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NOLo's Nightmare Scenario

This afternoon I will go through the web bot runs from earlier this year which made some horrific predictions about what this year would bring:  13-million people homeless and marching North.  I hate to say it, but a nightmare scenario of multiple hurricanes could destroy the oil and gas infrastructure in the gulf of Mexico and could make things indescribably bad - perhaps so bad as to push the world beyond the economic brink.

 

Here's the high level view:

  • My daughter Denise, who went through one "false alarm" evacuation from new Orleans last year tells me that what should have been a 45 minute trip turned into a 6-hour nightmare then and there's little reason to think things will be much different now.

  • If people get caught in the lowlands of Louisiana, there could be thousands of deaths - and as Denise related in a conversation this morning, there are 10's of thousands of people who are in the lower economic strata who have a lot of pride in the Big Easy and say things like "If my city goes down, I'm going down with it..."

  • The feds will likely have to move quickly to get people redistributed to 'reception centers" which will be set up in major cities west, north, and east of the impact zone.

  • We have run some numbers and see that if the city of NOL is substantially destroyed, the unemployment rate could be pushed up 1 to 2%.

  • The unemployment rate - now 5% could hit 7% to 8% by our reckoning due to the ripple effects of the storm.

  • Look for "restrictions on travel" a recurrent theme in the bot runs to bust out into consciousness.  Most critical of all will be the cessation of oil and gas barging on the Mississippi River upstream and finished goods and agricultural products downstream.

This "nightmare scenario" gets worse from here.  Click over and read the article in The Australian today which says a dollar dumping festival breaking out globally could being down the globe in a sort of financial September 11th.

 

The web bot forecasts as best I can recall forecast 13-million people being displaced.  There was talk of two cities being destroyed - and one of these is supposed to be on a hill and slide down (en masse) causing horrific loss of life.  In the April 10, 2005 run, there was this prescient forecast based on linguistic shift:

"Within this sections' data we note that our disaster scenario is picking up some more details. We find that references to 'geese' and other birds are strongly suggesting a North American location. Further we find indications that the refugees from this event will find (no) [solid] (ground/earth) as they (try/attempt/seek to) (walk) from the (coast). Instead this area is seen as [dangerous] in the extreme, presenting (quivers/shakes) such that (every) (four/4) (steps) (require/demand/insist) on (sitting)[down]. Yet this action of (sitting)[down] will apparently be also very (dangerous) such that (sitting) will be (spoken) [ill] (of).

 

The lexical sets suggest that (three/3) (days) after the [city] (slides) into the [mud], (refugees) will (arrive) at the [hills/mountains] and begin to (coagulate) into a [scattered/distributed] (nation). These refugees seek safety in the [solid] (rocks) and (boulders) of the [hills], and apparently will consider themselves lucky in spite of the problems that will develop as a result of their place of refuge. We note that (no) [food] is available there and that (difficulties/obstacles/barriers) of all kinds spring up for those attempting to provide assistance. First the area is seen as so hilly as to prevent landing of aircraft. Further, the aspects/attribute sets suggest that air drops of supplies will be less than successful due to (fierce/warring) [winds] and inclement weather of all kinds from [fog] to (lashing)[rainstorms].

 

These storms are also seen as causing the second set of problems for the refugees, the [floods] that (carve) [ravines/cuts] into the [hills], washing away topsoil and substrates. Again, as with our previous interpretation we note that a surprising, and consistent reference emerges to [gold] being (exposed) in these storms. We do find that after the first of the earthquake (induced) [storms] , a silver-lining will emerge from the [floods] which will cover the (feet) of the once-great coastal city, will at least provide [neighbors] from the (other) [valley] to (raft) (supplies/sustenance/resources) over to the [refugees] where an apparent, impromptu party will happen, with everyone (perched) on (large) [boulders], (happy), (eating) at (leisure), and with (new)[companions].

 

These [companions] have their entire lexical set hanging from [boats] and the sub aspects are suggestive of many small boats. For the former inhabitants of the coastal city, the aspects/attributes do not offer a very plush future. Most are seen as becoming permanent refugees. Within our lexical processing we do get numbers that rise through the filtering. When these do we pay attention to the specifics of the situation, as we did with the 300,000 seen in last years runs as being damaged by the earthquakes. Within this data set, we note that (many) [years] will pass with the (scattered)[nation] still in the [hills]. Our data suggests that it will be at least 30 days before [officials] are able to be present on the site, and that within this section of the data, there are indications that these same [officials] or their successors will still be (visiting) the (scattered) [nation] in the [hills] some (three/3) years later.

 

We must note that the use of the word 'years' is to be taken as meaning something far less exact than a 365 day solar year. In projecting the impact of emotional changes going forward, we are assigning values for words, and word shifts, as to the 'emotional carry distance forward'. These guesses as to emotive carrying power are then what make it through the processing as our indications of 'impact value' and 'duration of impact'. So we end up with the duration of impact values going over to the aspect of [year] within the lexicon. We have our time and date values separated such that it could have just as easily risen to the level of [decades] or even up to [saeculum] which is taken as being between 70 and 120 years {ed note: the range of the human life span; in ancient Rome, the period of about 100 years}. It would therefore make sense to interpret the '3 years' above into something more along the lines of 'a long time, perhaps longer than a year, but less than a decade'.

 

As a separate area we find lexical clues indicating that the hurricanes to strike the USofA this year will be [ten](years) (worth/value/total/sum) of (storms). The lexicon suggests that at some point the [confusion] of [colliding] (storms) sends (evacuees/refugees) (back pedaling/backwards motion), leaving many (trapped) (without/in absence of) (sight) due to (winds) and (wind) (driven) [rain]. Further, the [confusion] of [storms] will impact both the (answering/responding) to [requests] for (aid/assistance/help) as well as the (distribution) of (aid/relief/supplies/sustenance) afterward. The value of the impact duration is in the [decade] range. Supplies of all kinds are seen as being restricted in both availability, and movement once the storms are past. The image coming through is one of 'feel lucky you got that much' kind of period. There are some rising level of indicators suggesting that our '10 years worth of hurricanes' will start the season early, and will be led by a [surprising/shocking/attention gathering] (lightning) storm.

 

Again we note a rising number of references suggesting that this years storms will come from very unexpected directions, in fact we still see the France and Atlantic coast of France gaining accretion values suggesting a very close link to the bespoke [hurricanes] indicated to (crowd) in (with/having) (great) [confusion] of (mass) and (energy). We also note that there is an aspect/attribute set going to 'depletion of resources' that is cross linked back to Populace and the sub set of descriptors for 'terrorism'. The suggestion from the data appears to be that the storm problems will delay or impede such activities, reducing them to 'wet grass in the field', a poetic way of saying 'non harvestable' or 'no good result'. In fact, the extreme of that phrase within our lexicon indicates the goal would lead to 'decay' or 'rotting in the field'. The attributes here would seem to be indicating that problems from weather cause problems all over, even for would-be attackers."

In the April 23 run:

"Recognizing that this is a very unusual time for the Eastern Seaboard to receive storms, we nonetheless note that the [white flowers] contain, 'spinning' and 'rotating' as primary attributes. And other indicators to reinforce the occasional reference to 'hurricane'. Also though, the images present within our data suggest that unlike previous years, that a number of these [white flowers] storms are seen as developing off the coast of Europe, specifically France, and then moving toward the East coast of the USofA. A most odd image indeed, and that is why it is presented. There is very little to suggest that these storms are merely early hurricanes which would develop off the coast of North Africa and then move west. Instead we get several sub aspect/attribute sets which reference European Atlantic coast and specifically, France.

 

Within the [white flowers] data we find cross links back internally to our Terra entity and its view of 'ten wind storms'. Perhaps this is indicative of some of these [white flowers] storms being all or part of the ten wind storms seen through spring and summer. There are also cross links within this data and Populace which go back to BushCo and Markets indicating that these storms will be happening as we proceed to the financial storms detailed below.

 

Markets - Dollar Roots Yanked, Day of Abandonment, Return to Well New data within the Markets entity suggests that the global reliance on the USofA dollar is waning. We note that for the period of April through May {including our May 20th? event/change}, we find that the emotive values for the dollar resolve down to a new primary aspect of [uprooted] in which the primary descriptive attribute is [exterior].

 

We find that the (new)[man] will (bring) (like kind/similar) people to (discuss) the [situation], but that (hidden)[thoughts] [uproot] the (meeting), and cause the [roots] to be (yanked) from the dollar. We also note that a (three/3) day crisis will emerge as a result of these (hidden)[thoughts] in which [communications] will (fail) requiring [personal] (emissaries) to be sent. These [emissaries] will (present)[face] of (hooded/lidded)[anger] to the [neighbors]. Further referencing the dollars' degradation we now have new aspect/attribute sets, also affective within the April/May period which go to the explicit statement of [no] [confidence] in [unlimited](possibilities) which as repeated attribute sets suggesting that the [unlimited](possibilities) mentioned can be interpreted as meaning the 'unlimited' nature of the USofA dollar. These aspect/attribute sets are predominantly EU referencing, with some small number of descriptors for Russia, and Asia. Within the Markets new dollar [no] [confidence] data we have cross links going over to the Populace entity where they connect to [common people/plebes] (possess) (great) (capacities) to (subordinate). Then, references to [neighbors] are (already/previously)[prepared/ready/anticipatory], but are (subsumed/enveloped/covered) by (sea) of (angry)[arms]. We also find within the Markets entity direct references to [riots], and [chaos], and [hanging/execution] all tied to the (uprooting) of the [dollar]. Within the Markets entity we find that the [plebes] are (viewed/considered) (unreliable) in the [emergency/crisis] and viewed with [trepidation]. A minor cross link back to Populace shows that there will apparently be some level of awareness or discussion about the [elite] being (afraid/fearful) of (mingle/association) with [common][people]."

How close will these predictions come to being correct?  Check back later for the exact forecast terms - and then match them up yourself in a week or so.

 

As Cliff is fond of saying - the only problem with seeing the future before it springs into existence for the masses is getting it right...

 

(more as developments warrant)


Saturday

Odd Saturday Fed Speech

We found it odd to receive a press release Saturday from the Federal Reserve.  I recommend you read it and draw your own conclusions:

Remarks by Governor Donald L. Kohn
At a symposium sponsored by the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, Jackson Hole, Wyoming
August 27, 2005

Panel discussion: Financial Markets, Financial Fragility, and Central Banking

My perspective on this interesting and stimulating paper by Raghu Rajan has been very much influenced by observing Alan Greenspan's approach to the development of financial systems and their regulation over the past eighteen years.1 I believe that the Greenspan doctrine, if I may call it that, has reflected the Chairman's analysis and deeply held belief that private interest and technological change, interacting in a stable macroeconomic environment, will advance the general economic welfare.2

Chairman Greenspan has welcomed the ability of new technologies in financial markets to reduce transactions costs, to allow the creation of new instruments that enable risk and return to be divided and priced to better meet the needs of borrowers and lenders, to permit previously illiquid obligations to be securitized and traded, and to make obsolete previous divisions among types of financial intermediaries and across the geographical regions in which they operate. At the intersection of market developments and monetary policy, he has led the Federal Reserve's efforts to understand the implications of changing financial technology, such as the growing ease of housing equity extraction, and to use the newly available information about market expectations and the price of risk embodied in market prices.

The Greenspan doctrine holds that these developments, on balance, improve the functioning of financial markets and the real economies they support. By allowing institutions to diversify risk, to choose their risk profiles more precisely, and to improve the management of the risks they do take on, they have made institutions more robust. By making intermediaries more robust and by giving borrowers a greater variety of lenders to tap for funds, these developments have also made the financial system more resilient and flexible--better able to absorb shocks without increasing the effects of such shocks on the real economy. And by facilitating the flow of savings across markets and national boundaries, these developments have contributed to a better allocation of resources and have promoted growth.

That is not to say that the Greenspan doctrine holds that private markets always get it right. Prices in these markets are driven by the tendency of human nature to project the recent past--to waves of complacency and gloom--and hence are subject to overshooting. And private parties, left entirely to their own devices, do not always produce a market structure and market relationships consistent with adequate protection of financial stability. However, the actions of private parties to protect themselves--what Chairman Greenspan has called private regulation--are generally quite effective. Government regulation risks undermining private regulation and financial stability itself by distorting incentives through moral hazard and by promising a more effective role in promoting financial stability than it can deliver.

In this situation, government regulation has a function but it should be based on clear objectives, narrowly tailored to meet those objectives, and, given the iron law of unintended consequences, it should be clearly superior to private regulation. Regulation can be justified if incentives for private regulation are weak--perhaps because of other government programs, such as deposit insurance--or if market participants are likely to be ineffective, as for example small savers and borrowers. Regulation may also be justified to promote greater flow of accurate information to enable private participants to make better informed decisions.

New technologies and changing market structures imply that regulation should be constantly under review; at times rolling back regulation--for example, by lifting the Glass-Steagall restrictions on banking organizations--will benefit competition and help the financial sector deliver services more efficiently and effectively. Moreover, regulation itself can benefit from competition. Running regulated and unregulated markets side by side gives people a choice of whether they want protection and helps to constrain regulation. Some of the same purposes can be served by having multiple regulators for the same function; in some circumstances, the possible adverse consequences of competition in laxity may be smaller than the potential for regulatory conformity and regulator risk-aversion to impinge on innovation and change.

The Greenspan doctrine has had a perceptible influence on the evolution of markets and the regulatory structure that applies to them. Raghu Rajan voices some concerns about this evolution. In particular, he posits that the shift from depository intermediation to professional asset management has increased tail risk to socially excessive levels and has left the world more vulnerable to rare but potentially very serious tail events; he suggests some ways in which regulation should be increased.

In assessing this argument, we might find it useful to separate the question of whether the world is riskier from the question of whether systemic risk has risen. The increased ability to disentangle risk and tailor risk profiles should mean that risk has come to be lodged more in line with investor appetites, a change that has probably tended to reduce the price of risk and encouraged riskier capital projects to be funded. But individual investors at greater risk need not imply increased systemic risk--fatter tails and greater potential for losses feeding back on the macroeconomy.

In fact, industrial economies have been marked by much less variability in output and inflation over the past twenty years. Many reasons have been given for this so-called great moderation, but developments in financial markets have likely played a role in making the economy more resilient. As a consequence of greater diversification of risks and of sources of funds, problems in the financial sector are less likely to intensify shocks hitting the economy and financial market .

The experience of 2001-03 is instructive. Unusually large declines in equity prices and increases in defaults and risk spreads--surely tail events by most definitions--reduced wealth and raised the cost of capital but did not aggravate the downturn by impinging on the flow of funds. Financial intermediaries were not so troubled as to cut off the provision of credit, and in any case, many borrowers had alternative sources of funds.

In addition, we have not seen a clear upward trend in volatility of financial asset prices over the past twenty-five years, as one might expect if herding had increased in importance. Judging from options prices, market participants are expecting the volatility of financial asset prices to be damped in the future; they are also requiring lower-term premiums for placing funds for longer terms.

I do not share Raghu's nostalgia for the systemic-risk implications of bank-dominated finance. Old-style crises involving impaired depository institutions had substantial spillover effects; their repair took time, during which economic activity was affected; and emergency measures to deal with them often involved moral hazard because they were aimed at stabilizing ailing intermediaries. I think we would all agree that the industrial economy that has suffered the greatest systemic strains from problems in the financial sector in the past fifteen years is that of Japan, which remained tied to the commercial bank model Raghu finds safest. The macroeconomic effects of new-style crises involving market liquidity, as in 1998, or outsized movements in asset prices may be more readily cushioned by monetary policies aimed at bolstering the general level of liquidity and reducing interest rates. Such policies also carry less risk of increasing moral hazard.

Although investment managers receive substantial funds directly from households, many of their counterparties are sophisticated investors in positions of fiduciary responsibility. In addition, most asset managers are employees of institutions--mutual fund families, bank holding companies--that are in the market for the long haul. It is not in their interest to reach for short-run gains at the expense of longer-term risk, to disguise the degree of risk they are taking for their customers, or otherwise to endanger their reputations. I would expect these counterparties and employers to enforce compensation schemes that foster their objectives. As a consequence, I did not find convincing the discussion of market failure that would require government intervention in compensation. Moreover, compensation regulation is likely to be easily evaded and fraught with risks of untoward consequences. One only has to recall the congressional action of 1993 that, by imposing less-favorable tax treatment on some forms of executive compensation, fostered the shift to stock options that in turn was thought to have contributed to some of the transparency and corporate governance problems of the late 1990s.

Regulatory and supervisory systems do need to evolve to reflect the shift to market-based transactions. As intermediation shifts from depositories, with their specialized knowledge of borrowers, to markets, disclosure and transparency become more important to allow diverse private parties to assess risk properly, exert appropriate discipline, and contribute to the efficient allocation of resources. Greater reliance on markets also elevates the importance of the safety of clearing and settlement systems. Private-sector participants have every incentive to demand these disclosures and to ensure that their trades go through as contracted. But government may need to act in concert with private parties to arrive at collective decisions that strengthen markets and reduce systemic risk but might not be in the interest of individuals acting separately. And with more of the fluctuations in asset prices passing through to a large number and wide variety of households, educating people to make informed choices and protecting retail customers from abusive practices remain key governmental functions.

A particularly interesting strand of the debate about excessive risk-taking concerns the interaction of monetary policy and perceptions of risk in financial markets. Some analysts are concerned that several aspects of the conduct of monetary policy in the United States have induced market participants to reduce their expectations about risk too far, setting up the financial markets and the economy for an unpleasant and possibly destabilizing surprise.

In this view, the low short-term interest rates that policymakers have thought were required over the past few years to meet macroeconomic objectives are said to have encouraged reaching for yield--settling for risk compensation that the investors themselves view as probably inadequate but which they feel compelled to accept, perhaps to achieve targeted levels of real or nominal returns. The tendency of policy to react strongly to sharp declines in key asset prices, and thereby limiting the extent of the decreases, has been thought to induce risk-taking by imparting an asymmetry to asset price movements. Finally, a concern is that the fairly new practice of telling the public about our expectations for the path of the federal funds rate may have given market participants a false sense of security about the future path of policy.

These practices have been the result of a monetary policy focused on price and economic stability over the intermediate term interacting with the particular characteristics of the economy. The global decline of inflation and spending induced a global reduction in interest rates to unusually low levels in recent years. Those low rates were, in fact, intended to stimulate risk-taking and investment when private agents pulled back. The tendency for asset prices to fall more quickly than they rise has largely produced the more rapid and noticeable response of stabilizing monetary policy to declines than to increases. And the importance for economic performance of more-accurate expectations about monetary policy, along with the unusually low policy rates, led the Federal Open Market Committee to undertake a more extended discussion of its policy expectations.

To the extent that these policy strategies reduce the amplitude of fluctuations in output and prices and contain financial crises, risks are genuinely lower, and that development should be reflected in the prices of assets. To the extent that the central bank can convey something useful about its intentions, markets that take account of these intentions will be priced more accurately.

The risk is that private agents overestimate the ability or willingness of central banks to damp volatility in asset prices or the economy, or that they fail to appreciate that future policy actions depend on an imperfectly predictable economic outlook. But developments should have partially alleviated some of these concerns. Investors have had an opportunity to observe that policy actions in 1987, 1998, and 2001-03 cushioned the economy, but they did not stop major declines in the prices of equity in 1987 and 2001 or of risky credits in 1998. Short-term rates have risen substantially in the past year, reducing the profitability of "carry trades" without triggering an unwinding that drove long-term interest rates higher or widened risk premiums. And expectations that policy tightening would remain gradual over the near-term have not stopped long-term rates from fluctuating substantially in response to incoming data; the movements of future or forward rates out the yield curve after surprises in data have been at least as large since 2003 as they were before.

That is not to say that we have nothing to worry about. As I already noted, Alan Greenspan, himself, has often been concerned about market complacency--as recently as his latest monetary policy testimony. People may well perceive the economy as more stable than it is or central banks with greater power than we have to smooth the economy or to foresee our own actions.

Clearly, reminders to the public of the inherent uncertainty in economic developments and policy responses are appropriate and should have some effect. The question is whether these warnings should be supplemented by actions to inject uncertainty into policy pronouncements by saying less than we can or into the economy by shifting our objectives away from seeking the best outcome for the economy over the intermediate term. In my view, such policies would result in less accurate asset pricing, reduce public welfare on balance, and definitely be at odds with the tradition of policy excellence of the person whose era we are examining at this conference.


Footnotes

1. The views are my own and do not necessarily reflect other members of the Board or its staff. I thank Athanasios Orphanides, Matthew Pritsker, Patrick Parkinson, and Vincent Reinhart, of the Board's staff, for valuable comments. Return to text

2. Chairman Greenspan has spelled out his views on markets and regulation in many places, and much of what follows is my synthesis of this material. His remarks on "Government Regulation and Derivative Contracts" on February 21, 1997 are an especially valuable source for his approach to government regulation of financial markets. Return to text

My take on it? More Greenspan deification. In my view, St. Al is just bumbling around with no policy, other than market intervention.  Moreover, I read Fed pronouncements with the eye of a skeptic who translates paragraphs like this one:

Chairman Greenspan has welcomed the ability of new technologies in financial markets to reduce transactions costs, to allow the creation of new instruments that enable risk and return to be divided and priced to better meet the needs of borrowers and lenders, to permit previously illiquid obligations to be securitized and traded, and to make obsolete previous divisions among types of financial intermediaries and across the geographical regions in which they operate. At the intersection of market developments and monetary policy, he has led the Federal Reserve's efforts to understand the implications of changing financial technology, such as the growing ease of housing equity extraction, and to use the newly available information about market expectations and the price of risk embodied in market prices.

Into a more intellectually honest statement like this:

Chairman Greenspan has no grasp of new technologies in financial markets except they permit previously illiquid obligations to be securitized and traded, and make manipulation necessary. To do this, he has led the Federal Reserve's efforts to pimp the growing ease of housing equity extraction,  to use the newly available money to hold up market prices.

Deity?  Ask me in December. Doctrine?  I smell Carl Rove.  And "ease of housing equity extract6ion" sounds more and more like "getting people to ruin their savings" so we bankers can own their asses forever, thanks to our new bankruptcy laws going into effect in 45 days.

 

There

s also reference to the "general economic welfare" - when it's U.S.A. peoplenomics that matter - not the private bankster globalist cabal that runs the Fed, thanks.

 

When Kohn says "The risk is that private agents overestimate the ability or willingness of central banks to damp volatility in asset prices or the economy..." He is code talking to his bankster buddies "We may not be able to keep a lid on the market if it gets too wild."

 

No kidding.

 

Hang On Monday

Three huge events took place on Friday which bear amplification, and even perhaps a little bit of nail biting if you care to, over the weekend.

 

The first is that Hurricane Katrina may have decided to fill in my neighbor's new pond in East Texas by taking a sudden tack southward.  The problem is that at the present projections, the storm could hit the Louisiana Coast, or worse, could come storming up the Houston ship channel and up into East Texas.  But we should have a better bead on that Sunday.

 

The second thing that might give you that tightening sphincter feeling is that the market closed with a negative tick - down to more than -200 on the close.  This is no doubt driven by Alan Greenspan's confusion over what to do next as upward interest pressures are being short circuited by crashing consumer confidence which dropped more than 7 points in a month.

 

The third thing, and it's maybe a bit "out there" is the outlook of our fractal whiz who says "Hang on" for potentially rough sledding Monday:

"George, an ideal Fibonacci ratio length third fractal growth sequence was completed on Friday 26 August 2005.

The fractal evolution since October 2002 strongly suggests that there are very real and very simple quantum number fractal laws that underlie the macroeconomy. This discovery will be little consolation to the turmoil that is about to unfold over the next decade.

August 24 (Wednesday's) and August 25 (Thursday's) trading days once again demonstrated on a 5 minute unit fractal level, the recurrent precise fractal theme of x/2.5x/2x-2.5x - that pervades the economic universe.

For the Wilshire 5000 the base was about 17 five minute units. The three sequential growth fractals were 17/42/34 of 34 before the fall on Friday morning. The lateral 'skeletonized' evolution of this fractal sequence suggests the final lower (very lower) high is close at hand. Friday August 26 is the Fibonacci 85th day of a 52/130/85 daily sequence dating since August 2004.

1.62 times 52 equals 84.24 days.... If growth sequences follow idealized Fibonacci related fractals, Monday 29 August 2005 will see a nonlinear lower break in the equities.

For oil next week, week 52 will complete its third growth fractal and its ideal maximal growth fractal sequence: 21/52/52 of 42-52. This maximal growth fractal will be coincidentally timed with Katrina's hurricane winds slamming into US gulf oil rigs. Timed with Katrina is an evolving economic deluge. Gary Lammert http://www.economicfractalist.com/ "

Letters We Love

Occasionally, we see decisive evidence that there is creativity and serious mental horsepower still on the loose among the American Public as evidenced in this great reader letter of the Week:

"Guys,

What do you make of Hurricane Katrina? The National Weather Service is having a devil of a time trying to predict where it is going. Their prediction has jumped 3 states to the west in about 24 hours. The only place they haven't predicted it hitting is Texas or Mexico. Maybe we'll see that tomorrow?

(Cliff) From your earlier web bot runs, there were some reference to the summer shakes, and repeated references to SOLAR radiation & events as being the cause. You had a prediction of 3 big quakes and as many as 13 million people displaced before Sep 21st.

Here is one for you to ponder in reference to your web bot predictions: The New Madrid Fault and the previous activity around Little Rock, Arkansas. My concern is the hurricane being pulled to the west like a magnet towards the Mississippi River, and how that might affect the already stressed area around the fault. If you correlate some of the news stories such as the thousands of dead fish washing up on shore ( http://abclocal.go.com/ktrk/news/080405_local_fish.html  ) and the "Fish Parade" ( http://www.sun-herald.com/NewsArchive2/080505/ew11.htm?date=080505&story=ew11.htm ) and maybe even the Copperhead Gathering ( http://enews.earthlink.net/article/str?guid=20050816/430164c0_3ca6_15526200508161028495521 )

it is obvious that events and weather patterns are changing - in a big way. I've seen some of the analysis or opinions expressed indicating that the fish behaviors are related to the earth's geophysical stress, which is causing massive amounts of CO2 to be expelled up from the ocean floor. That creates "Dead Zones" where the fish asphyxiate if they stick around, or they migrate to waters that are alive with oxygen (the parade). [I threw in the copperheads just for grins!]

Now look at the geomagnetic storms of recent days ( http://n3kl.org/sun/noaa.html ) and the unbelievable string of recent gamma ray bursts ( http://grb.sonoma.edu/index.php ), and you can see a clear picture of geophysical related events that are unfolding. Maybe increasing in intensity is a better description, especially the recent solar activity. Look at the headlines around the world about the weather for the past couple of days, right after the Kp Index pegged the scale at a "9" and you'll see what I mean.

So, I'm seeing a very unpredictable hurricane, which is scheduled to make landfall right as we approach what Marshall Smith ( http://www.brojon.org/frontpage/WHAT_REALLY_KILLED_THE_DINOSAURS.html  ) says is the peak angular momentum geophysical stress period (earthquakes) for August on the 29th. I'd say that the New Madrid Fault is worth watching for the next few days in light of the web bot predictions, angular momentum predictions, torrential rain and storm surge adding to the pressure, and of course the weird animal behavior such as we saw in the Sumatra Quake.

Well, what do you guys make of all this? If you have any brain cells to spin on the subject, I'd appreciate your thoughts - even if you just comment in your respective online publications.

George, I've got two kids (17 and 20) that I haven't been able to convince them to leave Pensacola, Florida even when it looks almost as ugly as Los Angeles. Hopefully, I can get them out of there before too much longer.

Keep up the good work - I subscribe to or purchase just about everything you guys publish.

Both Cliff ( www.halfpasthuman.com )_ and I appreciate the kind word.  In answer to the specifics, here is some real grist for the mill:

  • Just because we use a future event predictive technology that Cliff has developed, doesn't mean that we have precise insight into the future.  For example, using subtle changes in language 4-5 months before an event, we were all scratching our heads about something like "electric waters rising" in August '04 long before the Dec. '05 quake itself.  Linguistically, it's a hell of a short jump from electric water rising to "shocking water rise".

  • The same kind of thing happens with the blind crippled lady and her "dred companion."  While I have taken this to be Cindy Sheehan (so far) that doesn't by any means rule out Hurricane Lee becoming an unheard of Category 6, striking Jamaica (ergo "dred") and then wrecking the Gulf Coast.  That would certainly "fit".  (Cliff doesn't think the "dark aspect woman" is Sheehan, BTW.)  That's probably why DoD turned down our development proposal when we submitted the Web Bots as a project under the Broad Area Announcements program in October '01.  Just not specific enough at that time.

  • What we do have is a very good sense of what the future will "feel like" emotionally.  That means in general between now and early to mid December, we are in a period of quickly riding tensions and these will see some kind of "release" in December.  But before you plan a hugely extravagant New Year's party, they seem to resume building again into '06 after the December "release."

Cliff is a truly modest sort of fellow who aptly points out that the only danger with predicting the future is being right.  We have no doubt that we have been right about key aspects of the future time and time again, but no, the way the technology works, we don't have the kind of precision necessary to say "Go out and do this one thing to change the course of history..."  Things only work out that way in science fiction movies.  The web bots aren't saying anything about Monday because the size of the stream coming in between runs (1105 has ended and 1305 is just organizing) is not large enough to draw conclusions. 

 

Nevertheless, if I were guessing, I would say Monday won't be the end of the financial world - that comes later.  But if the market were to drop a bit (a couple of hundred points or so) that wouldn't surprise us either.  After all, we're in a period of building tensions through December and nothing adds to tensions like major disasters and being broke.

George, great reader letter re anomalous animal behavior in environs of New Madrid Fault, esp. re copperheads!
 
I got this book through local library database.  Heck of a read.
 
Regards,
(reader name withheld)
 
From The MIT Press Classics Series:
When the Snakes Awake
Animals and Earthquake Prediction
Helmut Tributsch

Right-click here to download pictures. To help protect your privacy, Outlook prevented automatic download of this picture from the Internet. Table of Contents and Sample Chapters

Two days before an earthquake struck Helice, Greece, in 373 B.C., the snakes, weasels, and worms deserted the city. Minutes before the Naples quake of 1805, oxen, sheep, dogs, and geese cried out in unison. A herd of horses tore loose and ran off in panic just prior to the San Francisco earthquake of 1906. Helmut Tributsch thinks that these accounts are more than mere superstition and old wives' tales. In this book, he presents the first plausible explanation of why animals behave in unusual ways prior to the onset of an earthquake. Scientists and nonscientists alike will find fascinating reading in his unusual study.

Crack Babies Buy and Hold

I haven't been hearing much for the "buy and hold" for the long term crowd lately.  When I was more purely focused on long wave economics, I incurred the wrath of many "investment geniuses" when I pointed out that if you had bought and held at the top in 1929, you would not have made back even your original investment until well after World War II. That would, on a weekly basis, be 390.33 on 9/6/1929. 

 

With the market down only 3.3% YTD 2005 (excluding dividends), it would be very rude of me to point out - precisely as we warned) that the Dow is down  11.3% (ex dividends) since late 1999.  Still, that would be better than investing in the Tech Bubble, which since March 2000 (5048) has dropped to 2120.77, a 59.94% drop - something I warned you of well in advance and which is right there in the 1999 archives of the internet for anyone who is a skeptic to read:

http://web.archive.org/web/20000708211202/www.urbansurvival.com/dvdc.htm

 

We find it a remarkable coincidence that www.yahoo.com historical numbers suddenly aren't working  ( http://finance.yahoo.com/q/hp?s=%5EDJI&a=09&b=1&c=1950&d=07&e=27&f=1955&g=w ) and you will see for yourself unless they have fixed it.  Moreover, in what will not doubt be passed off as a web "redesign" previously available side-by-side comparisons to international indices have also disappeared. In fact, I can't seem to get past Dec 31 1969 all of a sudden.

 

If I were paranoid, I'd bet the farm that something big is coming.  And yes, paranoia these days is a survival skill.

 

If you Read Nothing Else

This weekend, you have to click over to the Northern Trust web site and read the commentary INXS.  It's a scary look at the towering Twin Deficits (government and consumer).

 

If, after reading it, you consider me less of a nutjob, ask your health care provider to up your meds.

 

Jobs Where?

Just suppose for a moment the economy decided to keel over and play dead all of a sudden due to some massive oil shock, or pick any number of other causes (housing bubble pops, US discovers that it has no manufacturing jobs, there are lots of choices).  Take it a step further and imagine government completely blowing its response.  Now close your eyes and think about the jobs that would be left.  That's our personal planning update this weekend over at our subscription site, www.peoplenomics.com.

 

Our www.peoplenomics.com report available to subscribers this week looks at some of the factors driving kids over 20 to move back in to their parent's homes.  Hint: prices are one.  For subscription information, click here.  Folks tell me it's worth many times the $30/year subscription. Upcoming this weekend, we explore boom and bust coping strategies.

 

Bookstore

We have a number of interesting books at our bookstore.  Top seller at the moment is "How to live on $10,000 a year - or less..." We will be adding the book on Alzheimer's prevention tomorrow.  But you can get titles like the "For Sales by Owner Coach" right now.

 

Pass it On

If you enjoy this site (which we hope you do), please recommend it to all your friends by clicking here.

 


Friday

Jittery Greenspan

We have maintained for some time that Fed boss Al Greenspan can spin the market this way or that with a few well-chosen words.  Such was the case this morning as the world's most powerful private banker (The fed isn't a government agency) got up in front of a Jackson Hole Wyoming audience:

Remarks by Chairman Alan Greenspan
Reflections on central banking
At a symposium sponsored by the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, Jackson Hole, Wyoming
August 26, 2005

In the spirit of this conference, I asked myself what developments in the past eighteen years--both in the economy and in the economics profession--were most important in changing the way we at the Federal Reserve have approached and implemented monetary policy.

The Federal Reserve System was created in 1913 to counter the recurrent credit stringencies that had so frequently been experienced in earlier decades. As lender of last resort, we had a mandate that, at least viewed from today's perspective, was limited. We did not engage in Systemwide open market operations until the 1920s. And as recently as the 1950s, the framework within which those open market operations were formulated was still being developed. Credit was eased when the economy weakened and tightened when inflation threatened, but largely in an ad hoc manner. As a consequence, the Federal Reserve was perceived by some as often accentuating, rather than damping, cycles in prices and activity. Importantly, however, the surge in prices that followed the removal of wage and price controls after World War II and again after the Korean War kept monetary policymakers wary of the threat of inflation.

But concern that the monetary restraint of the 1950s had led to unnecessarily high unemployment persuaded the Federal Open Market Committee to adopt a more stimulative policy stance in the mid-1960s. Those actions appear to have been predicated, in part, on an acceptance of the then-prevalent view that a long-term tradeoff existed between inflation and unemployment.1

Subsequently, however, the experience of stagflation in the 1970s and intellectual advances in understanding the importance of expectations--which built on the earlier work of Friedman and Phelps--undermined the notion of a long-run tradeoff.2 Inflation again became widely viewed as being detrimental to financial stability and macroeconomic performance. And as the decade progressed, a keener appreciation for the monetary roots of inflation emerged both in the profession at large and at central banks. Indeed, the insights from the work of Friedman and Schwartz a decade earlier gained greater prominence in the realm of practical policy.3

These events, both economic and intellectual, significantly influenced the tool kits employed by macroeconomists inside and outside policymaking institutions. The large-scale macromodels that had been the focus of so much work in the 1960s came under attack on two fronts.

Most prominently, greater recognition of the importance of expectations suggested that those models, which for the most part incorporated autoregressive expectations, were excessively reduced-form and backward-looking in nature and thus insensitive to changes in economic structure and the policy process. In addition, some researchers observed that simple time-series models often produced better forecasts than the large macromodels of that period.4

One prescription was to focus on uncovering, at a more fundamental level, the structural parameters of the economy. Needless to say, this task has proven to be a very tall order that has yet to be filled. Partly in response to these difficulties, a substantial body of research focused on improvements in empirical modeling, such as vector autoregressions for forecasting, and in some cases, for policy analysis.

Each one of these approaches has proven useful, and their descendants are currently employed in various forms in central banks throughout the world. But as yet, none of these approaches is capable of addressing the full range of policymakers' needs.

At various points in time, some analysts have held out hope that a single indicator variable--such as commodity prices, the yield curve, nominal income, and of course, the monetary aggregates--could be used to reliably guide the conduct of monetary policy. If it were the case that an indicator variable or a relatively simple equation could extract the essence of key economic relationships from an exceedingly complex and dynamic real world, then broader issues of economic causality could be set aside, and the tools of policy could be directed at fostering a path for this variable consistent with the attainment of the ultimate policy objective.

M1 was the focus of policy for a brief period in the late 1970s and early 1980s. That episode proved key to breaking the inflation spiral that had developed over the 1970s, but policymakers soon came to question the viability over the longer haul of targeting the monetary aggregates. The relationships of the monetary aggregates to income and prices were eroded significantly over the course of the 1980s and into the early 1990s by financial deregulation, innovation, and globalization. For example, the previously stable relationship of M2 to nominal gross domestic product and the opportunity cost of holding M2 deposits underwent a major structural shift in the early 1990s because of the increasing prevalence of competing forms of intermediation and financial instruments.

In the absence of a single variable, or at most a few, that can serve as a reliable guide, policymakers have been forced to fall back on an approach that entails the interpretation of the full range of economic and financial data. Policy is implemented through nominal and, implicitly, real short-term interest rates. However, reflecting the progress in economic understanding, our actions are now better informed about the pitfalls associated with relying on nominal interest rates to set policy and the important role played by inflation expectations in gauging the stance of monetary policy.

Our appreciation of the importance of expectations has also shaped our increasing transparency about policy actions and their rationale. We have moved toward greater transparency at a "measured pace" in part because we were concerned about potential feedback on the policy process and about being misinterpreted--as indeed we were from time to time. I do not intend this brief and necessarily incomplete review of events to illustrate how far we have come or to despair of how far we have to go. Rather, I believe it demonstrates the inevitable and ongoing uncertainty faced by policymakers.

Despite extensive efforts to capture and quantify what we perceive as the key macroeconomic relationships, our knowledge about many critical linkages is far from complete and, in all likelihood, will remain so. Every model, no matter how detailed or how well conceived, designed, and implemented, is a vastly simplified representation of the world, with all of the intricacies we experience on a day-to-day basis.

Formal models are a necessary, but not sufficient, system of analysis. To be sure, models discipline forecasts by requiring, among many restraints, that identities are indeed equal, inventories non-negative, and marginal propensities to consume positive. But we all temper the outputs of our models and test their results against the ongoing evaluations of a whole array of observations that we do not capture in either the data input or the structure of our models. We are particularly sensitive to observations that appear inconsistent with the causal relationships of our formal models. Tentative revisions of that structure are reflected in our add factors.

Given our inevitably incomplete knowledge about key structural aspects of an ever-changing economy and the sometimes asymmetric costs or benefits of particular outcomes, the paradigm on which we have settled has come to involve, at its core, crucial elements of risk management. In this approach, a central bank needs to consider not only the most likely future path for the economy but also the distribution of possible outcomes about that path. The decisionmakers then need to reach a judgment about the probabilities, costs, and benefits of various possible outcomes under alternative choices for policy.

The risk-management approach has gained greater traction as a consequence of the step-up in globalization and the technological changes of the 1990s, which found us adjusting to events without the comfort of relevant history to guide us. Forecasts of change in the global economic structure--for that is what we are now required to construct--can usefully be described only in probabalistic terms. In other words, point forecasts need to be supplemented by a clear understanding of the nature and magnitude of the risks that surround them.

In effect, we strive to construct a spectrum of forecasts from which, at least conceptually, specific policy action is determined through the tradeoffs implied by a loss-function. In the summer of 2003, for example, the Federal Open Market Committee viewed as very small the probability that the then-gradual decline in inflation would accelerate into a more consequential deflation. But because the implications for the economy were so dire should that scenario play out, we chose to counter it with unusually low interest rates.

The product of a low-probability event and a potentially severe outcome was judged a more serious threat to economic performance than the higher inflation that might ensue in the more probable scenario. Moreover, the risk of a sizable jump in inflation seemed limited at the time, largely because increased productivity growth was resulting in only modest advances in unit labor costs and because heightened competition, driven by globalization, was limiting employers' ability to pass through those cost increases into prices. Given the potentially severe consequences of deflation, the expected benefits of the unusual policy action were judged to outweigh its expected costs.

* * *

The structure of our economy will doubtless change in the years ahead. In particular, our analysis of economic developments almost surely will need to deal in greater detail with balance sheet considerations than was the case in the earlier decades of the postwar period. The determination of global economic activity in recent years has been influenced importantly by capital gains on various types of assets, and the liabilities that finance them. Our forecasts and hence policy are becoming increasingly driven by asset price changes.

The steep rise in the ratio of household net worth to disposable income in the mid-1990s, after a half-century of stability, is a case in point. Although the ratio fell with the collapse of equity prices in 2000, it has rebounded noticeably over the past couple of years, reflecting the rise in the prices of equities and houses.

Whether the currently elevated level of the wealth-to-income ratio will be sustained in the longer run remains to be seen. But arguably, the growing stability of the world economy over the past decade may have encouraged investors to accept increasingly lower levels of compensation for risk. They are exhibiting a seeming willingness to project stability and commit over an ever more extended time horizon.

The lowered risk premiums--the apparent consequence of a long period of economic stability--coupled with greater productivity growth have propelled asset prices higher.5 The rising prices of stocks, bonds and, more recently, of homes, have engendered a large increase in the market value of claims which, when converted to cash, are a source of purchasing power. Financial intermediaries, of course, routinely convert capital gains in stocks, bonds, and homes into cash for businesses and households to facilitate purchase transactions.6 The conversions have been markedly facilitated by the financial innovation that has greatly reduced the cost of such transactions.

Thus, this vast increase in the market value of asset claims is in part the indirect result of investors accepting lower compensation for risk. Such an increase in market value is too often viewed by market participants as structural and permanent. To some extent, those higher values may be reflecting the increased flexibility and resilience of our economy. But what they perceive as newly abundant liquidity can readily disappear. Any onset of increased investor caution elevates risk premiums and, as a consequence, lowers asset values and promotes the liquidation of the debt that supported higher prices. This is the reason that history has not dealt kindly with the aftermath of protracted periods of low risk premiums.

* * *

Broad economic forces are continuously at work, shaping the environment in which the Federal Reserve makes monetary policy. In recent years, the U.S. economy has prospered notably from the increase in productivity growth that began in the mid-1990s and the enhanced competition engendered by globalization. Innovation, spurred by competition, has nurtured the continual scrapping of old technologies to make way for the new. Standards of living have risen because depreciation and other cash flows generated by industries employing older, increasingly obsolescent technologies have been reinvested to finance newly produced capital assets that embody cutting-edge technologies.

But there is also no doubt that this transition to the new high-tech economy, of which expanding global trade is a part, is proving difficult for a segment of our workforce that interfaces day by day with our rapidly changing capital stock. This difficulty is most evident in the increased fear of job-skill obsolescence that has induced significant numbers of our population to resist the competitive pressures inherent in globalization from workers in the major newly emerging market economies. It is important that these understandable fears be addressed through education and training and not by restraining the competitive forces that are so essential to overall rising standards of living of the great majority of our population. A fear of the changes necessary for economic progress is all too evident in the current stymieing of international trade negotiations. Fear of change is also reflected in a hesitancy to face up to the difficult choices that will be required to resolve our looming fiscal problems.

The developing protectionism regarding trade and our reluctance to place fiscal policy on a more sustainable path are threatening what may well be our most valued policy asset: the increased flexibility of our economy, which has fostered our extraordinary resilience to shocks. If we can maintain an adequate degree of flexibility, some of America's economic imbalances, most notably the large current account deficit and the housing boom, can be rectified by adjustments in prices, interest rates, and exchange rates rather than through more-wrenching changes in output, incomes, and employment.

The more flexible an economy, the greater its ability to self-correct in response to inevitable, often unanticipated, disturbances. That process of correction limits the size and the consequences of cyclical imbalances. Enhanced flexibility provides the advantage of allowing the economy to adjust automatically, reducing the reliance on the actions of monetary and other policymakers, which have often come too late or been misguided.

In fact, the performance of the U.S. economy in recent years, despite shocks that in the past would have surely produced marked economic contraction, offers the clearest evidence that we have benefited from an enhanced resilience and flexibility.

We weathered a decline on October 19, 1987 of a fifth of the market value of U.S. equities with little evidence of subsequent macroeconomic stress--an episode that provided an early hint that adjustment dynamics might be changing. The credit crunch of the early 1990s and the bursting of the stock market bubble in 2000 were absorbed with the shallowest recessions in the post-World War II period. And the economic fallout from the tragic events of September 11, 2001, was limited by market forces, with severe economic weakness evident for only a few weeks. Most recently, the flexibility of our market-driven economy has allowed us, thus far, to weather reasonably well the steep rise in spot and futures prices for crude oil and natural gas that we have experienced over the past two years.

* * *

This morning I have tried to outline my perceptions of the key developments that have influenced the conduct of monetary policy over the past eighteen years. I acknowledge that monetary policy itself has been an important contributor to the decline in inflation and inflation expectations over the past quarter-century. Indeed, the Federal Reserve under Paul Volcker's leadership starting in 1979 did the very heavy lifting against inflation. The major contribution of the Federal Reserve to fashioning the events of the past decade or so, I believe, was to recognize that the U.S. and global economies were evolving in profound ways and to calibrate inflation-containing policies to gain most effectively from those changes.

For reasons that may not be too obscure, I will pay close attention to, and hope to learn from, the deliberations of the next couple of days. I have been asked to make a few closing remarks tomorrow about some of the unresolved challenges facing policymakers in the year ahead and about my experiences living inside the Federal Reserve for nearly two decades, after so many years of observing our institution from afar.


Footnotes

1. See Romer, Christina D. and David H. Romer, "The Evolution of Economic Understanding and Postwar Stabilization Policy", NBER Working Paper No. 9274 (October 2002), p. 39. Return to text

2. Friedman, Milton. "The Role of Monetary Policy", American Economic Review, vol. 58, No. 1 (March 1968) pp. 1-17. Phelps, Edmunds. "The New Microeconomics in Inflation and Unemployment Theory", American Economic Review (May 1969) pp. 147-160. Return to text

3. Friedman, Milton and Anna Jacobsen Schwartz. A Monetary History of the United States, 1867-1960. Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ, 1963. Return to text

4. Sims, Christopher A. "Macroeconomics and Reality". Econometrics, vol. 48, No. 1 (January 1980). pp. 1-48. Return to text

5. Despite the two-year bear market following the stock market collapse of 2000, equity prices have risen at an annual rate of 10 percent since 1995. Return to text

6. Capital gains do not add to GDP. The higher prices of plant and equipment and homes are reflected in an economy's cost structure, which directly or indirectly increases prices of goods and services, leaving real output largely unaffected. Capital gains, of course, cannot supply any of the saving required to finance gross domestic investment.

Consumers Don't Buy It

All the happy talk from Sir Alan aside, we notice that Consumer Confidence plummeted 7.4 points in the latest University of Michigan study out this morning.  Considering that the "economists" were calling for a drop of about 4- points, we'd call this an economic train wreck - but then our discipline is Peoplenomics which holds that bankster clowns can't keep screwing the little guy and expect the vast majority of Americans to swallow financial chain jerking ad nausea.  Look for the mainstream media to gloss over the train wreck. 

 

We also don't need to remind most economically aware people that the road to hell is paved with bad paper - something Ford and GM debt holders are learning the slow painful way...

 

Iraq Teetering

It's difficult to pin an emotion on reading today's headlines out of Iraq - that the constitutional talks have predictably failed again.  The Sunnis feel marginalized and the Shiites are about to ignore everyone desiring to incorporate all factions into the government.  The result is, as before, no progress and a milder take by the happy-talk cheer leading section.

 

Pragmatically, we have to ask again - because it's both an intellectual as well as emotional question - can someone tell me again what we are buying with the blood of our finest sons and daughters and $300-billion dollars?  Accuracy in Media has issued a report this week saying the war is threatening a Vietnam style outcome.

 

We see the Swiss have decided to screw neutrality by selling APC's to the UAE so they can be drop shipped to Iraq.  Good going, banking gnome host country!  Like anyone won't figure out the switch, right?

 

One thing we hear today is that what some people call Britain's leading liar is taking a job with the Carlyle Group when his term ends. We look at this "ex-president's club" arrangement and wonder how many "high minded public servants" would serve if they had to take a mandatory 5-year cooling off period after public service. rather than cash in right away when they were "hot."

 

Ten Hut!  We salute as a real American patriot republican Congressman Jim Leach of Iowa who has decided to break ranks with the lockstep right-wingers to join the Resolution of Inquiry into Bush Administration Communication with Lying Tony's boyz around Downing Street memo time. thank God for those left with conscience.

 

At the other extreme, the dodge and smear machine of you-know-who is going after Cindy Sheehan with a vengeance.

 

Ecuadorian People Win - a bit

The oil protests in Ecuador have tapered off and things are returning to "normal" as the government, protesters, and Big Oil have comes to an uneasy set of terms.  In the deal - which is not clear yet - reportedly the provincial areas (the people) will get a bigger slice of the oil company taxes.

 

Anger at the Pumps

Gas station workers are becoming more often targets of theft and drive-offs as the price of gasoline lingers around $3.00 in many parts of the country in spite of a momentary halt in the march to $75 a barrel oil.  Even if oil moderates this week, remember the supply chain is long and driving over Labor Day will be expensive.  Still, millions will take to the road.

 

Post Your Gas Prices

Spontaneously, people on our free discussion site are posting their local gasoline prices.  Want to see where gas is cheap?  Check it out and post your own.  Scroll down a bit and check out some of the old gas prices posted.  Who would have ever thought of 2004 as the "good old days"?

 

All kinds of travel deals out there for destinations like Las Vegas, notes Elaine, who is starting to think about packing up our household goods in Burbank as we prepare for our return to the Texas ranch October 1st.  I think she mentioned $28 a night Vegas hotel rooms (good ones, at that) because of soft reservations.

 

Because we have scheduled October 2 through 9th for the drive, our route is looking more like Zorro gone mad over a map of the Southwest.  San Diego, Phoenix, Gallup, and the hill country up a ways from San Antonio are among possible stops.  Our daily updates October 3-7 should be interesting because being on the road amplifies and improves our perspective on things and provides grist for the mill.

 

Fire and Rain

At the risk of sounding like the old James Taylor song, we notice that the rain is easing in Europe - although the Swiss are still mopping up and in all 40-odd people have died.  And about those fires in Portugal from extremely dry conditions?  Turns out firefighters have gained the upper hand there.

 

Speaking of rain, nearly a million people were without power while Tropical wet spot Katrina sat on Florida last night.  The good news is that forecasters now think the danger to oil and gas operations in the Gulf of Mexico (GOM for those in the oil business) will be minimal as the storm track looks to head northwest up the Florida coastline rather than head toward Baytown (LA) and other key oil transshipment points.  We expect a modest rally early in today's market.

 

The University of Michigan sentiment indicator is due to be released today - and if down less than expected (e.g. things are not going to hell as quickly as possible) the bulls should rally things a bit.

 

Colombia Congress Riding "Rails"

Reports out of Colombia are that some members of their government have used coke within the Congress itself.  Not that we should point fingers, as I wouldn't place bets on the personal habits of everyone in the US CONgress, myself.

 

Terror's Next Target

Standing around the water cooler placing bets on where the next terrorist event is sick, but if you were to find the conversation heading that way, I would suggest two choices.  First, there's growing speculation that something financial in Asia would be a dandy target, although we continue to shade our bets toward Chicago where the Fitzgerald Grand Jury is reportedly planning to issue sweeping indictments in the wake of the 9/11 event, cover-up, whitewash and what has gone both before and after, including the Iraq War. 

 

Bio Leak?

Some interesting speculation is floating about over this week's outbreak of a rare rabbit fever in Russia. Is it a natural occurrence, or something more sinister like a bioweapon plant leaking?

 

Friction Induced Warming?

A new bit of science out says the core of the earth is spinning faster than the crust on which we live.  An interesting snippet and if our recall of friction is right, we have to wonder how much of the earth's heating is brought about by the internal liquids spinning faster than the crust causing friction.  Just a thought, but friction equals heat at some level.

 


Thursday

Stockgate to Pop?

Some serious odors are developing around the financial industry's practice of doing naked puts and calls (as the mood suits them) with stock they don't own.  And now, the Fed is calling a meeting on credit derivatives and pointing out how extreme the risk is.  Some good reports are surfacing around the edges, but as we see if, the derivatives bubble, like it's kin the housing bubble, may be too big now for regulators to do anything about other than try - as Alan Greedspan is - to manage the problem so when it pops it will be after his watch is over.  That way he will go into the history books without footnotes like mine that will point out that he and his cronies are the reason the second leg down of the Second Depression will be so much greater than the first - it's as usual a tale of lust and greed - and oh yeah, leverage to extremes.

 

Also worth seeing: The John Embry/Sprott Asset Management interview on gold.

 

Call Noah?

If there is something a bit out of the ordinary in the weather this Summer, it may well be that "rivers of rain" are falling from the skies in several parts of the world.  Not that this should come to any surprise to a reader of the future-scanning web bot technology.  We have been looking for rain - and gobs of it based on the linguistic shifts on the internet that haven been picked up for more than 9 months.  It has been one thing after another with the latest flooding candidate looking like Florida when Tropical mess Katrina lands.  May be a bit late to buy orange juice calls, though.

 

Then there is flooding in Europe where at least 34 deaths have been attributed to flooding - and Switzerland is a mess, for sure.  As a result, the wheat crop in Germany will be down almost 7% reports Gloomberg, and we expect more yield problems elsewhere although they may not surface in mainstream media here.

 

The web bots seem to do OK with rain.  The January 1, 2005 report accurately forecast the heavy rains in January/February in southern California:

"In this case, the aspects associated with the California specific references show that a series of (devastaing/damaging) [rains/rainfall/storms] - {ed: perhaps already started} will continue such that the [ground/earth] will (change/alter) [color/appearance] to the point that it will be (unrecognizable/unknown/not seen). Many indications for [sinking] and [subsiding] exist, all of which cross-link back to [water/rain/deluge] attribute sets."

If you click to the back issues of this site, you'll find the web bots were spectacularly right on India as we noted in the July 30, 2005 update:

We have been watching the developing tragedy in India's financial center, Mumbai with considerable concern, not only for the loss of life, but for the apparent fulfillment of another one of those stories which has been tracked this spring and summer by the web bot project.

The June 16, 2005 ALTA 905_1 run makes specific reference to huge and damaging rainfall;

"The sense that appears out of the various layers of attribute sets would seem to support the earlier ALTA reports about the 'oceans of water' to be carried north in the atmosphere. In this case, our values have a higher level of immediacy and a slightly better level of detail, if we assume the detail interpretation is not misleading. Please note that we had 'electric water' = storm for the tsunami, when the same data set clearly had 'force driven water/wave'. So our interpretation can easily be wide the mark, however the current data set has nearly 200 thousand references and so presentation of any amount would be meaningless. In this case though, our details suggest that shortly after the 'thunder shock' that 'ripples the wind', we will get the 'rain storm' that was seen in earlier reports. In this case, we are now getting indications that the rains will begin in the mountains, and will scour the hills clean on their way down. Then as the winds shift, again bear in mind that this image is replete with 'reversal of movement', the rains begin to move over the plains, and the 'five river valleys' until they, the rivers, over flow in to one mass watery blockage which will induce the 'restricted movement' seen in earlier reports."

So where are the "five rivers" if Mumbai's disastrous flooding it a hit? Here's a site that describes five rivers near Mumbai this way:

"Mahableshwar is one of the most popular hill-stations around Mumbai. Situated at an altitude of 1372 metres, it is the ideal vacation spot for a relaxed (and maybe an extended) weekend. The hill-station has an interesting connection with history, the Pratapgad Fort - where Shivaji used his "tiger claw" on Afzal Khan - being 24 kms away. The development of Mahableshwar as a hill-station began since the days of the British. The place is the origin of the five rivers - Krishna, Koyna, Venna, Savitri, and Gayatri, and derives its name from the Mahableshwar Temple. "

What's next? We are continuously thinking in background about the imagery of a blind and crippled woman who directs a male who is described by her "dread companion." Could the blind crippled woman be an archetypical representation of "Justice"? Could the 'dread companion" be something akin to an "enforcer?"

We had in ALTA 605 a vision of this "dread companion" in the London financial district about a month ahead of the 7/7/ bombings. Now, we see the 'dread companion' coming up as imagery associated with the "southeast" of presumably the US. Therefore, we will be paying special attention to the Southeast U.S. and especially terrorism training exercises which might coincide with the next real attack."

Not bad, considering the events hadn't happened yet...

About Sheehan

As we now know, the "blind and crippled woman" did indeed turn out to be a representative of "justice" - Cindy Sheehan has predictably returned to the Southeast part of the country after taking some private time to be with her ailing mother here in the Los Angeles area.  What's clear is that the "dred companion" is Sheehan's son (linguistically) and "dred" because a dead son is indeed something to be dreaded by policymakers.

 

What's so amazing to us - verging on mind boggling - is that while our technology doesn't get the precise presentation of the future, it does get the general outline close enough so that we know where to follow along and what to cover.  Emotionally, we're not taken by surprise, either.  We're pleased as hell that the next run should give us insight into the huge emotional tension starting to build now and which the time-piercing technology reports is scheduled for release around the first week of December. 

 

Iraq Bait and Switch

The British press is reporting that Major General Douglas Lute is forecasting a significant troop reduction from Iraq over the next year.  But while the General says one thing, the reports are that at least in the short run, more forces are heading to Iraq.  1500+ to help with election security.

 

Of course, it's possible that Major General Lute is just trying to hang on to his job.  There's much being made of the firings and retirings of any generals that get in the way of the neocon agenda in Washington.

 

What is most significant to us is that the Bush administration is planning to bring a significant number of non-citizens into the ranks of the US military - perhaps upwards of 50,000.  In the case of one recently retired general, the idea of training a bunch of non-Americans (who may not even speak English) was apparently a major factor in his quitting.  We see reports in serious media that suggest the plan to staff US armed forces with foreigners is more than just an internet rumor.

 

What does it mean?  We think back to studies nearly a decade old that ask whether US (e.g. American born/English speaking) troops would fire on American civilian populations.**

[**The source document at has been deleted but we found the source docs in cache. Don't want too many dots for people to connect...]

The answer was that many simply would refuse.  Thus, when we read about the military's increasing interest in non-lethal weapons and now the notion of bringing tons of foreigners into US ranks, we have to wonder if the "paranoid" writers who raised the question of a totalitarian take over of US Constitutional government weren't wrong - but instead were merely prescient.

 

All of this is a long lead-in to the continuing Federal Grand Jury investigation in Chicago into the Valerie Plame affair because it threatens to involve Karl Rove, Dick Cheney and perhaps even George Bush.  But we doubt it will come to that.  We think Chicago is the most likely terrorist target on earth right now and when playing at the Watergate level, U.S. Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald should be the most cautious man alive.

 

Do Elections Matter?

Not that we need to hold elections in Iraq.  Why?  Because in the big spin of things, we know that the neocons controlled the presidential election here, and aside from those voting irregularities in Florida, the irregularities in Ohio just won't go away.  

 

I'd like to go on the record of being the low bidder for delivering the outcome of the Iraq elections.  For just $1,200 I will present the same election outcome in Iraq as we will get for our $200 billion and 2,000 dead, and I'll do it for a case of whiskey and a quick poll of the people in the country. The outcome would be the same either way, we figure. The results must give the Shiites enough votes to feel represented, enough for the Sunnis to win the majority, and enough people voting to put up a good series of photo ops.

 

Are we in Sweeps?

If CBS runs a reported piece which Drudge headlines as "Anti War Protester Target Wounded at Army Hospital" we can only assume (rating) sweeps are underway, or CNS is desperate for ratings to keep ad revenue from falling (faster).

 

Robertson Repents

Why in God's name anyone would follow supposedly "religious" preaching of an assassination promoting scoundrel like Pat Robertson is beyond me.  Either that or we have material in our Bible that's not in his.  We'd like to congratulate Aaron Brown of CNN for playing videotape of Robertson saying "assassinate" (Hugo Chavez, president of Venezuela) and then turning and then turning to Robertson live - with an impressively straight face - saying that he didn't really say that.  Brown must have gotten to him earlier than did Reuters, which reported that Robertson apologized.

 

Here's an UrbanSurvival tip:  Don't follow advise from anyone who has to repent, retract, redact, or restate.

 

There's an old joke about politicians that I can now extended to include Robertson: "How do you know a (fill in the blank) is lying?  Their mouth is open. And in Robertson's case, he smiled.  In poker, we call this a "tell".  (*Robertson to my eyes flunked tells 2 and 9 min the CNN interview.)

 

Manic Markets

We expect an up opening on faint good news about jobs this morning.  Not that it will come as any comfort to the 900 new Kodak employees being let go.  And oil, which we expect to stay high has momentarily dropped a bit which anymore causes spontaneous dancing to break out on Wall Street.

 


Wednesday

Durable Goods Tumble

Let's see how the markets put a positive spin on this one:  Durable goods have collapsed by the biggest level since January of 2004 in the latest report out this morning.  Orders excluding transportation (which always bounces around a lot) dropped 3.2% for the month.  But in a section that has to worry the productivity-obsessed folks at the (not really) Federal Reserve, we see that sales of computer and electronic equipment were down 5.9 percent while orders for machinery orders plummeted - down 6.2%/

 

Now, I don't want to sound like a wet dish rag here, but because the original (and continuing) purpose of this site is to keep a long wave economic view on things, let's recall that auto sales collapsed in August of 1929.  So, after all the hyperbole is done, we have to wonder what the combined effect of auto sales reports along with the crack in the Housing Bubble reported yesterday will add up to later this year. 

 

One bet?  A 20-40% decline in the Dow (which makes a bigger move down in the NASDAQ an even less wild prediction) between now and the middle of March 2006.

 

This longer view of things leaves us in an interesting conundrum:

  • If we have a moderate economic collapse, the Housing Bubble will land millions of people in debtor's hell because the new bankruptcy laws pressed by the Big Money folks go into effect on October 17th (date corrected) if I remember the date correctly.  So, if you have a mortgage, and get "caught out:" when the bubble pops, you may be required to turn in your passport so you can't leave the USA... and you did read Tuesday's story about existing home sales dropping a bit, right?

  • On the other hand, a good-sized collapse (if that's not an oxymoron) would immediately solve the energy crisis and leave all kinds of energy available - cheaply - for the ruling class of people who are unconsciously moving events in that direction.  Lower incomes mean lower consumption.

When I read about the $10,000 bet between Matt Simmons (Peak Oil prognosticator) and John Tierney of the Sunday New York Times, I was reminded that Simmons himself said something to the effect that "The only thing that will save us is a good depression."  Seems maybe the NY Times crowd may have a good bet going, particularly since they might have some sense of things from the NY Money Mobs.

 

I'll map out this huge tipping point this weekend in greater detail for subscribers to our www.peoplenomic.com reports (a mere $30 a year if you're not a subscriber).  One question which I keep getting is "What are the jobs that one should have in the next Depression, if things go that way?"  The answers and discussion for subscribers...

 

One thing seems safe: The market won't be able to cast this report (Durables down) off easily at the open on spin.  It's too big a drop to be ignored.

 

Weather Watch

We notice this morning that a tropical storm is brewing off the Bahamas.  And, if you click over to the tracking maps around Tropical Depression 12, you will see that it seems to be taking direct aim at this country's oil and gas production centers.  I don't know about the "official" location of the center, but if it hits anywhere from Bay Town LA to Houston TX, I'd have to expect that we'll have some additional fears pumped into the oil market, which is back above $66 this morning, which means perhaps another soft day ahead for the market.

 

Summer Shakes

We are not too worried about the little 2.9 earthquake here in Southern Kalifornia yesterday.  However, we're watching the continuing series of big quakes in Japan, where a 5.6 and a 6.0 hit near Honshu again.  We continue anxiously awaiting our day of three 8.0 (or larger) in a single day which seems to be out.

 

Bot Hit

I don't think the folks at www.halfpasthuman.com with their proprietary web bot technology would mind me passing on a couple of items.  First, here's another "hit" by the future sensing technology.

 

You will remember that the web bots have been going off for a couple of months now on something happening in the Antarctic - and more recently, we have had indications that NASA will be coming under fire in the period from September 3 forward for something having to do with disclosures and hidden information.  Well, it turns out that there's now a report that NASA has a massive "secret" salvage operation going in the Antarctic involving a 31-year old Mars probe that went missing:

"CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida (AMP) — The United States for the first time admitted it is engaged in a "salvage operation" in Antarctica and says that a recently discovered "anomaly" two miles beneath the ice is a NASA Mars module lost during an ill-fated training mission 31 years ago."

We can't be sure, but if the report is not a hoax, and it could be part of an e-book sold on the site, but if it begins to blow up as a legit story because of the possible presence of a low-powered nuclear reactor on the module, then that would sure raise the dickens with NASA, wouldn't it?

 

Then there is a question about whether the Pat Robertson call to assassinate Huge Chavez of Venezuela wasn't a bot hit, too.  As one reader writes:

"As was suggested in a recent Bot run a member or supporter linked to the administration would express extremist views that would upset people. I think Pat Robertson's statements come under the rubric of extremism. And given that the Dominionists are the only voting block still behind Bush, this is actually bad news for the President.

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=10000086&sid=aHRr2U l10eC0&refer=latin _america 

Also, the Bots prediction of power failures seems to be pointing to the whole of Asia basically. Indonesia had a huge failure last week. Iraq and China have ongoing power issues."

Last, but not least, there will be an ALTA 13 series and data collection on that run will start shortly with the first report due out around September 4th.  See www.halfpasthuman.com for subscription details and pricing.

 

Cindy Returning

Despite what the president may want, it looks like Cindy Sheehan is heading back to Texas, which just about cinches the notion that tensions will continue to build near Waco (the president's place is not far from there).  And speaking of war dissent, a reader sends along this advisory:

George, you can check out the wonderful earpiece that once of our wonderful veterans wore at Bush's speech yesterday in Idaho.

Thank God, you're one of the best BS "Detectors" out there.

http://craphound.com/images/bullshitdeflector.jpg

Thanks for being a news tip reporter - when you see news happening, click over to our "News Tip Line" and send it along.  We've been buried in our never-ending battles on the work front, but high on our agenda when we get back to the ranch in early October is completion of the expanded booklet "How to be a Reporter" which will have lots of inside scoop on writing - applicable in business and school regardless of whether you ever make a byline.

 

Speaking of which:  I have been polling experts in the field wondering if the www.peoplenomics.com/bookstore.htm site should have its own brand.  (Meaning: own site name) One group of experts says a flashy name for our cheap and short "How to Books" would increase sales.  The other group of experts says branding doesn't mean anything on the internet, and the bookstore would do just as well if there were simply links from www.independencejournal.com, www.peoplenomics.com, and here.  If you think our bookstore should be a separate site with a catchy name, or without, click here to weigh in.

 

Also when we get back to Texas, I will work on tuning up our discussion groups which are free and located at http://urbansurvival.com/cgi-bin/discus/discus.cgi. I notice not too many people post often perhaps because I don't make it clear enough that you can just click "Enter as Guest" and explore and post...

 


Tuesday

Home Sales Drop!

From the National Association of Realtors:

Home Resales Down from Record, Price Gains Continue to Roll - NAR

WASHINGTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Aug. 23, 2005--Existing-home sales declined in July from a record in June, but home prices continue to rise at double-digit rates, according to the National Association of Realtors(R).

Total existing-home sales - including single-family, townhomes, condominiums and co-ops - slipped 2.6 percent in July to a seasonally adjusted annual rate(a) of 7.16 million from an upwardly revised record of 7.35 million in June. Sales were 4.7 percent higher than the 6.84 million-unit pace in July 2004.

David Lereah, NAR's chief economist, said home sales remain in historic territory. "The level of existing-home sales in July was the third highest on record," he said. "This is a big number any way you slice it, and housing is continuing to stimulate the overall economy." The second highest level of sales activity ever recorded was in April of this year, with a pace of 7.18 million units.

The national median existing-home price for all housing types was $218,000 in July, up 14.1 percent from July 2004 when the median price was $191,000. The median is a typical market price where half of the homes sold for more and half sold for less.

Lereah noted that the strongest rates of price growth tend to move geographically. "In examining the hottest markets for home price appreciation, we see a rolling boom moving from one metro area to another over time, as well as a spillover effect into nearby areas with lower home prices," he said. "This is spreading the wealth of housing returns, with a natural easing of appreciation in areas following a period of extraordinary price growth. Even after slowing in a given area, prices typically have continued to rise faster than historic norms." Over the last four-and-a-half years of record home sales, no area that has experienced a sustained period of double-digit price growth has later seen a price decline.

NAR President Al Mansell of Salt Lake City said the rate of price growth is a simple reflection of supply and demand. "Housing inventory levels improved in July, but they're still quite lean by historic standards," he said. "If the supply of homes rises, it should reduce competition between buyers and take some of the pressure off of prices. Even so, we expect home price appreciation to remain above normal over the next year."

Total housing inventory levels rose 2.6 percent at the end of July to 2.75 million existing homes available for sale, which represents a 4.6-month supply at the current sales pace.

According to Freddie Mac, the national average commitment rate for a 30-year, conventional, fixed-rate mortgage was 5.70 percent in July, up from 5.58 percent in June; the rate was 6.06 percent in July 2004.

After hitting four consecutive monthly records, existing condominium and cooperative housing sales declined 5.0 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 915,000 units from an upwardly revised level of 963,000 in June. Last month's sales pace remained 8.4 percent above the 844,000-unit level in July 2004. The median condo price was $219,300, up 11.3 percent from a year ago.

Single-family home sales eased by 2.3 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 6.24 million in July from an upwardly revised record of 6.39 million in June, and were 4.0 percent above the 6.00 million-unit pace in July 2004. The median single-family home price was $217,900 in July, up 14.6 percent from a year ago.

Regionally, total existing-home sales in the South were unchanged in July, holding at a record level of 2.74 million units, and were 5.0 percent higher than a year earlier. The median price of an existing home in the South was $187,000, up 7.5 percent from July 2004.

Existing-home sales in the Midwest slipped 1.8 percent to an annual sales rate of 1.61 million in July, and were 2.5 percent higher than July 2004. The median price in the Midwest was $178,000, which was 11.9 percent higher than a year ago.

Total existing-home sales in the Northeast declined 3.3 percent to an annual pace of 1.19 million in July, and were 6.3 percent above the same month a year ago. The median existing-home price in the Northeast was $251,000, up 13.1 percent from July 2004.

In the West, existing-home sales fell 7.5 percent to a level of 1.61 million units in July, and were 3.2 percent higher than July 2004. The median existing-home price in the West was $319,000, up 16.0 percent in the last year.

The National Association of Realtors(R), "The Voice for Real Estate," is America's largest trade association, representing more than 1 million members involved in all aspects of the residential and commercial real estate industries.

(a) The annual rate for a particular month represents what the total number of actual sales for a year would be if the relative pace for that month were maintained for 12 consecutive months. Seasonally adjusted annual rates are used in reporting monthly data to factor out seasonal variations in resale activity. For example, home sales volume is normally higher in the summer than in the winter, primarily because of differences in the weather and family buying patterns.

Existing-home sales, which include single-family, townhomes, condominiums and co-ops, are based on transaction closings. This differs from the U.S. Census Bureau's series on new single-family home sales, which are based on contracts or the acceptance of a deposit. Because of these differences, it is not uncommon for each series to move in different directions in the same month. In addition, existing-home sales, which generally account for 85 percent of total home sales, are based on a much larger sample - nearly 40 percent of multiple listing service data each month - and typically are not subject to large prior-month revisions.

Because there is a concentration of condos in high-cost metro areas, the national median condo price is higher than the median single-family price. In a given market area, condos typically cost less than single-family homes.

Existing-home sales for August will be released September 26. The next Pending Home Sales Index will be on September 1 and the forecast will be revised September 7.

Information about NAR is available at http://www.realtor.org . This and other news releases are posted in the Web site's "News Media" section in the NAR Media Center. Statistical data, charts and surveys also may be found in the NAR Media Center by clicking on Economic & Housing Statistics.

Do you hear a slight hissing noise - like a bit of air coming out of a balloon?  We don't expect a big housing decline till later this year, but the report today certainly means something, although we expect the markets to put a positive spin on things like "Oh cool, see housing prices are just normally fluctuating..."

Mass Layoffs Up

New figures out from the Department of Labor are due out this morning are sure not to get much attention in the mainstream media because they don't paint a picture of the vibrant job growing economy that DC likes to talk about. 

In July 2005, employers took 1,249 mass layoff actions, seasonally adjusted, as measured by new filings for unemployment insurance benefits during the month, the Bureau of Labor Statistics of the U.S. Department of Labor reported today. Each action involved at least 50 persons from a single establishment, and the number of workers involved totaled 131,326, on a seasonally adjusted basis. (See table 1.) The number of layoff events in July rose by 74, and the number of associated initial claims increased by 3,439 from June. In the manufacturing sector, 360 mass layoff events were reported during July 2005, seasonally adjusted, resulting in 48,967 initial claims. The number of mass layoff events in manufacturing was somewhat higher than a month earlier, while the number of initial claims was lower. (See table 1.)

From January through July 2005, the total number of events (seasonally adjusted), at 8,673, and initial claims (seasonally adjusted), at 924,343, were lower than in January-July 2004 (9,381 and 959,018, respectively).

Industry Distribution (Not Seasonally Adjusted)

In July, the 10 industries reporting the highest number of mass-layoff initial claims, not seasonally adjusted, accounted for 83,882 initial claims, 34 percent of the total. (See table A.) The two industries with the highest number of initial claims were temporary help services, with 16,237, and light truck and utility vehicle manufacturing with 13,434. Together these two industries accounted for 12 percent of all initial claims during the month.

The manufacturing sector accounted for 43 percent of all mass layoff events and 56 percent of all initial claims filed in July 2005. A year earlier, manufacturing comprised 42 percent of events and 57 percent of initial claims. Within manufacturing, the number of claimants in July 2005 was highest in transportation equipment (69,393, mostly automotive- related), followed by plastics and rubber products (9,202) and primary metals (7,984). (See table 3.)

Administrative and waste services accounted for 12 percent of events and 10 percent of initial claims filed in July, with layoffs mostly from temporary help services. Six percent of all layoff events and 5 percent of initial claims filed during the month were from transportation and warehousing, mainly from school and employee bus transportation. Retail trade accounted for 5 percent of events and 4 percent of initial claims in July, primarily from general merchandise stores. Agriculture, forestry, fishing and hunting accounted for an additional 5 percent of events and 4 percent of initial claims during the month, largely among farm labor contractors and crew leaders.

Government establishments accounted for 7 percent of events and 5 per- cent of initial claims filed in July, mostly from educational services as the school year ended.

Over the year, the number of layoff events declined by 113 and the num- ber of associated initial claims fell by 9,713 (not seasonally adjusted). The largest decreases in initial claims were reported in plastics and rubber products manufacturing (-3,851), transportation equipment manufacturing (-3,163), and apparel manufacturing (-2,855). The largest over-the-year increases in initial claims were reported in transit and ground passenger transportation (+2,630), general merchandise stores (+1,783), and in elec- trical equipment and appliance manufacturing (+1,748).

Geographic Distribution (Not Seasonally Adjusted)

Among the four census regions, the highest number of initial claims in July due to mass layoffs was in the Midwest (114,158). (See table 5.) Transportation equipment manufacturing accounted for over half of the Midwest total. The West had the next largest number of initial claims (52,105), followed by the South (44,995) and the Northeast (32,958).

The number of initial claimants from mass layoffs decreased over the year in three of the four regions. The largest decrease occurred in the South (-10,409), followed by the Midwest (-4,755) and West (-307). The Northeast had the only over-the-year increase (+5,758). Five of the nine geographic divisions had over-the-year decreases in the number of initial claims associated with mass layoffs, with the largest in the East North Central division, -5,255. The Middle Atlantic (+4,172) and New England (+1,586) divisions reported the largest over-the-year increases.

Among the states, California recorded the highest number of initial claims filed due to mass layoff events in July (41,741), mostly in administrative and support services and educational services. Michigan was next, with 34,561 initial claims, followed by Ohio (25,306) and Indiana (15,176). These four states accounted for 45 percent of all mass layoff events and 48 percent of all initial claims for unemployment insurance. (See table 6.)

Indiana had the largest over-the-year decrease in the number of initial claims (-5,259), followed by South Carolina (-5,216). The largest over-the- year increases occurred in Wisconsin (+4,121) and Minnesota (+2,689).

From January to July, California reported 230,425 mass-layoff initial claims, 22 percent of the national total. This was California's lowest share for a January-to-July period since 1996. Ohio had the next largest number of claims over this period (84,390), followed by Michigan (83,620), New York (61,265), and Pennsylvania (59,138).

As we see it, the mass layoffs are only a simply symptom of a complex socioeconomic problem.  The problem is that the world is in what I'd have to call "Last days in the Agar mode."   If you think back to junior or senior high school biology, one of the experiments often used is to make some nutrition media (called "agar") and then introduce a bacterial into it.  What happens?  Well, at first, the agar supplies the nutrition and the bacteria grows like wildfire - soon encompassing the entire surface of the agar media.

 

But then, a funny thing happens: the bacteria finishes eating all the available nutrients and the whole dish dies off.  So it goes with last-ditch capitalism.  Rather than focus on spreading around the wealth and the work behind it, America has become engaged in "end of agar" behavior which means eating up all remaining industrial nutrients.  Which brings us to..

 

Kill Chavez

When Pat Robertson speaks, millions listen.  However, when he calls for the assassination of a foreign leader of government, as he had done in the care of president Chavez of Venezuela, we think there's something seriously amiss. Even if you get past the lack of moral leadership displayed by throwing out the "Thou Shalt Not Kill" Commandment, there should be legal sanctions against Robertson, in our view.  Why?  Well, if a person of another faith were to call for the assassination of another foreign leader (say, someone in Israel. for example) we expect that the full force of (neocon) government would be applied against them.  So....Why a different standard should be applied to the Dominionists is beyond our understanding. Obviously, our copy of the Good Book reads differently than Robertson's. But then again, maybe he drives an SUV.

 

Oil Crazy

Not that Pat Robertson is alone is his extreme reaction to the reality of expensive energy.  I took a little poll at the office yesterday to see what folks expect by Christmas. By initials only, BB said $2,20, DH voted for $2.40, KA suggested $2.80 and LT said $3.05.  In other words, my co-workers expect essentially no change.  I was the lone crazy at $4.50 to $5.

 

On the other hand, I just went through the process of ordering propane for the ranch for the coming winter.  We topped off the 400 gallon tank last year (two years worth on hand all the time) for $1.72 a gallon.  This year, even with my "over 55" discount again t was $2.32. If you're short on math skills, that's a 34.8% increase in a year. My inflation forecast of 13% for 2005 sure looks accurate according to my checkbook.  I wonder why government isn't reporting it?

 

Moreover, the price of oil doesn't reflect the current crude prices.  In fact, one could say that reflect prices of crude more than 60 days back which would put us in the $50 a barrel range.  So as I see it, by the fall, we should be paying over $3.00 everywhere, including Texas where we were paying $1.56 to $1.73 at this time a year ago.  Panama Bates reports from the ranch that it's around $2.75.  Thank heaven we live a half mile from an oil rig.

 

With all this going on in background (and without trying to make this report as lengthy as one of our Peoplenomics reports) we have to note that on Russia's southern tier, China is busy shopping for more energy suppliers

 

Iraq, meanwhile has recovered partially from the power problems that shut off production over the weekend.  Not a big flow, but something is better than nothing.  Iraq's political situation is still smoldering over the new constitution - and no, we're not placing bets one way or the other on that.

 

We don't look for any improvement as hurricane season looks to send another storm toward our Gulf of Mexico.

 

Markets: Soft

The pre-open futures were looking a bit downcast this morning an hour or so before the open with expectations that new data coming out would not be healthy for the bulls (wherever they are). 

 

Media Mystery

There was another special segment about the missing firl in Aruba on one of the news channels we monitored last night.  Yet this morning, when local media here in LA are covering a story about a quadruple murder - suicide (5 dead in all) not a mention in national media.  Say, you don't suppose it's because the story happened in Inglewood, do you?

 


Naked Government Power

The following news release from the Gold Anti-Trust Action group caught our attention this morning:

"Treasury Department Claims Power to Seize Gold, Silver--and Everything Else, GATA Says

MANCHESTER, Conn.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Aug. 22, 2005--The U.S. Government has the authority to prohibit the private possession of gold and silver coin and bullion by U.S. citizens during wartime, and, during wartime and declared emergencies, to freeze their ownership of shares of mining companies, the Treasury Department has told the Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee.

But gold and silver owners aren't alone in such jeopardy. For the U.S. Government claims the authority in declared emergencies to seize or freeze just about everything else that might be considered a financial instrument.

The Treasury Department's assertions came in a letter to GATA dated August 12 and written by Sean M. Thornton, chief counsel for the department's Office of Foreign Assets Control, who replied to questions GATA posed to the department in January. It took GATA six months and some prodding to get answers from the Treasury, but the Treasury's reply, when it came, was remarkably comprehensive and candid.

The government's authority to interfere with the ownership of gold, silver, and mining shares arises, Thornton wrote, from the Trading With the Enemy Act, which became law in 1917 during World War I and applies during declared wars, and from 1977's International Emergency Economic Powers Act, which can be applied without declared wars.

While the Trading With the Enemy Act authorizes the government to interfere with the ownership of gold and silver particularly, it also applies to all forms of currency and all securities. So the Treasury official stressed in his letter to GATA that the act could be applied not just to shares of gold and silver mining companies but to the shares of all companies in which there is a foreign ownership interest.

Further, there is no requirement in the law that the targets of the government's interference must have some connection to the declared enemies of the United States, nor even some connection to foreign ownership. Anything that can be construed as a financial instrument, no matter how innocently it has been used, is subject to seizure under the Trading With the Enemy Act and the International Emergency Economic Powers Act.

Having just gone through a controversy about a Supreme Court decision about government's power of eminent domain, most Americans may be surprised to learn that the Trading With the Enemy Act and the International Emergency Economic Powers Act could expropriate them instantly and far more broadly without any of the due process extended to parties in eminent domain cases. All that is needed is a presidential proclamation of an emergency of some kind -- and of course Americans lately have been living in a state of perpetual emergency.

When the Trading With the Enemy Act was passed in 1917, gold and silver formed part of the official currency of the United States and were essential to ordinary commerce, so perhaps an argument could be made then against "hoarding," even if "hoarding" could not be well defined. That is no longer the case; the United States has officially disavowed gold and silver as money and they no longer have a meaningful role in commerce. (GATA is working on that.) So gold and silver investors may want to ask their members of Congress to seek repeal of the statutes that give the government the authority to interfere with the private ownership of gold and silver, emergencies or not.

And ordinary citizens with no particular interest in gold and silver may want to ask their members of Congress to reconsider these statutes simply for being wildly tyrannical.

GATA's correspondence with the Treasury Department is posted on the Internet here:

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/gata/message/3276  "

This doesn't change our opinion about the value of hanging on to gold and silver.  It just makes us no longer talk about any personal holdings...

 

Missing River

We are reading a lot of small reports here and there about the earth heating up, but this one is an eye popper - a river gone missing.  The Santa Cruz River has apparently gone underground.

 

Media Habits Changing

One of the biggest media changes in history is underway before our eyes and ears - and it's starting to show up in front of the living room Cyclops (the TV, for the less literate). The story out today in Variety bemoaning the loss of audience is only a tip of the iceberg.

 

We don't have a lot of data points, but consider these:

We can't be sure what to make of it, but the traditional American mass media super-size tendency may be resulting in some degree of overload.  But, when we read how smart businessmen like Carl Icahn are thinking about putting Time-Warner cable off on its own, we wonder if broadband and picture phones and Netflix will  continue putting pressure on old media.

 

Oil Colony Notes

As the Constitution deadline approaches in Iraq, we read yet another story today about the oil exports from Iraq have been halted - this time by electricity going off. There was some speculation in the oil pits today that the outage would not last long.

 

Insurgents in Iraq meantime are no doubt becoming aware of Saddam Hussein's open letter in which he throws in with forces resisting gunpoint democracy.

 

Speaking of oil colonies, Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez, meeting with Fidel Castro in Cuba is blaming the U.S. (not his own interests) for destabilizing Bolivia where a people's uprising about having their resources ripped off by corporate interests is bordering on rebellion. Chavez also says his country will lend Ecuador oil during protests. Bet me who's behind those protests?

 

Meanwhile, there's some suggestion that higher gas prices may be putting the brakes on demand.  At a practical level, Elaine has noticed freeway traffic here in L.A. is a bit lighter than it has been in recent months.  People changing their habits?  Maybe...

 

Stock Thinking

Look for an up move at the open on merger talks, but as our fractal whiz reminds us, glory may be fleeting...

"George, valuation fractals represent a composite integration of primarily six elements in the complex economic system: cash and savings, debt, wages, assets, lending practices, and prevailing interest rates. Each of these six broad parameters has its own complex internal dynamics and summation characteristics. In a very mechanistic fashion, following simple near-quantum and near-quantum related Fibonacci numbers, valuation fractals 'grow' to buying saturation levels and thereafter 'decay' to lower selling saturation levels. The fundamental point is that the daily, weekly, monthly, and yearly valuation fractals represent the sum total integration of those six elements and their complex interactive relationships. Pour into the economic vat: cash for daily transactions, savings available for money to be borrowed at given interest rates using prevailing lending practices for both major purchases and minor credit card purchases, balanced by on-going wages and debt servicing obligations, balanced by relative valuation of assets and their relative state of consumption, mix it up on a daily, weekly, etc. basis - and - from the vat flows forth the daily, weekly, etc. summation fractals. While lower order time unit fractals such as minutes and hours represent trading valuation saturation points, intermediate fractals represent the larger picture of on going velocity of money growth percolating through the system. The higher order or 4-yearly, 17-18 yearly and 70 year fractals represent both business cycle and asset and debt saturation levels at the basic consumer level.

There are three sequential identified ideal growth fractals followed by a decay fractal. The near quantum number time units for the three cycles are x, 2-2.5x and 2x, respectively. A nonlinear devaluation typically characterizes the second growth fractal somewhere between the 2x and 2.5x time period. The third growth fractal which ideally is 2x in length can have an extension to 2.5x. This extension of the third growth fractal has characterized both the current US equity and heavily invested commodity areas, particularly oil and gold, for the entire 128 week duration of the March 2000 secondary growth period.

Just as the complex system is an integrative process, valuation fractals which exactly represent them are likewise composite nonlinear integrations. Fractals incorporate the terminal portion of the preceding decay fractal into the beginning of the follow-on growth fractal. An elegant pristine example of this rolling integration was the 40/100/100 day cycle exactly x/2.5x/2.5x that resulted in the March 2005 top for the DJIA. The first two fractals were 'declining' growth fractals with a very characteristic nonlinear break at the end of the second fractal in August 2004. That second fractal was likewise elegant in its evolution in that it was composed of a 29/72 day x/2.5x sub fractal sequence. The probability that these precise sequences are random numerical sequential events approaches zero and elevates fractal analysis, reciprocally, to a high probability real science descriptive of the complex macro economy.

The subsequent growth fractals dating from August 2004 likewise have followed the same very precise fractal growth evolution with a 52/130 (x/2.5x) day first and second fractal growth sequence with the typical nonlinear drop between 2x and 2.5x of the second fractal. Anyone can verify this pattern using any of the major US or European indices. The third fractal US equity sequence has been a 12/30-31/28 day sequence, approaching the extended ideal form of x/2.5x/2.5x growth pattern. The major European indices ,e.g., the FTSE, DAX, and CAC have a slightly different mix of the six aforementioned underlying elements and have extended their growth - but are still confined within the 52/130/104 theoretical maximum and the theoretical Fibonacci maximum of 52/130/(1.62 X 52 = 84-85) days. These recurrent numerically ideal patterns since August 2004 once again lend substantial credibility to the notion that the complex macroeconomy operates according to some relatively precise laws of fractal design.

What are the rate limiting factors that result in growth saturation points or asymptotes, decay selling saturation points or asymptotes, and the general nature of fractal patterning? Each of the six controlling parameters- assets, ongoing wages, lending practices, prevailing interest rates, debt load, and cash and savings - contribute to the saturation areas. Some are more important than others in determining cycle lengths and saturation points.

Assets have two important elements: relative valuations and saturation ownership. If the valuation becomes too high or too overly consumed, demand will decease. The timing for this decrease is exactly represented by an asymptotic valuation saturation level or a single high valuation point followed by lower valuations. The valuation curves provide precise barometric information on demand relative to valuation level and relative to the consumption level. Some assets such as gas and oil must be purchased to maintain livelihood. As global consumption for the this finite resource increases, resulting price increases squeeze the null saving US consumer, far too many living from paycheck to paycheck, to the financial breakpoint. Unnecessarily expensive US healthcare, 25 percent of the value of which goes to third party insurers and the non-value added bill collection system, can be considered yet another consumable asset, that, like 'uninsured equivalent' gasoline prices, is driving many to insolvency.

Ongoing wages and just as important the jobs that support those wages are perhaps the most important rate limiting factor in determining valuation saturation points. In the US jobs sphere, high paying manufacturing jobs with the exception of the housing industry have been significantly outsourced. As the housing bubble crests, overcapacity will become evident and high paying home construction jobs will contract. A considerable subset of jobs in America have questionable value-added real economic worth and will be lightened during consumer retrenchment. It is easy to image using the 1930's as a template of a positive feedback contracting system, where decreased ,e.g., construction jobs lead to decreased consumer spending leading to further job contraction leading to further spending contraction and so forth.

Lending practices and prevailing interesting rates, the latter a Federal Reserve controlled parameter, work in synergy to foster money creation and asset inflation. Fractional reserve lending practices amplify the bank and money market savings used as a reserve base for lending. Extremely low interest rates, i.e., a Fed fund rate of 1 percent coupled with a lending practice of LIBOR type loans, no money down and interest only payments creates the interesting situation in which the interest cost of money is far below the real asset inflation rate. Not to borrow is to lose money that would be made with the expected inflation. Saving money under these interest rate and lending practice guidelines results in loss of purchasing power. Credit card interest rates reflect the needed higher interest rates to overcome the default rate. The last year of higher Fed Fund interest rates have resulted in both increased mortgage payments and decreased bank profitability secondary to the contracting spread of long term verses short term interest rates.

Ongoing debt load and the requirement to service that debt diminishes cash available for asset consumption and investment. Percentage wise the total debt load relative to wages and GDP has had very small incremental increases - a fact which has mistakenly reassured many linear thinking economists. Debt load becomes a primary factor in the fractal decay process, where assets are liquated in an attempt to pay down debt. This results in a mechanistic deflationary process, lowering the value of nearly all non cash or non-cash equivalent assets.

Cash is the money that is represented by greenbacks in circulation and greenback equivalent readily convertible debt instruments such as treasuries, notes, bonds, bank deposits, and money market funds. In short cash represents the dollars in circulation and savings. The savings rate, which the Federal Reserve has bemoaned to be dangerously low and was reported to be zero in July, reflects the competition of the the various Investment areas. With interest rates below the real(which includes housing) asset inflation rates, deposited money in saving instruments loses its purchasing power value its week that it is malinvested. Deposited money in saving instruments has been generally a bad investment in the last few years. During the decay fractal process, this scenario will be reversed with money from ongoing asset liquidation flowing into cash and cash equivalents, whose purchase power value will increase relation to asset devaluation.

These are the lumped six broad elements that are interacting with each other to create the summation and integration valuation points, curves, saturation inflection asymptotes and fractals that respectively describe the real instantaneous state, the trending state, the saturation areas, and importantly the expected fractal nonlinearities of the complex macro economic system. Gary Lammert http://www.economicfractalist.com/ "

Big Calendar Item

We are anxious to see what tomorrow's Mass Layoff Report from the Labor Department looks like.  It's one measure of how the economy is doing - and with so many reports recently, the declining trend may be set to reverse course.

 

Taser Suit

We read the reports that more than 7,000 police agencies worldwide were using Tasers and come to find out that they may not be completely harmless.  In fact, a police chief is suing the company.  As always, there are two sides to the story, but we can't help but wonder if police won't have some huge liability in the future if, for example, they Tase someone with a heart condition, or a pacemaker for that matter. 30-cases going on nationally according to the report.

 

Speed of Light Now Variable

It may not seem like a big deal on the surface, but researchers are reporting the limited ability to control the speed of light in the fiber optic environment.  There's still not enough control for a computing breakthrough, but things seem headed that way.

 

News from Elliott Wave International

 

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Write when you get rich,

 

George Ure, The People's Economist

 

 

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