Showing posts with label China. Show all posts
Showing posts with label China. Show all posts

Friday, 17 September 2010

Get Gold!

Baltic Dry Index. 2737 -103
LIR Gold Target by 2019: $3,000.

“Fiat money has no place to go but gold”

Alan Greenspan. September 15, 2010

In Washington, it’s open season on China. Yesterday it was the turn of tax challenged Treasury Secretary Geithner. How much is mere pandering rhetoric and how much is real? China would dearly like to know, as I suspect would America’s Tea Party voters. One way or another, China is heading for import tariffs in America. The only question seems to be, will they come before November’s US election or will they come after, when a very different Congress is likely to be returned, comprised in very large measure of hard headed followers of a much more conservative agenda. Last time something like this happened, Iran was watching the arrival of a no nonsense Ronald Reagan, and wisely decided to release the US hostages rather than risk a war. This time around, it’s China in the role of Iran, and there aren’t any hostages thankfully, just China manipulating its currency via a dirty float. But I doubt that will make very much difference. From London, it looks to me, like only a serious change of policy in Beijing can change the outcome. From London, it seems to me, China is digging in rather than looking to change its policy.

"We need only take our heads out of the sand to see clearly that interventionism not only has failed to provide the promised something-for-nothing, but has led to all sorts of undesirable consequences. Indeed, many are just beginning to realize that we are moving towards disaster even though we have been on a wrong heading for decades."

Leonard Read

US-China clash over yuan escalates, risking superpower stand-off

US Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner has issued his harshest attack to date on China’s currency policy, the latest move in an escalating superpower clash across the gamut of commercial and strategic relations.

By Ambrose Evans-Pritchard Published: 7:09PM BST 16 Sep 2010

“We are very concerned about the negative impact of (China’s) policies on our economic interests,” he told a Congressional hearing on Beijing’s use of exchange intervention for trade advantage.

“The pace of appreciation has been to slow. The undervalued renminbi helps China’s export sector. It encourages out-sourcing of production and jobs from the United States. By continuing a rigid exchange rate, China is impeding the adjustments needed to secure sustainable global growth,” he said.

The tough talk comes amid concerns that the global currency order is unravelling, with countries breaking ranks in a `beggar-thy-neigbour’ use of 1930s-style devaluation to help exporters and shore up their economies.

Japan became the latest country to intervene this week, carrying out massive dollar and euro purchases to weaken the yen. Sander Levin, chair of the US House Ways and Means Committee, called the move “deeply disturbing”, chiefly because it muddies the political water and lets China off the hook.

Mr Geithner’s ire follows a move by US trade chief Ron Kirk to file two cases against China at the World Trade Organization, alleging bias against US steel producers and credit card companies. Mr Kirk said he was “fighting for the American jobs threatened by China’s actions.”

Trade expert Gary Hufbauer from Washington’s Peterson Institute said the tensions risk triggering a dangerous clash.” The US and China are now adversaries, not enemies, but if the Obama administration pushes this trade agenda the way it is now doing, we will end up antagonists,” he said.

Professor Hufbauer said the White House has lost faith in “quiet diplomacy”, irked that the yuan has hardly moved since Beijing ended the dollar peg in June. This is spiced by populist fever before the mid-term elections in November.

“The US trade deficit with China is widening, yet the Chinese are still accumulating reserves at remarkable rate, beyond their needs. They know that growth in China’s coastal provinces is their passport to political stability, but this is incompatible with US political stability,” he said.

“We have grievances piling up in tyres, aluminium, paper, and steel, and it has all come to a head. Of course, China is getting an unfair share of the blame from this anti-globalisation mood on Capitol Hill. The truth is that when the US curbed imports of Chinese tyres, sales went to Brazil and Mexico instead, not to US producers,” he said.

Jiang Yu from China’s foreign ministry echoed the point. “Appreciation of the renminbi will not resolve the deficit between the US and China and will not resolve US domestic unemployment. Pressure will not only fail to solve the problems; it could have the opposite effect,” she said..

Views are clearly hardening on both sides. Over 140 members of Congress have so far backed the Ryan-Murphy bill enforcing sanctions against China for currency abuse, siding with US domestic industry and trade unions against US multinationals with plant in China.

-----Japan’s leaders say privately that China’s actions have begun to threaten their country’s industrial base, forcing Tokyo to respond with its own solo intervention or stand by as its exporters are asphyxiated and its economy tips into a deflationary spiral.

The twist is that Japan itself has a large trade surplus -- though for different reasons -- so it is in effect passing the unwanted parcel to the US and Europe rather than allowing the global system to come back into equilibrium.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/comment/ambroseevans_pritchard/8007629/US-China-clash-over-yuan-escalates-risking-superpower-stand-off.html

Unsurprisingly, edgy holders of dollars are increasingly hedging their dollar exposure with gold. One way or another a weaker dollar lies ahead. Central banksters or not, gold is resuming its monetary role as a store of value. All fiat money eventually returns to intrinsic value, to misquote Voltaire. When the US Treasury bubble eventually meets up with its pin, the run on gold and silver is likely to be immense. Gold moving hundreds of dollars in a day. Think 1979-80. If the Fed and the BOE have a plan to bail out the gold and silver shorts, it isn’t immediately apparent to me. When the US treasury bubble eventually bursts, it seems to me very likely to blow up the Great Nixonian Error of fiat currency. With a Sarah Palin presidency now no longer out of the question, and a adversarial relationship with China developing, who wouldn’t want to hedge off some fiat currency risk while the opportunity is still there.

"The history of fiat money is little more than a register of monetary follies and inflations. Our present age merely affords another entry in this dismal register."

Hans F. Sennholz

Gold hits an all-time high

Gold mining shares peppered the blue-chip leaderboard as the price of the precious metal hit an all-time high.

Ben Harrington Published: 6:27PM BST 14 Sep 2010

Gold rose to $1269 an ounce, with dealers noting a growing number of investors have been buying the precious metal in recent weeks. Some traders reckon investors have almost replaced industry users as the main buyers of gold.

As central banks have cut interest rates to the bone to battle recession and high unemployment, investors are using gold as a hedge against the threat of inflation or even hyper-inflation.

Philip Klapwijk, chairman of metals consultancy GFMS, also pointed out that: "The United States has so far managed to side-step the sovereign debt crisis. But that could change in the future and that would undermine the dollar and boost gold."

The dollar fell to a 15-year low against the yen and a nine-month low against the Swiss franc, which boosted the price of gold further.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/markets/marketreport/8002758/Gold-hits-an-all-time-high.html

Greenspan’s Warning on Gold

Editorial of The New York Sun September 15, 2010

----Mr. Greenspan replied that he’d thought a lot about gold prices over the years and decided the supply and demand explanations treating gold like other commodities “simply don’t pan out,” as Mr. Malpass characterized Mr. Greenspan. “He’d concluded that gold is simply different,” Mr. Malpass wrote. At one point Mr. Greenspan spoke of how, during World War II, the Allies going into North Africa found gold was insisted on in the payment of bribes.* Said the former Fed chairman: “If all currencies are moving up or down together, the question is: relative to what? Gold is the canary in the coal mine. It signals problems with respect to currency markets. Central banks should pay attention to it.”

To which, forgive us, one can only say, “Now he tells us.” The fact is that if Mr. Greenspan governed the Fed with an eye on gold, it wasn’t a particularly steady eye. He might argue that when he left the chairmanship of the Fed, in January 2006, he left a dollar worth a 400th of an ounce of gold, slightly more valuable than the 461st of an ounce of gold that it was worth when he came in nearly 20 years before. But in the first five years of the 21st century, when he was in the last quarter of his years as chairman, the value of the dollar started its long collapse, plunging from the 282nd of an ounce of gold that it was worth on January 4, 2000. In the years since, it has cratered to record lows once imagined only by such sages as Ron Paul.

http://www.nysun.com/editorials/greenspans-warning-on-gold/87080

In UK news, the Humpty Dumpty governing coalition just got some very bad news. Consumers are already cutting back in anticipation of the coming austerity hard times. Sterling is now a very risky currency to hold. I suspect that Humpty won’t last out the coming winter.

September 17th – 99 days to Christmas.

Recovery hopes falter as retail sales disappoint

Britain's recovery hopes have suffered a sharp setback after surprisingly weak retail sales figures provided damning evidence that consumers are tightening their belts ahead of the Government's austerity measures.

By Philip Aldrick and James Hall Published: 10:41PM BST 16 Sep 2010

A collapse in high street sales for August and stark warnings from some of the nation's leading retailers sparked fresh talk of a double-dip recession.

"The unexpected fall is a nasty shock and deals a significant blow to growth hopes," said Howard Archer, chief UK economist at IHS Global Insight.

"It will likely fuel fears of a double-dip, given the importance of consumer spending to the economy."

Retail sales volumes shrank 0.5pc last month – against forecasts of 0.2pc growth – on the back of fewer purchases of food, fuel, clothes and household goods, according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS). It was the first fall in sales since January.

July's figures were also revised down from growth of 1.2pc to 0.8pc.

Retail chiefs added to rising concerns as they warned the weak figures could worsen following January's VAT increase from 17.5pc to 20pc and the Government's austerity package.

----The average UK consumer is now expected to be a total of £2,240 out of pocket over the next five years because of the effects of Government policies, according to a report on household budgets from Verdict Research and retail consultancy PRGX.

-----The poor ONS data was mirrored by figures from Barclaycard, which found that spending on debit and credit cards slid 1.9pc in August against the previous month.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/8007686/Recovery-hopes-falter-as-retail-sales-disappoint.html

"It is the greenback which is unstable, and not the bullion."

Dr. Franz Pick

At the Comex silver depositories Thursday, final figures were: Registered 53.44 Moz, Eligible 58.30 Moz, Total 111.74 Moz.

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Crooks and Scoundrels Corner.

The bent, the seriously bent, and the totally doubled over.

No crooks today, just more on China and the unlevel playing field in international trade. Below, the future is solar and the future is China. Or is it?

In contrast to wind turbines, there remains considerable room for advances in the efficiency of solar power and while this presents an opportunity to reduce costs further, it poses dilemmas for existing solar module manufacturers, particularly given the large investments which have already been made and the potential costs incurred in retooling existing factories to produce radically different products. A clear example is the recent breakthrough at the University of Stanford, where researchers have discovered that cesium-coated gallium nitride is capable of converting the energy from the light and heat of the Sun into electricity, paving the way for solar panels with efficiencies in the 55-60% range

Solarfun Proves Why Energy Investors Like Cheap, Chinese Panels

Sept. 17 (Bloomberg) -- Solarfun Power Holdings Co. is proving that cheaper, Chinese goods branded with English- sounding names can make renewable-energy investors rich.

The Chinese company makes solar panels that cost 35 percent less than Germany’s Schott AG and is headed to double sales in 2010. Its shares jumped 73 percent this quarter and lead Chinese stocks that are set to take the top five slots on the Bloomberg Global Leaders Solar Index for the first time in five quarters.

Solarfun, beating 499 of the 500 members in the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index, and Chinese makers of raw materials for panels like LDK Solar Co. gained an edge over German and U.S. rivals in mid-year. That’s when new energy and fiscal policies in Europe drove solar park developers to seek lower-cost panels to protect profit. Even after the gains, the Chinese stocks remain less expensive than Western counterparts in price-earnings terms.

“The Chinese are the ones to beat,” said Olaf Koester, head of renewable energy at VCH Investment Group, which oversees about 130 million euros ($165 million) including Chinese panel maker Trina Solar Ltd., up 61 percent this quarter. Their panels, or modules, are about 20 percent cheaper on average than those from German makers such as Conergy AG or Schott, he said in a telephone interview from his office in Frankfurt.

China’s manufacturers of panels and the polysilicon main ingredient have benefited from more than $20 billion in government loans this year while Western companies mainly seek private financing.

“In the long-term, the Chinese will probably be the winners,” said James Britland, an analyst at Allianz RCM which oversees about $2 billion in assets, including Asian polysilicon producers. “The real driver is their lower pricing.”

Price-Earnings Discount

The five best performers on the 38-member Bloomberg solar index include China’s JA Solar Holdings Co. and Renesola Ltd. The group trades at an average 8.3 times expected 2010 earnings. That’s below the index average of 29 times earnings and the 27 times earnings ratio of online travel agency Priceline.com Inc., the best-performing S&P 500 stock in the quarter, up 88 percent.

The Chinese manufacturers are riding the crest of a doubling of worldwide panel orders this year, having curbed production costs while improving quality to gain market share, said Martin Simonek, an analyst in London at Bloomberg New Energy Finance.

A Solarfun polycrystalline panel with a 195-watt capacity costs 396.27 euros compared with 610.47 euros for a similar module made by Schott, including taxes, according to the Solar Fachhandel website that sells solar-power generating products.

http://noir.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601085&sid=ahlJwzZr8Ano

“There is a tide in the affairs of men, Which taken at the flood, leads on to fortune. Omitted, all the voyage of their life is bound in shallows and in miseries. On such a full sea are we now afloat. And we must take the current when it serves, or lose our ventures.”

Wm. Shakespeare

Another weekend, and tiny Bermuda is preparing for hurricane Igor, while Mexico is preparing for hurricane Karl. Igor is forecast to brush by Bermuda as hurricane two, Karl is expected to hit Mexico as a stronger hurricane level 3 storm. Unfortunately Karl is likely to cause major flooding and this is all too likely to become a major story over the weekend. Here, our weather is turning autumnal. The leaves are turning colour and dropping, the elderberries, sloes and the last of the blackberries are in season. The chestnut trees have about another month to go. Check with the blog for the weekend update. Have a great and enjoyable weekend everyone.

"Of all the contrivances for cheating the laboring classes of mankind, none has been more effective than that which deludes them with paper money."

Daniel Webster

The monthly Coppock Indicators finished August:

DJIA: +243 Down. NASDAQ: +366 Down. SP500: +243 Down.

The bull market (or bear market rally) that commenced on Nasdaq on 30/4/09 at 1717 has ended. (30/5/09 SP 500 at 919, 30/5/09 DJIA 8500.) While the indicators can flip flop at market turns, this action is rare on the slow monthly indicators. August is the third down month in a row and “crash season” approaches.

Tuesday, 31 August 2010

QE Returns.

Baltic Dry Index. 2712
LIR Gold Target by 2019: $3,000.
“The war has developed not necessarily to Japan's advantage.”
Emperor Hirohito, August 1945

Japan yesterday became the first of the G-7 to return to quantitative easing. Where a bold policy was needed to break the rise of the yen, the BOJ opted instead for a baby step policy, and so the yen rose and Japan’s stocks slumped. Once started QE is virtually impossible to stop. A bad policy with eventual ruination as its destination, if you’re going to use QE, the BOJ forgot the only rule that applies, “you might as well be hung for a sheep as a lamb”. With the yen rising and taxes high, “Panasonic Corp., the maker of Viera televisions, said Aug. 20 it will move part of its plasma display panel production to Shanghai.” I wonder how much of that decision was down to China restricting rare metals exports and ending them entirely in 2015. Plasma panels require phosphors with rare earth doping. (Red requires europium, new blue europium phosphor retains brightness ten times longer than previous blue phosphors, and green is generated by phosphor doped with terbium.) Unless the west comes up with alternate non Chinese based rare earths and metals sources, the technology manufacturing future looks to be Chinese.

“Japan is an important ally of ours. Japan and the United States of the western industrialized capacity, 60 percent of the GNP, two countries. That's a statement in and of itself.”
Vice President Dan Quayle.

Japan renews QE as recovery falters

Japan has launched a fresh monetary and fiscal boost to shore up its faltering recovery and stem the slide into deflation, becoming the first major country to inject further stimulus since the Great Recession ended.

By Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, International Business Editor Published: 8:20PM BST 30 Aug 2010

The Bank of Japan agreed at an emergency meeting to boost its special loan facility by ¥10 trillion to ¥30 trillion (£220.7bn). "We need to watch out more carefully for downside risks to Japan's economy," said Governor Masaaki Shirakawa, who cut off his trip to the Jackson Hole forum in the US.

"Several weak US figures came out, while the yen rose and stock prices fell. When we saw this, we decided that we need to take more precautions."

Premier Naoto Kan said Tokyo would tap into its reserve fund for a ¥920bn spending package on jobs and investment. "We want to take swift measures as the second pillar of stimulus to support easing by the bank," he said.

The sums are tiny, a sign of Mr Kan's limited room for manoeuvre as public debt reaches 225pc of GDP. Rating agencies are already circling ominously.

The economy stalled in the second quarter, growing just 0.1pc. Prices have fallen for the past 17 months. Core deflation is running at -1.1pc.

The Bank of Japan's move was too timid to stabilise exchange markets. The yen appreciated sharply to ¥84.6 against the dollar. It is once again closing in on a 15-year high.

---- Even so, it is the first central bank to start loosening again.

While the Bank of England has hinted at more quantitative easing, and the Fed is taking steps to avoid "passive tightening", neither has yet launched fresh QE

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/economics/7972098/Japan-renews-QE-as-recovery-falters.html

Japan Policy Tinkering Leaves ’Huge’ Risk to Growth

Aug. 31 (Bloomberg) -- Japan’s limited policy response yesterday to risks facing economic growth after a surge in the yen may leave the recovery dependent on overseas spending.

---- The measures won’t alter the outlook for growth, which is poised to slow in the second half, according to economists at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Sumitomo Mitsui Asset Management Co. Pressure on Japan’s currency to rise may also be sustained after the announcements prompted the yen to rise from its low of the day yesterday against the dollar.

----- The Nikkei 225 Stock Average tumbled 2.1 percent as investors shrugged off government reports today that showed the recovery remains intact even as it slows. Industrial production unexpectedly expanded 0.3 percent in July from June, when it declined 1.1 percent. Retail sales rose 0.7 percent from a month earlier as hotter-than-usual summer weather spurred shopping.

Japan’s recovery from its worst postwar recession has depended on exports, propelled by Asia, which now makes up a majority of overseas demand for the country’s products. That reliance is unlikely to change given limited prospects for domestic spending with a shrinking population and sustained deflation.

Gross domestic product growth will be more than halved in the final six months of this year, to an annual pace of about 1 percent from about 2.4 percent in January to June, according to Goldman Sachs.

Corporate Taxes

“There are huge downside risks” to the expansion, said Chiwoong Lee, a senior economist at Goldman Sachs in Tokyo. Rather than the “limited” action taken yesterday by policy makers, “what’s needed are measures that lead to innovative steps,” such as reductions in corporate tax rates for industries including technology, he said.

Tax rates for electronics companies in Japan are around 29 percent in Japan, compared with 6 percent in the U.S., Lee said.

Keidanren, Japan’s biggest business lobby, has called on the government to support investment by cutting corporate taxes. Without such a step, companies may plow their record cash holdings abroad rather than at home.

Nissan Motor Co., Japan’s third-largest automaker, began selling a Thai-made compact car in July to counter the rising yen. Panasonic Corp., the maker of Viera televisions, said Aug. 20 it will move part of its plasma display panel production to Shanghai.

http://noir.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=alu_oRV._Ouw&pos=5

In other Asian news, China’s gain is Europe’s loss. Well. It isn’t yet but it soon will be. With Russia’s oil production hitting its limits and set to decline from next year onwards, Russia will soon have the option of deciding who stays warm in the northern hemisphere winter. Washington’s colour revolution policy of encircling Russia and going in for the kill, backfired badly as it forced Russia and China into a defensive alliance. Western Europe will soon get to pay for the ill conceived and poorly executed colour revolutions in faraway places, but Russia’s backyard.

Russia opens China pipeline for Siberian oil

By Isabel Gorst in Moscow

Published: August 29 2010 18:00 Last updated: August 29 2010 18:00.

Vladimir Putin, the Russian prime minister, on Sunday opened a new pipeline to export east Siberian oil to China that will help Russia reorientate its oil trade towards the east.

The pipeline, running 67km from Skovorodino in east Siberia to China’s north-eastern frontier, is an offshoot of a new oil export route Russia is building to the Pacific Ocean, providing a strategic window on the fast-growing energy markets of Asia.

----Russia began exporting oil this year from a new export terminal on the Pacific Ocean built to serve fields in east Siberia, one of the world’s last untapped oil provinces. Some Kremlin-friendly oil companies have been granted tax breaks to speed development of east Siberian reserves and offset a decline in production in other regions.

Transneft, the Russian oil pipeline monopoly, completed the construction of a pipeline from Taishet in the Irkutsk region to Skovorodino last year, the first stretch of a planned 2,757km pipeline to the Pacific. On completion in 2012, the pipeline will be capable of carrying up to 1.6m barrels of oil a day, about one-third of Russia’s current exports.

----Russia accepted a $25bn (€19.6bn, £16bn) loan from China in exchange for future oil deliveries last year, cementing its energy-trading relations with the world’s fastest growing oil consumer. The deal entitles China to import 300,000 barrels a day of Russian oil for 20 years starting in 2011.

Transneft said last year that Russia would boost its daily oil production by 1m barrels to 11m b/d after 2012, providing enough oil for exports both ways.

But analysts have warned that Russian oil production, after rising to an all-time record of 10.2m b/d this month, will begin to fall next year as a decline accelerates at mature fields.

http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/dd89374a-b38c-11df-81aa-00144feabdc0.html

We end today with signs of global cooling arriving, perhaps?

China's largest saltwater lake grows after 50 years of shrinking

10:40, August 02, 2010

The surface area of China's largest saltwater lake had grown in size over the past five years amid increased rain and decreased evaporation, an expert from the Qinghai Provincial Center of Geomatics said Saturday.
The surface area of the Qinghai Lake had reached 4,249.3 square kilometers, 4.3 square kilometers more than in 2005, Wang Yuan, deputy director of the center, said.
"The year 2005 was a turning point. Before then, the lake's size was decreasing due to climate change and human activities," Wang said.
The government's environmental protection work had contributed to the increase in surface area, Wang said.
The lake's surface area shrunk more than 300 square kilometers beginning in the 1950s, according to the Qinghai Province Meteorological Sciences Academy.

http://chinatibet.people.com.cn/7089362.html

At the Comex silver depositories Monday, final figures were: Registered 51.91 Moz, Eligible 58.85 Moz, Total 110.76 Moz.

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Crooks and Scoundrels Corner.

The bent, the seriously bent, and the totally doubled over.

Today it’s the crooks and scoundrels in the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change again. The nutters who brought the world the scam of “carbon trading, carbon taxes, and carbon capture”, in the cause of fighting “man-made global warming for CO2”, now rebranded “climate change”, since the public got wise to the man-mad global warming scam, are found guilty of being economical with the truth, and more than a little self serving. Things were apparently so bad, it was the best the finest whitewash committee could come up with. No need to tell them about Qinghai Lake.

How about we refund your money, send you a new one at no charge, close the store and have the manager shot. Would that be satisfactory?

Chinese laundry sign.

IPCC 'must avoid playing politics'

The UN's climate change body has been told to stick to the science and avoid playing politics in a landmark review of how it operates

By Stephen Adams Published: 7:00AM BST 31 Aug 2010

A group of leading scientists from around the world said on Monday that the leaders of the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change had left themselves open to the accusation that they had "gone beyond IPCC's remit".

In March the Amsterdam-based InterAcademy Council (IAC) was called in after a number of errors were found in the IPCC's landmark 2007 Fourth Assessment Report into man-made climate change.

Key among those was the unsubstantiated claim - based on an article in New Scientist magazine - that most of the Himalayas' glaciers would have melted by 2035.

Its inclusion gave ammunition to those sceptical about the climate change science, who dug for further evidence that the IPCC's report was flawed and the organisation biased.

On Monday the IAC announced its recommendations on how to strengthen the IPCC, saying it "needs fundamental reform" to convince an ever more sceptical public that its science was solid.

It did not call into question the main findings of the 2007 report, and said that overall its assessment process of the rate of, and risks from, climate chance had "been a success and served society well".

However, the IAC said: "IPCC’s slow and inadequate response to revelations of errors in the last assessment, as well as complaints that its leaders have gone beyond IPCC’s mandate to be 'policy relevant, not policy prescriptive' in their public comments, have made communications a critical issue."

Harold Shapiro, a Princeton University professor of economics, who chaired the IAC committee, noted that "controversies have erupted over the perceived impartiality of IPCC towards climate policy".

He said guidelines should be drawn up "on how to speak on the IPCC's behalf while staying within the the bounds of IPCC reports".

The report also recommended that a "rigorous conflict-of-interest policy" should be drawn up for senior IPCC leadership and authors of its reports. In the future no individual should chair the IPCC for more than one six-year term, it stated.

Additionally, "formal qualifications for the chair and all other Bureau members need to be developed", the IAC said.

While Prof Shapiro stipulated that the IAC's recommendations were "not in any way motivated by an evaluation of the current leadership of IPCC", many will see them as putting pressure on Dr Pachauri.

The Indian scientist, who started his career as a railway engineer, refused to resign following the Himalaya debacle.

He has also been dogged by questions over conflict of interest, which he has resolutely denied. He has been in the post since 2002 - he was awarded a new six-year term in 2008 - and he plans to remain until 2014.

The IAC also said the IPCC should tighten up on its use of so-called "gray literature" - that which has not been peer-reviewed.

Prof Shapiro said: "IPCC has guidelines for the use of such sources, but these guidelines are vague and have not always been followed."

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/earth/environment/climatechange/7972011/IPCC-must-avoid-playing-politics.html

Phew! So that’s alright then. Move along, nothing to see here. For a moment there we actually thought you might be conducting an impartial review.

“They have all the virtues I dislike and none of the vices I admire.”

With apologies to Winston Churchill.

The monthly Coppock Indicators finished July:

DJIA: +264 Down. NASDAQ: +427 Down. SP500: +275 Down.

The bull market (or bear market rally) that commenced on Nasdaq on 30/4/09 at 1717 has ended. (30/5/09 SP 500 at 919, 30/5/09 DJIA 8500.) While the indicators can flip flop at market turns, this action is rare on the slow monthly indicators. July seems to have confirmed June’s reversal and end of the bull market.

Help the LIR fight Banksterism, the EU, and for sound money.

If you can, help the LIR stay around and make a difference. Please make a donation at the PayPal link on the website or better still become a sponsor for what looks like an exciting 2010. Capitalism not banksterism. Many thanks to all who have helped.

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Sunspots – A 22 year colder world? (From 2004?)

Spotless Days Aug 30
Current Stretch:0 days

2010 total: 39 days (16%)
2009 total: 260 days (71%)
Since 2004: 807 days
Typical Solar Min: 485 days

http://www.spaceweather.com