Economic and Financial Thoughts and Comments
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Thursday, April 30, 2009
U.S. Gas Fields Go From Bust to Boom
WSJ reports that US has surplus of natural gas. If you have noted, natural gas prices are pretty low. Supply is up (last year the Barnett shale produced 4 bcf of gas/day) and import of LNG is coming.
April 30, 2009 WSJ - CADDO PARISH, La. -- A massive natural-gas discovery here in northern Louisiana heralds a big shift in the nation's energy landscape. After an era of declining production, the U.S. is now swimming in natural gas.
Monday, April 27, 2009
Bound to Burn
Humanity will keep spewing carbon into the atmosphere, but good policy can help sink it back into the earth. However, we don’t control the global supply of carbon.
Like medieval priests, today’s carbon brokers will sell you an indulgence that forgives your carbon sins. It will run you about $500 for 5 tons of forgiveness—about how much the typical American needs every year. Or about $2,000 a year for a typical four-person household. Your broker will spend the money on such things as reducing methane emissions from hog farms in Brazil. But if you really want to make a difference, you must send a check large enough to forgive the carbon emitted by four poor Brazilian households, too—because they’re not going to do it themselves. To cover all five households, then, send $4,000.
Green plants currently pump 15 to 20 times as much carbon out of the atmosphere as humanity releases into it—that’s the pump that put all that carbon underground in the first place, millions of years ago.
Continue the read by going to Bound to Burn on City Journal
The capital well is running dry and some economies will wither
Interest rates could be heading up. Government debts and bail outs require funding.
From the UK Telegrahp April 26, 2009 -The world is running out of capital. We cannot take it for granted that the global bond markets will prove deep enough to fund the $6 trillion or so needed for the Obama fiscal package, US-European bank bail-outs, and ballooning deficits almost everywhere.
Sunday, April 26, 2009
COT - Update for April 27th
S&P - Flat (Cash)
Oil - Flat (Cash)
Gold - Bullish - Long - April 27th
Weekly Market Briefing
Week Ending April 24, 2009
Market
It has now been seven weeks since this rally began and this week
stocks took a break. Since hitting its low in the first week of
March, the S&P500 is up nearly 28%. Last week we mentioned that
the S&P500 index was 9.6% above its 50-DMA and that is about
where it stayed this week (9.5%) so stocks remain overbought.
But indexes are also still banging up against key resistance
areas that taken together with how overbought stocks are across
the board, increases the chances for a correction. And now this
rally is losing momentum. If prices hold up it will show that
investor demand for stocks is increasing despite the technicals
pointing to a drop. But that must be considered a long shot.
Interest Rates
US Treasuries with a net drop (redemption) of $97 billion in Treasuries by foreigners in February in the latest Treasury international capital flow (TIC) data. This followed a record net redemption of $148.9 billion by foreigners in January.
The government will have to sell $2.4 trillion in new bills, notes and bonds in fiscal 2009, according to an recent estimate by UBS. How does this compare with past Treasury sales? From October through December, the Treasury sold a record $569 billion, up a whopping 693% from the $82 billion it sold during the same period a year earlier, and auctioned another $493 billion in the last quarter up from $156 billion the year before according to Bloomberg, as the government increasingly finds itself squeezed between rocketing expenditures and collapsing tax revenues
Obama plan to raise tax revenues 40% by 2013 and the impact it will have on taxes and the economy. Unless the economy experiences a miraculous recovery, increasing the tax burden amid a declining economy is not only an extremely bad idea, it turns Treasury’s gargantuan task of financing the rapidly rising debt burden as spending soars into Mission Impossible.What does this mean for traders and investors? First, this is inflationary because if history is any guide, the government will print more money and employ more helicopters from which to throw it into the economy, a methodology euphemistically labeled “quantitative easing.” The next all-too predictable development will be strong upward pressure on interest rates as U.S. Treasury investors demand higher returns to offset their losses due to increasing inflation.
In this increasing hostile investment environment, any investment strategy will need to take rising interest rates and increasing inflation into account.
U.K Financial Bailout Reaches 1.4 Trillion Pounds
US Treasury Needs to Raise more Cash
“Tax receipts are just collapsing. [The need to sell more debt] is a big issue in the Treasury market and it is ongoing. The surging budget deficit is the primary cause.” Head Stamford UBS Securities interest-rate strategist Chris Ahrens.
Petroleum coke fuel provider calls wind power "boondoggle"
Global Bank Writedowns: Canadian Troublemakers
From Infectious Greed at http://paul.kedrosky.com
The darn Canadians won't get with the program with respect to global bank writedowns!
Answer....maybe its just because they do not have too!
How Bernie did it
Madoff is behind bars and isn't talking. But a Fortune investigation uncovers secrets of his massive swindle.
Saturday, April 25, 2009
Friday, April 24, 2009
Insiders are Unloading Shares
Chocolate coins are now deemed safer than gilt
Published: April 22 2009 18:00
As Alistair Darling produced his Budget goodies on Wednesday, he would have done well to peek at something which might be dubbed the "chocolate" metric.
This refers to a corner of finance known as the credit default swap - the derivatives market where investors buy protection against a debt default. In recent months the cost of insuring against a default on UK gilts has surged as investors have fretted about the ever-spiralling levels of British debt.
On Wednesday, for example, the cost of protecting five-year gilts was 95 basis points - meaning it costs £95,000 a year to insure £10m of bonds - up from 18 basis points last summer (albeit down from a peak earlier this year).
But if that is embarrassing enough, the cost of insuring the chocolate giant Cadbury was on Wednesday far lower, around 50bp. A company that peddles chocolate coins, in other words, is currently deemed a better credit bet than the British Treasury itself.
So, for that matter, are tobacco giant British American Tobacco, services provider Compass, consumer goods group Unilever, energy group Centrica and Pearson, owner of the Financial Times.
It is a startling pattern, not least because last summer all of those companies had CDS spreads which were notably higher than the UK government's. Indeed, until last year it was widely assumed that sovereign bonds would always command lower CDS spreads than corporate debt.
Will the Budget turn that chocolate metric on its head once more?
Mr Darling certainly did his best to reassure investors that gilt-edged money remained a good investment bet, declaring that the government could halve the budget deficit in four years time. He also promised that the economy would start to rebound later this year and post stunning growth in two years.
But the problem that dogs the chancellor is that few investors appear to believe in this sunny scenario. Take a look at a poll conducted at a large Investor Relations Society conference in London on Tuesday. Back in March 2008, when a similar poll was conducted, most asset managers and investor relations experts expected the financial crisis to be relatively short lived. But when the same participants were polled this week a mere 6 per cent thought the UK downturn had bottomed, while a third were braced for years of recession. Moreover, 54 per cent expected to see more UK bank bail-outs in the coming months.
Of course, those forecasts may turn out to be wrong, proving Mr Darling right. But the current problem is one of perception. After last year's shocking financial dramas, most ordinary investors are now so utterly befuddled that they have little idea what a number like £60bn, £200bn or even £2,000bn actually means.
However, as long as investors keep fearing in a general way that UK debt levels - and bail-out packages - are set to grow, amid weak or no economic growth, they will remain nervous about the credibility of gilts.
Thus far, thankfully, this unease has not produced a funding crisis for the UK government. For while mainstream asset managers feel nervous about gilts, they feel equally worried about the obvious alternatives. The price of gold is high, US Treasuries no longer look like a safe haven, and nor do eurozone bonds.
Thus, while some recent gilt auctions have produced disappointing results, the British government is still managing to sell its bonds, notwithstanding the CDS swings.
Nevertheless, in the coming months investors and policymakers would do well to keep watching that putative chocolate index. If the CDS spread on UK debt starts to fall, to a level similar to that of large British corporations such as Cadbury, then Mr Darling's Budget can indeed be deemed a success. And on Wednesday, at least, the CDS spread on gilts barely moved after his speech, implying that the markets were not unduly surprised.
But if the CDS spread on gilts remains well above those commanded by large UK companies - or if the credibility gap widens even further - it will soon be time for gilt investors to put on their tin hats. And perhaps stock up on those chocolate coins as financial comfort food.
Thursday, April 23, 2009
The Economic Future Just Does Not Look Great
Watching the government rack up debts that will be impossible to repay while narrowing the tax base (at least 50% of Americans pay zero federal income tax) at the same time is very scary. It seems more and more certain the deficit will spiral out of control. Not only has the government gone mad with spending and corruption, but it also expects about 10% of the population to pay for essentially all the costs. The math simply doesn't add up: 10% of the population can't (and won't) pay for all of the costs of a socialist federal government.
And, by the way, before you respond with the typical Democrat vs. Republican nonsense, this problem has nothing to do with traditional politics. Both parties have grown the size and responsibilities of government. Both parties have added to the national debt. And both parties support the narrowing of the tax base - because that's what makes good political sense in an unlimited democracy. Promise the voters they can live at the expense of their neighbors - and the next five generations.
Unfortunately, we know from history this kind of political system can't last for long - for lots of reasons. One important reason: The rich will leave. Or they will stop working. They will hide their incomes or only invest in tax-protected vehicles. And we know the political response will be tougher laws on emigration, taxation, more money printing, and eventually, capital controls that make it impossible to protect yourself from a massive currency devaluation. That's the script. We've watched the same things happen dozens of times around the world following World War II and the introduction of a global paper currency standard, which allowed governments to run huge deficits and finance their activities through inflation and devaluation. We just never thought we'd see it happen here.
Today, the idea of leaving America in search of freedom and financial security seems like absolute madness. But it won't for long. And by the time most people wake up to the very real threats to their standard of living, it will be too late. Again, before you respond with some crazed invective about how this isn't OBAMA!'s fault, blah, blah, blah - save yourself the trouble. The trends I'm talking about are cultural and fiscal, not ideological. Read the original Communist Manifesto. It's nearly identical to today's government policies. Any politician who tries to oppose the landslide of modern entitlements is immediately labeled a kook and is unelectable.
Whether you think we ought to have free health care and drugs for retirees, more military spending than the rest of the world combined, a bankrupt retirement scheme based on government debt, government guarantees for the banks, etc. doesn't matter to me. I'm not interested in pie-in-the-sky ideas about how the world should work. I write about how the world does work. And I can tell you this with 100% accuracy: You cannot support the world's reserve currency when you are the world's largest debtor, when you plan to finance annual deficits exceeding $2 trillion with progressive income taxes and money printing. Our economy is a charade. And when it falls apart, the consequences will be devastating.
US Banks - Insolvent
From MoneyNews.com April 23, 2009
Pershing Square Capital Management fund manager Bill Ackman is betting that the share prices of big banks will decline.
He’s also hoping to give them a little push.
Ackman argues that banks like Citigroup and Bank of America are effectively insolvent, a view some economists share, but one the banks vigorously deny.
“The problem when you are CEO of a business is that you get used to being able to do anything you want, and you get a little bit too full of yourself,” Ackman told The New York Times.
Ackman is planning a media blitz urging banks' bondholders to exchange their debt for equity in order to shore up the institutions, a move that could well sink bank shares but boost Ackman's profits.
Ackman’s fund controls 25 percent of General Growth, the mall properties company that filed bankruptcy last week, and the firm will play a crucial role in restructuring the company, making it possible that Ackman and his investors could walk with hundreds of millions of dollars in profits.
Rumors ran rampant on the Web this week that bank-stress tests devised by Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner show that 16 of the 19 big banks tested are "technically insolvent."
Geithner’s office released a statement saying that the results from the stress tests weren’t completed, yet damage to the stocks was already done. Since then, Geithner has testified that bank capital is “adequate.”
Wednesday, April 22, 2009
UK Raises Personal Tax Rate to 50%
London is burning, with the UK facing the most serious economic downturn in generations. So what is the response of the British government? Raise taxes to shockingly high levels.
The BBC is reporting that UK chancellor Alistair Darling is proposing to hike taxes all the way up to 50% for anyone earning more than £150,000. That tops the 45% rate Darling indicated in a pre-Budget report last year. The UK is struggling with falling tax receipts due to the economic slow down while spending to combat recession and its effect increases.
One question: which economic theory tells you to announce a giant tax hike in the midst of a recession?
Britain in elite company with budget blues
The Pound Sterling will be under some pressure with the annouced budget and economy outlook. UK debt could reach 100% of GDP.
From the Telegraph - April 22, 2009Britain’s budget deficit threatens to hit £175bn this year, or 12pc of GDP.That is just about the worst performance of any major country at any time in history, during peacetime.
An Alarming Trend
Be afraid. Be very, very afraid.
That appears to be the Obama Administration’s latest tactic to achieve greater government control over liberty, the economy, and mankind’s ability to tread water. And again, it’s with phony science. Anxieties were raised last week to the highest levels yet about islands sinking into the sea, the elimination of entire nations, and even the reduction of coastlines to certain U.S. states if, of course, carbon emissions are not immediately reduced.
According to Energy Secretary Steven Chu, the earth's temperature is rising so fast that a “very, very scary” scenario will unfold. Island nations, especially those in the Caribbean, may disappear. Portions of Louisiana and Florida will go underwater, reducing the size of those states. New Orleans will be flooded. Said the Secretary, “I think the Caribbean countries face rising oceans and they face increase in the severity of hurricanes. This is something that is very, very scary to all of us. The island states in the world represent—I remember this number—one-half of 1 percent of the carbon emissions in the world. And they will—some of them will disappear.”
Fortunately for the American people, the fragile economy, and beachgoers everywhere, Mr. Chu’s alarming prediction is based upon a faulty hypothesis: Melting ice caps would cause sea levels to rise. They would not. This is scientifically falsifiable claim. It is, in fact, provably false.
As a matter of fact, ice displaces more water than does its liquid counterpart. According to Chemistry.About.com, “Ice floats because it is about 9% less dense than liquid water. In other words, ice takes up about 9% more space than water…” Therefore, ice—which expands when it freezes—takes up less space when it melts, and could not result in sea levels rising.One could even prove it. If Mr. Chu’s hypothesis is correct, then one should be able to fill up a glass of water, add some ice, place it in the sun, and then watch as the glass overflows. But it does not. In fact, the volume decreases. Therefore, Mr. Chu’s claim is falsified by a simple experiment. He would not even pass a 7th grade earth science exam.
The only way for the sea levels to rise is if enough water melted off of land masses. To make matters worse for the Hot Earthers, some 97.5 percent of the water is already in the seas and oceans. And for the remaining 2.5 percent to find its way to the oceans is actually impossible, since much of that will always be water vapor trapped in the atmosphere. Also, topography plays a role: Given the presence of lakes, it is clear that not all water has an outlet to the sea. Another obstacle is plate tectonics: How far will mountain ranges be raised by rising plates, thus trapping more water in the form of snow and ice on mountain peaks?
These are all factors that make sea levels rising at an alarming pace impossible. There is no cause for governmental policies to turn back the tides. King Canute could not do it, and neither can Uncle Sam.
More on this from GetLiberty.Org
Tuesday, April 21, 2009
Spain’s Falling Prices Fuel Deflation Fears in Europe
House Prices Finally Approaching Fair Value...
As goes housing, so goes the rest of the economy. So where do things stand? After two years of precipitous declines that have taken prices down almost 30% from the peak, house prices are finally approaching fair value (which is perhaps 10% below today's level).
That doesn't mean that house prices will only fall another 10%, however. On the contrary, given the tendency for prices to overshoot, it would be startling if house prices stopped at fair value. More likely, they'll drop at least 10% below fair value before they finally trough. Although the rate of decline is likely to ease over the coming months and years, therefore, prices will likely keep falling through at least 2011. And there's at least 20% downside left.
5 Reasons House Prices May Never Recover
In an essay published today, Charles Hugh Smith explains that the bubble vaulations are probably never coming back.
Stock Market Disconnect
The stock market at least in its current form is a horrible indicator of the actual economic carnage falling upon the majority of Americans. Most Americans are witnessing the current rally and wondering why the massive run up (largely in financial related stocks) is going forward while they are getting called into supervisor offices behind closed doors and being laid off or seeing their hours cut back. Wall Street has completely disconnected from Main Street. It is also hard for many to understand how they are having their limited income being taxed to finance the bailouts of Wall Street and financial cronies while they are asked to do more with less. They are seeing these same institutions, alive because of the massive funding from the American people since our government ideally should reflect the will of the majority, shut off credit lines and raise rates while the government through the U.S. Treasury and Federal Reserve showers the banks and Wall Street with easy low rate financing thanks to the American taxpayer. Welcome to the new America. Where unemployment is good news for Wall Street and bailouts are now seen as a new source of revenue for financial companies. New accounting students will learn how to incorporate bailout funds as a new source of revenue.
Monday, April 20, 2009
Always good to remember....
What does the PM of France think of Obama! ?
In the world according to Sarko, President Obama is weak, inexperienced and badly briefed on climate change; Mr. Obama, according to Mr. Sarkozy, “has a subtle mind, very intelligent and very charismatic. But he was elected two months ago and never ran a ministry in his life. He doesn’t have a position on a number of things.” Mr. Obama “is not always operating at a level of decision-making and efficiency,” according to the voluble Mr. Sarkozy.
And from UK Times April 15, 2009
World Agenda: Nicolas Sarkozy puts Barack Obama in the doghouse
Mr Sarkozy is pouring cold water on President Obama's efforts to recast American leadership on the world stage, depicting them as unoriginal, unsubstantial and overrated.The American President's call "to free the world of the menace of a nuclear nightmare" was hot air, Mr Sarkozy's diplomatic staff told him in a report. "It was rhetoric – not a speech on American security policy but an export model aimed at improving the image of the United States," they said.
Saturday, April 18, 2009
How long with the US Dollar be the reserve currency?
April 18, 2009 - BOAO, China (Reuters) – China's Premier Wen Jiabao said on Saturday that economic polices of countries which issue global reserve currencies require closer supervision as part of building a diversified international monetary system. His comments, an apparent reference to U.S. economic management that Beijing has blamed in part for the global financial crisis, were twinned with a pledge to promote more international use of the yuan, China's currency.
Friday, April 17, 2009
Federated’s Tice Says S&P 500 Is Poised to Plunge 62%
Thursday, April 16, 2009
Natural gas production decline creates fiscal headache
Soros Says Commercial Property Values Will Fall 30%
March 26 (Bloomberg) -- Billionaire investor George Soros said U.S. commercial real estate will probably drop at least 30 percent in value, causing further strains on banks.
Here's a One-Week Trade Good for 25%
It is a different market today than it was six weeks ago.
Back then, I warned short sellers they were about to get wiped out. Since that essay, the S&P 500 has rallied 20%. The Dow is up over 1,000 points. And investors are breathing a sigh of relief that the worst is over. Indeed, the strength of the recent rally seems to have just about everyone thinking we've entered a new bull market.
While I'd love to join the ever-expanding chorus of cheerleaders yelling out, "Give me a B... Give me a U... Give me an L – L," we'd have to add four more letters to express my true thoughts. The rally has been nice, but it's not the start of a brand new bull market. Stocks will be lower later this year.
Jim Rogers: How He's Investing After the Crisis
As the global investor and adventurer offers lessons to his daughters in a new book, he still favors commodities and scorns diversification.
Tuesday, April 14, 2009
Science of global warming?
"President Obama has said that the science of global warming is 'beyond dispute,' and therefore settled. This is the justification for the imposition of a carbon cap-and-trade system that will cost $2 trillion. But Obama does not understand science. 'Settled science' is an oxymoron, and anyone who characterizes science as 'settled' or 'indisputable' is ignorant not only of science, but also history and philosophy.
Aristotle, who lived and wrote in the fourth century B.C., was one of the greatest geniuses the world has ever known. He invented the discipline of logic, and founded the sciences of ecology and biology. Aristotle's physics were accepted as correct for nearly two thousand years. ... Aristotle taught that heavy objects fall faster than light ones. Over the centuries, a few unreasonable persons expressed skeptical concerns. But the consensus was that the physics of motion were described by Aristotle's dicta. The science was settled.
Around the year 1591, an irascible young instructor at the University of Pisa demonstrated that Aristotle was wrong. He climbed to the top of the tower of Pisa and dropped cannonballs of unequal weight that hit the ground simultaneously. Aristotelean professors on the faculty were embarrassed. The university administration responded by not renewing Galileo's contract, thus ridding themselves of a troublemaker who challenged the accepted consensus. ...
President Obama, a lawyer and politician, would now have us believe that the process of history has stopped. For the first time, scientific knowledge is not provisional and subject to revision, but final and settled. Skepticism, which has been the spur to all innovation and human progress, is unacceptable and must be condemned. But in fact, it is our awareness of what we do not know that determines our scientific level. ... Knowledge begins with skepticism and ends with conceit." --University of Oklahoma geologist David Deming
Monday, April 13, 2009
In uncertain times, all that glisters is a gold standard
A few months ago, Terry Smith, head of Tullett Prebon, the interdealer broker, chaired a panel at the World Economic Forum meeting in Davos which was asked to produce one concrete recommendation to fix the global financial crisis. The top pick? Not anything on toxic assets or fiscal spending. Instead, this gaggle of leading financiers called for a new reserve currency, akin to an old-style gold standard.
Another Sign of Spring: Refinery Outages
Why We're Not at the Beginning of the End, and Probably Not Even At the End of the Beginning
....everyone with a stock portfolio wants to see it grow again. But wishing for something is different from getting it. And cockeyed optimism can wreak enormous damage on an economy. Haven't we already learned this?
Hanging Tough
You’d think that everyone would want to emulate Kellogg’s success, but, when hard times hit, most companies end up behaving more like Post. They hunker down, cut spending, and wait for good times to return. They make fewer acquisitions, even though prices are cheaper. They cut advertising budgets. And often they invest less in research and development. They do all this to preserve what they have.
Alaska forecasts oil-output drop, more oil spending
Goldman Sachs hires law firm to shut blogger's site
The UK Telegraph reported that Goldman Sachs is attempting to shut down a dissident blogger who is extremely critical of the investment bank, its board members and its practices.
Florida-based Mr Morgan began a blog entitled "Facts about Goldman Sachs" – the link to his blog is goldmansachs666.com
National Tax Day Tea Pary - April 15th
Looks like there will be close to 500 "tea parties" on April 15th. Here is link to google map of locations.
Here is another link to another site for Tea Party information is Tax Day Tea Party
The Tax Capital of the World
I think people and business will be leaving. There are 10 other states that are also considering major tax hikes, including Oregon, Illinois, Wisconsin, Washington, Arizona and New Jersey.
These states are all gambling that people and business will stay. I say people and business will relocate.
Oil Industry Braces for Drop in U.S. Thirst for Gasoline
Among those who say U.S. consumption of gasoline has peaked are executives at the world's biggest publicly traded oil company, Exxon Mobil Corp., as well as many private analysts and government energy forecasters.
US Treasury Bonds - 30 year
Oil Production - North Sea
World Oil Production Peaked in 2008
World oil production peaked in 2008 at 81.73 million barrels/day (mbd) shown in the chart below. This oil definition includes crude oil, lease condensate, oil sands and natural gas plant liquids. If natural gas plant liquids are excluded, then the production peak remains in 2008 but at 73.79 mbd. However, if oil sands are also excluded then crude oil and lease condensate production peaked in 2005 at 72.75 mbd.
Sunday, April 12, 2009
At least 24 million barrels of oil stored at sea
Quote of the Week
“When we look at the systematic financial system we’re in, and it affects every country in the world including Canada, I think staying bearish is the route to go,” Economist Nouriel Roubini.
Easter - the Risen Christ
Thursday, April 9, 2009
Wednesday, April 8, 2009
WASTING A GOOD CRISIS: RESULT - $200 OIL
Oil, Gas May ‘Slingshot’ Up After Credit Freezes Rigs
Tuesday, April 7, 2009
Fighting Recklessness with Recklessness
"Last week saw a continuation of the impenetrably misguided policy response to this financial crisis, which seeks to address the downturn by encouraging more of what got us into this mess in the first place."
“It’s a bear market rally,”
So where is Soros -- one of the world’s most successful investors -- putting his billions? “I think Brazil actually,” says the thickly bespectacled one, “together with China, will be among the recovering countries. The outlook for Brazil is better than for most other countries.”
Monday, April 6, 2009
From Bubble to Depression?
Liberty and Freedom
Sunday, April 5, 2009
The offical US unemployment rate is 8.5% (red line) however, that excludes number of people looking for work.
The gray line is the broader measure which includes people working part time but looking for full time work. This unemployment figure is 15.6% (wow!).
The blue line is the SGS Alternate Unemployment Rate which was stopped using this in the Clinton presidency and it included those who are "discouraged" and did not look for work in the past month. This rate is near 20%.
About 13-20 million are now unemployed or employed part time and 600,000 add to the list each month and on top of the the roughly 130,000 who come into the job market for the fist time. This is over 1 million new unemployed every 5 weeks. This is not a situation where long term bull markets form.
Nassim Taleb Says Geithner’s Bank Plan Will Fail
U.S. Markets Wrap: Stocks Rise in Longest Streak Since 2007
Weekly wrap up summary from Bloomberg reports -- U.S. stocks rose, capping the longest streak of weekly gains since 2007
Saturday, April 4, 2009
Eureka Machine
Friday, April 3, 2009
Thursday, April 2, 2009
Did Goldman Goose Oil?
Bull by Night, Bear by Day Is Best Strategy, Goldman Sachs Says
Wednesday, April 1, 2009
Sign of the times
The two happiest days of your life: The day you buy it, and the day you abandon it:
New York Times reported today, there’s been a slew of cases where boat owners have sanded the names off the hull, filed down registration numbers and ditched the things. Some just drive ’em into land and run, as you see above. Others anchor in the middle of nowhere and swim away. Some scuttle them and try to collect the insurance.
“We’ve never needed a law before,” a South Carolina councilman told The New York Times. South Carolina made “boat abandonment” illegal in January.