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For the Record (Read 176766 times)
perceptions_now
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For the Record
Jun 26th, 2010 at 5:14pm
 
The Mighty US$
Last Report dated 04/06/2010

US$ Index (basket of Currencies: @ 85.25 (Last Report - 87.85
http://www.goldseek.com/quotes/charts/usdollar/usdollarindex24hour.php


Euro - US$: @ 1.2369 (Last Report - 1.2044)
AUD$ - US$: @ 0.8740 (Last Report - 0.8317)
AUD$ - GBP: @ 0.5803 (Last Report - 0.5704)
AUD$ - Euro: @ 0.7067 (Last Report - 0.6906)
http://www.bloomberg.com/markets/currencies/fxc.html


Gold - @ US$1,256.20 (Last Report - US$1,207.80)
Oil - @ US$78.86 (Last Report - US$72.59
DOW - 10,144 - (Down 9 @ Thursday close) (Last Report - 10,255)
All Ords - 4,439 (Down 65 @ Friday close) (Last Report - 4,472)
http://www.bloomberg.com/?b=0

Last months DOW -
http://finance.yahoo.com/echarts?s=%5EDJI#chart3:symbol=^dji;range=1m;indicator=...

THERE was movement at the FED, for the word had passed around, That the US$ was an old Regret and its value had long since passed away
==================
Well, the UPS, DOWNS & VOLATILITY continue!

The US$ index lost some ground, whilst the Australian $ picked, as did the Euro.

Gold rose, as did the Oil price.

And finally, the DOW, the All Ord's and most markets lost ground this week, after recent rises.


 

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Re: For the Record
Reply #1 - Jun 26th, 2010 at 5:50pm
 
The Mighty US Banking System?

Last Report dated - 14/05/2010

Banks gone this week - 3

Banks gone since last report - 14

Banks gone last month (June) - 8

Total Banks failed, so far, in 2010 - 86  

Total Banks Failed in 2009 - 140
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Re: For the Record
Reply #2 - Jun 26th, 2010 at 6:01pm
 
That's what happens when you put the lunatics in charge of the asylum
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Go the Bunnies
 
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Re: For the Record
Reply #3 - Jun 26th, 2010 at 6:20pm
 
adelcrow wrote on Jun 26th, 2010 at 6:01pm:
That's what happens when you put the lunatics in charge of the asylum


By any chance, are you referring to a few of US presidents and a few US FED Reserve Chairmen?
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Re: For the Record
Reply #4 - Jun 26th, 2010 at 6:48pm
 
perceptions_now wrote on Jun 26th, 2010 at 5:50pm:
The Mighty US Banking System?

Last Report dated - 14/05/2010

Banks gone this week - 3

Banks gone since last report - 14

Banks gone last month (June) - 8

Total Banks failed, so far, in 2010 - 86  

Total Banks Failed in 2009 - 140



So looking at that, there will be more banks failing this year than last. We don't seem to hear much about it, maybe they're playing it down over there. I have heard more of the states are worried about looming bankruptcy, and the housing market is nowhere near out of the doldrums.  Sad
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"When the power of love overcomes the love of power, the world will know peace." Hendrix
andrei said: Great isn't it? Seeing boatloads of what is nothing more than human garbage turn up.....
 
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Re: For the Record
Reply #5 - Jun 26th, 2010 at 8:37pm
 
Ex Dame Pansi wrote on Jun 26th, 2010 at 6:48pm:
perceptions_now wrote on Jun 26th, 2010 at 5:50pm:
The Mighty US Banking System?

Last Report dated - 14/05/2010

Banks gone this week - 3

Banks gone since last report - 14

Banks gone last month (June) - 8

Total Banks failed, so far, in 2010 - 86  

Total Banks Failed in 2009 - 140



So looking at that, there will be more banks failing this year than last. We don't seem to hear much about it, maybe they're playing it down over there. I have heard more of the states are worried about looming bankruptcy, and the housing market is nowhere near out of the doldrums.  Sad


On the issues of Banks failing, States failing & the housing market continuing in the doldrums, you are correct, on every count!

Although the US pollies have just softened upcoming regulations, there are strong indicators that the number of failed US Banks will spike higher, in the 2nd half of this year.

There are also quite a few US states, which are in DEAP crap, including the biggest of California, plus others such as Florida & Michigan & New York. Btw, if California was a country, it would reputedly have the 6th biggest GDP in the world.

And finally, the US housing, both new & existing is still well under water, with new housing at all time lows, particularly compared to population levels and the existing housing set to undergo another hit, as mortgages re-set in droves, starting later this year.
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Reply #6 - Jul 16th, 2010 at 7:18pm
 
U.S. home-buying applications sink to 13-year low


July 14 (Reuters) - Demand for loans to purchase U.S. homes sunk to a 13-year low last week, and refinancing demand also slid despite near record-low mortgage rates, the Mortgage Bankers Association said on Wednesday.

Requests for loans to buy homes dropped 3.1 percent in the week ended July 9, after adjusting for the Independence Day holiday, to the lowest level since December 1996, the industry group said.

Refinancing applications fell 2.9 percent, and the mortgage market index that reflects total loan demand also fell 2.9 percent.

Average 30-year mortgage rates edged up 0.01 percentage point to 4.69 percent, but were near the record low of 4.61 percent set in March 2009, based on MBA records dating back to 1990.

Rock-bottom borrowing costs are helping borrowers with pristine credit to buy and those who still have equity in their homes to refinance.

But high unemployment and foreclosures remain major hurdles, and worries that prices could dip further are also keeping many potential buyers on the sidelines.

The April 30 expiration of homebuyer tax credits has also sapped summer purchasing activity. Buyers had raced to get in under the gun for the tax incentives this spring, and demand for loans to buy homes has fallen in nine out of the 10 weeks since the credit expired.

Refinancings accounted for 78.7 percent of all applications last week, the same as the prior week, the MBA said.

http://link.reuters.com/veb47m

Talk has surfaced of a double-dip in U.S. housing, though most economists doubt a second leg down would be nearly as severe as the first.

"It's sort of a self-fulfilling prophecy, but if there's going to be a double-dip you might as well stay on the sidelines as opposed to coming in to buy," said Taylor Woods, president of Genpact Mortgage Services in Irvine, California, a unit of Genpact Limited (G.N).

"With as much turmoil as there is around loans that need to be modified, short sales, foreclosures -- all of those signs really indicate to buyers and investors that there will be better prices come tomorrow," he said.

Prices have toppled about 30 percent, on average, from their peaks four years ago, according to Standard & Poor's/Case-Shiller indexes. Most estimates are for additional single-digit declines.

"If there's one part of the economy that might suffer some sort of a double-dip it might come out of the housing market," said Cam Albright, economic research director and portfolio manager at Wilmington Trust Investment Management in Wilmington, Delaware.

Housing economists look for the autumn months to tell the story once the ripple effects of the expired tax incentives are in the past.

"There's been an awful lot of demand shifted forward by the first-time homebuyers credit," Albright said. "Once we get into the fall, maybe even sooner, some of that will begin to smooth out."

Link -
http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSNLLDIE69420100714
==========
Like Australia, the "first home buyer market" was brought forward, but that has now also, finally finished in the US, as it did earlier in Australia.

Now, both the existing & new Housing market will again come under great pressure, with the new  housing market in the USA resuming a long downward trend.
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Re: For the Record
Reply #7 - Jul 17th, 2010 at 11:11am
 
The Mighty US Banking System?

Last Report dated - 26/06/2010

Banks gone this week - 6

Banks Gone last week - 4

Banks gone since last report - 24

Banks gone last month (June) - 8

Total Banks failed, so far, in 2010 - 110

Total Banks Failed in 2009 - 140

FDIC Link -
http://www.fdic.gov/bank/individual/failed/banklist.html
============
The next 12 months will see many more US Banks fail!
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Re: For the Record
Reply #8 - Jul 17th, 2010 at 11:37am
 
The Mighty US$

Last Report dated 26/06/2010

US$ Index (basket of Currencies: @ 82.56 (Last Report - 85.25
http://www.goldseek.com/quotes/charts/usdollar/usdollarindex24hour.php

Euro - US$: @ 1.293 (Last Report - 1.2369)
AUD$ - US$: @ 0.8689 (Last Report - 0.8740)
AUD$ - GBP: @ 0.5679 (Last Report - 0.5803)
AUD$ - Euro: @ 0.6720 (Last Report - 0.7067)
http://www.bloomberg.com/markets/currencies/fxc.html

Gold - @ US$1,188.20 (Last Report - US$1,256.20)
Oil - @ US$76.01 (Last Report - US$78.86
DOW - 10,098 - (Down 261 @ Friay close) (Last Report - 10,144)
All Ords - 4,437 (Down 20 @ Friday close) (Last Report - 4,439)
http://www.bloomberg.com/?b=0

Last 5 years DOW -
http://finance.yahoo.com/echarts?s=%5EDJI#chart3:symbol=

THERE was movement at the FED, for the word had passed around, That the US$ was an old Regret and its value had long since passed away
==================
The US$ index lost some ground against the Euro.

Gold fell, as did the Oil price.

And finally, the UPS, DOWNS & VOLATILITY continue everywhere!

The scene is set, nearly time to raise the curtain, turn on the lights & make the action call, but not quite?
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Re: For the Record
Reply #9 - Jul 18th, 2010 at 10:44am
 
Market Going Down With the Ship?


This morning the Baltic Dry Index, a measure of freight rates for international shipping, was at 1700. It hasn't been at this level since April 2009, only four months after its Credit Crisis low and only one month after the stock market was at its bottom.

Bloomberg News noted a week ago that the index had dropped continuously for the longest period in nine years. Yes, the current drop in the preceding seven weeks (from a high of 4209 in late May) has been bigger than anything seen during the Credit Crisis. The last drop of this magnitude was in August 2001 in the middle of that year's recession. Lack of shipping activity from China, the engine for global economic activity, was cited as the main cause for the falling index. Charter rates for all types of ships tracked in the index are falling.

Prices for dry bulk shipping, which doesn't include energy commodities, tend to be very sensitive to economic activity. A sharp drop in rates indicates a significant drop in global trade. Based on historical charts it looks like the Baltic Index can lead, be coincident or lag movements in economic data and the stock market. The index seems to be most closely correlated with prices of industrial commodities and the industrial sector of the global economy. While this is not the largest component of the U.S. economy (the service sector is four times larger), it is the key sector in developing economies. It was manufacturing though that had the biggest rebound in the U.S. since last year. The service sector has remained lackluster.

The stock market will likely be following the Baltic Index down, although perhaps not with such a precipitous decline. The Index has dropped almost 60% since late May. With the exception of the small cap Russell 2000, none of the major stock indices have had even a 20% drop - at least not yet.
Link -
http://seekingalpha.com/article/214898-market-going-down-with-the-ship?source=em...
=========
The BDI (Baltic Dry Index) is an index that tracks Global shipping and it is used as an indicator of future Economic activity.

"On 20 May 2008 the index reached its record high level since its introduction in 1985, reaching 11,793 points. Half a year later, on 5 December 2008, the index had dropped by 94%, to 663 points, the lowest since 1986.[8], though by 4 February 2009 it had recovered a little lost ground, back to 1,316.[9] These low rates moved dangerously close to the combined operating costs of vessels, fuel, and crews.[10][11]

By the end of 2008, shipping times had been already increased by reduced speeds to save fuel consumption, but lack of credit meant the reduction of letters of credit, historically required to load cargoes for departure at ports. Debt load of future ship construction was also a problem for shipping companies, with several major bankruptcies and implications for shipyards.[12][13] This, combined with the collapsing price of raw commodities created a perfect storm for the world's marine commerce.

By October of 2009 the index had recovered to around 2,900, a level that is more historically normal. [14]"
Wiki Link -
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baltic_Dry_Index
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Re: For the Record
Reply #10 - Jul 18th, 2010 at 1:53pm
 
CNBC Host Accuses Guest Of Just Trying To Scare The Crap Out Of Everyone


CNBC's Simon Hobbs fought it out with Michael Pento today about the reality of the current economic situation in the U.S.

The fireworks start around 3:25, when Hobbs starts questioning the current generation of CEO's for misunderstanding our post crisis world. Pento argues that right now people aren't spending. Hobbs says that in Latin America and Asia, they are.

Pento then argues that consumers are going to be paying down debt for several years, and that the U.S. will be weak through that time period. The two then fight it out over the U.S. AAA rating and taxes.

At 6:00 minutes in, Hobbs says, "You're just peddling the power of nightmares," and "Wars are fought because of that sort of attitude."

Pento goes on to make points about how people need to take the threat of U.S. sovereign debt seriousl



Business Insider Link -
http://www.businessinsider.com/hobbs-youre-just-peddling-the-power-of-nightmares...
=========
A little fun, amongst some serious issues?

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Reply #11 - Jul 19th, 2010 at 10:24pm
 
Rethinking the Measure of Growth


SINGAPORE — Almost overlooked amid BP’s debacle in the Gulf of Mexico was an oil spill in the Singapore Strait, where in late May two tankers collided and disgorged the equivalent of 18,000 barrels of oil into one of the world’s busiest shipping lanes.

In considering this risk and the increasing evidence of the toll that rapid economic development is already taking on Asia’s environment, economists and other experts in Asia have taken up the call to re-examine the prominence of economic growth as a measure of policy success, particularly the use of gross domestic product.

Asian governments have become particularly enthralled with gross domestic product statistics for validation, becoming what Vishakha Desai, the president and chief executive of the Asia Society in New York, has called “G.D.P. junkies.”

For local officials in China, gross domestic product was, until recently, more than just a barometer for gauging policies, it was the measuring stick against which their futures in the ruling Communist Party were determined. Economic growth still ranks as one of the chief criteria for determining party promotions, according to Tan Kong Yam, an economics professor at Nanyang Technological University in Singapore who offers a course for mayors from China.

For such officials, “there is an enormous incentive to promote investments and industrial production,” he said. “This explains why there’s enormous pollution.”

Gross domestic product has come in for some particularly hard knocks since the global financial crisis, notably after a report last year whose co-author was Joseph E. Stiglitz, a Nobel laureate in economics, that said reliance on gross domestic product had blinded governments to the increasing risks in the world economy since 2004.

Overlooking that risk has possibly cost future economic growth, the report said, and has contributed to a looming environmental crisis.

“Market prices are distorted by the fact that there is no charge imposed on carbon emissions,” the report said. “Clearly, measures of economic performance that reflected these environmental costs might look markedly different from standard measures.”

Economists in Asia say the debate about gross domestic product misses the point. Gross domestic product as a statistic is sound, they say; what is wrong is the fascination in government with what it measures — the sum total of a nation’s annual production.

“The problem is not G.D.P.,” said Bhanoji Rao, a visiting economics professor at the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy in Singapore. “The problem is the culture of consumption.”

Mr. Rao is part of a growing body of economists, largely in academia, who question whether rapid economic growth rates in Asia — from the 10.3 percent expansion in giant-but-poor China to an expected 15 percent growth this year in tiny-but-rich Singapore — are necessarily producing a happier, healthier Asia.

Some Asian governments, China’s included, have been trying to recalibrate gross domestic product to include the cost of growth to the environment, creating a green gross domestic product. Such efforts, said Mr. Tan, the Nanyang professor, have been frustrated by the difficulty in determining the future cost of environmental destruction.

What is needed instead, some economists say, is a wholesale re-examination of development’s goals. “There needs to be an internal debate within the developing countries about what is the path of development we want to have,” Mr. Rao said.

Andy Xie, a private economist in Shanghai, has long argued that the 1.3 billion people in China cannot realistically hope to live like Americans.

“That statement is truer than ever,” he said.


Beijing, at least, appears to have gotten the message, if its investments in green technology and public transportation are anything to go by. The Communist Party has also revised the promotion criteria for officials so that environmental conditions are included along with gross domestic product.

But economists like Mr. Xie and Mr. Rao warn that even with greener development, the result may still be the same if the goal remains an American-style standard of living. Asia may instead need to carve out a vastly different vision of prosperity that does not rely on ever-increasing levels of material consumption.

And in what represents a bit of strange casting, some economists say the answer may lie in drawing on Asia’s religious traditions — Shinto, Taoism, Buddhism and Hinduism — with their emphasis on harmony with nature and self-denial.

“Is there any commandment from the heavens that one must have one’s own swimming pool?” Mr. Rao said. “That one must have 10 bedrooms?”

To illustrate, he cited Mahatma Gandhi’s comment about the Earth’s providing enough to satisfy every man’s need, but not every man’s greed.

“If G.D.P. goes down,” Mr. Rao said, “so what?”

NY Times Link -
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/19/business/energy-environment/19green.html?_r=1
========
I am not sure that too many are yet listening, nor that China has taken note!

But, it is correct that the Planet will never support another 1.3 Chinese & a further 1.3 Billion Indians, living a consumer life similar to those of the current USA population!
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Re: For the Record
Reply #12 - Jul 19th, 2010 at 10:39pm
 
Baby Boomers, The U. S. Economic Collapse, And The Future Of Senior Housing


The Baby Boom generation, the nearly 80 million of us who were born between 1946 and 1964, is the largest in U. S. history. Its size alone guaranteed that Boomers would be our most influential generation, and indeed their impact on the country’s social, cultural and economic institutions is unprecedented.

Boom Times.
Boomers have spent wildly and lavishly on themselves, certain that the economic prosperity that followed World War II would continue indefinitely. They turned into the “Me” generation, its purpose, “Shop ‘till you drop,” its goal, “He who dies with the most toys wins.”
Similarly, the housing supply was insufficient to meet Boomers’ needs, and the unprecedented demand for the limited supply of homes ratcheted up housing prices, which eventually produced the “McMansion” phenomenon.

Now in early- and mid-middle age, between 45 and 63 years old, the Baby Boom generation was, until very recently, wealthier than any other age group, controlling 70 percent of the total net worth of American households–$7 trillion–owning four-fifths of all money in financial institutions, and accounting for nearly one-half of total consumer demand.

Boom Bust.
Unlike their predecessors, whose accumulated savings funded their retirement, Baby Boomers have counted on their assets to deliver needed wealth. The spectacular performance of the stock market and the recent astounding appreciation of housing values produced the results that are summarized above.

However, the stock market lost 47 percent of its value between September 30, 2007, and December 2, 2008, a decline of about $11 trillion. This has primarily impacted older Americans, whose retirement accounts lost $2.8 trillion, or nearly one-third of their value.  

Equally devastating is a recent report by the Center for Economic and Policy Research, which concludes that the collapse of the housing bubble has decimated the holdings of the vast majority of near retirees, who will have little or no housing wealth this year and will be almost totally reliant on Social Security and Medicare to support them after retirement.

The fact is that the collision between economic reality and the expectations of Baby Boomers about the quality of their post-retirement housing will dumbfound this, the “entitlement” generation. Expecting McMansions, nearly destitute Boomers will likely encounter retirement housing on a par with their first apartments.

And what about Boomers who at some point will need long-term health care?
Link -
http://airstreambooks.com/2010/07/18/baby-boomers-the-u-s-economic-collapse-and-...

=========
And yes, those figures are in Trillions!

As suggested in my Futures article titled "What is the Motor of the World and why is it stopping?", we are facing $64 Trillion questions!
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« Last Edit: Jul 21st, 2010 at 1:40pm by perceptions_now »  
 
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Re: For the Record
Reply #13 - Jul 20th, 2010 at 11:54pm
 
Housing Starts in U.S. Decrease More Than Forecast


July 20 (Bloomberg) -- Housing starts fell in June to the lowest level since October as a slump in sales following the expiration of a government tax incentive caused U.S. builders to cut back.

Work began on 549,000 houses last month, fewer than forecast by the median estimate of economists surveyed by Bloomberg News and down 5 percent from May, Commerce Department figures showed today in Washington.

The retreat following the end of government support shows it will be difficult for the industry that precipitated the recession to sustain a recovery. Mounting foreclosures will swell the supply of houses on the market and pressure prices, while prospective buyers shy away as a lack of jobs shakes confidence in the world’s largest economy.

Worse Than Forecast

Economists forecast starts would fall to a 577,000 annual rate, according to the median of 75 projections in a Bloomberg News survey. Estimates ranged from 525,000 to 620,000.

Builders have to contend with a growing supply of existing homes that is driving down home values as foreclosures rise. Home seizures jumped 38 percent in the second quarter from a year earlier, RealtyTrac Inc. said last week, putting lenders on pace to claim more than 1 million properties this year.

“The new home market and housing in general still face serious headwinds from current economic and legislative conditions,” Miller said on a conference call with investors. “The prospect of additional delinquencies ahead continues to moderate this recovery as shadow inventory continues to be absorbed.”
Link -
http://noir.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aPAjN2CbpE1M&pos=3
=============
After the end of the US government subsidies, the US new housing markets has gone back tp its long term decline trend!
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Re: For the Record
Reply #14 - Jul 21st, 2010 at 12:20am
 
Goldman Suchs Profit Falls 82% in Q2


And the US DOW is currently DOWn 119 points.

Another fun day?

Bloomberg DOW Link-
http://noir.bloomberg.com/markets/stocks/wei.html
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