And calls it the true name for what we are experiencing, here.
Friday, August 29, 2014
Market capitalization to GDP for 1999, before the August 2000 high and subsequent crash
The Wilshire 5000 level at the end of December 1999 was 13,812.7. Multiplied times 1.2 yields a total market capitalization of $16.57524 trillion.
Nominal GDP for 1999 was $9.6606 trillion according to the latest figures from the BEA.
The former divided by the latter yields 1.72.
The ratio through March 2014 is 1.41.
The ratio through June 2014 is 1.45.
The ratio through March 2014 is 1.41.
The ratio through June 2014 is 1.45.
Thursday, August 28, 2014
2Q2014 GDP, second estimate, at 4.2% vs. 4.0% in advance estimate and -2.1% in 1Q2014
If today's report of GDP holds up in the final estimate of 2Q2014 GDP about a month from now, Obama will have racked up just three quarters in his entire presidency with prints in the fours:
4Q2011 4.6%
3Q2013 4.5%
2Q2014 4.2%.
Here's Obama's full record incorporating the latest annual revisions from bea.gov at the end of July and the annual revisions from the summer of 2013:
2009: -5.4, -0.4, 1.3, 3.9
2010: 1.6, 3.9, 2.8, 2.5
2011: -1.5, 2.9, 0.8, 4.6
2012: 2.3, 1.6, 2.5, 0.1
2013: 2.7, 1.8, 4.5, 3.5
2014: -2.1, 4.2.
Average report after 22 quarters: 1.7%.
Pathetic!
Wednesday, August 27, 2014
Congressional Budget Office quietly predicts 1.5% real 2014 GDP one day before BEA.gov announcement
Is 2Q2014 GDP of 4% just a memory?
The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (!) had the story here:
"The Congressional Budget Office on Wednesday forecast that the U.S. economy will grow by just 1.5 per cent in 2014, undermined by a poor performance during the first three months of the year."
Why S&P500 2000.02 isn't the all time high
Because adjusted for inflation the August 2000 high was 2048.10, so we remain 48.08 points away from the all time high, or another 2.3%.
The housing riot: Average time in mortgage delinquency is 2.7 years nationwide, 4 years in New York State
Lawlessness and mayhem isn't just for po folk in Ferguson, Missouri, where law enforcement was overwhelmed by the bad actors doing millions of dollars in damage on the streets. Same goes for freeloaders in judicial mortgage states like New York where the authorities do not have the capacity to deal with the widespread problem of non-payment.
From Michael Sincere, here:
Millions of homeowners are already seriously delinquent. “The average length of time that houses remain delinquent nationwide is 995 days,” [Keith] Jurow says. “The worst culprit is New York State. The average delinquency period there is four years.” Many homeowners are aware that banks are not in a rush to file foreclosures, so they stay in their houses mortgage-free. “The banks are not initiating foreclosure proceedings because once the servicer forecloses, the lender takes a hit on earnings,” Jurow says. “They also have to manage the property, and most banks don’t want to do that.”
Sunday, August 24, 2014
Postmodernism at The Atlantic, continued, where the seven-day week is completely man-made
What's completely man-made is this account of the week, "Where the Five-Day Workweek Came From", in which long observation of four lunar phases of 7.4 days in length over millennia means nothing to an architect, who is, fittingly, cited as an authority, as in architects making stuff up.
The author, one Philip Sopher, an economics graduate from Princeton who should know his dates better, is completely ignorant of the Julian calendar reform of the Roman market day cycle of eight days to the more natural seven, which together with its other changes in 46 BC helped remove ever after in the West, not add, deliberate human meddling with the calendar, a common problem at the time of Caesar, here:
“Seven days,” wrote Witold Rybczynski in the August 1991 issue of The Atlantic, “is not natural because no natural phenomenon occurs every seven days.” The year marks one revolution of the Earth around the sun. Months, supposedly, mark the time between full moons. The seven-day week, however, is completely man-made.
If it’s man-made, can’t man unmake it? For all the talk of how freeing it’d be to shave a day or two off the five-day workweek, little attention has been paid to where the weekly calendar came from. Understanding the sometimes arbitrary origins of the modern workweek might inform the movement to shorten it.
... At the very latest, the seven-day week was firmly entrenched in the Western calendar about 250 years before Christ was born.
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Little attention, indeed.
Friday, August 22, 2014
Federal Reserve banks rob the people a minimum $400 billion annually through ZIRP, so far have paid just $125 billion in fines for financial crisis crimes
"The Bank of America deal announced Thursday, the government’s largest-ever settlement with a single company, means the nation’s second-biggest bank will shell out $16.65 billion over allegations that it knowingly sold toxic mortgages to investors. ... The sum surpasses Bank of America’s entire profits last year and is significantly higher than the $13 billion it offered during negotiations in July."
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The story doesn't mention the nearly $90 billion paid out by the FDIC Deposit Insurance Fund for the failed banks which have numbered over 500 since 2007, the funds for which are supplied by insurance premiums extorted from the honest banks. But it is the depositors who end up paying for that cost of doing business in the end. Nor does it ruminate on the effects of the Federal Reserve's Zero Interest Rate Policy, which allows those first in line for money to get it rock bottom cheap and speculate with it. The financial sector now rivals the household sector in stock ownership. Savers meanwhile get the crumbs which fall from their masters' table. Ten years prior to 2007 the country was finally beginning to recover from a decade long Savings and Loan crisis which witnessed over a thousand institutions fail, costing the taxpayers directly about $130 billion. No sooner was that over in 1995 when the wizards of smart conspired to abolish the Glass-Steagall banking regime in 1999, precipitating the recent panic less than a decade later. And, of course, the Great Depression after 1929 followed closely on the heels of the establishment of the Federal Reserve itself in 1913, signed into law by one Woodrow Wilson, Ph.D., Johns Hopkins University. Over 700 banks failed in 1930, and 9,000 over the ensuing decade. The professionals have a long history of failure. The prudent avoid them.
Thursday, August 21, 2014
S&P500 posts its 28th record close in 2014 at 1992
That's one new record high every 1.18 weeks to date, down from just slightly more than one per week in 2013, or one new high every 1.02 weeks.
Sentier Research: Real Median Annual Household Income Down 3.1% From 2009, 4.8% From 2007, 5.9% From 2000
The metric has recovered between 2011 and 2014 by 3.8%, so things could be a lot worse. But the report means incomes remain in a depression now fourteen years long and counting.
Read the full report here.
Tuesday, August 19, 2014
Missouri governor calls in the National Guard to protect . . . the police
The New York Times reports here in "National Guard Troops Fail to Quell Unrest in Ferguson":
"Early Monday, after a new spate of unrest, Gov. Jay Nixon said he was bringing in the National Guard. Hours later, he said that he was lifting the curfew and that the Guard would have only a limited role, protecting the police command post. ... at the police command post, National Guard members in Army fatigues, some with military police patches on their uniforms, stood ready but never entered the area where protesters were marching. State and local law enforcement authorities oversaw operations there."
The market crash is not coming with signs to be observed
John Hussman, here:
"Compressed risk premiums normalize in spikes.
"Those spikes will make it quite difficult to exit in the nice, orderly manner that speculators seem to imagine will be possible. Nor are readily observable warnings (beyond those we already observe) likely to provide a clear exit signal. Galbraith reminds us that the 1929 market crash did not have observable catalysts. Rather, his description is very much in line with the view that the market crashed first, and the underlying economic strains emerged later: 'the crash did not come – as some have suggested – because the market suddenly became aware that a serious depression was in the offing. A depression, serious or otherwise, could not be foreseen when the market fell.'"
Grand Rapids Community College students take less classes, learn fewer knowledge: VP for Finance and Administration copes with declining revenue
Story at mlive.com here:
Lisa Freiburger, vice president for finance and administration, didn’t have an estimate on the number of vacant positions the college will delay filling or leave unfilled altogether. ... Freiburger said an improving economy is likely one of the factors causing enrollment to decline. In addition to a declining headcount, students are also taking fewer courses. “We are seeing students take less classes, and I assume those students are perhaps working more than they might have been,” she said. “Clearly, we’re down farther than we anticipated, but we are managing that drop and related loss in revenue.”
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Maybe GRCC could save money by firing people who speak English goodier.
Gold bug Ralph Benko thinks Richard Nixon had to resign over the closing of the gold window!
I like Ralph Benko. Ralph Benko often makes important arguments on behalf of the gold standard. But when he tries to force everything in the universe to be interpreted through the lens of it you know you have met an ideologue who has become unhinged from reality. Which is why Forbes is a good place for him.
His latest screed here is a mere flight of fantasy, imagining Richard Nixon was forced to resign over the closing of the gold window in 1971. Had he presented it as such, it would have entertained and illumined, even pleased. Instead, its talk of correlation only annoys, the way a chart reader plots two things on a graph and yells 'See! See! They both go up together!' Against Benko, Pat Buchanan may be forgiven for ignoring what didn't exist, just as Nixon's enemies ignored it, except in the fever camps of utopianism.
Benko makes Thomas Paine's opinions about gold a prophecy reaching 200 years into the future where gold becomes Nemesis and the end of Bretton Woods Hubris. Covering up Watergate? Well, simply an instrumental little detail:
"The House Judiciary Committee’s charges and the Connally indictment uncannily fulfill a prophecy by Tom Paine. ... Connally was acquitted on the charges of graft and perjury. Later he underwent bankruptcy before dying in semi-disgrace. Nixon resigned rather than undergoing impeachment, also living out his life in disgraced political exile. The spirit of Paine’s declaration was fulfilled in both cases. Connally and Nixon engineered this violation, abandoning the good, precious-metal, money contemplated by the Constitution. Nemesis followed hubris. The closing of the 'gold window' was based, by Connolly, on deeply wrong premises. It was sold to the public, by Nixon, on deeply false promises."
Methinks Tom Paine himself would be a little embarrassed at the almost religious regard with which some of his present day followers come to what he has left behind for us on paper.
He'd probably call them Burkeans.
Labels:
bankruptcy,
Forbes,
gold,
hubris,
impeachment,
John B. Connally Jr,
Pat Buchanan,
Ralph Benko,
Richard Nixon,
Thomas Paine
Monday, August 18, 2014
Missouri governor calls in National Guard, vindicating need for militarized police to stop riots in Ferguson
Reported here, with this excellent comment appended by a reader:
"Now we learn the National Guard is being called in. More than looking like the military, which the locals cops were accused of doing, these fellows 'are' the military. If this doesn't vindicate the local cops accused of being over the top in their response, nothing will."
Sunday, August 17, 2014
Ross Douthat is insane, doesn't say a word about millions of dollars in damage done by rioters in Ferguson, MO
Ross Douthat in The New York Times calls for taking away the militarized components of police departments, here.
But Ferguson, MO, police effectively watched on the sidelines as millions of dollars in damages were inflicted on property owners by rioters there, and didn't use their hardware to stop it. They should have.
It would have sent a message across this country to cease and desist, or suffer the consequences. Law-abiding people everywhere want this in their hearts, but are afraid to speak up because of the intimidation they would suffer from an insane media allied with the race hucksters of this country. It's too bad Ross Douthat has joined them.
From the St. Louis Business Journal, here:
"QuikTrip, which saw its store at 9420 West Florrisant Ave. looted and burned, estimated Monday the damage total to be in the seven figures.
"More than a dozen other businesses along West Florissant Avenue were damaged and looted, including Zisser Tire & Auto, Wal-Mart, Taco Bell, St. Vincent de Paul Thrift Store, and Toys R Us. Nu Fashion Beauty, Party City and Boost Mobile were also affected. The unrest spread beyond Ferguson Monday night, as a Shoe Carnival on Gravois near Grand was vandalized and looted."
In America, unfortunately, some property is more unequal than others.
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