Thursday, March 31, 2011

Debt Limit Breeched!

Bet you haven't heard this on the MSM!

Here are some excerpts...

Yesterday the Treasury sold 29 billion in bonds bringing the total U.S. debt to 14.311 trillion, the current debt ceiling is 14.294. Now with a 52.2 billion dollar buffer for the total debt, a technical default should happen within the next 10 trading days, let's see if that makes any news.

Bill Gross, the largest bond fund manager in the world, recently had this to say regarding U.S. debt, "unless entitlements are substantially reformed, I am confident that this country will default on its debt; not in conventional ways, but by picking the pocket of savers via a combination of less observable, yet historically verifiable policies - inflation, currency devaluation, and low negative real interest rates."

Folks, read that again! This guy is not a fly by night guy, but a well respected person in the industry!

There are clues people, open your eyes and look. We have industry experts telling us what is coming. If only more people would stop worrying about who will be the next one voted off and learn what freight train is heading toward them.

Oh well, at least you are watching.

Preparing---Don't Procrastinate Any Longer!

For those that have talked about preparing, but not done so, you better start!

STOP TALKING ABOUT IT AND GET STARTED, NOW!

n

Monday, March 28, 2011

Are We Going To See Protests Here In America?

Remember last weekend when there were 500,000 people protesting in the UK? It was all non-violent correct.... Okay, maybe not so much. Well anyway it seems to have been organized/started by a group called UK uncut. Guess what...we now have a similar group called...you guessed it, US uncut. Look at the symbols, very similar. I'm not usually a betting man, but I have a feeling we are going to see something close to what the UK saw this weekend, here in America soon.

Keep your eyes open my friends...

Saturday, March 26, 2011

What Are The Central Banks Telling Us?

Central banks around the world are dumping the reserve currency, the U.S. dollar, and investing in gold and silver. They see the writing on the wall and don't like what they are reading. Precious metals have been increasing due to the uncertainty in the world and due also to the gigantic U.S. debt which continues to increase.

I believe it is not too late to get into silver and gold. I feel silver will increase more than gold from a percentage standpoint. Watch for dips and get into some precious metals as a hedge against inflation, which is coming....or should I say it's here, but more is coming.

Is The Fed In Panic Mode?

Look at this graph...


Look at the two spikes. The first one was in October 2008. If you remember that was at the time QE1 was started. You might say that the second spike is just QE2, but if that was the case it should have spiked in October 2010.

Now, I don't know why we have seen a spike of close to $500 billion in just a couple months. Is there something happening that we don't know about? Is there a panic happening at the Fed?

Keep your eyes open, because when you hear about what is happening through the MSM it will be too late

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

Is This Your Economic Recovery?

Well, I keep hearing on the liberal lame stream media that we are in an "economic recovery". Boy that sounds great, but I wonder how they explain these facts.

1. Forty-four million people are are now on food stamps. This is up 13.1% from this time last year.

2. The U.S. trade deficits are getting larger. The trade deficit increased by 33% from 2009, and it is expected to grow even larger in 2011.

3. The housing market continues to suck I mean stink. The new year has brought little cheer to new-home builders: Their sales fell a shocking 11.2% between December and January and 18.6% from 12 months earlier.

4. Thank goodness that the government is stepping in to save the housing industry as we now guarantee or are writing close to 97% of all mortgages in the United States.

5. The U.S. National debt continues to grow at a rapid pace, more that a million dollars per minute. In fact, the budget deficit is projected to reach an astounding $1.65 TRILLION.

6. Foreclosures continue to rise at a rapid rate. It has been reported that just last year over a million families were foreclosed on in 2010.

7. The health of household budgets declined each quarter in 2010 and is at the lowest level since the first quarter of 2009.

8. According to the liberal leaning Huffington Post, there are approximately 15,000 empty buildings in Chicago and over 60,000 vacant homes in Las Vegas.

9. We know that there are several states that are in financial trouble, California and New Jersey and Illinois come to mind. But are you aware that there are several cities and municipalities that are in trouble as well.

10. Quantitative Easing 1 and 2 have gotten us nothing. Here are 9 reasons why QE is bad for the economy.

11. Prices for consumables are getting higher. Corn has increased 33% since December 2010. Cotton is at an all time high. Oil is up to $105 a barrel and is expected to rise with all the turmoil occuring in the Middle East.

12. The unemployment rate is predicted at 10.3% by Gallup and above 20% by shadowstats.com.

America is dying a slow and painful death. I cannot see a recovery in the picture. In case you do not remember one of my very first posts when I started this blog I explained what represents a trillion dollars. If you were to spend one dollar a second ($60 per minute or $3600 per hour), it would take you over 31,000 YEARS to spend one trillion dollars.

Tell me how you see a recovery happening!

Monday, March 7, 2011

We Are Doomed If This Continues

The U.S. Treasury is depleting its cash at an accelerating pace, drawing down its cash balance by $81.6 billion in the just the first four days of March, leaving the federal government with only $108.9 billion on hand, according to the Daily Treasury Statement released Monday afternoon.

At the beginning of February, the Treasury had $349.1 billion in cash on hand, but spent that down by $158.5 billion during the month, ending February with only $190.6 billion on hand.

Were the government to continue to draw down its cash balance at the $20.4 billion-per-day rate that prevailed in the first four days of March, it would spend its way through its final $108.9 billion in little more than five days.

Under current law, the U.S. Treasury may only run the national debt up to $14.294 trillion. At the end of February, according to the Treasury’s Monthly Statement of the Public Debt, the total debt subject to this legal limit was $14.142331 trillion—just $151.669 billion short of the limit.

Had the Treasury not spent down the $81.6 billion in its cash balance in the first four days of this month and borrowed that money instead, it would have significantly reduced its remaining legal borrowing authority.

For the Treasury to borrow more than the current $14,294 limit, Congress and President Barack Obama will need to enact new legislation authorizing the Treasury to increase the national debt up to whatever new limit they find agreeable.

The Treasury’s largest single expenditure in the first four days of March, according to the Daily Treasury Statement, was paying off maturing debt. During those four days, Treasury paid $128.477 billion to redeem old bonds. At the same time, it borrowed $133.196 billion by selling new bonds.

People wake up. We are sliding down the mountain faster than ever. Just in the month of February 2011 our defict was greater than the entire yearly deficit in 2007. That was just four years ago! Where will be in just another 4 months or 4 years? Get some GOLD and SILVER. Even at todays prices it will seem like a bargain in the future. I would not be surprised to see 1oz of gold to be able to purchase a nice home in the future.

Fed Needs A Miracle

Peter Schiff was on Fast Money and was hammered by the pundits. They wanted him to give them a date on when the collaspe will come. Everyone knows that nobody can predict the time. They were trying to make him look bad and discredit him and his predictions, I feel. I have not heard them ask Bernanke or Obama the exact date that the economy will be back to normal.

Listen to Peter, as I feel he and the others like him (Celente, Zell, etc) are on the right track.

Sunday, March 6, 2011

China "Attacks The Dollar"

Well, this is kind of like a sequel to the last post about what Sam Zell was saying. I will highlight some key points.

In a surprising turn of events, today's biggest piece of news received a mere two paragraph blurb on Reuters, and was thoroughly ignored by the broader media. An announcement appeared shortly after midnight on the website of the People's Bank of China.

The statement, google translated as "Pragmatic and pioneering spirit to promote cross-border renminbi business cum on monitoring and analysis to a new level"...

Reuters provides a simple translation and summary of the announcement: "China hopes to allow all exporters and importers to settle their cross-border trades in the yuan by this year, the central bank said on Wednesday, as part of plans to grow the currency's international role. In a statement on its website www.pbc.gov.cn, the central bank said it would respond to overseas demand for the yuan to be used as a reserve currency. It added it would also allow the yuan to flow back into China more easily." To all those who claim that China is perfectly happy with the status quo, in which it is willing to peg the Renmibni to the Dollar in perpetuity, this may come as a rather unpleasant surprise, as it indicates that suddenly China is far more vocal about its intention to convert its currency to reserve status, and in the process make the dollar even more insignificant.

International Business Times provides further insight:

This is all part of China’s plan for the internationalization of its currency, which may, in the decades to come, threaten the global ‘market share’ of other currencies like the US dollar.

Previously, China also announced that bilateral trades with Russia and Malaysia will begin to be conducted with the yuan and the ruble and ringgit, respectively.

Other moves on the part of China to internationalize its currency include allowing foreign companies to issue yuan-denominated bonds and relaxing rules for foreign financial institutions to access the yuan.

Aside from the efforts of the Chinese government, fundamentals also point to the increasing international popularity of the Chinese currency.

China is already the leading trade partner with Australia and Japan. It’s also the leading or a large trade partner with many of its smaller neighbors. The purpose of having foreign currencies is to conduct foreign trade and investment, so the yuan is expected to become a more attractive currency for China’s trade partners, espeically as the government continues to relax restrictions.

The reason for this dramatic move may be found in what Stephen Roach wrote a few days ago in Project Syndicate:

In early March, China’s National People’s Congress will approve its 12th Five-Year Plan. This Plan is likely to go down in history as one of China’s boldest strategic initiatives.

In essence, it will change the character of China’s economic model – moving from the export- and investment-led structure of the past 30 years toward a pattern of growth that is driven increasingly by Chinese consumers. This shift will have profound implications for China, the rest of Asia, and the broader global economy.

Like the Fifth Five-Year Plan, which set the stage for the “reforms and opening up” of the late 1970’s, and the Ninth Five-Year Plan, which triggered the marketization of state-owned enterprises in the mid-1990’s, the upcoming Plan will force China to rethink the core value propositions of its economy. Premier Wen Jiabao laid the groundwork four years ago, when he first articulated the paradox of the “Four ‘Uns’” – an economy whose strength on the surface masked a structure that was increasingly “unstable, unbalanced, uncoordinated, and ultimately unsustainable.”

The Great Recession of 2008-2009 suggests that China can no longer afford to treat the Four Uns as theoretical conjecture. The post-crisis era is likely to be characterized by lasting aftershocks in the developed world – undermining the external demand upon which China has long relied. That leaves China’s government with little choice other than to turn to internal demand and tackle the Four Uns head on.

The 12th Five-Year Plan will do precisely that, focusing on major pro-consumption initiatives. China will begin to wean itself from the manufacturing model that has underpinned export- and investment-led growth. While the manufacturing approach served China well for 30 years, its dependence on capital-intensive, labor-saving productivity enhancement makes it incapable of absorbing the country’s massive labor surplus.

Instead, under the new Plan, China will adopt a more labor-intensive services model. It will, one hopes, provide a detailed blueprint for the development of large-scale transactions-intensive industries such as wholesale and retail trade, domestic transport and supply-chain logistics, health care, and leisure and hospitality.

Obviously, a reserve currency would be not only extremely useful, but quite critical in achieving the goal of China's conversion to an inwardly focused, middle-class reliant society. And even that would not guarantee a smooth transition. However, should China really be on a path to a step function in its evolution, the shocks to the system will be massive. Roach puts this diplomatically as follows:

But there is a catch: in shifting to a more consumption-led dynamic, China will reduce its surplus saving and have less left over to fund the ongoing saving deficits of countries like the US. The possibility of such an asymmetrical global rebalancing – with China taking the lead and the developed world dragging its feet – could be the key unintended consequence of China’s 12th Five-Year Plan.

A less diplomatic version implies that the relationship between China and the US would suffer a seismic shift in which the game theoretical model of Mutual Assured Destruction, and symbiotic monetary and fiscal policies, would no longer exist, allowing China to pursue its fate completely independent of any economic shocks that the increasingly distressed United States may be going through.

And confirming that the PBoC announcement is far more serious than the amount of airtime allotted to it by the mainstream media, is the just released article in Spiegel "China Attacked the Dollar" (google translated):

The Chinese central bank surprised with a spectacular announcement: The would-be superpower wants to handle their entire future foreign trade in yuan, not in dollars. Beijing shakes America's claim to represent the key currency - with serious consequences for the U.S..

The announcement was inconspicuous , but it has the potential, to permanently change the balance of power on the world currency market: China strengthens the international role of the yuan. All exporters and importers will, this year, be allowed to settle their business with their foreign partners in Yuan, the central bank said on Wednesday in Beijing.

This will respond to the growing importance of the yuan as a global reserve currency. "The market demand for cross-border use of the yuan rises," said the central bank. The PBoC had previously tested this plan by allowing 67 000 enterprises in 20 provinces to run their business abroad in yuan. The trade volume amounted to the equivalent of €56 billion.

Now the amount of yuan to be extended, it should be handled much more business in Chinese currency - and less in the U.S. Chinese companies trade at present often in dollars, they are thus dependent on the decisions of the U.S. Federal Reserve to pay on it in a rising oil price and will have pay higher transaction fees than necessary. That should change now.

Currently, the People's Republic can hardly take yuan out of the country and even that is monitored within the boundary of all legitimate capital flows. Chinese exporters have to change a large part of their euro, yen or dollars at a fixed rate revenue in yuan. Foreign companies wishing to do business in China must do so in Yuan, they can exchange their money in the People's Republic. Tourists are allowed a maximum of 20,000 yuan and exporting. Yuan an international market can not occur - and not on supply and demand-based exchange rate.

Needless to say, should the yuan be seen increasingly as a reserve currency, all of this, and virtually everything else is about to change.

The only question is whether or not the Yuan will cement its status at the top of the currency pyramid by allowing the backing of the currency with individual or a basket of commodities. If that were to happen, it would be the last nail in the coffin of the already terminally ill dollar.

Saturday, March 5, 2011

You Heard Of Sam Zell?

He is a Billionaire! I have highlighted some comments I feel are very telling.

Look at what he is saying:

ZELL ON THE DOLLAR LONG:
"YOU ASK ME ME WHAT IS MY BIGGEST SINGLE FINANCIAL CONCERN IS THE LOSS OF THE DOLLAR AS THE RESERVE CURRENCY I CAN'T IMAGINE ANYTHING BEING MORE DISASTROUS TO OUR COUNTRY THAT IF THE DOLLAR LOST ITS RESERVE CURRENCY STATUS."

Zell: Dollar's Global Fall Will Be 'Disastrous’ for US Living Standard

Thursday, 03 Mar 2011 12:27 PM
Billionaire real-estate magnate Sam Zell warns that Americans should brace for a "disastrous" 25 percent decline in the standard of living if the U.S. dollar’s reign as the global reserve currency ever ends.

He says that there are signs in the market that it could eventually happen. As it is now, a Korean manufacturer who wants to sell to Brazil must first buy dollars to complete the deal. If countries decide to bypass the dollar, the effect would be a disaster, Zell says.
Sam Zell
"Frankly, I think we’re at a tipping point. What’s my biggest single financial concern is the loss of the dollar as the reserve currency," he told CNBC in an interview. "I can’t imagine anything being more disastrous to our country than if the dollar lost its reserve-currency status."

Although he is "hoping against hope" the dollar remains the standard for international exchange, he warns that "you’re already seeing things in the markets that are suggesting that confidence in the dollar is waning."

If that happens, the impact on the United States would be deep. "I think you could see a 25 percent reduction in the standard of living in this country if the U.S. dollar was no longer the world’s reserve currency," Zell said "That’s how valuable it is."

Zell says that the bond market seems remarkably complacent about the risk. But that could turn on a dime, he warns.

"The worry in the bond market is never there until it’s there. The dollar has gone down 20 percent in the last three or four years," Zell says. "I don’t know who is buying 30-year fixed-rate debt. I don’t understand TIPs (Treasury inflation-protected bonds) that are projecting 30 years of benign inflation."

Benchmark 10-year Treasury note yields are around 3.48 percent. TIPs maturing in 2041 have a yield of 1.96 percent.

Once the world turns on the U.S. dollar, if it does, things will change fast, Zell warns. "How could interest rates not go up? Either they go up or the dollar goes down, one or the other," Zell says.

As for inflation, he estimates that actual inflation is between 5 percent and 7 percent right now, despite government figures showing the CPI flirting with low single digits. Fear of deflation — prices falling out of control — has been the primary motivator at the Federal Reserve to pump up money supply by more than $2 trillion in recent months.

Nevertheless, oil is rising fast and food riots are breaking out in developing countries. The United States has been less affected until recently. Zell points out that our Consumer Price Index tends to hide inflation by counting depressed home prices at 42 percent of the index.

"If you adjusted the CPI to reality you’re probably looking at 5, 6, 7 percent inflation today," Zell says.

"The reality out there is the costs are going up. The fact that we’ve been massive beneficiaries of Chinese mercantilist policies that have allowed us to buy goods at much less than their fair value. That has hurt us on the manufacturing side, but it has been a subsidy to America. That subsidy is coming to an end."

Others agree with Zell that the dollar’s world dominance will soon fade.

Ray Dalio, founder & CIO of Bridgewater Associates, told CNBC that it is "inevitable that the dollar's role as the world's currency will diminish from the dominant world currency to one of a few."


"It will fade probably fairly quickly so the United States which accounts for almost two-thirds of the reserves will probably go down to 50 percent of the world's reserves and it will have an effect on lending," he added.

Meanwhile, Bill Gross, found of bond giant Pimco, recently told investors that the Fed’s heavy thumb on the scales on behalf of low interests was perhaps necessary given the magnitude of the crisis. The second round of easing known as "QE2," perhaps, also had a role to play.

However, as the deadline for the second round to end looms — it is set to expire in June — there are serious questions about whether a smooth transition to private demand for U.S. debt will appear, Gross said.

Stocks have doubled from the March 2009 bottom and marked steadily upward since the second round was announced in August, which has given some stock investors pause.

"Investors should view June 30, 2011 not as political historians view Nov. 11, 1918 (Armistice Day — a day of reconciliation and healing) but more like June 6, 1944 (D-Day — a day fraught with hope for victory, but fueled with immediate uncertainty and fear as to what would happen in the short term)," Gross said in recent commentary online.

"Bond yields and stock prices are resting on an artificial foundation of QE2 credit that may or may not lead to a successful private-market handoff and stability in currency and financial markets."

-END-


People, I have said this before (pretty much from the start of this blog) you need to PREPARE. We have seen inflation (just look at your grocery bill and gas bill) and after QE2 is finished (June 30, 2011) we may see hyperinflation. If you think things are expensive now, wait until hyperinflation hits. You will need food and supplies. Here is a good place to start http://www.jrhenterprises.com/.