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Sayonara internal funding. In what we suspect will become a major issue (
and warned in April of last year),
Bloomberg reports that Japan’s public pension fund, the world’s
largest, said it has been selling domestic government bonds as the
number of people eligible for retirement payments increases. "
Payouts are getting bigger than insurance revenue, so we need to sell Japanese government bonds to raise cash."
It would appear the Ponzi has reached it's Tipping Point. Japan’s
population is aging, and baby boomers born in the wake of World War II
are beginning to reach 65 and eligible for pensions. That’s putting GPIF
under pressure to sell JGBs so it can cover the increase in payouts.
The
fund needs to raise about 8.87 trillion yen this fiscal year. GPIF is
historically one of the biggest buyers of Japanese debt and held 71.9 trillion yen, or 63 percent of its assets, in domestic bonds as of March.
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While
it might seem like somewhat stating the obvious, it is nonetheless
worth driving home to the politicians and public policy wonks who see
rates at record lows and perceive a Keynesian borrow-and-spend-fest as
once again the solution to borrowing-and-spending too much. As Morgan
Stanley puts it,
fiscal policy is sailing between the Scylla of chase-your-tail austerity and the Charybdis of sovereign insolvency.
In short, it is impossible for developed market (DM) governments to
grow their way back to solvency. Doing nothing would sail governments
towards the whirlpool of national insolvency – at some stage. But
avoiding insolvency would risk being monstered by recession. If
'expansionary austerity' worked, then Europe would now be booming. The
outlook for fiscal policy and public sector finances is a major
uncertainty for investors and, critically, is part of the reason why
risky assets are being de-rated and 'safe' assets are at unprecedented
valuations.
There is no question that negative-net-worth
governments will impose a cost on the private sector. The only
questions are when and how. The options are asset confiscation, explicit default, surreptitious default (financial oppression), or conventional fiscal tightening.
Seventeen
months after the earthquake and tsunami that destroyed the Tokyo
Electric Power Company’s six–reactor complex at its Fukushima Daiichi,
discussions continue about the possible effects of the radiation
“dusting” the prefecture’s inhabitants received, and their
consequences. Far outside most media coverage, 2012 is shaping up to be
the media battleground between the massed proponents of the ongoing
‘safety’ of nuclear power, as opposed to a motley coalition of
environmentalists, renegade nuclear scientists and anti-nuclear
opponents, largely bereft of media contact.
There is an
involuntary irradiated “test” Fukushima group monitored since March
2011 displaying disturbing health abnormalities that may ultimately decide the debate, should the global media report it, forcing governments to debate its consequences.
The children of Fukushima.
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'Things'
appear to be hotting up in a couple of places around the world. While
the Middle East's incessant instability only grows worse; the following
clip from Stratfor sheds light on the 'discussion' that is occurring
in the middle of the Pacific with the Chinese and the Phillipines over
potential energy rights. Nothing to see here, move along.
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In a recent
BBC News
article, philosopher John Gray asks the quaint but otherwise vain
question of what would John Maynard Keynes do in today’s economic
slump. We call the question vain because
practically every Western government has followed Keynes’ prescribed remedy for the so-called Great Recession.
Following the financial crisis of 2008, governments around the world
engaged in deficit spending while central banks pushed interest rates
to unprecedented lows. Nearly four years later, unemployment remains
stubbornly high in most major countries. Even now in the face of the
come-down that inevitably follows any stimulus-induced feelings of
euphoria, certain central banks
have taken to further monetary easing.
The
question of interest shouldn’t be “what would Keynes do” but rather
“why even listen to someone so pompous and nihilistic to begin with?” Just as Keynes
missed the Great Depression,
modern day Keynesians missed the housing bubble and financial crash.
From his contempt for moral principles to his enthusiastic
support for eugenics, Keynes saw the world as something separate from the bubble of his fellow elitists.
Outside of that we guess he was a great guy!
“If anybody laughs at your idea, view it as a sign of potential success!”
- A Gift to My Children: A Father's Lessons for Life and Investing
*Jim Rogers is an author, financial commentator and successful
international investor. He has been frequently featured in Time, The New
York Times, Barron’s, Forbes, Fortune, The Wall Street Journal, The
Financial Times and is a regular guest on Bloomberg and CNBC.*
Good
evening Ladies and Gentlemen:
Gold closed up today as the risk on trade was orchestrated throughout
the globe. Gold finished the comex session up $32.00 to $1608.00.
Silver also joined the party rising by 66 cents to $27.45.
Today, the news was all about the Hilsenrath article yesterday at 3:55
pm est where he expects the Fed to engage in some round of QEIII. That
lit a fire under the Dow
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The abillity of the gold market to push a "16" handle on the price can be
considered a minor victory for the bulls. You can see from the chart below,
that within its broader consolidation pattern, gold had been experiencing a
somewhat tightening or constricting of its range. The upper boundary of
that "mini-pattern" has been the $1600 level. The ability of the bulls to
take it through this region gives them a very slight advantage over the
bears in the immediate term and provides the possibility of a push towards
more stubborn resistance beginning near the $1620 level.
Keep in mind ...
more »
If everyone saw himself as a citizen of the world rather than of his town,
city or country, the world would be a more peaceful, better place where
success in all forms is abundant and available to all.
- in A Gift to My Children
*Jim Rogers is an author, financial commentator and successful
international investor. He has been frequently featured in Time, The New
York Times, Barron’s, Forbes, Fortune, The Wall Street Journal, The
Financial Times and is a regular guest on Bloomberg and CNBC.*
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Economic
and business growth is a complex and multi-dimensional thing, driven
by the complex relationship between both supply and demand.
To
claim that those who put the legwork into building a business - whether
that is the owners, or workers - “didn’t build” the business is totally
false and absurd. And even if Obama was talking about infrastructure and the wider economic system (which I suspect was the case)
it is taxpayers who fund infrastructure creation,
and the overwhelming majority of businesses and business owners (other
than the bailed-out financial institutions and similar) contribute
heavily to tax revenue.
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There's Hope. There's Faith. And then there is Q4 Consensus Earnings Expectations...
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Presenting ZNGA's sellside coverage as of this afternoon. Pick the odd guy out.
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For
some time now we have been warning about the danger to portfolios
given the deteriorating fundamental, economic and technical backdrop in
the markets. Our warnings, for the most part, have been ignored as
individuals continue to chase stocks in hopes that "this time will be different", and somehow, stocks will continue to ramp higher
even though all three support legs are weakening. Currently, it is
the imminent arrival of the next round of Quantitative Easing (QE) that
keeps
"hope" elevated but further Central Bank intervention
is unlikely in the near term leaving the markets at risk of a further correction.
The
technical and fundamental setup is currently a negatively trending
market. It is very likely that, in the current environment, we will
retest the May lows, if not ultimately set new lows, in August. Those
lows will likely coincide with further weakness in the economy which
should be the perfect setup for the Fed to launch a third round of
Quantitative Easing.
UPDATE: ZNGA is down 40% now, trading with a $2 handle
They said it could never happen. They said it was social, mobile,
everything... Well, oops... It seems the drought conditions around the
world have hit the virtual farms too. Let it 'Virtual Rain'
- *ZYNGA 2Q REV. $322.5M, EST. $343.1M
- *ZYNGA 2Q ADJ. EPS 1C, EST. 6C
- *ZNGA SEES YR EPS ADJ 4C-9C, SAW 23C-29C, EST. 27C
and with that 33% of market cap is wiped away... and the derivative
play - Facebook is down 7% after-hours and EURUSD is dipping as all
that virtual cash is vaporized (yes seriously EURUSD is dropping!). We
assume that very soon, congressmen around the country will be calling
for a government intervention as the hand-of-god impacts these poor
virtual farmers. FYI - Margin Stanley is the largest ZNGA holder at 13.84%.
With
GDP on Friday, FOMC around the corner, month-end T-3 ahead of that,
and a market so ultra-sensitive to any and every word uttered from EU
leaders, it is perhaps little wonder that volume was lack-luster (and so
was commitment with the lowest average trade size of the year)
today. What is perhaps most notable about a day when Treasuries ended
unch to +1bps and stocks marginally higher is the weakness of the USD
(pulling back to unch on the week) and strength in Gold (and Silver).
What also surprises is the dramatic rise in correlation across asset classes - suggesting a high degree of systemic preparedness for some 'event'.
The US drought, which as previously noted, is the worst in decades, has already caused corn prices to hit a record, and soy to soar. And as we first reported last week, and subsequently Bloomberg also caught, Asia could well be next to suffer soaring food prices next as "the monsoon season, which is critical for that country’s agricultural production, is 22% below normal conditions for the year."
In fact, if there is one thing preventing the PBOC from engaging in
full blown easing, it is precisely the threat that just as it floods the
market with excess CNY, that the supply of food will collapse causing
widespread riots and chaos a la Arab Spring 2011. And now, just to make
sure that the threat of full out global food crisis is complete, and
the deep fried black swan has truly gone global, we find that a heat
wave in Southern Europe is causing the corn crops to wither in a region
that is responsible for 16% of global exports.
When Paul first introduced his bill a decade ago, it was written off as another piece of his far-flung libertarian worldview is how Politico
juxtaposes today's (now successful) vote on Ron Paul's Fed Transparency
Bill. "I want to appreciate and congratulate Dr. Ron Paul for his
tireless pursuit of openness and transparency," said Rep. Jason Chaffetz
(R-Utah). "Without his leadership, we wouldn’t be at this point
today." Via Bloomberg:
- *FED AUDIT BILL OPPOSED BY BERNANKE GAINS APPROVAL BY U.S. HOUSE
- *FED AUDIT BILL NEEDS SENATE APPROVAL, PRESIDENT'S SIGNATURE
- *FED AUDIT BILL SPONSORED BY REPRESENTATIVE RON PAUL OF TEXAS
"I’m pleased. It’s something I’ve worked on for a long time, and it’s
a good first step," Paul told POLITICO. "It’s coming to the floor as a
response to the American people, because I don’t have a whole lot of
clout around here." Never mind that the Fed audit is dead in the Senate — Majority Leader Harry Reid’s office has said he won’t bring it up.
We The Sheeplez... is intended to reflect
excellence in effort and content. Donations will help maintain this goal
and defray the operational costs. Paypal, a leading provider of secure
online money transfers, will handle the donations. Thank you for your
contribution.
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