Wikinvest Wire

Big government and the Fourth of July

Saturday, July 04, 2009

Richard Ebeling offers these thoughts over at the American Institute for Economic Research about the history of big government in the U.S., that is, before it became the U.S.

A Declaration of Independence from Big Government
The Declaration of Independence, signed by members of the Continental Congress on July 4, 1776, is the founding document of the American experiment in free government. What is too often forgotten is that what the Founding Fathers argued against in the Declaration was the heavy and intrusive hand of big government.

Most Americans easily recall those eloquent words with which the Founding Fathers expressed the basis of their claim for independence from Great Britain in 1776:

“We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness – That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed – That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness.”

But what is usually not recalled is the long list of enumerated grievances that make up most of the text of the Declaration of Independence. The Founding Fathers explained how intolerable an absolutist and highly centralized government in faraway London had become.
There's much more over at the AIER - happy Fourth of July everyone!

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And now, for something completely different

Friday, July 03, 2009

A new approach aimed at getting Air New Zealand airline passengers to pay closer attention to the safety instructions provided before each flight.

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A reflex more than anything else

To be honest, I didn't even read this story in the Wall Street Journal before deciding to make it the subject of a post. With glasses like the ones worn by Mr. Langerman and the well worn phrase "Easy Money" in the title, how could I go wrong?

Managers Bemoan Loss of Easy Money
Mutual-fund managers, especially those with a value-stock approach, said tighter credit has had such an effect on the market that it has changed the way they look at stocks.

The issue, said managers, is that so much cheap money headed to private-equity firms in recent years that it allowed the firms to buy up companies if a stock's price fell too low. The demise of that system has removed a floor in stock prices, said managers, adding a layer of uncertainty.
...
Fund managers said that while they didn't rely on what is known as the "private-equity put" in their strategies, the presence of private equity factored into their thinking.

"It was an analysis that a lot of value players used," said Peter Langerman, chief executive of Mutual Series, a group of value funds offered through Franklin Templeton Investments.

But as easy money has dried up, private-equity firms have been far less active.
While "dried up" easy money is, undoubtedly, a welcome development in this world, perhaps it would be best to read the article next time before making any rash decisions about its suitability for this blog. Then again, the idea that value fund managers would be unduly affected by such a development is kind of interesting.

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A hearing we'd like to see

Spotted over at the Daily Bail, just in time for the nation's 233rd birthday (wow - that number is an unpleasant reminder of just how old you are if you remember the 200th).
IMAGE Jefferson would surely not be pleased with how things developed. Hamilton, on the other hand, may think they turned out swimmingly. Is that Hamilton all the way on the left?

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Cash-strapped states start a new fiscal year

California leads a gaggle of states that entered a new fiscal year on Wednesday with no viable plan to fund their spending. The AP reports that Florida, Oregon, North Carolina and other states have similar problems, though none quite as severe as in the "Golden State".

Several states are facing the prospect of government shutdowns and program cuts as they enter the first weekend of the fiscal year and July Fourth holiday without a budget in place.

"This downturn, even more so than previous downturns, really is affecting every state right now," said Brian Sigritz, a staff associate with the National Association of State Budget Officers.

The Washington-based organization says 42 states wrestled with budget deficits this spring, the most since it began tracking budgets 30 years ago.

States weathered similar problems in the recessions of the early 1980s, 1990s and earlier this decade. The confluence of so many problems hammering the economy at once make the present situation seem dire.
Until home prices stop falling and unemployment stops rising, there doesn't appear to be any improvement on the horizon.

Pennsylvania and Ohio seem to have problems as well. Hopefully, it's just a coincidence that I've lived in three of the states mentioned in this story - Pennsylvania, California, and Oregon.
Pennsylvania schools still don't know how much state money they'll receive and may have to reopen their budgets to add or subtract spending. The state's budget year began Wednesday with no sign of a deal between lawmakers and Gov. Ed Rendell.

Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland and lawmakers are stymied over a proposal to allow casino-style gambling to raise money. As a result, the state started its budget year with a one-week temporary budget.
...
"This budget impasse is impacting real Ohioans," said Lisa Hamler-Fugitt, executive director of the Ohio Association of Second Harvest Food Banks. "People for the first time in their lives are now finding themselves standing in the food line because they've lost their jobs, their incomes aren't stretching."
This cartoon by R.J. Matson is really starting to grow on me...

IMAGE
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Manhattan real estate prices tumble

It's about time... Nothing against New Yorkers - it's all about sharing the pain at this point.

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Friday morning links

TOP STORIES
GM awaits judge's ruling on sale plan - AP
Job Losses Dampen Hopes for Recovery - Wash. Post
Seven banks bring 2009 U.S. failures total to 52 - MarketWatch
GM could exit Chapter 11 this month, IPO in 2010 - MarketWatch
Cash-poor California turns to IOUs - CNN/Money
The scandal of overdraft fees - Salmon, Reuters
On giving Goldman a chance - True Slant
California sends out IOUs - LA Times

MARKETS/INVESTING
Oil's record high, one year later - CNN/Money
Gold edges up on overseas markets, rupee - Economic Times
Rogue oil trader blamed for Tuesday's spike - MarketWatch
Hurricanes May Increase in Gulf as El Nino Shifts - Bloomberg
June jewellery sales soar in Abu Dhabi - Commodity Online
OPEC president satisfied with current oil price - Globe & Mail

ECONOMY
Taking a weed whacker to green shoots - CNN/Money
American Jobs Data Are Worse than We Think - Pimco
Grim jobless numbers damp economic recovery hopes - LA Times
Is free checking on its way out? - CNN/Money
That ’30s Show - Krugman, NY Times

INTERNATIONAL
World markets slide on grim US jobs report - AP
PBOC's Zhou: China is saving too much - MarketWatch
Darling: Bankers will be 'brought back to earth' - Telegraph
Major nations should back dollar as key currency: Japan - Reuters
Japan's Hayashi: U.S. economy has yet to hit bottom - MarketWatch
Appraising the European Central Bank: Hard talk, soft policy - Economist
Green Power Takes Root in the Chinese Desert - NY Times
The relaunch of Gordon Brown: The vision thing - Economist

HOUSING
House prices and the wealth effect - Economist
Manhattan real estate market finally craters - WalletPop
Spring U.S. housing market hints at awaited recovery - Reuters
Bear Market in U.S. Housing to Last Years - Rosemanblog

FED/TREASURY/BANKING
Crisis Won’t End Until Balance Sheets Get Real - Bloomberg
US toxic securities funds launch seen at $20 bln - Reuters
Fed Assets Shrink to $2.01T as Lending Declines - Bloomberg
Small business lending falls sharply - CNN/Money

INTERESTING
Recession-fed tensions grow in luxury hotel industry - LA Times
NYPD rookie makes arrest moments after graduation - AP
The Strange Ingredients in Fireworks - LiveScience
A comedian in the Senate: Eight months later - Economist

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Illinois gains ground on Georgia

Thursday, July 02, 2009

It was a busy Thursday for the FDIC as seven banks were shut down, prompting the question, "What the heck is going on in Illinois?" Are they trying to challenge Georgia, the clear leader in failed banks? MarketWatch reports that the "Prairie State" is catching up quickly.

Seven banks bring 2009 U.S. failures total to 52
Seven banks were closed by regulators on Thursday, including six in Illinois, bringing the total for 2009 to 52 as the U.S. banking system remains under pressure from rising unemployment and record foreclosures.
...
More than 1,000 banks may fail in the next three to five years as the recession intensifies and loan losses climb, RBC Capital Markets estimated in February.

Bank failures on such a scale will deplete some of the money the FDIC has stored to pay depositors. On Thursday, the FDIC estimated that the seven bank failures will cost its deposit-insurance fund a total of roughly $314.3 million.
You can go to the FDIC website and get a list of all the banks that have failed since October of 2000, sortable by name, state, and closing date.

Unfortunately, you can't download the list as spreadsheet, but, based on a manual count, it looks as though Georgia holds onto first place with 15 bank failures since 2007, followed by a surging Illinois with 13. California holds down the third spot with 10.

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Peter Bookvar on gold

Equity strategist Peter Bookvar of Miller Tabak explains the many reasons why every investor should own some gold (and maybe not just a little of the stuff).

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Rosenberg on the CS-HPI "green shoots"

David Rosenberg at Gluskin-Sheff comments on Tuesday's cheery 0.6 percent monthly decline in the 20-city Case-Shiller Home Price Index (CS-HPI).

Even Robert Shiller himself seemed excited about the fact that his own home price index was down just 0.6% in April, which admittedly compares favourably to the 2%+ slides posted since last October. But it's one month for crying out loud and we have seen these sorts of brief periods of more moderate home price declines before in this cycle that triggered premature bouts of optimism. If memory serves us correctly, in the spring of 2007, we went through about three or four months when the Case-Shiller index was declining by just 0.2% and this got a whole lot people excited that the worst was over (Alan Greenspan being one of them). Then from May to July of 2008, after a series of awful declines, the Case Shiller posted numbers of -0.8% or better – again, the moderation in the pace of decline was brief. It could well be that we have seen the worst in terms of the pace of decline, but it seems hardly reason to be enthused by the fact these 'green shoots' which are little more than noise on what is still a fundamental downtrend.
Maybe a chart would help to put the latest data into its proper context...

Well, Rosy appears to have it about right.
IMAGE While it seems improbably that we'll return to the -2.0 to -2.5 percent monthly declines for a sustained period of time, you can see how a multi-month period of smaller price declines would be typical of stretches during 2007 and 2008 that were not followed by higher prices.

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Rep. Mark Kirk on China's gold buying plans

Here's the video to go along with yesterday's item about the Chinese wanting to exchange lots more U.S. dollars for gold. Skip directly to 3:20 to hear about their future buying plans.

There doesn't seem to be any uncertainty from Rep. Kirk who notes, "...they plan to buy $80 billion worth of gold - that's two Fort Knoxes", though it's not clear how he figured that Fort Knox has about 1,300 tonnes of gold. Wikipedia says it's about three times that amount.

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Bewilderingly complex Elliott Wave Theory

Peter Brimelow at MarketWatch comments on the latest prognostications from the group of perma-deflationists over at Elliott Wave International.

The good news: One successful survivor of the Crash of 2008 thinks the bear-market rally has further to go. The bad news: It's still a bear market, and it will end in devastating deflation.
...
Elliott Wave Theory can be bewilderingly complex. One reason it tends to leave investors incensed is that they believe EWFF's overlapping waves constitute a sort of bait-and-switch, always leaving the forecaster with an out.

Right now, for example, EWFF is showing what it calls the "intermediate" trend as down. But the somewhat longer "primary" trend, which began in March, is intact and is projected to reach 9,000-10,000 on the Dow.

EWFF writes: "The probabilities favor a second phase of advance that carries the rally off the March lows to new recovery highs later."

For the record, EWFF also shows a "grand supercycle," beginning in January 2000 and ending at 400. Yes, that was FOUR HUNDRED.
Like many others, Elliott Wave Theory has always been bewildering to me, but that may have something to do with the fact that I have a degree in engineering and worked as a hardware/software designer for more than twenty years.

Absent that background, maybe it would make a whole lot more sense...

Here's a simplified version of the five waves.
IMAGE Don't ask me to explain it but, from my limited exposure to it, there always seems to be a debate between wave 3 and wave 5. There's more from Wikipedia here.

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Labor market "more bad" in June

The Labor Department reported a sharp decline in nonfarm payrolls last month and a slight increase in the unemployment rate as the labor market continues to shed jobs during the worst recession in decades.
IMAGE Employers in the U.S. cut a total of 467,000 jobs in June following losses of 519,000 in April and 322,000 in May. Revisions to prior months resulted in 8,000 fewer jobs lost than previously reported, the May total revised downward from -504,000 and the June data revised upward from -345,000.

The unemployment rate continued to rise, up from 9.4 percent in May to 9.5 percent in June, however, this was the smallest increase since last September, just prior to the financial market and economic crisis taking a turn for the worse. The current 9.5 percent rate is the highest since August of 1983.

In a separate report, new claims for unemployment insurance fell to 614,000 for the week ended June 27 from an upwardly revised 630,000 the week before.

Since the start of the recession in December of 2007, non farm payrolls have declined every month, the total labor market decline now totaling 6.5 million jobs.

By category, June job losses were concentrated in the manufacturing and business services sectors that shed 136,000 and 118,000 positions, respectively, and the decline in manufacturing payrolls included 26,500 fewer jobs in the auto and auto parts industries.
IMAGE As usual, the education and health care sectors added to the work force, a gain of 14,900 seen in education services and 18,600 more workers now collecting paychecks in the health care and social assistance sectors.

Government payrolls posted their second consecutive decline, down 52,000 in June after a drop of 10,000 in May, much of this a result of layoffs for temporary workers hired to prepare for the 2010 census. Over a million temporary workers are expected to be hired in the months ahead to conduct the census next year.

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Thursday morning links

TOP STORIES
Manhattan home prices plunge - Fortune
As deficit grows, Calif. prepares to issue IOUs - AP
Staffer at SEC Had Warned Of Madoff - Wash. Post
As oil rallies, passive investors increase their holdings - MarketWatch
GM Plans ‘Garage Sale’ for Toxic Plants, NJ Golf Course - Bloomberg
Clock Ticking on Accord to Sell Good G.M. Assets - NY Times
Madoff customers get $231 million so far - Reuters
Feds could seize Calif. parks if closed by budget - AP

MARKETS/INVESTING
Oil slips to $68 a barrel ahead of US jobs report - AP
Gold slips ahead of data; dollar strengthens - Reuters
Asia stocks end mostly down before U.S. jobs data - MarketWatch
Newsletter Insights: Elliott Wave of Mutilation - MarketWatch
Oil market oversupplied, demand weak -Kuwait - Maktoob
Case Shiller Housing Market ETFs Start Trading - Altos Research

ECONOMY
467K jobs cut in June; jobless rate at 9.5 percent - AP
Initial Jobless Claims Fell 16,000 to 614,000 Last Week - Bloomberg
Pimco: Consumer "greed" hibernating, fear rules - Reuters
June Sales at Ford Fall Less Than G.M. or Chrysler - NY Times
Meltdown 101: Shuttered stores' sites still sell - AP

INTERNATIONAL
ECB keeps interest rate at 1 pct - AP
Swedish Central Bank Cuts Rate to Record - Bloomberg
Australia's trade deficit almost doubles in May - MarketWatch
Dollar Gains . China ‘Not Aware’ of Reserve Currency Talk - Bloomberg
China reportedly to concede on iron-ore pricing - MarketWatch
China Renews Call for ‘Stable’ Dollar, Diversification - Bloomberg
Banking system like South Sea bubble - Guardian
Moody's cuts Ireland's Aaa credit rating - MarketWatch

HOUSING
Foreclosure help will reach more homeowners - USA Today
Fannie, Freddie ease terms for mortgage refinance - Reuters
Home Sales Perk Up, but Expensive Houses Languish - Time
Gov't foreclosure help will reach more homeowners - AP

FED/TREASURY/BANKING
Treasury to name up to 9 managers for toxic-asset plan - Reuters
Bank Fees Rise as Lenders Try to Offset Losses - NY Times
Chicago Fed President sees U.S. growth in H2 - Reuters
Some Thoughts on the Fractional Reserve Banking System - Elliot Wave

INTERESTING
Sears Tower unveils 103rd floor glass balconies - AP
Palin story sparks GOP family feud - Politico
light diverted after passenger undresses in seat - AP
New class of black hole could explain cosmic leviathans - AP

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More "green shoots" today ... apparently

Wednesday, July 01, 2009

Well, we just got back from a quick trip to Cali (as they call it up here in Oregon) and, after catching bits and pieces of the news on the way back - the ISM manufacturing index and pending home sales were both up - we were sure there was a "green shoots" revival underway.

In looking at the actual data, Tom Toles probably had it right yesterday.
IMAGE The increase in pending home sales, reported by everyone's favorite trade group the National Association of Realtors, was pretty funny - we must have heard four or five times today about how "pending home sales were up last month" without hearing any figures.

As it turned out, it was a monthly increase of just 0.1 percent, but that didn't stop talking heads from spouting "After today's rise in pending home sales..." I'm not so sure it's a good thing that XM radio carries CNN, CNBC, Bloomberg, and Fox News.

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The Chinese want more gold

It comes as no surprise that the Chinese want to swap some of their U.S. dollar holdings for dumb 'ol gold bars, but the amount is a bit of a shock. Numismaster has the details:

It wasn't until about June 9 that the mainstream media was told that the Chinese government was planning to purchase an additional huge quantity of gold. The information became public when U.S. Rep. Mark Kirk (R-Ill.) was interviewed on Fox News by Greta Van Susteren.

Kirk accompanied Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner on his trip to China in May. While the Chinese were laughing at Geithner during his speech at Beijing University for claiming that the U.S. dollar was strong (By the way, laughing at a speaker is a major social no-no in China, a sign that Geithner's comments were not respected at all!), Kirk was engaged in a private conversation with lesser Chinese officials. In this non-public discussion, Kirk was told that the Chinese were extremely concerned about the likely near term decline in the U.S. dollar because of the explosion of government debt. As part of the reaction to this concern, the Chinese government had established another reserve to stockpile petroleum and was planning to purchase another $80 billion of gold (about 85 million ounces at today's price level).

Kirk's revelation about the Chinese plan to purchase another $80 billion of gold was the very last comment in the interview. This extraordinary news received almost no coverage until last week when multiple hard-asset Web sites picked up the interview.
The Chinese are different than the Japanese in many ways - this is one of those ways...

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Hyperinflation nation

This has been making the rounds...


Parts 2 and 3 are here and here.

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Signs of a housing bottom in home staging

In this commentary at Bloomberg today, Caroline Baum stirs memories of the late, great housing bubble as it was inflating and looks at the current "home staging" mania.

When CondoFlip.com debuted in 2004, you knew housing was headed for a tumble.

Here was a Web site where customers could buy and sell, sight unseen, condominiums that had yet to be built. It was confirmation of the degree to which home prices had come untethered from housing fundamentals.

If CondoFlip.com represented the peak of the home-buying frenzy, the proliferation of “home staging” businesses to gussy up houses for sale may turn out to be a sign of a bottom. That would certainly validate the message from recent reports showing home sales and single-family starts moving sideways for the last four to six months and home prices falling at a slower pace.
Note that the panic buttons shown above didn't appear until Condoflip.com was about to turn into Condoflop.com, as BusinessWeek noted a few years back.

As for home staging, where we used to live, before the "Reduced Price" signs began popping up atop the For Sales signs, you'd often see "Newly Staged" as an enticement for potential buyers to come in.

What is home staging? Caroline explains...
The term, if not the concept, was new to me.

I was dimly aware that real estate agents rearrange the deck chairs in order to make a home appealing to prospective buyers, especially in a down market. But I had no idea there was such an animal as an Accredited Staging Professional, an ASP mission statement, books and courses on the subject and, what else, a reality TV show.

My education started when a press release for a new book, “Staging to Sell: The Secret to Selling Homes in a Down Market,” by Barb Schwarz, landed in my inbox.

The pitch included rave reviews -- a “must-read” -- testimonials by brokers on the secrets of Barb’s success, and compelling data: “Even in today’s slower housing market, 95 percent of staged homes sell, on average, in 35 days or less.” There was no indication what price those staged homes fetched.

At a minimum, the success rate would seem to offer more Hope for Homeowners than all the government programs combined.
There's lots more at Bloomberg - a sign of the times, to be sure.

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Here come the California IOUs

Senate President Darrell Steinberg and Senate Republican leader Dennis Hollingsworth leave the California Senate chamber last night after failing to reach a budget agreement.
IMAGE The combined efforts of Democrats and Rebublicans in the most recent round of negotations saw the state dig an even deeper budget hole, by some $2 billion, after yesterday's failure to cut education spending, the deficit now standing at more than $26 billion.

Naturally, state of fiscal emergency has been declared and a special session has been called for the legislature, this Sacramento Bee report providing the latest details.

Tuesday's failure to cut education spending and shift redevelopment funds expanded the deficit overnight because of the way school funding formulas are calculated.

Schwarzenegger plans to declare a new state of fiscal emergency today, launch another special session and propose additional program cuts to solve the larger deficit problem, spokesman Aaron McLear said.
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Senate President Pro Tem Darrell Steinberg said Schwarzenegger's veto threat against a stopgap package to cut the 2008-09 education budget and delay IOUs "may be the most irresponsible act I have seen in my 15 years of public service. And for what? It's a monumental blunder."

But Schwarzenegger said Democrats instead were to blame for failing to compromise with him on a plan to solve the entire $24 billion deficit with enough spending cuts and permanent program reductions.

"The Legislature's latest proposal is no different than what Sacramento has been doing for the past two decades – kicking the can down the alley," McLear said in a written statement.

Absent a significant budget deal today, state Controller John Chiang has warned he must take the next step of issuing IOUs on Thursday to vendors who do business with the state, local governments and people who are owed tax refunds. Chiang said IOUs are necessary to preserve enough cash to meet constitutionally mandated obligations to schools and state bondholders in July.

Hallye Jordan, a Chiang spokeswoman, said the first batch to go out would consist of 28,742 IOUs, worth a total of $53.3 million, to taxpayers awaiting refunds.
This really is a perpetual crisis.

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Wednesday morning links

TOP STORIES
11th-hour votes on state budget fail - LA Times
California Misses Deadline to Avoid the Need for IOUs - Bloomberg
Ten or more face possible Madoff charges - Reuters
Program saves 60 percent of homes from foreclosure - Reuters
Mr. Sunshine? Ron Paul Wins Support to Audit Fed Reserve - Fox News
Treasury OKs 3 firms for mortgage relief program - AP
GM CEO makes case for bankruptcy asset sale - Reuters
Retired From G.M. at 54. Pensionless at 74? - NY Times

MARKETS/INVESTING
Oil rises above $71 as US crude inventories drop - AP
Gold firms a day after sell-off, dollar in focus - Forex Pros
No major Iraq oil output increase in next 5 years - Reuters
Boom in scrap gold sales in India, Middle East - Commodity Online
Banks Falling 23% Since May Foreshadow S&P 500 Slump - Bloomberg
Stock Fund Inflow Continued In May - AP

ECONOMY
Private sector sheds 473,000 jobs in June - Reuters
A Forecast With Hope Built In - New York Times
Small businesses vital to economic recovery go bankrupt - USA Today
Consumer confidence falls on gloomier jobs view - MarketWatch
Consumers hit again as some banks raise credit rates, fees - USA Today

INTERNATIONAL
Chinese Want To Purchase Another $80B Of Gold! - Numismaster
China Manufacturing Expands a Fourth Month - Bloomberg
Fiat CEO says Chrysler cash burn slows - Reuters
Japan’s Tankan Confidence Rebounds Less Than Expected - Bloomberg
China's Huawei needs makeover to win big markets - Reuters
Iraq Fails to Award Most Oil Contracts in Bid Round - Bloomberg
Bank Woes Deepening in Europe - NY Times
Australia’s Retail Sales Climb 1% - Bloomberg

HOUSING
Next Housing Segment To Crash: $1+ Million McMansions - ClusterStock
McMansions Another Black Eye For Housing Market - The Atlantic
Phoenix Housing Market Finally Feels Uptick - HousingWire
Home price decline slows in many places - USA Today

FED/TREASURY/BANKING
Fed's Yellen: rates could be near zero for years - Reuters
FED to Monetize Another $1.75 Trillion in 2009 - Liberty Maven
Banks Balk at Agency Meant to Aid Consumers - NY Times
Bernanke still a speed demon - Asia Times

INTERESTING
What Supersonic Looks Like - LiveScience
Michael Jackson's death sparks bus brawl - AP
Lion prides form to win turf wars - BBC
Man nabbed 3 times in week for skipping on tab - AP

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And ... we have another winner!

Tuesday, June 30, 2009

Today's closing prices for a barrel of oil and an ounce of gold were $69.89 and $926.60, respectively, making ycching the winner of the sixth "Guess the Price of Oil and Gold" contest by a narrow margin over jlowey and Bruno T.
In first place for the last three weeks as prices moved very little, ycching wins a free one-year subscription to the companion investment website Iacono Research.

Sadly, the Inscrutible Chicken came up short in his late move toward the top, finishing fourth.

Better cluck next time...

A list of the top-ten finishers (out of over 80 guesses) is shown below. Interestingly, the type of calculation makes a difference for the second and third place finishers, but not for the top spot (i.e., the "Diff. Alt." column is a square root of the sum of the squares calculation versus the simple sum of the percent differences in the "Total Diff." column).
The average guesses of $59 for a barrel of oil and $936 for an ounce of gold were off by a total of almost 16 percent and, during the almost two months that the contest went on, the oil price rose from just under $60 a barrel to almost $70 and the gold price moved up about five dollars from around $920 an ounce.

Ycching, please send me your email address and I'll get an account set up for you.

Thanks to all who participated.

There should be a much more exciting year-end edition of this contest set to kick off sometime in October. With the notable exception of 2008, as the oil price was heading toward almost $150 a barrel in June, the year-end editions have always been much more exciting than the mid-year editions due to generally larger price moves.

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To learn more about investing in natural resources using commonly traded ETFs, stocks, and mutual funds, see this description at Iacono Research. Or, sign up for a free trial.
IMAGE

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Cash4Gold to buy the U.S. gold reserves?

Last week, after seeing it pop up in a number of other places, this video from The Onion about Cash4Gold wanting to buy all of the 8,000+ tonnes of U.S. gold reserves was shared here because, well, it was pretty darn funny.

You'd think that would the end of this story but, yesterday, Commodity Online (originating from India and, perhaps, not all that familiar with American-style satire) ran this story about the video, apparently not realizing that The Onion is not really "American's Finest News Source" but a satire website offering only fake news.

IMAGE Cash4Gold, America's leading buyer of precious metals direct from the general public, announced an offer to purchase the U.S. national gold reserve for $240 billion.

Cash4Gold stated in a press release that it learned of the federal government's plan to turn the nation's gold into cash after the Onion News Network broke the story at the Radio and Television Correspondents' Association Dinner in Washington last week. President Obama and scores of other political and media leaders were on-hand as the Onion aired a video news segment announcing the emergency economic plan aimed at helping the United States pay off its debts.
Now, these Onion videos are good, but they're not that good...

The funniest part about this whole thing is that it brings a bit more attention to the absurdity of the numbers. The U.S. government has already made some $13 trillion worth of guarantees as a result of the financial crisis, it has a debt of over $11 trillion, and a 2010 budget deficit of almost $2 trillion, but their entire gold reserves are only worth a little over $200 billion.
Appearing on The Onion to explain the government's plan to work with Cash4Gold, Deputy Treasury Secretary Edward Kuehnel estimated the value of the pure gold bars that comprise the U.S. federal gold reserve at $200 billion. Cash4Gold's unprecedented $240 billion offer reflects the full melt value of the U.S. stockpile, plus an added 20 percent. Melt value refers to the value of actual precious metal contained in an item that a refinery can extract and recycle, and does not account for the decorative, artistic, historic, or sentimental value of a given item.

As part of a current promotion called Gold Rush, Cash4Gold is currently paying an additional 20 percent on all items received before July 4. A transaction concluded with the U.S. government would put Cash4Gold 240,000 percent above its advertised goal of purchasing $100 million in gold by the July 4 Independence Day holiday.

Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner devised the plan to sell the federal gold reserve after viewing one of Cash4Gold's commercials on television, according to the Onion.
Just the fact the Cash4Gold is purportedly paying over the melt value should have been a big tip-off that this wasn't the real deal.

And, of course, a quick visit to The Onion would reveal another shocking development which probably isn't true:


I just got a "cubicle flashback" after hearing about self-evaluations about 30 seconds in...

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The lighter side of the California budget crisis

A good summary of the California budget morass from Steve Greenberg.

IMAGE There are surprisingly few good cartoons on this subject - at least that I've been able to locate in a few minutes of searching. If anyone knows of more, please provide a link in the comments section below. Here's one that almost went up in place of what you see above.

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The California IOUs are coming...

We're back in California for a couple of days and, having caught a few minutes of the local news from Sacramento a short time ago, there appears to be little progress being made in the effort to avoid state issuance of IOUs in the days ahead.

The local paper carries news that the last day of the fiscal year should be quite an interesting one in the state capital, with each passing hour the odds increasing that the IOU man cometh.

Both houses likely will be in session all day and into the evening, but look for the real action at the negotiating table in the Governor's Office.

A key issue is $3.3 billion in budget savings that have to be approved by midnight -- in the current fiscal year -- or will be lost forever. Democrats are pushing the cuts to schools and redevelopment agencies to be approved by midnight, but the GOP and the governor want a full package before signing off.

The 1992 version of this melodrama ended badly, with drunken shouting, a fistfight, and a mysteriously stopped clock in the Assembly. Ultimately, the production ran all summer, with IOUs, court fights and rock-bottom performance ratings for politicians of all stripes.
Maybe someone will do the state a favor and roll a hand-grenade into the governor's office and a new group of "leaders" can begin the budget process anew.

Too harsh? Probably.

But, it seems clear that nearly all lawmakers in California are hopelessly out of touch with reality these days, many of them likely viewing the recent economic downturn as being just a temporary setback in what is seen as a birthright of ever-rising real estate prices, the absence of which makes the state, basically, ungovernable.

The idea that an Obama bailout might also materialize, despite recent assurances to the contrary, is no doubt making the sense of urgency a bit less than it might otherwise be.

The San Francisco Chronicle files this report of no progress being made in the stalemate.
Despite a deadline looming tonight, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and the Legislature were at a loss Monday over how to close the state's massive deficit, and there were no signs a compromise would be reached soon.

If no plan is adopted by 12:01 a.m. Wednesday, the state plans to issue IOUs to contractors, vendors, local governments and taxpayers expecting refunds beginning Thursday. The governor plans to force 220,000 state workers to take a third unpaid day off beginning in July; and the state will forfeit more than $3 billion in budget savings through cuts to education that had to be made in the fiscal year ending today.

Before the Legislature adjourned late Monday, Democratic leaders had scrambled to pass a plan to solve the impending insolvency of the Golden State, but the governor fired back, insisting he would not support their budget bills because they included taxes and not enough spending reductions to close the $24.3 billion deficit through June 2010.

"I will veto any majority-vote tax increase bill that punishes taxpayers for Sacramento's failure to live within its means," Schwarzenegger said Monday.
Since the state has had to issue IOUs before (during the 1990s housing bust, by no small coincidence), it seems unlikely that the embarrassment of having to do so again will be any deterrent this time around.

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Consumer confidence "more bad" in June

Financial markets are reacting rather poorly to the first "more bad" report in months on consumer confidence from the Conference Board. Usually cheery Econoday notes that the "consumer sector appears to have crumbled in June" after the one-two punch of sagging consumer confidence and a disappointing report on chain-store sales.
IMAGE The consumer confidence index dropped some ten percent, from 54.9 in May to 49.3 in June, news that came as a surprise to analysts who were looking for further improvement as rising unemployment and rising gasoline prices continue to take their toll.

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Case Shiller home price declines ease

The April report(.pdf) for the S&P Case-Shiller Home Price Indexes showed an easing of home price declines across the country after months of record declines. From March to April, the 20-city index fell just 0.6 percent, its "least bad" reading since last June, and the annual rate of decline improved from -18.7 percent to -18.1 percent.
Note that the top-to-bottom end-positions of the curves on the right of the chart correspond to the order in the legend in the upper left to aid in viewing the data.

Poor Detroit continues to plumb new lows, the index falling from 71.67 in March to just 69.2 in April, well off the bottom of the chart.

As shown below, Phoenix maintained its leadership role in year-over-year price declines with an astonishing 35.3 percent plunge, only slightly improved from last month's 36.0 percent decline. Conditions worsened in Las Vegas, however, April's annual decline of 32.2 percent exceeding the 31.2 percent drop seen in March.

San Francisco moved from the 30+ percent decline group (indicated by red underlines) back to the 20+ percent decline group (indicated by blue underlines), however, there were no similar moves out of the 20+ percent decline group which now numbers seven.
IMAGE David M. Blitzer, Chairman of the Index Committee at Standard & Poor's notes:

The pace of decline in residential real estate slowed in April. In addition to the 10-City and 20-City Composites, 13 of the 20 metro areas also saw improvement in their annual return compared to that of March. Furthermore, every metro area, except for Charlotte, recorded an improvement in monthly returns over March. While one month’s data cannot determine if a turnaround has begun; it seems that some stabilization may be appearing in some of the regions. We are entering the seasonally strong period in the housing market, so it will take some time to determine if a recovery is really here.

The stock market bottomed in March and measures of consumer confidence have turned upward. This report shows that these better spirits are also appearing in the housing market.
Mr. Blitzer doesn't appear to be quite convinced yet - "some stabilization may be appearing in some of the regions" is not exactly a ringing endorsement of a return to normalcy.

It will take at least a few months of actual increases in prices before a bottom can reasonably be called. When exactly that happens is anyones guess - my guess is that it won't be this year.

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Tuesday morning links

TOP STORIES
Madoff Is Sentenced to 150 Years for Ponzi Scheme - NY Times
Rhetoric reigns as California IOU deadline nears - Sacramento Bee
Cash Best as Record Correlation Hints Herd Collapse - Bloomberg
GM cuts Toyota ties in US joint venture - CNN/Money
As Iraq Stabilizes, China Eyes Its Oil Fields - Times
Michigan to California: Send us your prisoners - CNN/Money
California faces its moment of truth - Reuters
The Chinese Are Just Like Us - The Atlantic

MARKETS/INVESTING
Oil up to near $72 on dollar fall, Nigeria attack - AP
Gold Climbs Over $940, Heading for Third Quarterly Gain - Bloomberg
US Gold Reserve: Cash4Gold's offer price $240 bn - Commodity Online
Asian Stocks Extend Quarterly Gain on Commodities - Bloomberg
The Senate Report - Butler, Investment Rarities
“GaveKal” - Saut, Raymond James

ECONOMY
‘Green Shoots’ Take Over the Lexicon, If Not U.S. - Bloomberg
Inflationary Pressures Are A Legitimate Concern - Technical Take
Economy prompts Salvation Army’s first summer fundraiser - Bizjournals
Wage Deflation in our Midst - Pragamatic Capitalist
Does USA 2009 = Argentina 2001? - iTulip

INTERNATIONAL
British Economy Suffers Worst Drop in 50 Years - NY Times
China’s present growth story is built on malinvestment - Credit Writedowns
China's banks are an accident waiting to happen to every one of us - Telegraph
AIG Discloses New Risk on Derivatives Sold to European Banks - Bloomberg
Young Japanese Raise Their Voices Over Economy - NY Times
Norway Swapping Government Debt For Mortgages - zero Hedge
China makes surprise fuel-price hike - MarketWatch
Japan jobless rate hits five-year high in May - MarketWatch

HOUSING
The U.S. housing market's 800 lb gorilla - Examiner.com
Housing Data: The Slow Healing Process Begins - Seeking Alpha
California legislation aims to revive housing market - SmartBrief
Caveat Mortgagor - New Yorker

FED/TREASURY/BANKING
Ruling Adds Teeth to State Oversight of Banks - Wash. Post
Fed’s Rosengren Says Regulator Should Oversee Capital - Bloomberg
Federal Reserve past due for an audit - Albany Herald
Fed Buys More Time for Purchases With Schedule Changes - Bloomberg

INTERESTING
Billy Mays: An industry loses its voice - CNN/Money
RUTH-LESS LANDLORDS SLAM DOOR - NY Post
Steve Jobs' return to Apple different this time - MarketWatch
The Man in the Mirror - Kunstler, CFN

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Bernanke in denial

Monday, June 29, 2009

Don't know how I could have missed this one last month - as it turned out, bank regulators didn't pay close attention to the kinds of loans that were being made (at about 1:45).

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Explaining the rise of China stocks in 2009

The miraculous 61 percent rise in the value of China's stock market so far this year makes a lot more sense given this crucial tidbit of information about where some of the money has been coming from. Bloomberg has the details in this report:

Chinese new bank loans worth about an estimated 1.16 trillion yuan ($170 billion) were invested in the stock market in the first five months of this year, China Business News reported, citing a government economist.

That’s 20 percent of the 5.8 trillion yuan loans banks extended in the period, the Shanghai-based newspaper said, citing Wei Jianing, a deputy director at the macro-economics department of the Development and Research Center under China’s State Council.

Wei’s assistant said the economist is traveling and can’t be reached. She declined to give her name. Calls to the press offices of the China Banking Regulatory Commission and the China Securities Regulatory Commission weren’t answered.
Since about March there have been widespread rumors that this had been going on, Chinese investors apparently none-too-shy about placing leveraged bets once again on stocks after the amazing rise and fall of equities from 2006 up until late last year.

Could this end badly? Yes.

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A Mid-year look at the 2009 predictions

It's mid-year!

Time for a quick check on the many and varied "Predictions for 2009" made some six months ago before anyone began talking about "green shoots" and the price of oil was still around $35 a barrel.

My, how things have changed from the despair of last New Years Day...

Or maybe that was just a hangover...

In any event, now half-way through the year, it appears that Armageddon - Part I in 2008 may not necessarily be followed by Part II this year. It looked like Part II there for a while in February and March, but then the skies cleared and people started buying stocks again.

Off we go...

1. Another Bad Year for Housing

Once again, more pain in housing seems inevitable with liar loans and option ARM products reaching their critical years. If it already hasn't, that second home/investment property that seemed like such a good idea back in 2004 will turn into a nightmare in 2009.

As was the case last year, only real estate sales types will be predicting a rebound for home prices in 2009 though home sales will probably make a lasting bottom. Late-2009 and 2010 will be the time to start looking to buy property again, but there will be no need to hurry - contrary to what real estate sales types tell you, prices are not headed back up anytime soon. They may not go too much lower in 2010, but, except for places like Washington D.C. where the bailout business is booming, prices will be mostly flat through 2011 or 2012.

Next year, housing prices will fall another 10 percent nationally, based on the year-over-year change to the 20-city S&P Case Shiller Home Price Index for October 2009 (this report gets released at the end of December and showed an 18 percent decline last week.) It seems that home price declines have to ease up. For example, based on their current trajectory, by the end of next year the median home price in Los Angeles would be below $200,000, down from a high of $550,000 in 2007.
As has been the case for a few years now, saying that home prices will go down is an easy call, however, we've just begun to see how more sales of high-end homes can make median prices rise while actual home prices continue to fall - look for more of that later this year.

The S&P Case Shiller Home Price Index (to be updated tomorrow) has yet to show any signs of slowing down, however, that will likely change by the end of the year. The most recent report had the 20-city index down 18.7 percent on a year-over-year basis.
2. The Dollar Will Go Down

The trade weighted U.S. dollar rose in 2008, but that was an anomaly. There are many bad currencies in the world (most of them are bad, actually, the pound now probably the worst) but the greenback will have a hard time looking good on a relative basis after big negative GDP numbers are reported along with even bigger job losses.

The source of most of the world's financial market troubles over the last year or so will finally be appreciated by those who've been buying U.S. Treasuries and, despite the best efforts of the big players at the Comex, many of these people will buy gold instead.

By year-end, the U.S. Dollar Index will be at 70, after dipping into the 60s briefly, and economists will again marvel at how the trade deficit is shrinking due to higher U.S. exports, helping the U.S. economy to recover.
They had some even bigger negative numbers for GDP in Europe recently but the dollar has still trended lower during the first half of the year and lots more people were buying gold in the first quarter, though demand has ebbed lately.

The U.S. Dollar Index approached the 90 level in December and then again in March before moving back down, spending the last few weeks at around 80. Tumbling to 70 by the end of the year is a distinct possibility as the greenback almost always falls in the fall.
3. Broad Equity Markets will Rise

The Dow and the S&P 500 Index will gain 10 percent and most investors will be happy about this, not realizing that it would have to repeat this performance for the next four or five years to make up for the losses seen in 2008. It won't.

Foreign stocks will do much better than U.S. stocks - up about 20 percent on average by year end - and stocks in China will rise 30 percent. Here too, most investors will fail to appreciate the cruel nature of large declines and advances expressed in percentage terms - this will leave Chinese stocks 55 percent below where they began 2008 (i.e., before last year's 65 percent decline).

Gold and silver mining stocks will outperform all other equities in 2009 (this process is already well underway) and many retail investors will add gold stocks to their portfolio for the first time only to sell in a panic during the first correction.
Predicting that stocks would rise this year was met with a few cat calls six months ago but equity markets are generally up at mid-year with emerging markets leading the rest of the world.

Gold and silver mining stocks are up about 15 to 20 percent so far this year, trailing the BRIC stocks (Brazil, Russia, India, and China) by a wide margin, but ahead of most other sectors.
4. Short-Term Interest Rates Will Stay at Zero

Short-term interest rates in the U.S. will end the year where they began - at zero.

Instead of the Fed funds rate, the new metric that will be used to gauge what the Federal Reserve is doing will be the Fed's balance sheet. Now at $2.2 trillion, this will grow to over $4 trillion by year-end, by which time the weekly H.4.1 report will become a major news event.

Ben Bernanke aged five years over the last twelve months - over the next twelve months he will only age two years.
Short-term interest rates were (and continues to be) quite an easy call. The fun will begin next year when there are real prospects for higher lending rates to combat rising inflation, an economy that is probably still weak, and an election cycle about to swing into high gear.

The Fed's balance sheet has become more important than interest rates, but the $4 trillion target now looks a bit difficult to reach based on the current trajectory. Of course, that could change quickly over the summer if credit markets have a relapse.
5. Energy Prices Will Rebound

After dipping below $30 a barrel in the spring, the price of crude oil will rise to $100 by the time Hurricane season is over (hey, there's no election in '09) and end the year at $85.

Just when people were getting used to $1.50 gasoline, taking advantage of dealer incentives to buy Suburbans and Escalades again, the price at the pump will be back up over $3 and they won't be happy about it.
This too was something of a bold call as oil was trading below $40 a barrel for a good portion of December, jumping inexplicably from $37 to $44 a barrel on December 31st. Crude oil went below $34 in February, largely due to a wicked contango, and then almost doubled from there.

Gasoline prices have risen substantially, now at $2.93 a gallon on the West Coast with a national average of $2.70. Prices at the pump of around $3 a gallon don't hurt nearly as much as $4 gas did a year ago but, of course, millions more Americans don't have to drive to work anymore.
6. Gold and Silver Will Soar

The price of silver will double before ending the year at around $20 an ounce and gold will again surpass the $1,000 mark, finishing the year at $1,150. Inventory at the SPDR Gold Shares ETF will increase to over 1,000 tonnes and there will be 10,000 tonnes of silver in the iShares Silver Trust ETF. We still won't be sure whether the ETFs really have the metal, but no one will care.

An increasing number of retail investors will buy gold and silver for the first time and they'll sell in a panic during the first correction they encounter. They'll look back and think, "Precious metals are no more volatile than that S&P500 Index fund I sold last year. Why did I sell in a panic again? Maybe I should just invest in Hummels."

People will start talking about junior mining stocks at cocktail parties - just like internet stocks in 1997. (As noted the last couple years, I'm going to keep saying this until it's true).
The idea of a tousand tonnes in the GLD ETF was kind of a big deal back at the beginning of the year since it only had 780 tonnes at the time. It's now down slightly from its all-time high at 1125 tonnes and the silver ETF, at 8,730 tonnes, still has a ways to go reach 10,000.

Prices for gold and silver have been less impressive than the inventory levels, but the metals have finished up odd-numbered years very strongly in this decade, so $1,150 and $20 are do-able. Hedge funds and central banks around the world are on the gold-bandwagon - retail investors are still thinking about it.
7. The U.S. Economy and its Consumer Engine will Hit Rock Bottom

The personal saving rate will rise to four percent and both layaway programs and Christmas savings clubs will grow in popularity. This won't be good for the U.S. economy which will contract during the first two quarters and post anemic growth rates in the last two.

Much of the Christmas savings money will be raided late in the year as many consumers will think they've served their penance and, with money gushing out of the government and central bank, they will regain their spendthrift ways before year-end making for a spectacular Christmas shopping season as compared to the one that just concluded.
The personal savings rate hit 6.9 percent in last week's report for May, however, that was heavily influenced by the government handing out money, but the trend is definitely up. It's still too early to assess the rise in lay-away plans for this Christmas.

Negative growth in the second quarter is likely and, after such a terrible prior three quarters, the second half might produce some small GDP numbers without a minus sign in front of them. There will be lots of interesting year-over-year comparisons coming up this fall.
8. Reported Inflation will Dip into Negative Territory

We'll hear lots of talk about deflation as the overall Consumer Price Index dips into negative territory on a year-over-year basis by mid-year. At this point, we'll all be bathing in a virtual government money shower as policymakers desperately try to avoid the ignominious honor of being the first group to ever cause real deflation within a fiat money system (no, what Japan had was not real, hard-money style deflation - that was just baby-deflation).

The policymakers will succeed.

By the time the leaves start falling, we'll all be talking about inflation again as energy prices rise in what will look like an inverse, smaller magnitude version of what happened last year.
The Consumer Price Index showed prices falling at an annual rate of 1.3 percent last month and there's been lots of talk about deflation all through the first half of the year.

Unless we relapse into a late-2008 style crisis mode again later this year, in-flation will once again become a hot topic and you'll (thankfully) hear less and less about de-flation. Remember that, by the end of the year, we'll be comparing energy costs to the $35 oil and $1.50 gasoline from last December.
9. Four Million Jobs will be Lost

Nonfarm payrolls will decline by three million in 2009 and there will be downward revisions of about one million to prior years' payrolls data as the Labor Department grapples with its birth-death modeling once again, publicly confessing that it has utterly failed to provide any meaningful statistics about the labor market in real time.

Health care will be the only employment sector that adds jobs in 2009.

Teenagers all across the country will become disillusioned after having lived their formative years during the biggest financial bubble in the history of Mankind and then seeing it come to an abrupt end as home equity withdrawals are relegated to the history books. They will actually go out and seek work, though few will find any this year.
Almost three million jobs have been lost through the first five months of the year, so a total of four million by year-end may underestimate the net decline in payrolls and, yes, health care continues to be about the only sector that consistently creates jobs.

Teenagers are looking for work more these days, unfortunately, they're now competing with grownups, more than a few forty-something lifeguards expected to be applying sunscreen to their nose and twirling a whistle this summer.
10. Websites will not Wise-Up

A growing number of websites will continue to annoy readers by automatically playing video clips when the page is opened (didn't we already go through this process about four years ago?). They'll believe their marketing staff that this really is an effective advertising technique, but they will fail to understand just how many readers are leaving, never to return, after having to search so many times for that damn Pause button.
There's been some progress on this, but not nearly enough.

Overall, things are proceeding pretty much as envisioned six months ago, however, last year's predictions were spot-on up until about two weeks into the third quarter.

ooo

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