Filed under: Alan Greenspan, Alan Greenspan, Alan Greenspan, Big Banks, Big Banks, bush tax cuts, bush tax cuts, dollar collapse, dollar collapse, Economic Collapse, Economic Collapse, economic crisis, economic crisis, economic depression, economic depression, Economy, Empire, Empire, Fascism, Fascism, federal reserve, federal reserve, Great Depression, Great Depression, Inflation, Inflation, tax, taxcuts, US Economy
Greenspan: End Bush tax cuts
Raw Story
August 1, 2010
Former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan believes that the US should “follow the law” and let the Bush tax cuts lapse. He disagreed Sunday with Republicans who say that tax cuts pay for themselves.
“I am very much in favor of tax cuts but not with borrowed money,” Greenspan said during an appearance on NBC.
“The problem that we’ve gotten into in recent years is that spending programs with borrowed money, tax cuts with borrowed money, and at the end of the day that proves disastrous and my view is I don’t think we can play subtle policy here,” said Greenspan.
“You don’t agree with Republican leaders who say tax cuts pay for themselves?” asked NBC’s David Gregory.
“They do not,” Greenspan replied firmly.
Filed under: Alan Greenspan, bailout, Bank of England, bernanke, Big Banks, BOE, Britain, central bank, CFR, China, CNBC, Communism, Credit Crisis, DEBT, Dow, Economic Collapse, economic depression, Economy, energy, Europe, european union, fannie mae, Fascism, Federal Reserve, freddie mac, George Bush, george soros, global economy, gold, Goldman Sachs, Great Depression, Greenback, henry paulson, housing market, hyperinflation, Inflation, interest rate cut, interest rate cuts, jim rogers, martgage companies, Media, Merrill Lynch, mortgage, mortgage companies, mortgage lenders, Oil, Paulson, rate cut, real estate, Russia, Stock Market, subprime, subprime lending, Taxpayers, United Kingdom, US Economy, US Treasury, Wamu, washington mutual, WW2 | Tags: run on banks
Fannie and Freddie Seized…Cost to Taxpayer: Over $1 Trillion
Contrarain Profits
September 8, 2008
Uncle Sam has finally taken over Fannie Mae (NYSE:FNM) and Freddie Mac (NYSE:FRE). Yesterday, the Bush administration placed the mortgage giants under a conservatorship, putting billions of dollars of taxpeyers’ money at risk in the process.
The Treasury says it will stump up $200 billion to back the companies in exchange for a 79.9% stake in each. The government is now the biggest player in the US mortgage market.
Don Rich warns that the government’s bailout spells trouble for anyone holding US dollars. A major issue is that the Congressional Budget Office’s estimation of the costs of the bailout is far too conservative…
This from last Thursday’s Daily Reckoning:
A recent study from the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) has zero credibility. It pegged likely taxpayer losses in the Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac bailouts at $25 billion. For those with a sense of history, it is worth remembering that the S&L bailout had a $160 billion price tag. The numbers diverge so far from reality as to be laugh-out-loud funny. Funny, that is, except that the CBO estimate demonstrates a willful disconnect with the actual consequences of federal government actions.
As demonstrated below, the real cost of the bailouts will easily exceed $1.3 trillion. In fact, the real cost is likely to range between $1.3 trillion to $1.6 trillion, and is not unlikely to reach $2.5 trillion.
Between 2001 and 2007, Fannie and Freddie purchased or guaranteed $700 billion of Alt-A and subprime loans. Given the default rates on these loans – and the fact that the price of the housing that is the ultimate security of the loans will, for reasons demonstrated below, fall by at least thirty percent – this alone implies a loss for Fannie and Freddie on the order of $210 billion.
Fannie and Freddie acknowledge already-impaired loans on the balance sheet of $19 billion, which they have used creative accounting to avoid deleting from the shareholder equity account. This means that Fannie and Freddie have a maximum of $64 billion in capital remaining.
Given the inevitable losses on the Alt-A/subprime portion of their portfolio, it must be the case that if the federal government, as it is doing, guarantees Fannie and Freddie’s solvency, the difference between the loss and the capital to be made up by the government (i.e., the taxpayers) must equal, not $25 billion but $147 billion.
That alone would mean that the CBO is blowing smoke with their estimated cost figures, and if you think back to the S&L cost of $160 billion, this is not a surprising result. The real picture is so much worse that it is pretty obvious the CBO is flat out inventing figures just to get the politicians through November.
It doesn’t take a genius to work out how the government is going to get its hands on such money: the Federal printing press…
I don’t know what those people in Washington are taking to sleep at night after all their electorally driven accounting and finance exercises, but I can tell you what they will be doing to keep the government open for business: printing a whole lot of money.
Chairman Bernanke has the discount window open to any collateralization not worth the paper it is written on, so in effect he has the helicopters ready to drop hundred-dollar bills over Wall Street – as he once famously described the ultimate policy instrument of a fiat-money system.
Of course, if he does that, we will have to change his nickname from Helicopter Ben to Hyperinflation Ben, which answers the question of who picks up the tab of bailing out Fannie and Freddie: anyone owning dollars.
Produce a lot of something, and it becomes worth less. And given the losses at Fannie and Freddie, the taxpayer guarantee, and the ongoing initiation of Boomer retirement, only the inflation tax will work to pay for keeping Fannie and Freddie afloat.
Like it or not, we are about to enter interesting times, and it is too bad our supposed professional civil servants at the Congressional Budget Office have failed to tell the emperor the truth: that he is buck-naked bankrupt and getting ready to take a lot of people with him.
P.S Don Rich is an instructor of economics, finance, and political science at Montgomery County Community College in Blue Bell, PA. He also teaches economics, government, and history at Delaware County Community College in Exton, PA. You can leave comments for Don on the mises.org blog.
Greenspan: U.S Economy in ’once-in-a-century’ financial crisis
September 15, 2008
The nationalization of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac shows that the U.S. is “more communist than China right now” but its brand of socialism is meant only for the rich, investor Jim Rogers, CEO of Rogers Holdings, told CNBC Europe on Monday.
“America is more communist than China is right now. You can see that this is welfare of the rich, it is socialism for the rich… it’s just bailing out financial institutions,” Rogers said.
Stock markets jumped after the U.S. government’s decision to launch what could be its biggest federal bailout ever, in a bid to support the housing market and ward off more global financial market turbulence.
But Rogers said in the long term the move spelled trouble.
“This is madness, this is insanity, they have more than doubled the American national debt in one weekend for a bunch of crooks and incompetents. I’m not quite sure why I or anybody else should be paying for this,” Rogers told “Squawk Box Europe.”
Soros Compares Mishandling Of Current Crisis To Great Depression
Paul Joseph Watson
Prison Planet
September 17, 2008
Billionaire investor George Soros has slammed US Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson for behaving in the same manner as bankers in the 1930’s and mishandling a financial crisis that threatens a repeat of the Great Depression.
Soros told BBC Newsnight that the world was merely at the beginning of a financial storm and warned, “We mustn’t allow the financial system to collapse as it did in the 1930s.”
Referring to Hank Paulson, the US Treasury Secretary, Soros stated, “The way Paulson is handling the situation is reminiscent of the way the bankers handled it in the 1930s.”
He added: “The financial system has gone overboard and the financial engineering has grown to big, it takes up too big a share in the world’s resources.”
“Now it is shrinking. When it becomes regulated it will be less profitable than the last 25 years.”
Soros, a former member of the Board of Directors of the Council on Foreign Relations, is ranked by Forbes as the 99th richest person in the world with a net worth of around $9 billion.
Ironically, Soros made his name by reaping the dividends of another financial meltdown when he “broke the Bank of England” by short-selling the pound sterling before the currency dropped out of the European Exchange Rate Mechanism in 1992, landing Soros a profit of around $1.1 billion.
In 2006, the highest court in France upheld a conviction that Soros had practiced insider trading when he bought shares in French bank Société Générale after discovering that the bank was on the verge of a takeover.
Soros has repeatedly predicted fiscal armageddon, writing three books about a “superbubble” that is on the verge of collapse.
In response to those accusing him of crying wolf in an effort to panic financial markets and benefit from the fallout, Soros stated, “I have a record of crying wolf…. I did it first in The Alchemy of Finance (in 1987), then in The Crisis of Global Capitalism (in 1998) and now in this book (2008’s The New Paradigm for Financial Markets). So it’s three books predicting disaster. (After) the boy cried wolf three times . . . the wolf really came.”
Respondents to a Daily Mail article about Soros’ comments accused the financier of engaging in wanton hypocrisy.
“I don’t know why on Earth they interview Soros since he has been proven again and again to deliberately spread financial rumour for his own exploitation and gain,” wrote one, “Soros became a multi multi billionaire precisely through manipulating markets like this – if this man says that we are heading for a 1930’s style crash you can guarantee he already has plans to profit from it.”
http://www.reuters.com/article/ousiv/idUSPEK4365020080917?sp=true
US authorities have now spent $900 billion to prop up the financial system
http://www.swissinfo.ch/eng/..d=9736054&cKey=1221686585000&ty=ti
Central banks pump £100bn into money markets
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/m..2008/09/17/cncentral117.xml
Treasury announces debt auctions for Fed
http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5jnS9Vm..m4iAD938I1A80
Fed Pumps $70B Into Financial System
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080916/ap_on_bi_ge/fed_credit_..E44U6Xfx.Fe7GUOQ.D1v24cA
Run On The Bank? Americans Could Lose Their Deposits
http://www.prisonplanet.com/run-on-the-bank-americans-could-lose-their-deposits.html
Merrill Lynch seals future with Bank of America deal
http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/bu.._finance/article4755438.ece
Rogers: Dollar To Lose World Reserve Status
http://www.prisonplanet.com/rogers-dollar-to-lose-world-reserve-status.html
Paulson: Congress Has No Authority Here
http://bigpicture.typepad.com/comments/2008/09/paulson-congres.html
Goldman profit plunges 70 pct amid market slump
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20080916/bs_nm/goldmansachs_dc
August home starts seen at lowest level in 17 years
http://www.reuters.com/article/newsOne/idUSN1638353220080917
Russia halts trading after 17.5% share price fall
http://money.cnn.com/news/newsfeeds/articles..ORTUNE5.htm
Dow closed down 450
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20..er=1;_ylt=Al5VvbZImvYKFj5hEtFaLktv24cA
Is Britain Heading For Worst Recession Since 1929?
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/main.jhtml?xml=/money/2008/09/15/bcnrecession115.xml
Washington Mutual Tumbles 30%
http://news.yaho..CZ6k2k2Rd38VKPgv6b.HQA
Now fear stalks British banks
Inflation rises to 4.7% and FTSE plunges ANOTHER 90 points as global markets tumble in wake of Meltdown Monday
Bush Claims Economy Can Weather Storm
Bailouts Will Push U.S. Into Depression
Filed under: Alan Greenspan, Argentina, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Australia, Big Banks, brazil, California, carlyle group, Chicago, Cintra, consolidation, Credit Crisis, Credit Suisse, DEBT, ecnomic collapse, economic depression, Economy, florida, food prices, foreign buyout, foreign investors, global economy, gold, Goldman Sachs, Great Depression, Greenback, hyperinflation, Inflation, infrastructure, JPMorgan, Lehman Brothers, liquidation, morgan stanley, privatization, South America, spain, Stock Market, tax, Taxpayers, Toll Roads, US Economy | Tags: highways, indiana toll road, infrastructure transactions, investing, Kohlberg Kravis Roberts, Krugerrands, Macquarie, Midway Airport, Pennsylvania Turnpike, roads, run on banks, skyway
Cities Debate Privatizing Public Infrastructure
NY Times
August 29, 2008
Cleaning up road kill and maintaining runways may not sound like cutting-edge investments. But banks and funds with big money seem to think so.
Reeling from more exotic investments that imploded during the credit crisis, Kohlberg Kravis Roberts, the Carlyle Group, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley and Credit Suisse are among the investors who have amassed an estimated $250 billion war chest — much of it raised in the last two years — to finance a tidal wave of infrastructure projects in the United States and overseas.
Their strategy is gaining steam in the United States as federal, state and local governments previously wary of private funds struggle under mounting deficits that have curbed their ability to improve crumbling roads, bridges and even airports with taxpayer money.
With politicians like Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger of California warning of a national infrastructure crisis, public resistance to private financing may start to ease.
“Budget gaps are starting to increase the viability of public-private partnerships,” said Norman Y. Mineta, a former secretary of transportation who was recently hired by Credit Suisse as a senior adviser to such deals.
This fall, Midway Airport of Chicago could become the first to pass into the hands of private investors. Just outside the nation’s capital, a $1.9 billion public-private partnership will finance new high-occupancy toll lanes around Washington. This week, Florida gave the green light to six groups that included JPMorgan, Lehman Brothers and the Carlyle Group to bid for a 50- to 75 -year lease on Alligator Alley, a toll road known for sightings of sleeping alligators that stretches 78 miles down I-75 in South Florida.
Until recently, the use of private funds to build and manage large-scale American infrastructure assets was slow to take root. States and towns could raise taxes and user fees or turn to the municipal bond market.
Americans have also been wary of foreign investors, who were among the first to this market, taking over their prized roads and bridges. When Macquarie of Australia and Cintra of Spain, two foreign funds with large portfolios of international investments, snapped up leases to the Chicago Skyway and the Indiana Toll Road, “people said ‘hold it, we don’t want our infrastructure owned by foreigners,’ ” Mr. Mineta said.
And then there is the odd romance between Americans and their roads: they do not want anyone other than the government owning them. The specter of investors reaping huge fees by financing assets like the Pennsylvania Turnpike also touches a raw nerve among taxpayers, who already feel they are paying top dollar for the government to maintain roads and bridges.
And with good reason: Private investors recoup their money by maximizing revenue — either making the infrastructure better to allow for more cars, for example, or by raising tolls. (Concession agreements dictate everything from toll increases to the amount of time dead animals can remain on the road before being cleared.)
Politicians have often supported the civic outcry: in the spring of 2007, James L. Oberstar of Minnesota, chairman of the House Committees on Transportation and Infrastructure, warned that his panel would “work to undo” any public-private partnership deals that failed to protect the public interest.
And labor unions have been quick to point out that investment funds stand to reap handsome fees from the crisis in infrastructure. “Our concern is that some sources of financing see this as a quick opportunity to make money,” Stephen Abrecht, director of the Capital Stewardship Program at the Service Employees International Union, said.
But in a world in which governments view infrastructure as a way to manage growth and raise productivity through the efficient movement of goods and people, an eroding economy has forced politicians to take another look.
“There’s a huge opportunity that the U.S. public sector is in danger of losing,” says Markus J. Pressdee, head of infrastructure investment banking at Credit Suisse. “It thinks there is a boatload of capital and when it is politically convenient it will be able to take advantage of it. But the capital is going into infrastructure assets available today around the world, and not waiting for projects the U.S., the public sector, may sponsor in the future.”
Traditionally, the federal government played a major role in developing the nation’s transportation backbone: Thomas Jefferson built canals and roads in the 1800s, Theodore Roosevelt expanded power generation in the early 1900s. In the 1950s Dwight Eisenhower oversaw the building of the interstate highway system.
But since the early 1990s, the United States has had no comprehensive transportation development, and responsibilities were pushed off to states, municipalities and metropolitan planning organizations. “Look at the physical neglect — crumbling bridges, the issue of energy security, environmental concerns,” said Robert Puentes of the Brookings Institution. “It’s more relevant than ever and we have no vision.”
The American Society of Civil Engineers estimates that the United States needs to invest at least $1.6 trillion over the next five years to maintain and expand its infrastructure. Last year, the Federal Highway Administration deemed 72,000 bridges, or more than 12 percent of the country’s total, “structurally deficient.” But the funds to fix them are shrinking: by the end of this year, the Highway Trust Fund will have a several billion dollar deficit.
“We are facing an infrastructure crisis in this country that threatens our status as an economic superpower, and threatens the health and safety of the people we serve,” New York Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg told Congress this year. In January he joined forces with Mr. Schwarzenegger and Gov. Edward G. Rendell of Pennsylvania to start a nonprofit group to raise awareness about the problem.
Some American pension funds see an investment opportunity. “Our infrastructure is crumbling, from bridges in Minnesota to our airports and freeways,” said Christopher Ailman, the head of the California State Teachers’ Retirement System. His board recently authorized up to about $800 million to invest in infrastructure projects. Nearby, the California Public Employees’ Retirement System, with coffers totaling $234 billion, has earmarked $7 billion for infrastructure investments through 2010. The Washington State Investment Board has allocated 5 percent of its fund to such investments.
Some foreign pension funds that jumped into the game early have already reaped rewards: The $52 billion Ontario Municipal Employee Retirement System saw a 12.4 percent return last year on a $5 billion infrastructure investment pool, above the benchmark 9.9 percent though down from 14 percent in 2006.
“People are creating a new asset class,” said Anne Valentine Andrews, head of portfolio strategy at Morgan Stanley Infrastructure. “You can see and understand the businesses involved — for example, ships come into the port, unload containers, reload containers and leave,” she said. “There’s no black box.”
The prospect of steady returns has drawn high-flying investors like Kohlberg Kravis and Morgan Stanley to the table. “Ten to 20 years from now infrastructure could be larger than real estate,” said Mark Weisdorf, head of infrastructure investments at JPMorgan. In 2006 and 2007, more than $500 billion worth of commercial real estate deals were done.
The pace of recent work is encouraging, says Robert Poole, director of transportation studies at the Reason Foundation, pointing to projects like the high-occupancy toll, or HOT, lanes outside Washington. “The fact that the private sector raised $1.4 billion for the Beltway project shows that even projects like HOT lanes that are considered high risk can be developed and financed privately and that has huge implications for other large metro areas,” he said .
Yet if the flow of money is fast, the return on these investments can be a waiting game. Washington’s HOT lanes project took six years to build after Fluor Enterprises, one of the two private companies financing part of the project, made an unsolicited bid in 2002. The privatization of Chicago’s Midway Airport was part of a pilot program adopted by the Federal Aviation Administration in 1996 to allow five domestic airports to be privatized. Twelve years later only one airport has met that goal — Stewart International Airport in Newburgh, N.Y. — and it was sold back to the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey.
For many politicians, privatization also remains a painful process. Mitch Daniels, the governor of Indiana, faced a severe backlash when he collected $3.8 billion for a 75- year lease of the Indiana Toll Road. A popular bumper sticker in Indiana reads “Keep the toll road, lease Mitch.”
Joe Dear, executive director of the Washington State Investment Board, still wonders how quickly governments will move. “Will all public agencies think it’s worth the extra return private capital will demand?” he asked. “That’s unclear.”
Recent News:
http://in.us.biz.yahoo.com/ap/080908/lehman_brothers_mover.html?.v=1
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601012&sid=acH4WhPh1WJ0&refer=commodities
Greenspan: Don’t use Fed as a ‘magical piggy bank’
http://apnews.myway.com/article/20080905/D930B0EG1.html
Economic downturn worst in ‘60 years’
http://uk.news.yahoo.com/itn/20080830/tuk..-worst-in-60-years-dba1618.html
Brazil, Argentina to eliminate US dollar
http://www.prisonplan…0in%20their%20bilateral%20trade.%20
Food prices rise at the fastest rate on record
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/..ney/2008/09/08/bcnfood108.xml
Gold Falls Below $800 Again
http://www.nas..=&link=&headlinereturnpage=http://www.international.nasd
Incomes Of Americans Plunge
http://ap.google.com..sanM66tszKz1zFq0LOG4XvWS7zAD92RV0M00
World’s Richest Got Richer Last Year
http://news.yahoo.com/s/..=AuoqxJH_m6x1CtrZ5.D1n_gXIr0F
Oil nears $100 a barrel ahead of Opec meeting
U.K. House Prices Fall as Sales Drop to Record Low
Greenspan: Don’t use Fed as a ‘magical piggy bank’
China central bank may need government bailout
Filed under: Alan Greenspan, bailout, central bank, CNBC, Congress, Credit Crisis, DEBT, Dollar, Economic Collapse, economic depression, Economy, fannie mae, Federal Reserve, food crisis, food market, food prices, freddie mac, gas prices, global economy, gold, Great Depression, Greenback, henry paulson, house senate, housing market, hyperinflation, Inflation, Jim Cramer, liquidation, Mad Money, Media, medicare, morgan stanley, mortgage, mortgage companies, mortgage lenders, nationalization, NYSE, Oil, Paulson, Petrol, real estate, SEC, Stock Market, subprime, subprime lending, US Economy, US Treasury, USDA, Wall Street, Warren Buffett | Tags: securities and exchange commission
Buffett Says Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac ’Game Is Over’
Bloomberg
August 22, 2008
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the two largest mortgage finance companies, “don’t have any net worth,’’ billionaire investor Warren Buffett said.
“The game is over’’ as independent companies said Buffett, the 77-year-old chairman of Berkshire Hathaway Inc., in an interview on CNBC today. “They were able to borrow without any of the normal restraints. They had a blank check from the federal government.’’
Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae touched 20-year lows yesterday on the New York Stock Exchange on speculation a government bailout will leave the stocks worthless. U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson won approval from Congress last month to pump emergency capital into the companies, which account for more than half of the $12 trillion U.S. mortgage market.
Fannie and Freddie mispriced their products and “kept existing because they had the federal government behind them,’’ Buffett said. Omaha, Nebraska-based Berkshire had been among the largest holders of Freddie until about 2001, when it became apparent the company wasn’t being run well, he said.
Jim Cramer Talks About Market Manipulation
http://www.reuters.com/article..220080820?sp=true
79 Million Americans Struggle To Pay Med Bills
http://news.yahoo.com/s/hsn/2..AjuAtPXqgtjMugI32IL4GWO9j7AB
Gold surges to a 1-week high of $839
http://africa.reuters.com/business/news/usnBAN222833.html
US Crony Capitalism
http://mparent7777-1.livejournal.com/1375774.html
Recession within year, say experts
http://uk.news.yahoo.com/pres..ay-experts-6323e80.html
Oil shoots to $122 on missile shield row
http://www.thestandard.com.hk/..70614&sid=20295831&con_type=3
Morgan Stanley Says Financial Crisis Will Last: Report
http://www.cnbc.com/id/26252398
Wholesale prices: Highest annual rate in 27 years
http://money.cnn.com/2008/08/19/ne..postversion=2008081910
Wall Street Pulls Back As Financials Fall
Stocks Fall On Inflation Data
Financial Fears, Soaring Inflation Hit Wall Street
Filed under: Alan Greenspan, bernanke, central bank, Credit Crisis, DEBT, Dollar, Economic Collapse, economic depression, Economy, energy, Euro, Federal Reserve, GDP, Germany, gold, Great Depression, greece, Greenback, housing market, hyperinflation, Inflation, interest rate cuts, job market, rate cut, silver, Stock Market, US Economy, WW2 | Tags: hennecke
Hennecke Says U.S. Faces ’Hyperinflationary Depression’
Filed under: Ahmadinejad, airstrikes, Alan Greenspan, Big Banks, Britain, California, central bank, Coup, Credit Crisis, DEBT, Dictatorship, Dollar, Economic Collapse, economic depression, Economy, Empire, energy, Euro, Europe, european union, euros, False Flag, Federal Reserve, florida, gas prices, Great Depression, Greenback, imf, Inflation, Iran, Iraq, kuwait, LA, london, Los Angeles, Media, Media Fear, military strike, nation building, national debt, New York, Nuke, occupation, Oil, OPEC, Petrol, Preemptive Strike, preemptive war, Propaganda, Saddam Hussein, Saudi Arabia, Senate, Shock and Awe, Stock Market, Tehran, United Kingdom, US Economy, War Crimes, War On Terror, Washington D.C., White House, WMD, World Bank, WW3, ww4
OPEC dumping the dollar could be the real reason for a war with Iran
Recent News:
http://uk.reuters.com/article/motorin..NOA62976920080626
Federal Reserve leaves key interest rate at 2%
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld..un26,0,7851841.story
Kuwait Buying Up U.S. Infrastructure
http://biz.yahoo.com/ap/080624/kuwait_fund_us_banks.html?.v=1
U.S. Senate To Pass Bank Bailout Bill
http://apnews.myway.com/article/20080625/D91H2TT80.html
Bad economy cancels central Florida city’s 4th of July fireworks display
http://www.local6.com/money/16709180/detail.html
Utilities Cutting Off More Customers
http://www.usatoday.com/money/indu..ff-disconnect_N.htm
Suburbia Life Tougher Because Of Gas Prices
http://www.iht.com/articles/2008/06/24/business/exurbs.php
Oil prices ’will not come down’ says OPEC boss
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/mone..06/24/bcnoil124.xml
LA Seeing More People Living In Cars
http://www.breitbart.com/article.php?id=D91FV1E80&show_article=1
Economy on brink of recession, Greenspan says
http://www.reuters.com/article/businessNew..s&rpc=23&sp=true
OPEC talks: Saudi Arabia to boost oil output
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/m..oost-oil-output.html
IMF sees zero US growth in 2008
http://www.gulf-news.com/business/Economy/10222823.html
Few people are conscious of how the United States can use food as a political weapon
Big Shots Jump at Bilderberg’s Oil Orders
Paulson & Co. Says Writedowns May Reach $1.3 Trillion
Japan Offers Helping Hand To World Banks
Bush administration wants to give Federal Reserve more power
Filed under: Alan Greenspan, central bank, Chicago, China, citigroup, Credit Crisis, DEBT, dollar peg, Economic Collapse, economic depression, Economy, Euro, Federal Reserve, gas prices, george soros, gold, Great Depression, Greenback, henry paulson, imf, Inflation, Oil, Paulson, Petrol, platinum, silver, south africa, Stock Market, UAE, US Economy, washington mutual
Gold hits highs of $940, Current Price is $924
IBT Times
April 11, 2008
Gold pushed as high as $940 just before the open of the New York session on Thursday, then fell off until the noon hour, but then reversed field once again, moving higher to finish at $929.40/oz., down $4.60. Overnight, gold has edged lower.
Platinum was higher in the European markets, but declined in New York, to end at $2026/oz., unchanged. Overnight, platinum has slipped lower.
Silver peaked at $18.40 in early London trading, fell off until mid-morning in New York, then traded sideways for the rest of the day, closing at $17.95, down 22 cents. Overnight, silver has been flat.
It was a mixed day for the precious metals, with early weakness giving way to a spate of buying later in the day, and no major changes by the end.
Oil Prices Above $112 As Supplies Fall, Current Price $110
AP
April 9, 2008
The price of oil has surged to a new record, with a barrel a crude trading above $112 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
A government report that oil and fuel supplies were lower than expected last week gave crude a push past its latest milestone. But months of buying by speculators and by investors seeking refuge from a falling dollar have also lifted oil to its new heights.
Light, sweet crude for May delivery has traded as high as $112.16, surpassing the previous trading record of $111.80 set ast month.
US Dollar Hits New Record Low Against Euro
RTT
April 10, 2008
The US dollar declined against its major counterparts in early deals on Thursday, hitting a fresh record low against the euro. Against its other major counterparts, the dollar weakened to new multi-day low during this time period.
The US trade balance, initial jobless and continuing claims are the major economic events slated for release later in New York morning.
The US dollar plummeted to new record low of 1.5915 against the euro at about 5:10 am ET Thursday, compared to yesterday’s closing value of 1.5832.
The dollar may face $1.65 against the euro by October
Bloomberg
April 7, 2008
Optimism for a dollar rebound that pervaded the currency market at the start of the year is fading.
Futures traders doubled bets against the greenback in the past two months, data from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission in Washington show. Citigroup Inc., Deutsche Bank AG and Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc, which handle almost 40 percent of global foreign exchange trading, say the currency may slump to $1.65 per euro by October.
Recent News:
http://www.reuters.com/article/topNews/idUSWBT00874120080410
Fed: Severe Downturn Possible
http://www.reuters.com/article/ousiv/idUSTRS00005820080409?sp=true
South Africa: Analysts Say Gold Can Top $1000 Again
http://allafrica.com/stories/200804100124.html
Greenspan: I have no regrets on Federal Reserve’s past policies
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20080408/bs_nm/usa_economy_greenspan_dc
The Great Chinese Crash of 2008
http://www.fool.com/investing/in..reat-chinese-crash-of-2008.aspx
Soros: USD Won’t Be World’s Reserve Currency
http://www.nytimes.com/2008..Y&pagewanted=print
Soros sounds the alarm again on world economy
http://www.iht.com/articles/2008/04/11/business/11soros.php
Federal Credit Cards Misused
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dy../ST2008040803504.html
U.S. Economy: Consumer Sentiment Drops to 26-Year Low
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/n..=af8M_eEjb_QY&refer=home
Gas, Diesel Prices Hit New Records
http://www.bloomberg.com..087&sid=af8M_eEjb_QY&refer=home
Gas Tops $4 In Chicago
http://cbs2chicago.com/consumer/gas.prices.milestone.2.697232.html
G24: IMF Regulatory Failures Caused Crisis
http://news.yahoo.com/s..bNmbqT52QemoOrgF
Official: UAE to maintain dollar-peg policy
http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2008-04/08/content_7940355.htm
WaMu gets $7 billion infusion, cuts jobs, sees big loss
IMF: Mortgage Crisis May Cost $945 Billion
Dollar Falls Against Euro, Heads for Weekly Decline, Before G-7
US Fed prepares to replenish war chest
US trade deficit jumps despite weak dollar
Pound falls to 80p against the euro
IMF Says U.S. Crisis Biggest Since 1930s
IMF: Global Intervention Needed On Credit Crisis
Current crisis is worst since Great Depression: Soros
Soros Predicts End Of Easy Borrowing
Govt Expects Gas To Hit $4
Filed under: Alan Greenspan, bernanke, Big Banks, BOE, carlyle group, central bank, Credit Crisis, DEBT, Economic Collapse, economic depression, Economy, Federal Reserve, Great Depression, Greenback, henry paulson, imf, Inflation, interest rate cut, interest rate cuts, job market, Karl Rove, Paulson, rate cut, Stock Market, Uncategorized, US Economy, Wall Street
Fed Pumps Another $50 billion Into Banking System
AP
April 8, 2008
The Federal Reserve, still working to combat the effects of a severe credit squeeze, said Tuesday that it had auctioned another $50 billion to cash-strapped banks.
Separately, some Fed officials said they were concerned about a “prolonged and severe” economic downturn when they cut interest rates last month.
The Fed auction marked the ninth in a series that began in December that so far have pumped $310 billion in short-term loans into the nation’s banking system.
Bernanke: “Recession Is Possible”
Reuters
April 4, 2008
For the second time this week, a senior Federal Reserve official conceded the United States economy could slip into recession, but suggested the central bank should wait to see if more rate cuts are needed.
“The economy has all but stalled and could contract over the first half of the year,” San Francisco Federal Reserve President Janet Yellen, who is not a voter on the policy-setting committee in 2008, said on Thursday.
“Current indicators suggest that, starting in the fourth quarter, the economy, at best, slowed to a crawl,” she said, adding later that the Fed is still battling a “negative feedback loop” of tight credit conditions, falling house prices and low consumer confidence.
Yellen’s remarks, in a speech to the Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, echoed those from Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke during testimony to a Congressional Joint Economic Committee on Wednesday.
“Recession is possible,” Bernanke said. “There’s a chance that for the first half as a whole, there might be a slight contraction.”
But, like Bernanke, Yellen declined to point the way toward additional interest rate cuts to pull the economy out of its malaise.
Instead, she forecast a minor pickup in growth in the second half on the back of rate cuts already in the pipeline, and “timely” fiscal stimulus checks — even though the drag from falling house prices will linger into 2009.
Fed rate cut plans up on weak jobs
Ros Krasny
Reuters
April 4, 2008
U.S. short-term interest rate futures rose on Friday on news that U.S. firms cut payrolls for a third consecutive month, as dealers raised bets that the Federal Reserve will make an aggressive interest rate cut this month and beyond.
The implied prospects for the Fed to cut its benchmark lending rate by 50 basis points at the April 29-30 policy meeting hit 40 percent against 20 percent late on Thursday.
A smaller, 25 basis point rate cut from the Federal Open Market Committee, which would take the fed funds rate to 2 percent, is fully priced.
More than 50 percent chance of U.S. recession: Greenspan
Sonya Dowsett
Reuters
April 6, 2008
There is more than a 50 percent chance the United States could go into recession, former Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan told El Pais newspaper in an interview published on Sunday.
However, the U.S. has not yet entered recessionary state marked by sharp falls in orders, strong rises in unemployment and intensive weakening of the economy, he said.
“We would have to see signs of this intensification: there are some, but not many yet,” he said. “Therefore … I would not describe the situation we are in as a recession, although the chances that we’ll have one are more than 50 percent.”
Recent News:
http://www.reuters.com/articl..wsAndPR/idUSL0539983320080405
Paulson Unveils 218 Page Bank Regulation Plan
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/m..8/04/01/cnusbanks101.xml
Huge Job Losses Set Off Recession Alarms
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080405/ap_on_bi_go_ec_fi/economy
81 percent of Americans think country on “wrong track”
http://www.reuters.com/article/newsOne/idUSN0348141520080404
Karl Rove Claims The Economy Is Only ‘Apparently Struggling’
http://thinkprogress.org/2008/04/02/rove-economy-struggling/
IMF gives gloomy economic outlook
http://www.reuters.com/article/ousiv/idUSL0553300520080405
Fed’s interest rate games could destroy the dollar
http://www.detnews.com/apps/pb..PINION01/804040313/1008
Carlyle Group’s Plan to Takeover the Banking System
http://www.economicanalyticsgroup.co..oups-plan-to-take-over.html
Bankrupticies Up 27%
http://money.cnn.com/2008/04/02..dex.htm?postversion=2008040212
BOE’s King Might Be Sleepwalking Into Recession
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?..mnist_lynn&sid=aD237XXZ.Hok
IMF Says U.S. In Worst Economic Crisis Since Great Depression
http://prisonplanet.com/articles/april2008/040208_great_depression.htm
Federal Reserve Staff Moves Into Monitor Banks
http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/industr..ce/article3678053.ece
The Federal Reserve is a Private Financial Institution
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=8518
Banks Swamped By Foreclosures
Senate Sets Urgent Push For Housing Compromise
Bernanke Meets With House GOP On Economy
Bernanke Faces Scrutiny in Congress Over Bear Stearns Buyout
Fed Official Urges Tighter Wall Street Regulation
Ron Paul On Money Inflation & Government
Radical action to fight credit crisis discussed
Filed under: 2008 Election, Alan Greenspan, bernanke, central bank, CNBC, Credit Crisis, DEBT, Economic Collapse, economic depression, Economy, Federal Reserve, food prices, glenn beck, gold, GOP, Great Depression, Greenback, housing market, idaho, Inflation, interest rate cut, interest rate cuts, missouri, montana, peter schiff, rate cut, real estate, republican caucus, republican primaries, Ron Paul, ron paul delegates, silver, Stock Market, subprime, subprime lending, US Economy
Abolish the Fed – Ron Paul on CNBC
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mBympCQcyzY
Financial Advisor to Glenn Beck: Ron Paul Gets It
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Es2SZ1Z2lW8
http://www.house.gov/paul/tst/tst2008/tst031608.htm
Ron Paul Satisfies Ballot Requirements Nationwide
http://news.google.com/news/url..f2pmR2-qMAHsD2kDwRRN_9fJAdGQ
Ron Paul: Shock and Awe in Missouri
http://stcharlesjournal.stltoday.c..s/doc47e01f744db32094092795.txt
Ron Paul Turns in Signatures to Appear on Montana
http://www.ronpaul2008.com/press..ppear-on-montana-republican-primary-ballotRon Paul is On The Idaho Ballot
Ron Paul Backers Take Over GOP Caucuses
Ron Paul wins here where it counts
Ron Paul backers tangle with state GOP over caucus reports
Ron Paul: Beware the Threat from Within
Filed under: Alan Greenspan, bear sterns, bernanke, Big Banks, Bill Clinton, catastrophic event, China, Credit Crisis, DEBT, Dictatorship, Economic Collapse, economic depression, Economy, Federal Reserve, food prices, gas prices, George Bush, global elite, gold, Goldman Sachs, Great Depression, Greenback, Hillary Clinton, House, housing market, imf, Inflation, interest rate cut, interest rate cuts, Japan, new zealand, Northern Rock, Oil, OPEC, peter schiff, Petrol, rate cut, real estate, robert reich, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Senate, Stock Market, tax, US Economy, wheat, WW2 | Tags: Larry Elliott
The Federal Reserve Is Destroying America
Lee Rogers
Funny Money Report
March 17, 2008
It is incredible to see the rampant devaluation of the U.S. Dollar. The Federal Reserve just hours ago made a rare cut of 25 basis points during the weekend which will cause even more inflation. Gold immediately moved up $20 an ounce and the U.S. Dollar Index plunged under 71 in international trading. If this type of market activity continues the U.S. Dollar will have no value in a few months. While it is probably unlikely that we will see a hyper-inflationary collapse of the U.S. Dollar within the next few months, these policies are entirely unsustainable. If the Federal Reserve does not move to defend the value of the U.S. Dollar we will eventually see a hyper-inflationary collapse and worldwide financial turmoil. This view is also shared by other well respected financial analysts. Peter Schiff recently raised concerns about a hyper-inflationary collapse of the U.S. Dollar, Robert Reich a former Clinton cabinet member believes we are facing a depression and Alan Greenspan the man who caused this whole mess wrote in the Financial Times stating that we are facing the worst financial crisis since World War II. What’s amazing is that the Federal Reserve isn’t even trying to protect the U.S. Dollar because all they care about is saving the power of their private banking cartel. They don’t care about the U.S. Dollar nor do they care about the country itself. They are destroying this country through their actions and there needs to be an investigation into the controllers of this bank.
A Time For Caution
321 Gold
March 16, 2008
I wrote a piece 10 days ago suggesting caution on the part of my readers. Gold and silver are at bullish extremes; the dollar is at a bearish extreme. In any normal time, we would expect to see a correction, probably violent. I still believe we will have a correction shortly but we may no longer control anything. While the metals and the dollar are showing extremes of emotion, the shares of mining companies still seem to be very bullish based on my read of the XAU over gold.
My readers are smart enough to realize we are not in normal times. We are in a Domino Depression where we can expect two or three hedge funds to collapse every day, banks to go under on a regular basis. Northern Rock collapsed last fall, I for one, cannot understand how the rest of the banking system has not failed.
It’s starting again; we are in uncharted waters where no one quite understands where we are; we’ve never been here before. Bear Sterns crashed on Friday last. On Monday March 17th, President Bush meets with the infamous Plunge Protection Team. The alternatives are everything from a Bank Holiday to a nuclear attack on Iran to Bush declaring a “National Emergency” and naming himself Fuhrer.
One of the very real alternatives is Weimar style inflation. That’s what the government would like to do; it’s a question of if the rest of the world will go along with it. All it would take for a total and immediate failure would be for China or Russia or Japan or Saudi Arabia to dump the dollar.
It’s a time for caution. We SHOULD have a violent correction in gold and silver and the dollar based on emotion and government intervention but we could see $3,000 gold in a week or the start of a living nightmare brought to you by the Gang of Fools in Washington. No one knows.
I’m tempted to say the government’s ability to deceive is far greater than I ever imagined and the stupidity of Americans equally unimagined. We may well coast into Armageddon at a nice measured rate or we could see a freeze-up next week. The time will come when there is a total freeze-up in the banking system and all the banks will close. I just don’t know if it’s next week or not.
It’s a time to be cautious. We are not entering a recession; it’s a full-blown Domino Depression. It’s not a time to be in CDs or Real Estate or speculating in the stock market. You need to own real things of some real value. Our world is changing at an ever-increasing rate. Own some physical gold and pay attention to what is going on.
Leading Economic Writer: Financial Meltdown A “Gigantic Fraud”
Steve Watson
Infowars.net
March 17, 2008
A leading economic journalist has described the current financial crisis as a “gigantic fraud”, the fallout of a deliberate and preconceived profit agenda to enslave the middle classes in a debt bubble.
The economics editor of the London Guardian, Larry Elliott, has hit out at the global financial elite in a refreshing piece that marks a rare shift away from the establishment hackery we are used to from the corporate media.
In an article titled America was conned – who will pay? Elliot writes:
Indeed, it is somewhat surprising that there is not already rioting in the streets, given the gigantic fraud perpetrated by the financial elite at the expense of ordinary Americans.
[…]
Business, of course, needs consumers to carry on spending in order to make money, so a way had to be found to persuade households to do their patriotic duty. The method chosen was simple. Whip up a colossal housing bubble, convince consumers that it makes sense to borrow money against the rising value of their homes to supplement their meagre real wage growth and watch the profits roll in.
As they did – for a while. Now it’s payback time and the mood could get very ugly. Americans, to put it bluntly, have been conned. They have been duped by a bunch of serpent-tongued hucksters who packed up the wagon and made it across the county line before a lynch mob could be formed.
Elliot also states that the debate is now not about whether the US faces a recession, but is about how deep it will be and how long it will last, comparing the downturn to the South Sea Bubble crisis in 1720, and declaring that the “Ponzi securitisation scam has been exposed.”
A Ponzi scheme, named after Charles Ponzi, is one that offers abnormally high short-term returns in order to entice new investors. The high returns that a Ponzi scheme advertises and pays require an ever-increasing flow of money from investors in order to keep the scheme going, meaning it is inevitable that it will eventually collapse.
http://www.bloomberg.com..p;sid=aMVeMY2hvYUI&refer=home
Not Just Recession, Clinton Appointee Talking ‘Depression’
http://www.businessandmedia.org/articles/2008/20080314131851.aspx
Oil plummets on economy worries
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080317/ap_on_bi_ge/oil_prices
Bernanke May Run Low on `Ammunition’ for Loans, Rates
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news..amp;refer=exclusive
Who Is Responsible for the World Food Shortage?
http://www.larouchepub.com/other/1995/2249_food_intro.html
NZ market hit by US meltdown
http://www.newstalkzb.co.nz/newsdetail1.asp?storyID=134130
House, Senate endorse tax hikes
http://www.rawstory.com/new..enate_endorse_tax_hikes_03132008.html
Dollars Tough To Sell On Amsterdam
http://www.reuters.com/article/ousiv/idUSL1758265520080317
Gulf States Creep Away From Plunging Dollar
http://prisonplanet.com/articles/march2008/031708_creep_away.htm
IMF, OECD hit alarm buttons for crisis-hit global financial system
http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/200803..Aj6Sk0_nk7A4Wj6bi0U.nq7.ucsA
Goldman Sees $175 Oil & Explosive Commodities
http://www.bloomberg.com/app..newsarchive&sid=aUmQ3MBOkx_0
Filed under: Alan Greenspan, Bear Stearns, bernanke, Big Banks, Britain, Credit Crisis, DEBT, Economic Collapse, economic depression, Economy, Europe, Federal Reserve, food prices, gas prices, George Bush, global economy, gold, Great Depression, Greenback, imf, Income Tax, Inflation, interest rate cut, interest rate cuts, JP Morgan, Oil, Petrol, rate cut, Ron Paul, Stock Market, tax, United Kingdom, US Economy, US Treasury, wheat, WW2
noworldsystem.com note: Immediately after the fed announced the 3.25% cut, gold dramatically hit record lows of around $1004 but the trend right now (Mar 17, 2008 10:57 AM NY Time) is $1013, and is gradually going up, get live quotes for gold! This can get really ugly. . .
Gold futures ease back off $1,033 record
Market Watch
March 17, 2008
Gold futures hit a new record on Monday of nearly $1,034 an ounce before edging back down after the Federal Reserve cut the discount rate by a quarter of a percentage point after JP Morgan Chase & Co. agreed to buy the troubled investment bank, Bear Stearns.
Gold for April delivery stood lately at $1,009.40 in the Comex Division in the New York Mercantile Exchange, after hitting high of $1,033.90 an ounce. Bullion gained 3.4 percent.
The benchmark contract closed Friday’s session at $999.50 an ounce on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
“We believe there is a derivative play being unwound,” said Johnathan Barratt, managing director of Sydney-based Commodity Broking Services.
Oil hits record near $112 as dollar slumps
Herald Tribune
March 17, 2008
Oil rose to a record near $112 on Monday as a surprise weekend cut in the Federal Reserve discount rate and the sale of stricken U.S. investment bank Bear Stearns sent the dollar to all-time lows.
U.S. crude for April hit a fresh high of $111.80 a barrel. It was trading $1.15 up at $111.36 a barrel by 9:15 a.m.
May London Brent crude was $1.28 higher at $107.48.
“The recent oil prices have been swayed by the currency moves, including this latest rally to a record,” said Tony Nunan, risk management executive at Tokyo-based Mitsubishi. “The dollar weakness is the factor at the moment.”
Euro touches $1.59, Current Price $1.57
RTE Business
March 17, 2008
The dollar plunged to a fresh record low against the euro this morning as fears about the health of the US economy escalated.
Dealers said an emergency rate cut by the US Federal Reserve only added to the sense of crisis after the near-collapse of US bank Bear Stearns.
The euro struck a new peak of $1.5905 in Tokyo, up from $1.5669 late on Friday in New York. It later slipped back to $1.5770 in volatile European trading amid speculation that central banks could step in to halt the dollar’s decline.
The euro also moved above 78p against sterling.
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/682..00779fd2ac.html?nclick_check=1
Gas Not Alone — Food Prices Way Up, Too
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2008/03/..merWatch/main3928372.shtml
Treasury Chief Defends Fed Intervention
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/2008..AvVz8_lzJEF1tmFuhLEGyZ6s0NUE
High Wheat Process Rise Grocery Prices
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/2008031..e/costly_wheat&printer=1
U.S. Dollar Intervention Madness
http://www.howestreet.com/articles/index.php?article_id=5958
UK: Taxman Given Draconian Powers
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/liv..33629&in_page_id=1770
JP Morgan Closes In On Bear Stearns Buyout
http://online.wsj.com/article..8739825.html?mod=googlenews_wsj
Greenspan: Worst Crisis Since World War II
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/e..6bc-0000779fd2ac.html?nclick_check=1
Ron Paul’s Statement On Coinage Debasement
http://pressmediawire.com/article.cfm?articleID=18325
Bush: Economy Is Going Through A ‘Rough Period’
http://wcbstv.com/topstories/Bush.New.York.2.676953.html
U.S. faces severe recession: NBER’s Feldstein
http://biz.yahoo.com..a_economy_feldstein.html?.v=1
What the Price of Gold Is Telling Us
Could we really run out of food?
Fears mount over US economy
Leading Economist: Dollar Faces Outright Collapse
Swiss Franc Rises to Parity With Dollar as Investors Avoid Risk
Filed under: Abu Dhabi, Alan Greenspan, Alex Jones, asia, bernanke, bonds, central bank, China, Credit Crisis, DEBT, dollar peg, Economic Collapse, economic depression, Economy, Euro, Federal Reserve, food crisis, food market, food prices, George Bush, Great Depression, Greenback, gulf, imf, Inflation, interest rate cuts, Joseph Stiglitz, liquidation, rate cut, sterling, Stock Market, UAE, US Economy, US Treasury, World Bank
Traitor Greenspan Urges Gulf States To Abandon Dollar
Former Fed chief’s insistence that Arab nations dump greenback peg could lead to economic chaos in America
Paul Joseph Watson
Prison Planet
February 26, 2008
Alan Greenspan has again exposed himself as a traitor working against the interests of the American people by urging Gulf states to abandon the dollar peg, a move that could result in financial chaos and an economic depression in America.
The dollar peg mandates Gulf nations to price their assets in U.S. dollars and follow U.S. monetary policy at a time when the Fed is cutting interest rates, a system that has produced a boom in oil revenues but led to high inflation as the dollar weakens.
“It [de-pegging] is probably the most useful thing that can be done to stop the increasing influence of foreign assets on the monetary system and therefore the monetary base which is basically the major force in inflationary pressures,” Greenspan told the Abu Dhabi Corporate Leadership Forum yesterday.
“In the short term free floating … will not fully dissipate inflationary pressure, although it would significantly do so,” added Greenspan, giving a green light for Gulf states to drop the dollar peg.
According to Economist editor Pam Woodall, Greenspan’s comments heralded the beginning of the end for the US dollar as the currency of choice for foreign exchange reserves.
“If Asian central banks hold today more than 80 per cent of the global foreign exchange reserves, which indicates the shift of the global economy domination towards Asia, it seems quite awkward that the UAE still maintains the peg of its currency to the US dollar,” she told Gulf News.
Greenspan’s zeal to destroy the dollar is evident in numerous public statements he has made predicting the replacement of the dollar with the Euro as the world reserve currency.
The former Fed chairman has repeatedly badmouthed the dollar and hyped the inevitability of economic chaos at a time when market confidence is in the toilet. Greenspan’s rhetoric matches that of the IMF, who in October of last year bizarrely slammed the dollar as “overvalued” at the same time the greenback hit its all time low against the Euro.
A decision on behalf of the Gulf states to abandon the dollar peg would have disastrous consequences for the greenback and the American economy.
Such a move could lead the likes of the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia to diversify their foreign exchange holdings out of dollars. This would amount to a vote of “no confidence” in the dollar and may cause other countries with large dollar reserves, such as China and Japan, to follow suit and begin dumping the greenback en masse.
China has threatened repeatedly to use the “nuclear option” and liquidate its vast holding of US treasuries in response to continued pressure on the Communist state to force a yuan revaluation. According to a widely-read London Telegraph report, such an event “could trigger a dollar crash” and also “cause a spike in US bond yields, hammering the US housing market and perhaps tipping the economy into recession.”
Runaway inflation would also ensue, making the cost of living unaffordable to even middle class Americans as food prices skyrocket and international aid organizations like the World Food Programme predict rationing and food riots.
The dollar has held firm against the Euro and recovered some losses against Sterling over the past two months, but it has still lost 12 per cent of its value against the trade-weighted index over the last two years and has plunged by a whopping 60 per cent against the Euro since Bush entered the White House.
Stiglitz Blames Greenspan For Recession
Former World Bank Chief Economist says US probably already in recession
Steve Watson
Infowars.net
February 26, 2008
Former chief economist of the World Bank, Joseph Stiglitz, has said that the US economy is already in recession and is pointing the finger of blame directly towards former Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan.
Remarking that the economy is “probably” now in recession, Stiglitz told Bloomberg Television that “There is a very significant slowdown in the U.S. economy… The housing bubble has broken and housing prices are coming down. Most experts think they will have to come down substantially more.”
Stiglitz stressed that Alan Greenspan “is right that this downturn is going to be the worst downturn in a quarter century, but he’s largely to blame,” adding “It’s not just that he was asleep at the wheel, he actively looked the other way”.
Stiglitz’s comments come on the back of news that Greenspan has been actively urging Gulf states to abandon the dollar peg, a move that could result in financial chaos and a further economic depression in America. We have previously reported on Greenspan’s penchant for working to destroy the US economy.
Stiglitz also took a swipe at current Fed chairman Ben S. Bernanke, charging him with failing to counter the deterioration of the real-estate market by procrastinating over interest rate cuts.
“The dramatic lowering of the main interest rate by 75 basis points [last month] was a panic not a prudent measure.” Stiglitz said.
The Nobel-prize winning economist also cited the $3 trillion cost of the Iraq war as a key factor in the economic downturn, saying it has increased the budget deficit and consumed resources that would otherwise promote growth.
In contrast, the president last week stated that the war in Iraq has had no bearing on the economic slump.
Stiglitz is no stranger to speaking out against the establishment on the economy. In October 2001 he caused controversy when he exposed rampant corruption within the IMF and blew the whistle on their nefarious methods of inducing countries to fall under their debt before stripping them of sovereignty and hollowing out their economies.
Sixteen months ago, on the nationally syndicated Alex Jones radio show, Stiglitz predicted a global economic crash would occur within 2 years.
Filed under: Alan Greenspan, bernanke, Credit Crisis, DEBT, Economic Collapse, economic depression, Economy, Federal Reserve, George Bush, global elite, Goldman Sachs, Great Depression, Greenback, housing market, Inflation, Merrill Lynch, Michael Bloomberg, Stock Market, subprime, subprime lending, tax rebates, US Economy, Wall Street
Greenspan Says U.S. Economy Is on Edge of a Recession
Bloomberg
February 15, 2008
Former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan said the U.S. economy is on the verge of its first recession in six years as falling home values hurt consumer spending.
“We are clearly on the edge,” Greenspan told a group of energy-industry executives yesterday at the Cambridge Energy Research Associates’ 27th annual CERAWeek conference in Houston. He reiterated comments from last month that the odds of an economic contraction are “50 percent or better.”
Greenspan’s view has evolved from a year ago, when he saw a one-in-three chance of a recession, citing slowing profit growth and becoming one of the first economists to warn of the risk. Now, Wall Street firms including Merrill Lynch & Co. and Goldman Sachs Group Inc. are forecasting a contraction in the aftermath of the worst housing downturn in a quarter century.
Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke, Greenspan’s successor, acknowledged “downside” risks to the expansion yesterday, while telling lawmakers he expects growth to pick up later this year. He reiterated the central bank is prepared to take “timely” action to aid the economy as needed.
Treasuries rose, pushing the 10-year yield 1 basis point lower to 3.81 percent at 3:37 p.m. in Tokyo.
“While we are at stall speed in the U.S. at the moment, we haven’t yet seen the discontinuity that characterizes recession,” Greenspan said during a question-and-answer session yesterday. “American business was in such extra-good shape before this problem hit. Otherwise we would be talking about how long and how deep. We are not there yet.”
Bloomberg: US Economy Resembles A “Third World Country”
WCBS-TV
February 15, 2008
Mayor Michael Bloomberg has unleashed another flurry of jabs on Washington, ridiculing the federal government’s rebate checks as being “like giving a drink to an alcoholic” on Thursday, and said the presidential candidates are looking for easy solutions to complex economic problems.
The billionaire and potential independent presidential candidate also said the nation “has a balance sheet that’s starting to look more and more like a third-world country.”
President Bush signed legislation Wednesday that will result in cash rebates ranging from $300 to $1,200 for more than 130 million people.
The federal checks are the centerpiece of the government’s emergency effort to stimulate the economy, under the theory that most people will spend the money right away.
But Bloomberg does not believe it will do much good. And his harsh words at a news conference Thursday reflect the view among some of his associates that the country’s economic woes present a unique opportunity for him to launch a third-party bid for the White House.
Filed under: Alan Greenspan, Central Banks, Congress, Credit Crisis, DEBT, Economic Collapse, economic depression, Economy, engineered recession, Federal Reserve, gold, Great Depression, Greenback, Inflation, Stock Market, US Economy, US Treasury
Half of gold in central banks gone?
Watchdog: ‘We want to expose and stop the manipulation’
Jerome R. Corsi
World Net Daily
January 29, 2008
U.S. central banks may have less than half the gold they claim to possess in their vaults, charges a watchdog group in an ad scheduled for publication in the Wall Street Journal this week.
As WND reported, the Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee, or GATA, claims the Federal Reserve and the U.S. Treasury are surreptitiously manipulating the country’s gold reserves by participating in undisclosed leases, according to an advance copy WND obtained of the ad running in Thursday’s edition of the Journal.
GATA believes much of the borrowed gold out on lease will never be returned to the central banks.
“With the demand for gold so strong worldwide, it has become impossible to return much of the leased gold without driving the price to the moon,” said GATA’s chairman, William J. Murphy III.
“Most observers calculate central bank reserves are supposed to have about 30,000 tons of gold worldwide in their vaults, but we believe the amount of gold actually there may be more like 15,000 tons,” Murphy said. “The rest of the gold is gone.”
The U.S. Treasury denies the claim, insisting the stock is accounted for regularly.
“We want to expose and stop the manipulation of the gold market by the United States Treasury and Federal Reserve right now,” Murphy said.
“The purpose of this ad is to wake people up in the investment world as to what is going on behind the scenes in the U.S. gold and financial markets,” Murphy told WND.
He explained GATA has decided to pay the Wall Street Journal $264,000 for a one-time placement of the full page ad in the national edition because the financial press has not covered the story.
“We have had two major international conferences since 2001; the mainstream financial press has blackballed our message,” Murphy explained.
“Anybody Seen Our Gold?” the ad is titled, charging U.S. gold reserves held at depositories such as Fort Knox or West Point may have been seriously depleted as they are shipped overseas to settle complex transactions utilized by the Federal Reserve and the U.S. Treasury to suppress prices.
GATA further charges the U.S. government strategy to manipulate the price of gold has begun to fail.
“The objective of this manipulation is to conceal the mismanagement of the U.S. dollar so that it might retain its function as the world’s reserve currency,” the ad copy reads.
“Gold’s recent rise toward $900 per ounce shows that the price suppression scheme is faltering,” GATA says. “When it is widely understood how central banks have been suppressing gold, its price may rise to $3,000 or $5,000 an ounce or more.”
As evidence of gold price manipulation by the U.S. Treasury and the Federal Reserve, GATA cites Treasury’s weekly report of the government’s international reserve position that since May has listed gold loans and swaps as a line item in accounting for U.S. gold reserves.
The ad also cites a July 24, 1998, statement by then-Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan, who told Congress “central banks stand ready to lease gold in increasing quantities should the price rise.”
Filed under: Alan Greenspan, bernanke, Big Banks, Britain, California, Credit Crisis, DEBT, Department of Defense, DoD, Economic Collapse, economic depression, Economy, ethanol, Europe, european union, Federal Reserve, food prices, Great Depression, Greenback, henry paulson, House, housing market, Hugo Chavez, imf, Inflation, interest rate cuts, morgan stanley, Oppenheimer, rate cut, southern california, Stock Market, subprime, subprime lending, tax rebates, tent city, United Kingdom, US Economy, Venezuela, War On Terror, WW2
Fed Lowers Interest Rates 50 Basis Points
Bloomberg
January 30, 2008
The Federal Reserve lowered its benchmark interest rate by half a percentage point to 3 percent, the second cut in as many weeks, to prevent the U.S. economy from sinking into a recession.
“Today’s policy action, combined with those taken earlier, should help to promote moderate growth over time and to mitigate the risks to economic activity,” the Federal Open Market Committee said in a statement after meeting today in Washington. “However, downside risks to growth remain.”
Morgan Stanley Strategist: Head For The Hills
Bloomberg
January 30, 2008
Barton Biggs has some offbeat advice for the rich: Insure yourself against war and disaster by buying a remote farm or ranch and stocking it with “seed, fertilizer, canned food, wine, medicine, clothes, etc.”
The “etc.” must mean guns.
“A few rounds over the approaching brigands’ heads would probably be a compelling persuader that there are easier farms to pillage,” he writes in his new book, “Wealth, War and Wisdom.”
Biggs is no paranoid survivalist. He was chief global strategist at Morgan Stanley before leaving in 2003 to form hedge fund Traxis Partners. He doesn’t lock and load until the last page of this smart look at how World War II warped share prices, gutted wealth and remains a warning to investors. His message: Listen to markets, learn from history and prepare for the worst.
Chance of recession at least 50 percent: Greenspan
Reuters
January 30, 2008
The likelihood of the economy slipping into recession is at least 50 percent, former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan was quoted on Wednesday as saying.
“I believe the probability of a recession is at least 50 percent, but up to now there are few signs that we are already in one,” Greenspan said in an interview with weekly newspaper Die Zeit published in German. “In my opinion, it will probably happen but the facts suggest we are not there yet.”
Asked whether central bankers and financial policymakers could head off a U.S. recession, Greenspan said: “Probably not. Global economic influences today are stronger than almost anything that monetary or fiscal policy can counter them with.”
“Long-term real interest rates have significantly more influence on the core of the economy than decisions by national governments,” he added. “And central banks have increasingly lost the ability to influence these long-term rates, whereas 20 or 30 years ago they still dominated there.
“So the more important question today is in which direction long-term real interest rates are heading.”
The Fed is expected to cut interest rates again on Wednesday as part of its effort to offset the effects of a deep housing slump and credit crunch. This cut would follow a 75 basis point reduction last week to 3.5 percent and mark one of the deepest and fastest rate-cutting episodes since the early 1980s.
The U.S. economy grew at a 4.9 percent annual rate in the third quarter of 2007, but gloomy economic data this month — notably a report of weak hiring in December — suggests growth has slowed abruptly.
Southern California Shanty Town / Tent City
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jmeHiFZUWtE
Recent News:
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Have you been noticing the cost of groceries going up? You can thank government subsidized ethanol
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House passes economic stimulus legislation
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Filed under: Alan Greenspan, bernanke, black monday, Britain, Canada, central bank, Credit Crisis, DEBT, Dow, ECB, Economic Collapse, economic depression, Economy, Europe, european central bank, european union, global economy, gold, Great Depression, Greenback, Inflation, interest rate cut, interest rate cuts, John McCain, liquidation, Paul Craig Roberts, platinum, rate cut, Stock Market, United Kingdom, US Economy
Forget 1987, This Could Be 1929 All Over Again
Analyst says economic winter could last 8 years, worst is yet to come
Paul Joseph Watson
Prison Planet
January 24, 2008
The huge debt bubble, which has artificially propped up the stock market since the turn of the millennium, could cause a new great depression according to one expert, who also predicts that investors will flock to buy gold as the dollar continues to plummet.
Financial analysts have been drawing comparisons between this week’s chaos and the October 19 1987 crash, known as Black Monday, when the Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped by over 22 per cent and markets sunk worldwide.
But Vancouver-based investment adviser Ian Gordon has gone a step further, seeing clear parallels between current events and those that foreshadowed the 1929 crash and ensuing depression.
“We’re really seeing a mirror image of what happened following the [19]29 peak in equity prices in the United States, and the subsequent crash in equities,” Gordon told the Georgia Straight. “We’re seeing really the mirror of…the huge debt bubble that was built into the economy in the ’20s in the United States. We’re now seeing the collapse of the debt bubble that was built into the world economies, but principally in the United States.”
Gordon levels the blame at Alan Greenspan for creating a huge bubble by injecting too much money into the system in an attempt to offset the “economic winter” that inevitably arrives as part of the boom and bust cycle of the fiat money system, arguing that the realistic peak in the stock market occurred in 2000.
Gordon predicts that the “economic winter” will last another 7 or 8 years and that the worst is yet to come, with the continued meltdown of the dollar causing people to flock to the safe haven of gold.
“As this whole collapse in paper assets begins to unfold, causing tremendous strain on the banking system, we will see a tremendous rush to gold, to own gold,” he said. “But I think the worst is definitely in front of us, and not behind us.”
Gordon slammed the huge 75 points rate cut as ineffective, arguing that neither banks or consumers want to engage because of the crippling problems of their existing debts.
The analyst’s conclusions are in line with those of Paul Craig Roberts, the father of Reaganomics, who on Tuesday warned that the mess could result in the dollar losing its status as the world reserve currency.
Roberts also cautioned that the rush to diversify into gold could make people’s assets a target for government confiscation, as happened in 1933, four years after the great depression.
SocGen raises questions over Fed rate cut
FT
January 24, 2008
The Federal Reserve had no inkling about Société Générale’s firesale of stock futures following the discovery of a rogue trader when the US central bank made its emergency interest rate cut.
The question being asked by some in the markets is: was the Fed duped into a clumsy and panicked move by the clean-up operation for Jérôme Kerviel’s mammoth losses for the French bank?
There are many prepared to believe that, without SocGen’s huge derivatives sales, the mood in the stock markets would not have been half as bleak.
“It is now clear that the Fed was panicked into a 75 basis point rate cut by the actions of a rogue trader and the bank’s unwinding of his positions,” said one London-based hedge fund manager. “The action also clearly suggests that their French and ECB counterparts did not tell them what had happened at SocGen.”
Read Full Article Here
Purchasing Power Of The DOW
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SjS60TaD_J8
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A full-blown, prolonged recession in America is now inescapable
http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/markets/article3239801.ece
Crisis far from over, even with emergency cut
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Home Prices Fell in ’07 for First Time in Decades
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Central Bankers Confront A New Inflation Calculus
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John McCain: ‘Underpinnings Of Economy Are Strong’
http://thinkprogress.org/2008/01/23/mccain-economy-strong/
Offers Buyouts In U.S.
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Bernanke In Hot Seat As Turmoil Spikes
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U.S. budget deficit likely to hit $250 billion this year as economy weakens
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Bank of England Governor hints at rate cut as global markets bounce back
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Filed under: Alan Greenspan, central bank, China, Credit Crisis, DEBT, ECB, Economic Collapse, economic depression, Economy, european central bank, Federal Reserve, gas prices, gas tax, global economy, gold, Goldman Sachs, Great Depression, Greenback, housing market, Inflation, interest rate cut, interest rate cuts, job market, john paulson, Northern Rock, Oil, Petrol, rate cut, Stock Market, subprime, subprime lending, unemployment, US Economy, US Treasury, Wall Street, Yen
Greenspan joins firm that made billions betting against the housing market
Reuters
January 15, 2008
Hedge fund manager John Paulson, who earned billions of dollars last year by betting against the housing market, said on Tuesday that former Federal Reserve board chairman Alan Greenspan will advise his firm.
Greenspan, whose words can still move financial markets, will advise Paulson on the global economy for an undisclosed amount of money, the hedge fund said in a statement.
By joining the New York-based fund, Greenspan becomes the latest former Washington insider to work in the fast growing $2 trillion hedge fund industry. Former Treasury Secretaries Lawrence Summers and John Snow provide advice to D.E. Shaw and Cerberus.
Goldman Sachs Hints at $1000 Gold and $135 Oil
24/7 Wallstreet
January 16, 2008
Goldman Sachs is RAISING ITS 2008 GOLD FORECASTS factoring for a recession in the U.S. in both Q2 and Q3 2008, leading to a weaker U.S. Dollar target of $1.51/Euro (up from $1.35) over the next six months. The prior $800/ounce gold target is now put at an average of $915/ounce for all of 2008, with an exit 2008 commodity price of $850 (up from $825 prior). The call is based on support from investment demand, purchases from emerging market central banks, and the ongoing declining mine supplies.
Goldman Sachs is also raising its 2009 and 2010 gold prices:
2009 prices are now expected to be $870/ounce (up from $852);
2010 prices are now expected to be $940/ounce (up from $907);
Near-term Goldman Sachs notes a possibility of a spike past $1,000.00 that could be the effect of further credit events and increases in oil prices.
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Shares in freefall as recession hits
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Inflation Up by Largest Amount in 17 Years
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Citigroup May Write Down Up To $24 Billion, Lay Off 20,000 Workers
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Wall Street braces for more losses
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Shadow spreads across the US economy
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Transit Panel Urges Gas Tax Increase
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Bankers Throw In Towel On Northern Rock
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Largest Saudi Bank Urges Dollar Depeg
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Crisis may make 1929 look a ‘walk in the park’
Wholesale Prices Up 6.7% In 2007
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Gold Futures Rise to Record $900.10
Weaker dollar likely to push gold over $1,000-mark