Archive for category The Economy

Reality Is Setting In

When Lynn Adler’s article hit the mainstream press on 11 August (Unemployment Drives More Home Sellers To Cut Price – Reuters), you know things are bad. Reality is setting in for many residential home owners, and price cuts are picking up speed. This is the beginning of the next leg down in housing, and will only be worse when as many as 5 millions homes in foreclosure finally begin to be seized by banks.

The Obama administration has given banks a free pass on their mortgage holders that have stopped making payments. In addition,  once a mortgage customer asks for a loan modification or other form of mortgage assistance, the bank is no longer required to report this debt as an actual liability against their tier one assets -  just a continuation of the fraud taking place between the government and banks & further proof that the recent Financial Reform Act that just passed (with no one reading it) is a complete fraud itself.

In other words, everything we’ve been told about so-called stabilization and recovery in the banks balance sheets is a complete lie. Once these 5 million homes are foreclosed upon, along with the 8 million or so homes that will enter foreclosure after their rates reset over the next 12-18 months, we will be right back to where we were before…with a financial system on the brink of systemic failure. Plus, the cracks in commercial real estate are becoming clear as it faces a $2 trillion shortfall in available financing over the next 2 years…it’s decline is about to pick up some speed.

This is the reality of what the economy will look like over the next 2 years.

Also, the FED announced yesterday that they will abandon their March pledge to stop buying our own debt back (no surprise – they’re above accountability)…and that quantitative easing will continue for some time. Desperation is setting in as the so-called experts wake up to the fact that the FED doesn’t know what they’re doing, and that their mistakes will likely make our future more bleak.

With the unemployment rate headed far higher than 10% (Feds report presently 9.5% but it’s really right now 17% unemployment  -  the U-6 figure…the only one that matters), is there any scenario where you can imagine the stock market going higher??

The timing couldn’t be better for anyone to seek safety and guarantees by Becoming Their Own Bank and start recapturing the large amount of “Transferred Money” they are already losing on a regular basis every year!

For additional proof of the above, please see US Financial Meltdown or Is A Complete Financial Armageddon Coming? | Greg Hunter’s USAWatchdog

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Paradigm Shifts And Gold Rocket Launches

By: Moses Kim

There are certain periods of time in history when seemingly obscene prognostications are right. I believe we are in one of those times. It is at times like these that “conspiracy theorists” (whatever that means) become what I like to call “reality theorists.”

Economic shocks come from nowhere. One day the global economy is humming along; the next day it collapses. Crashes don’t occur because the fundamentals suddenly change; they occur because the public at large recognizes the fundamentals and heads for the exit at the same time. What’s crashing next is the public’s confidence in governments across the Western world. You can guess how that will affect the price of gold.

If you study the bull market of the 1920′s and the Great Depression of the 1930′s, one of the amusing things you’ll discover is how consistently wrong the mainstream was. During the great bull run of the 1920′s, the mainstream was forever expecting a stock market crash. Remember, the decade began with a severe Depression (which incidentally came to a swift end without government intervention). The great Jesse Livermore was the only one who recognized the bull market very early on in the 1920′s. He was mocked, but he was the only one making money for the longest time.

On the other side of the coin, the mainstream refused to believe that we were in for a prolonged period of economic weakness in the early years of the Great Depression. People were continually calling for a bottom in the economy. Of course the bottom didn’t come for a decade.

So what gives? What causes the mainstream to consistently miss the boat at key turning points? When does the risk/reward dynamic skew towards the seemingly insane- such as $3,000 gold?

Why Do People Miscalculate?
What we must realize is that economic orthodoxy is constantly changing. For example, it used to be common knowledge that interest rates rise in bull markets and vice versa; now the average investor believes the exact opposite. Back then, people feared the slightest rise in inflation; now the Helicopter Bens of the world are scared out of their mind of deflation.

So what causes people to miscalculate? It’s pretty simply actually: Economists and investors alike fail to adjust their economic models to account for changing underlying conditions. They try to fit square pegs into round holes- then they scratch their heads and wonder what went wrong.

Our leaders haven’t the slightest clue. They are using the same medicine to cure a different disease. Keynesian economics can work in theory if it were used sparingly and only in response to a true underutilization of productive capacity. But what we have on our hands right now is a debt crisis. Our leaders think they are geniuses curing the disease, when in fact, they are making it worse.

What amuses me is the brouhaha over Keynesian economic stimulus as if it arrived yesterday. Excuse me, but what do you call the last 50 years of American economic policy characterized by debt-financed consumption? Is it not Keynesian economics and has it not already failed?

Gold Rocket Launch

I am a big believer that Pareto’s law applies to markets. In other words, 20% of inputs will drive 80% of outputs. I honestly couldn’t care less about productivity numbers because what’s coming is no demand-pull inflation. I am much more focused on the dollar, bond rates, bond/dividend spreads, TIC capital flows, and the stupidity of governments around the world. Of all these variables, I am most confident in my prognostication that politicians will become increasingly foolish as the economic crisis on our hands becomes more complicated.

I have been preparing for the gold rocket launch for many months now. I am probably different from most people in that I focus more on the likely flow of capital than inflation when trying to figure out gold price movements. What I foresee is a flood of capital going from bonds into gold. The bond market is so huge that even a small percentage of capital flowing from bonds to gold will result in a volcanic eruption of epic proportions. So the potential rocket launch in gold depends largely on the bond market.

You all know where I stand. U.S. government bonds are the biggest bubble I’ve seen in my life. If you are trying to rationalize 10-year yields at 3%, then you are probably the kind of person who rationalized bubble home prices by using the “there’s a fixed amount of land but a growing population” argument. In other words, your mind is stuck in the 5th grade. I advise you to think rationally for a second and consider the credit quality of a country that has to monetize its debt in the face of falling tax receipts and a stalling economy. Are you really on the right side of the trade going long bonds?
There will be monumental paradigm shifts in the years ahead. Everyone is asleep, but I think this is going to change fairly soon. The big changes, which will be evidenced by huge moves in gold, are still ahead.

Moses Kim

http://www.expectedreturnsblog.com/

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The Tax Tsunami On The Horizon

From Investors Business Daily, Posted 07/21/2010

Fiscal Policy: Many voters are looking forward to 2011, hoping a new Congress will put the country back on the right track. But unless something’s done soon, the new year will also come with a raft of tax hikes — including a return of the death tax — that will be real killers.

Through the end of this year, the federal estate tax rate is zero — thanks to the package of broad-based tax cuts that President Bush pushed through to get the economy going earlier in the decade.

But as of midnight Dec. 31, the death tax returns — at a rate of 55% on estates of $1 million or more. The effect this will have on hospital life-support systems is already a matter of conjecture.

Resurrection of the death tax, however, isn’t the only tax problem that will be ushered in Jan. 1. Many other cuts from the Bush administration are set to disappear and a new set of taxes will materialize. And it’s not just the rich who will pay.

The lowest bracket for the personal income tax, for instance, moves up 50% — to 15% from 10%. The next lowest bracket — 25% — will rise to 28%, and the old 28% bracket will be 31%. At the higher end, the 33% bracket is pushed to 36% and the 35% bracket becomes 39.6%.

But the damage doesn’t stop there.

The marriage penalty also makes a comeback, and the capital gains tax will jump 33% — to 20% from 15%. The tax on dividends will go all the way from 15% to 39.6% — a 164% increase.

Both the cap-gains and dividend taxes will go up further in 2013 as the health care reform adds a 3.8% Medicare levy for individuals making more than $200,000 a year and joint filers making more than $250,000. Other tax hikes include: halving the child tax credit to $500 from $1,000 and fixing the standard deduction for couples at the same level as it is for single filers.

Letting the Bush cuts expire will cost taxpayers $115 billion next year alone, according to the Congressional Budget Office, and $2.6 trillion through 2020.

But even more tax headaches lie ahead. This “second wave” of hikes, as Americans for Tax Reform puts it, are designed to pay for ObamaCare and include:

The Medicine Cabinet Tax. Americans, says ATR, “will no longer be able to use health savings account, flexible spending account, or health reimbursement pretax dollars to purchase nonprescription, over-the-counter medicines (except insulin).”

The HSA Withdrawal Tax Hike. “This provision of ObamaCare,” according to ATR, “increases the additional tax on nonmedical early withdrawals from an HSA from 10% to 20%, disadvantaging them relative to IRAs and other tax-advantaged accounts, which remain at 10%.”

Brand Name Drug Tax. Makers and importers of brand-name drugs will be liable for a tax of $2.5 billion in 2011. The tax goes to $3 billion a year from 2012 to 2016, then $3.5 billion in 2017 and $4.2 billion in 2018. Beginning in 2019 it falls to $2.8 billion and stays there. And who pays the new drug tax? Patients, in the form of higher prices.

Economic Substance Doctrine. ATR reports that “The IRS is now empowered to disallow perfectly legal tax deductions and maneuvers merely because it judges that the deduction or action lacks ‘economic substance.’”

A third and final (for now) wave, says ATR, consists of the alternative minimum tax’s widening net, tax hikes on employers and the loss of deductions for tuition:

• The Tax Policy Center, no right-wing group, says that the failure to index the AMT will subject 28.5 million families to the tax when they file next year, up from 4 million this year.

• “Small businesses can normally expense (rather than slowly deduct, or ‘depreciate’) equipment purchases up to $250,000,” says ATR. “This will be cut all the way down to $25,000. Larger businesses can expense half of their purchases of equipment. In January of 2011, all of it will have to be ‘depreciated.’”

• According to ATR, there are “literally scores of tax hikes on business that will take place,” plus the loss of some tax credits. The research and experimentation tax credit will be the biggest loss, “but there are many, many others. Combining high marginal tax rates with the loss of this tax relief will cost jobs.”

• The deduction for tuition and fees will no longer be available and there will be limits placed on education tax credits. Teachers won’t be able to deduct their classroom expenses and employer-provided educational aid will be restricted. Thousands of families will no longer be allowed to deduct student loan interest.

Then there’s the tax on Americans who decline to buy health care insurance (the tax the administration initially said wasn’t a tax but now argues in court that it is) plus a 3.8% Medicare tax beginning in 2013 on profits made in real estate transactions by wealthier Americans.

Not all Americans may fully realize what’s in store come Jan. 1. But they should have a pretty good idea by the mid-term elections, and members of Congress might take note of our latest IBD/TIPP Poll (summarized above).

Fifty-one percent of respondents favored making the Bush cuts permanent vs. 28% who didn’t. Republicans were more than 4 to 1 and Independents more than 2 to 1 in favor. Only Democrats were opposed, but only by 40%-38%.

The cuts also proved popular among all income groups — despite the Democrats’ oft-heard assertion that Bush merely provided “tax breaks for the wealthy.” Fact is, Bush cut taxes for everyone who paid them, and the cuts helped the nation recover from a recession and the worst stock-market crash since 1929.

Maybe, just maybe, Americans remember that — and will not forget come Nov. 2.

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The Democrats Financial Reform Is No Reform At All!

Do yourself a favor and read the following article, it hits the nail on the head!

Meddlers at the gate

Posted: 04/28/2010 01:00:00 AM MDT

Updated: 04/28/2010 05:47:21 AM MDT

No. Legislators would never employ crude and simplistic sloganeering like those rowdy anti-gummint protesters.

Just ask Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, who this week offered up this eloquent gem: “A party that stands with Wall Street is a party that stands against families and fairness.”

You know Wall Street? It lives to destabilize the family unit. Just scratch the surface and you’ll find 8,500 companies trading on the New York Stock Exchange and another 3,200 companies listed on NASDAQ. Nearly 50 percent of households own some form of equities, and 21 million households own individual stocks outside any employer-sponsored plan.

All working together against kids and fairness.

Actually, what Reid’s words reveal is an ideological disposition that is wholly unconcerned with creating a healthier Wall Street or a Wall Street scrubbed of crony capitalism and government-produced moral hazard.

Using stale populist rhetoric, Democrats dishonestly pit families against “banks” to generate enough support to pass a fiscal reform bill. But how many voters manipulated by the fear-mongering of Chris Dodd, Reid or Barack Obama fully understand reform? I sure don’t. It’s complex stuff, no doubt.

How many of us are aware that these derivatives that politicians rail against are financial tools that often allow people to hedge bets and take insurance on risk? As The New York Times recently reported, entities like Mars, the maker of M&M’s, like to dip into the derivative market to insulate themselves from fluctuating prices of sugar and chocolate.

How many voters are aware that the pending Senate reform bill includes a payback to unions in the form of a “proxy access” that would allow labor to manipulate company boards? How many are aware that the bill may give the Treasury Department the right to seize private property and businesses without any significant judicial review?

How many Americans are aware that the reform bill might create a so-called “consumer protection board” that would slather another needless layer of federal red tape on a wide range of businesses — businesses, incidentally, with far less culpability in creating the housing bubble than members of the Senate Banking Committee?

At the same time, the board may also ban private, voluntary arbitration agreements between consumers and financial firms. Why?

How many voters are aware that the Senate reform bill clamps down on “angel investors” — wealthy individuals who invest in startups with few regulatory guidelines. From Google to Facebook, it was angel investors who undertook the initial risk.

What is appropriate risk? Well, who else but politicians and bureaucrats, both genetically disposed to avoid risk, could be better judges? That is the kind of micromanaging Washington is proposing. Would it not make more sense for government to disentangle itself from the market (and the bailouts), enhance transparency and simply enforce the rules already in place?

Instead, Democrats have boiled down this intricate and wide-ranging legislation into a false choice that pits Wall Street against families. Our attention is to be diverted by a show trial of Goldman Sachs — which, as far as I can tell, is accused of betting against the housing market just as Fannie and Freddie were incentivizing failure — to gin up anger.

No crisis is ever wasted. And for those reflexively averse to risk, profit and markets, this is an opportunity like no other.

We need financial reform. What we’re being offered, it seems, is another piece of command-and-control legislation fast-tracked to avoid the midterm elections — and honest discussion.

E-mail David Harsanyi at dharsanyi@denverpost.com and follow him on Twitter at www.twitter.com/davidharsanyi.

Link to article on denverpost.com – http://www.denverpost.com/harsanyi/ci_14970531

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Goldman Sachs Lawsuit is Pure Political Grandstanding

Beware, the Goldman Sachs lawsuit is a smoke screen to gather support for the financial reform legislation currently debated in the House. This is pure political grandstanding and does not begin to even scratch the surface of the criminal enterprise that is Goldman Sachs, let alone bring any lasting reform to the crooks of Wall Street. Wait & see, it will only put more power in the hands of the Federal Reserve Board which is totally wrong. The FRB needs to be audited & then disbanded.

Goldman will continue to get their way unless there is REAL reform and its former executives will consistently move on to the very highest financial positions in the US government. This gives them unprecedented access to power and knowledge.

Goldman seems to ALWAYS be on the right side of all major investment trends. Those concerning interest rates, stock market trends, and futures markets. Of course there is no way they would use the inside information they gather from their ex-partners that now work at the highest levels in government…yeah, right.

When the truth begins to emerge about Goldman, and their cross dealings and insider trading, somehow they always manage to get just a small slap on the wrist. I can just about guarantee you that this will be the case this time as well.

The truth is that Goldman Sachs is the mafia of Wall Street, and that they will do anything and everything to win at all costs, even if it means sacrificing their clients, and our financial system along the way. The incredibly insightful investigative reporter Matt Taibbi wrote, Goldman Sachs is a “a great vampire squid wrapped around the face of humanity, relentlessly jamming its blood funnel into anything that smells like money.” This may be the best Wall St quote of all time, and it is a true reflection of exactly what Wall Street has morphed into.

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