlard, a professional trader and market analyst at Chart-Guide.com, is urging investors to get into cash as soon as possible because he fears the FTSE 100 will soon start on a downward trajectory that will take the index back to its lows of 2003 – a fall of more than 40%.
He says: 'The world is heading for a major economic depression. The FTSE 100 is going to fall back to its lows of 2003.
'My advice to investors is to get in to cash and stay there as it will be the asset class that outperforms all others over the next five years.'
'Previously, back in 2003 there was a massive credit expansion but now we are heading for a credit contraction. The major difference is that in 2003 debt was lower and if prices fell it didn't necessarily mean that people had to sell.
'But since then there has been a credit binge resulting in the massive inflation of debt and as such there will have to be a lot of selling if it is to be paid off.'
It took just over three years and three months for the FTSE 100 to bottom out during the last bear market.
On 30 December 1999 at the height of the technology, media and telecommunications (TMT) boom, the index of the UK's largest firms peaked at 6930.2 – but by 12 March 2003 the index had plummeted by more than 50% to 3287.
Adlard added: 'The FTSE 100 will fall again over the same time period, if not sooner.' "
petey : nice one bill.!...
...disclaimer...
...this aint no advert an no bollox...
...read the disclaimers at the top an find yo own stuff out...
STOP THE PRESS
...ah found anuvva one...
'Footsie to fall 90% from all-time high'
Philip Scott, This is Money28 January 2009
The severity of the ongoing economic and market torment has now led one analyst to forecast that the FTSE 100 index could plummet to below the 1000 level in the coming years.
Bill Adlard, a professional trader and market analyst, at Chart-Guide.com gave This is Money, the most gloomy - but notably the most accurate - forecast for how the index would fare in 2008.
Now Adlard says: 'I believe over the coming five years the FTSE 100 could fall by around 90% - from its all time high in 1999 of 6930. It could easily be below 1000 in five years time.
'The UK market will reflect what happened in the US between 1929 and 1932 when the Dow Jones dropped by 90% from 397 to 40 points. I expect something of the same from the Footsie.'
Speaking to This is Money 12 months ago, Adlard said that given the coupling of poor economic data and the ongoing global credit crunch, he believed that the index could pull back to its lows of 2003 – a fall of more than 40%.
In early trading on 10 October, 2008, the Footsie, had collapsed to 3873 - a fall of 40% since the start of the year - and Adlard's prediction had come to fruition.
By the year's end, the index had clawed back some of its fall and finished 31% down over the 12 months.
At mid morning trading on 28 January, 2009, the Footsie was at 4266.31. On 31 December 2007, the index was riding far higher at 6457 – giving a fall of 34% in the past 13 months. It hit its all time high of 6930, back on 31 December 1999, and today's level exemplifies a drop of 38% since then.
For the rest of 2009, Adlard expects the index of the UK's top 100 firms to 'thrash about between 4,500 and 3,500' before ultimately crashing through the lower barrier.
petey : only time will tell...innit!
...disclaimer...
...this aint no advert an no bollox...
...read the disclaimers at the top an find yo own stuff out...
Friday, 20 February 2009
MONDAY MONDAY
capitulation day
+150...
...try as we they may...
...the committee cannot stop the market from falling ...
...maybe...
...sometime over the weekend...
...some of the bust banks will be nationalised...
...and...
...we will see the dead cat bounce...
...but...
...a lower low looks likely...
ALL TOGETHER NOW
You say buy, I say no
You say why, and I say I don't know
Oh, no
You see a high and I see a low
A lower low
I don't know why you see a high
I see a low
A lower low
I don't know why you see a high
I see a low
Wednesday, 4 February 2009
THE MAN WHO PAINTED THE CRASH
capitulation day
+133...
...petey the paintstick ...
...the father of depressionism ...
...has been offered a show...
...MUMMY...
...the famous art gallery in the naked city...
...is to show his paintings of the...
...great crash...
...at the annex on threadneedle st...
THE CURSE OF THE MUMMY'S TOMB
...many in the city are worried that the works will be lost in the bad bank...
...you know! the one where all the worthless assets are held...
...the establishment see all his pictures as toxic...
...and hope that a show at the tomb...
...will draw attention away from the real sh*t stored there...
ZOMBIE ART
...the critics see the mummy as a zombie queen..
...and tell of how artists shown there always meet...
...a violent obscurity...
...still there's no business like show business...
ART FOR ARTS SAKE
...some of his most famous and controversial pieces will be on view...
...'admiral paulson crosses the rubicon'...
...'the rape of the shadow banking system'...
...'the bailout of the bust'...
...'the triumph of deflation'...
...'the bailout of the bubble'...
...'never mind the collateral, feel the bust!'...
THE CRITIC SEES
...howard huges...
...the famous art critic...
...has seen the show for what it is...
..."protectionism is to depressionism...
...what...
...koons is to pop art"...
THE END
opkin : say! that sure is good news about the exhibition dude...
petey : feels just lak palm sundae!
Saturday, 24 January 2009
ONCE-UPON-A-TIME IN THE EAST
capitulation day
+122...
...in palookaville everybody goes to meet the train...
...so you can understand our dismay when we are met there by four horsemen...
...three of em are wearin long dusters...
...the fourth is roy rogers...
...the american engine has failed to decouple from the eastern train...
...an now it looks like they all goin over the cliff together...
...the stuffed shirts have caused all tomorrows spending to be spent yesterday...
...an now china is full of dollars an we are full of sh*t...
ALL TOMORROWS PARTIES
...roy says that the west is finished and in particular...
...that the pound is sunk, the oil all gone an a banks in debt...
...sell evva british thang ya got boys...fill yo boots wi oil an gold...
...this sukka goin dahn...innit!...
AN IT'S AN EARLY BATH FOR STERLING
...the pound has taken an early bath...
...and everyone is laughing they bollox off...
...but the guys in the dusters is waitin fo the train...
...they have blown the bridge...
...and the great eastern is goin over...
...seems like they chinese was balancin on a wooden cross in a spaghetti eastern...
...dude with the wicked smile was playin a harmonica...
...only it was a double cross...
THE GHOST OF ELECTRICITY
China Powers Down..."The global recession has meant a big decline in demand for iron and steel. That has meant sharp decreases in electricity demand from China’s metal producers, which have been leading the country’s demand for increased electricity production.For November, the Chinese government expects total power generation to fall by 7 percent compared to November 2007. That drop follows a 4 percent decline in October. This will mark the first time in recent history that China’s power demand has fallen for two consecutive months. Falling power demand mirrors a decline in exports. In November, China’s exports fell by 2.2 percent compared to November 2007. That’s the biggest year-over-year slide in exports since April 1999. Foreign investment is also falling. According to the latest Chinese government statistics, foreign direct investment fell by 36.5 percent in November, when compared to the year-earlier period."
THE DOLLAR YOU GET YOU DESERVE
...in china they know a thing or two about dollars...
...they have all of the real ones in a box under the bed...
...peraps they know a way to enhance their value...
...maybe then sell a few...
IN THE WHITE ROOM...WITH BLACK CURTAINS
...here in palookaville the train is late...
...come to think of it...
...so is the ship...
THE MSM TELLS THE TRUTH AT LAST
capitulation day
+122...
peteynation : foolin alla the people alla the time is difficult...
...1997 - 2007...
smoke an mirrors...profits of wax...
...less of the benefit...
...more of the tax...
DOWN BY BROWN
albert edwards : ..."What I find amazing is that people aren’t really nailing Gordon Brown and [Bank of England Governor] Mervyn King for this,” he said. “At least in the US they had the excuse of the arrival of sub-prime — a new sector of the market. We didn’t really have anything similar but we ended up with a bigger national Ponzi scheme than the US.”
THEY ARE NOW
from the times :-
The case against Gordon Brown
...seven nails in his political coffin...
Wednesday, 21 January 2009
STANDS WITH A BOWL
capitulation day
+119...
...the story so far...
...a new american president has gone supernova...
...but...
the great british dictator has gone brown dwarf...
NOT THE END OF THE BEGINNING
...the weather is turning icelandic...
...but...
...so is the pound...
THE WHITE POUND
iain martin : "They don't know what they're doing, do they? With every step taken by the Government as it tries frantically to prop up the British banking system, this central truth becomes ever more obvious.
Yesterday marked a new low for all involved, even by the standards of this crisis. Britons woke to news of the enormity of the fresh horrors in store. Despite all the sophistry and outdated boom-era terminology from experts, I think a far greater number of people than is imagined grasp at root what is happening here.
The country stands on the precipice. We are at risk of utter humiliation, of London becoming a Reykjavik on Thames and Britain going under. Thanks to the arrogance, hubristic strutting and serial incompetence of the Government and a group of bankers, the possibility of national bankruptcy is not unrealistic." telegraph...
ninja : ..."All the growth in tax receipts linked to real estate and financial services was of course was nothing but an illusion. Those tax receipts are gone now, almost certainly never to return. Most of the financial firms won’t record profits for years and when they finally do, they will have years of losses to carry forward. The net result will be a giant, prolonged corporate tax shortfall.
In the meantime, the government is throwing good money after bad. This is of course plunging the country deep into debt. Just like in Iceland, although to a lesser degree relative to GDP, UK banks have liabilities in other currencies. As the pound goes into free fall, these liabilities explode in value crippling the banks. As the UK issues more debt to stabilize the banks, even more pressure is put on the pound. A vicious, debt death spiral could easily be sparked."...
jim rogers : ...“I don’t think there is a sound UK bank now, at least, if there is one I don’t know about it,” he says.
“The City of London is finished, the financial centre of the world is moving east.”
“All the money is in Asia. Why would it go back to the West? You don’t need London,” says Mr Rogers.
Mr Rogers thinks the pound is more vulnerable than the dollar or the euro.
He says the UK housing market is arguably in a worse state than that of the US, given pockets of strength in the US and prices that are sliding across the board in the UK.
Meanwhile, he says, the UK is in worse shape economically than the eurozone, where most countries are not big debtors and do not run huge trade deficits.
“If the UK discovers more North Sea oil, I might change this view,” he says. “But I don’t see that happening.” FT
ticker : ..."There is exactly one way to resolve this problem - the banks must be "crammed down" through forcible reorganization, and we must stop bailing them out and handing them money.
We cannot recapitalize them through taxpayer donations, for through that path we only delay the inevitable. We do not have the ability to "manufacture" or "borrow" the three to five trillion dollars it would take to cover those losses - a full fifty percent increase in our federal debt, on which we would pay hundreds of billions of dollars a year - forever - being a permanent drag on GDP. Such a path will only lead to more insolvency as the crimp on GDP will inevitably lead to more job losses, more credit losses and more malaise, ultimately resulting in the very collapse that the proponents of this path claim to be trying to avoid."...
THE DAY AFTER TOMORROW
matthew lynn : ..."One thing is clear, though: The world won’t go back to the debt-fuelled, globalization-crazy world of 2007."
“Unlike previous postwar contractions, the problem the global economy now faces does not primarily stem from a temporary mismatch between output and demand,” Stephen Lewis, chief economist at Monument Securities Ltd. in London, said in a note to investors. “It arises, rather, from the breakdown of the financial system, and the process of wealth-destruction that has set in train.”
Three Tasks
The question now is how Obama can take the lead in fixing that. Here are three places he could start.
First, ditch ideological hang-ups. The debate on how to move on from the credit crunch is fast turning into trench warfare between the traditional advocates of big government and the die- hard supporters of the free market. That isn’t getting us anywhere. The free-market camp needs to recognize that there wasn’t enough supervision or regulation of the financial markets. We are going to need more rules.
Likewise, the big-government camp needs to understand that more spending and government meddling won’t fix much either. We don’t want to lose the growth, dynamism and opportunities that flowed from the free movement of money, ideas and people across borders. The path to be steered will have to lie somewhere between the two extremes.
Rules for Banks
Next, new rules on the way banks operate are needed. It is clear that the global banking system had ignored the risks building up over many years. The incentive systems had become perverse. New capital requirements will have to be devised for banks to stop excessive risk-taking. Institutions such as hedge funds and private-equity firms will have to be brought into the system: They play too big a role in the financial markets to be left unregulated. And the rules need to be global. There is no point in changes being made country-by-country. That way we lose all the benefits of globalization.
Most importantly, the imbalances need to be fixed. Too much capital was being recycled through the global financial system. Some countries -- China and Germany, for example -- exported and saved too much. Others -- the U.S. and U.K. -- imported and borrowed too much. That will have to be rectified. It is no good having one lot of countries telling everyone else to consume more unless they are also willing to consume less. That will hurt. But there is no way of avoiding it. Where the last president had a war on terror, this one needs a war on financial bubbles, and that requires a more balanced global economy."bloomberg...
peteynation : foolin alla the people alla the time is difficult...
...1997 - 2007...
smoke an mirrors...profits of wax...
...less of the benefit...
...more of the tax...
Monday, 19 January 2009
BUT
PALOOKAVILLE FINANCIAL
capitulation day
+117...
...the story so far...
...america has the worlds reserve currency...
...but...
...structural deficits, bust banks, national debt... an political malaise...
...are threatening to implode the dollar...
AMERICA HAS A NEW PRESIDENT
...but...
...he plans to borrow more money to solve the debt crisis...
...there is no plan to force the banks to declare, in full...
...their exposure to toxic assets...
ENGLAND EXPECTS
...britain has the devalued pound...
...but...
...the rest of the world is also in recession...
...so our trade gap still gets wider...
BRITAIN HAS A NEW DICTATOR
...but...
...he plans to borrow more money to solve the debt crisis...
...there is no plan to force the banks to declare, in full...
...their exposure to toxic assets...
FIRE IN THE HOLD
The US economy’s perilous condition calls for extreme fiscal activism. The new administration’s stimulus plans are by no means over the top. If anything, a fiscal injection of $800bn (€602bn, £543bn) over two years is too modest. But the implication of so strong a fiscal boost is a swift and severe worsening of the country’s long-term fiscal position.
clive crook
Gordon Brown’s government tightened its grip on Britain’s financial system...
...guaranteeing toxic assets and giving...
...the Bank of England unprecedented power to buy securities.
bloomberg
Firefighters are failing and we're all getting scorched
Unemployment will soar to 3.4 million, thinktank warns
‘Time to Sell’ Treasuries, Biggest Korean Fund Says
Help Ireland or it will exit euro, economist warns
A leading Irish economist has called on Dublin to threaten withdrawal from the euro unless Europe's big powers do more to rescue Ireland's economy.Once again, Britain leads the world...
...in the macabre speciality of saving banks.
...but...ambrose : ..."Taken together, the rescues may make the difference between global recession and a deeper slump that causes mass unemployment and social turmoil, perhaps destroying the open global order we take for granted. We can only guess....
...but...
...but...
In the end, the only way out of all this global debt may prove to be a Biblical debt Jubilee.
...but...
Creditors are not going to like that."
telegraph