Showing posts with label US deficit. Show all posts
Showing posts with label US deficit. Show all posts

Friday, 10 September 2010

The Sickest Bankster Joke Yet.

Baltic Dry Index. 2975 +57
LIR Gold Target by 2019: $3,000.

The World Trade Center opened in 1970 after 8 years of construction.

For more on the sickest great vampire squid joke yet, scroll down to “Crooks and Scoundrel’s Corner”. God’s workers are about to peddle municipal bonds to the great unsophisticated hoi polloi. When the man from Goldie calls hang up. If they want out, do you really want in?

Sixteen blocks were cleared to house the completed WTC.

We open this Friday before the 9th anniversary of the Moslem fanatic atrocity of 9/11 in America, with the OECD saying the slowdown in the west is worse than forecast. Wait for later revisions to show just how much worse.

The excavation work displaced enough soil to create Liberty Park, where four 60-floor towers and four apartment buildings were constructed.

World slowdown steeper than anticipated: OECD

Sept. 9, 2010, 5:29 a.m. EDT

LONDON (MarketWatch) -- The slowdown in the global economic recovery is "somewhat more pronounced than previously anticipated," said Pier Carlo Padoan, chief economist at the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development on Thursday. In prepared remarks accompanying the release of the organization's updated economic outlook in Paris, Padoan said it isn't clear whether the loss of momentum is temporary or whether it signals greater underlying weaknesses in private spending at a time when support from fiscal and monetary policy is being removed.

If the slowdown is temporary, it would be appropriate to delay the withdrawal of monetary stimulus "for a few months" while pressing ahead with fiscal deficit-reduction measures, Padoan said. If the slowdown reflects "longer-lasting forces bearing down on activity," however, additional monetary stimulus might be warranted in the form of quantitative easing and a commitment to near-zero policy interest rates for a longer period, he said, while also delaying fiscal consolidation where public finances permit

http://www.marketwatch.com/story/world-slowdown-steeper-than-anticipated-oecd-2010-09-09

Below, some $2.5 trillion in to the great 21st century bankster bailout, the USA has managed to add more to national debt than collectively all previous Presidents from Reagan all the way back to George Washington. Stay long precious metals. The Great Nixonian Error gets more bizarre by the week.

The WTC had 12 million square feet of space. Each floor was 50,000 square feet.

Obama Added More to National Debt in First 19 Months Than All Presidents from Washington Through Reagan Combined, Says Gov’t Data
Wednesday, September 08, 2010
By Terence P. Jeffrey, Editor-in-Chief

(CNSNews.com) - In the first 19 months of the Obama administration, the federal debt held by the public increased by $2.5260 trillion, which is more than the cumulative total of the national debt held by the public that was amassed by all U.S. presidents from George Washington through Ronald Reagan.
The U.S. Treasury Department divides the federal debt into two categories. One is “debt held by the public,” which includes U.S. government securities owned by individuals, corporations, state or local governments, foreign governments and other entities outside the federal government itself. The other is “intragovernmental” debt, which includes I.O.U.s the federal government gives to itself when, for example, the Treasury borrows money out of the Social Security “trust fund” to pay for expenses other than Social Security.


At the end of fiscal year 1989, which ended eight months after President Reagan left office, the total federal debt held by the public was $2.1907 trillion, according to the Congressional Budget Office. That means all U.S. presidents from George Washington through Ronald Reagan had accumulated only that much publicly held debt on behalf of American taxpayers. That is $335.3 billion less than the $2.5260 trillion that was added to the federal debt held by the public just between Jan. 20, 2009, when President Obama was inaugurated, and Aug. 20, 2010, the 19-month anniversary of Obama's inauguration.


By contrast, President Reagan was sworn into office on Jan. 20, 1981 and left office eight years later on Jan. 20, 1989. At the end of fiscal 1980, four months before Reagan was inaugurated, the federal debt held by the public was $711.9 billion, according to CBO. At the end of fiscal 1989, eight months after Reagan left office, the federal debt held by the public was $2.1907 trillion. That means that in the nine-fiscal-year period of 1980-89--which included all of Reagan’s eight years in office--the federal debt held by the public increased $1.4788 trillion. That is in excess of a trillion dollars less than the $2.5260 increase in the debt held by the public during Obama’s first 19 months

http://cnsnews.com/news/article/72404

Back across the Atlantic in the home of the overpaid maladroit English World Cup football team, the stealth devaluation has gone off the rails. Despite the BOE dropping the Pound from $2.10 to $1.50, the devaluation has all gone horribly wrong in Europe’s second largest economy. Worryingly, Germany, Europe’s largest economy, now seems to be slowing as well. Pretty soon we’ll all be in Club Med but with Iceland’s weather.

The towers were different heights. The South tower was 1,362 feet tall, and big brother North tower was 1,368.

U.K. Trade Deficit Widens to Record as Imports Surge

By Jennifer Ryan

Sept. 9 (Bloomberg) -- The U.K.’s trade deficit widened to a record in July as purchases of chemicals and oil drove imports to the highest level in two years.

The goods-trade gap widened to 8.7 billion pounds ($13.4 billion) from 7.5 billion pounds and June, the Office for National Statistics said today in London. The median of 13 forecasts in a Bloomberg News survey was for a 7.5 billion-pound deficit. Exports fell 0.9 percent and imports rose 3.1 percent

----The Bank of England today left its benchmark interest rate at a record low of 0.5 percent and its bond stimulus plan at 200 billion pounds.

“The figures are a disappointment,” Philip Shaw, chief economist at Investec Securities in London, said in a telephone interview. “Overall the great rebalancing of the U.K. economy has yet to happen. The bank will be frustrated that the long- awaited upturn in export growth simply hasn’t happened.”

-----The trade deficit in oil swelled to 649 million pounds, the most in two years. Imports from non-European Union nations reached 15.6 billion pounds in July, a record high.

While the jump in imports may signal strength in domestic demand, weakening exports suggest the economy is failing to benefit from the weakness of the pound, which has fallen by a about a fifth on a trade-weighted basis since the start of 2007.

Abingdon, England-based PV Crystalox Solar Plc, a maker of silicon wafers, said Aug. 19 first-half net income fell 59 percent as average wafer prices fell about 40 percent from a year earlier. Chief Executive Officer Iain Dorrity said the company is working to build up business in Asia.

German economic data published yesterday also showed exports fell and industrial production rose less than economists forecast in July, suggesting the recovery in Europe’s largest economy is moderating. The German economy expanded at the fastest pace in two decades in the second quarter, boosted by exports.

http://noir.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=newsarchive&sid=aOTZh4ao5C5s

Yesterday we covered Norway’s big sovereign wealth fund bet on the tax and work shy Greeks. Whatever were they thinking, they might as well have bet on England or France winning the World Cup! We end for the day with the ever entertaining Michael Lewis visiting Greece. Many thanks to Morris in NYC for sending the article along. The whole 7 page article will make for great weekend reading.

The steel inside the WTC could have made three more Brooklyn Bridges.

Beware of Greeks Bearing Bonds

By Michael Lewis October 1, 2010

As Wall Street hangs on the question “Will Greece default?,” the author heads for riot-stricken Athens, and for the mysterious Vatopaidi monastery, which brought down the last government, laying bare the country’s economic insanity. But beyond a $1.2 trillion debt (roughly a quarter-million dollars for each working adult), there is a more frightening deficit. After systematically looting their own treasury, in a breathtaking binge of tax evasion, bribery, and creative accounting spurred on by Goldman Sachs, Greeks are sure of one thing: they can’t trust their fellow Greeks.

-----I was there for money. The tsunami of cheap credit that rolled across the planet between 2002 and 2007 has just now created a new opportunity for travel: financial-disaster tourism. The credit wasn’t just money, it was temptation. It offered entire societies the chance to reveal aspects of their characters they could not normally afford to indulge. Entire countries were told, “The lights are out, you can do whatever you want to do and no one will ever know.” What they wanted to do with money in the dark varied. Americans wanted to own homes far larger than they could afford, and to allow the strong to exploit the weak. Icelanders wanted to stop fishing and become investment bankers, and to allow their alpha males to reveal a theretofore suppressed megalomania. The Germans wanted to be even more German; the Irish wanted to stop being Irish. All these different societies were touched by the same event, but each responded to it in its own peculiar way. No response was as peculiar as the Greeks’, however: anyone who had spent even a few days talking to people in charge of the place could see that. But to see just how peculiar it was, you had to come to this monastery.

-----Moody’s, the ratings agency, had just lowered Greece’s credit rating to the level that turned all Greek government bonds into junk—and so no longer eligible to be owned by many of the investors who currently owned them. The resulting dumping of Greek bonds onto the market was, in the short term, no big deal, because the International Monetary Fund and the European Central Bank had between them agreed to lend Greece—a nation of about 11 million people, or two million fewer than Greater Los Angeles—up to $145 billion. In the short term Greece had been removed from the free financial markets and become a ward of other states.

-----That was the good news. The long-term picture was far bleaker. In addition to its roughly $400 billion (and growing) of outstanding government debt, the Greek number crunchers had just figured out that their government owed another $800 billion or more in pensions. Add it all up and you got about $1.2 trillion, or more than a quarter-million dollars for every working Greek. Against $1.2 trillion in debts, a $145 billion bailout was clearly more of a gesture than a solution.

-----As it turned out, what the Greeks wanted to do, once the lights went out and they were alone in the dark with a pile of borrowed money, was turn their government into a piƱata stuffed with fantastic sums and give as many citizens as possible a whack at it. In just the past decade the wage bill of the Greek public sector has doubled, in real terms—and that number doesn’t take into account the bribes collected by public officials. The average government job pays almost three times the average private-sector job. The national railroad has annual revenues of 100 million euros against an annual wage bill of 400 million, plus 300 million euros in other expenses. The average state railroad employee earns 65,000 euros a year.

-----The Greek public-school system is the site of breathtaking inefficiency: one of the lowest-ranked systems in Europe, it nonetheless employs four times as many teachers per pupil as the highest-ranked, Finland’s.

-----Where waste ends and theft begins almost doesn’t matter; the one masks and thus enables the other. It’s simply assumed, for instance, that anyone who is working for the government is meant to be bribed.

-----Oddly enough, the financiers in Greece remain more or less beyond reproach. They never ceased to be anything but sleepy old commercial bankers. Virtually alone among Europe’s bankers, they did not buy U.S. subprime-backed bonds, or leverage themselves to the hilt, or pay themselves huge sums of money. The biggest problem the banks had was that they had lent roughly 30 billion euros to the Greek government—where it was stolen or squandered. In Greece the banks didn’t sink the country. The country sank the banks.

-----At the dark and narrow entrance to the Ministry of Finance a small crowd of security guards screen you as you enter—then don’t bother to check and see why you set off the metal detector. In the minister’s antechamber six ladies, all on their feet, arrange his schedule. They seem frantic and harried and overworked … and yet he still runs late. The place generally seems as if even its better days weren’t so great. The furniture is worn, the floor linoleum. The most striking thing about it is how many people it employs.

Much more.

http://www.vanityfair.com/business/features/2010/10/greeks-bearing-bonds-201010?currentPage=1

We end for the day with China, China’s top “diplomat” at the UN to be exact. Next posting Mongolia probably.

The buildings housed 49,000 tons of air-conditioning equipment.

China's UN diplomat in drunken rant against Americans

China's top-ranking UN diplomat embarked on a drunken rant against the UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, telling his boss he'd "never liked" him, and adding for good measure that he didn't like Americans either.

Peter Foster in Beijing Published: 11:42AM BST 09 Sep 2010

The outburst by Sha Zukang at a retreat for top UN officials in the Austrian ski resort of Alpbach left senior UN officials cringing in embarrassment as others tried to convince him to put down the microphone, according to Washington-based Foreign Policy magazine.

"I know you never liked me Mr. Secretary-General – well, I never liked you, either," said Mr Sha as Mr Ban looked on, smiling and nodding awkwardly during the 15-minute toast attended by the UN's top brass.

Mr Sha, who was appointed the UN undersecretary general for Economic and Social Affairs in 2007, also made no secret of his fractious relationship with Mr Ban, although did say he'd grown to respect the South Korean.

"You've been trying to get rid of me," said 62-year-old Mr Sha according to the senior UN official present, "You can fire me anytime, you can fire me today."

Later in his impromptu speech Mr Sha turned to an American colleague, singling out Bob Orr, from the executive office of the secretary-general.

"I really don't like him: he's an American and I really don't like Americans," he said.

A second senior UN official who was at the dinner said: "It went on for about ten or fifteen minutes but it felt like an hour."

Officials present at the dinner suggested that Mr Sha might have been the victim of a misguided attempt at humour.

The next morning Mr Sha requested a meeting with Mr Ban during which he was "deeply apologetic" according to Farhan Haq, the acting deputy UN spokesman.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/asia/china/7991414/Chinas-UN-diplomat-in-drunken-rant-against-Americans.html

On a clear day, it was possible to see for 45 miles in every direction from the observation deck.

At the Comex silver depositories Thursday, final figures were: Registered 54.12 Moz, Eligible 57.12 Moz, Total 111.24 Moz.

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Crooks and Scoundrels Corner.

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

We end for the day with the sickest NY bankster joke of the year so far. My thanks to Ed in Chicago for sending it along. When Goldman calls hang up. Below, the Journal on Ebenezer Squid’s move into municipal bonds! If Ebenezer’s selling, do you really think it’s right to be buying? Sensing the coming US municipal collapse and debacle, Goldie is about to take opportunity to dump the increasingly bankrupt municipality "triple-A bonds" on the unsuspecting dhimmis of Main Street America. Has any Squid in Goldie called Narvik yet? This is so sad and funny at the same time, it’s a Wall Street classic. Any chance that they will short against the munis they peddle? Naw, they wouldn’t do that would they? Ebenezer is laughing all the way to the Federal Reserve bank Goldie already owns.

The most famous man to scale the outside of the building was George Willig - who was arrested at the top. Mr. Willig was fined one penny for each of the 110 floors he scaled.

I had the privilege of watching Mr. Willig from my corner office.

SEPTEMBER 8, 2010

Goldman in Bond Deal

Goldman Sachs Group Inc. is about to start selling municipal bonds directly to mom and pop.

The New York company plans to enter a partnership this week with Chicago securities firm Incapital LLC to sell bonds issued by U.S. states, cities and towns to individual investors, according to a person familiar with the situation.

The arrangement will make billions of dollars of municipal bonds underwritten by Goldman available for sale by at least 85,000 brokers in Incapital's distribution network of broker-dealer firms.

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703720004575478151808425876.html

How Narvik was fooled into investing in CDOs

How Narvik, Norway, a small town near the Arctic circle, was fooled into investing in Collateralized Debt Obligations (CDOs). From CNBC’s “CNBC,” original air date, February 12, 2009.

http://blog.norway.com/2009/07/13/narvik-fooled-into-investing-in-dcos/

"As soon as the coin in the coffer rings, the soul from purgatory springs."

Another weekend, and if Pastor Terry Jones in Florida doesn’t set off World War 3 on the 9th anniversary of the atrocity of the World Trade Center, we will all be fortunate indeed. The on again-off again threatened US war with Iran over nukes, seems to be off again for the moment. Replaced by a man who no one had ever heard of, determined to set off a US lead war against the whole Moslem world. Only in America as they say. As religious protests go, I suppose this is Florida’s sun baked travesty of the 95 Theses on the door of All Saints Church. Most countries have sensible laws against deliberately setting off religious or race wars. In Europe the result of too many wars over the centuries, and the still fresh memory of the Godless psychopaths Stalin and Hitler. Whatever happens tomorrow, we can only hope that God lets saner heads prevail. Tomorrow we remember the dead of 9/11. May God give comfort to their families and friends. Have a great weekend everyone.

"Why does the pope, whose wealth today is greater than the wealth of the richest Crassus, build the basilica of St. Peter with the money of poor believers rather than with his own money?"

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.

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. Anyone heard from Hindenburg?

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

Spotless Days Sep 08
Current Stretch:1 days

2010 total: 39 days (16%)
2009 total: 260 days (71%)
Since 2004: 808 days
Typical Solar Min: 485 days

http://www.spaceweather.com/

Wednesday, 14 July 2010

The Simmering U.S. Crisis.

Baltic Dry Index. 1790 -50 (Down 57.50% since May 26.)
LIR Gold Target by 2019: $3,000.

“What members of both parties realize is that we can’t allow a financial crisis like this one that we just went through to happen again.”

President Obama.

President Obama is a hopeful optimist. Today we take a look at the hidden crisis in America, not that you would know it from the action in US stock markets lately. Up first, the USA for the second year in succession hits a trillion dollar deficit in June, nine months in to the US fiscal year. By the end of the fiscal year, the US federal deficit will be somewhere between 1.3 trillion to 1.4 trillion, a slight “improvement” on last year’s 1.5 trillion deficit. As terrifying as a peacetime budget deficit of 2.8 trillion in 2 years is, it pales in comparison to the planned 9 trillion dollar deficit intended to be run up in the next 9 years. A trillion here, a trillion there, and pretty soon you’re talking monopoly money, to mangle the old saying. Stay long precious metals. Most impartial observers think the actual amount will be closer to 15 trillion over the next 9 years. Fiat currency, the dodgy dollar and the even more dodgy euro, is now out of control.

“Deficits don’t matter,” infamously opined former Vice President Dick Cheney, who also tossed in for good measure “that the American way of life is not negotiable.” He was wrong on both, of course, as the out of control federal deficit relentlessly undermines the American way of life every day. Sadly there is no political will in America to do anything about it. Reform, when it comes, will be forced on America and the world by the collapse of the fiat currencies.

The best way to help the poor is not to become one of them

Lang Hancock. Australian mining magnate

Federal budget gap tops $1 trillion through June

Federal budget gap through June tops $1 trillion amid GOP resistance to more gov't spending

Martin Crutsinger, AP Economics Writer, On Tuesday July 13, 2010, 7:02 pm EDT

WASHINGTON (AP) -- The federal deficit has topped $1 trillion with three months still to go in the budget year, showing the lasting impact of the recession on the government's finances.

In its monthly budget report, the Treasury Department said Tuesday that through the first nine months of this budget year, the deficit totals $1 trillion. That's down 7.6 percent from the $1.09 trillion deficit run up during the same period a year ago.

Worries about the size of the deficit have created political problems for the Obama administration. Congressional Republicans and moderate Democrats have blocked more spending on job creation and other efforts. Republicans also have held up legislation to extend unemployment benefits for the long-term jobless because of its effect on the deficit.

Another failed effort would have provided cash-starved states with money to help avoid layoff of public employees and finance the Medicaid program for the poor and disabled.

President Barack Obama also encountered resistance to further stimulus spending at a meeting of the Group of 20 major industrial nations last month in Toronto.

Obama expressed concerns about the risks to a fragile global recovery from withdrawing spending too soon. But the G-20 adopted targets to cut deficits in half as a percentage of their economies over three years.

The deficit in the federal budget in June totaled $68.4 billion, the second highest June deficit on record, but down from the all-time high of $94.3 billion in June 2009, a month when the government was spending heavily to stabilize the financial system and jump-start economic growth.

June is normally a surplus month as the government collects tax payments from corporations and individuals who make quarterly payments. Only seven years in the past 56 have seen deficits in June.

http://finance.yahoo.com/news/Federal-budget-gap-tops-1-apf-3046787518.html?x=0&.v=13

Staying with America, the FT covers the death of a Presidency. In fairness, the problems were so great that whoever got the job was likely to fail. However, when the leader of the free world gets international press like this, effectively there isn’t any leadership to the free world. Below, the FT on the prospect of President Obama becoming a lame duck one-timer President after November’s election. Will the President’s team opt for a September or October surprise? Anything is possible I suppose, but does America really need another war it can’t pay for?

Always back the horse named self-interest, son. It’ll be the only one trying

Jack Lang – Australian Prime Minister.

Obama faces growing credibility crisis

By Edward Luce in Washington Published: July 13 2010 18:51

Robert Gibbs, Barack Obama’s chief spokesman, got into hot water this week for daring to speak the truth – that the Democrats could lose control of the House of Representatives in November. But it could be even worse than that.

Contrary to pretty much every projection until now, Democratic control of the Senate is also starting to coming into question. While Mr Obama’s approval ratings have continued to fall, and now hover at dangerously close to 40 per cent according an ABC-Washington Post poll published on Tuesday, the fate of his former colleagues in the Senate looks even worse.

In the past few days polls have shown Republican challengers taking the lead over previously safe Democratic incumbents, such as Barbara Boxer in California and Russ Feingold in Wisconsin. Indeed, given the uniformly negative direction in the numbers, it is now quite possible the Republicans could win the Senate seats formerly held by both President Obama in Illinois, and Joe Biden, vice-president, in Delaware.

Add to that the continuing woes of Harry Reid, the Senate Democratic majority leader, in Nevada, where the Republican party’s recent nomination of Sharron Angle, a far-right and highly eccentric Tea Party supporter, appear to have had no positive effect on Mr Reid’s prospects, and the Grand Old party has a good shot at taking control of both houses of Congress. Worse for Mr Obama, political scientists say that at this stage in the calendar, there is almost nothing he can do about it.

“If you ask me where the silver lining is for President Obama, I have to say I cannot see one,” says Bill Galston, a former Clinton official, who has been predicting for months the Democrats could lose the House. “Just as BP’s failure to cap the well has been so damaging, Obama’s failure to cap unemployment will be his undoing. There is nothing he can do to affect the jobless rate before November.”

The direction of the data could hardly be worse. According to Democracy Corps, a group headed by Stanley Greenberg, a liberal pollster who is a close friend of Rahm Emanuel, Mr Obama’s chief of staff, a majority of US citizens see Mr Obama as “too liberal”.

Astonishingly, 55 per cent of citizens think Mr Obama is a “socialist” against only 39 per cent who do not share that diagnosis. The same poll shows 48 per cent support for Republicans against just 42 per cent for Democrats. The numbers are eerily similar to 2006, except that it was George W. Bush’s Republicans who were on the receiving end four years ago.

“The bottom line here is that Americans don’t believe in President Obama’s leadership,” says Rob Shapiro, another former Clinton official and a supporter of Mr Obama. “He has to find some way between now and November of demonstrating that he is a leader who can command confidence and, short of a 9/11 event or an Oklahoma City bombing, I can’t think of how he could do that.”

In private, informal advisors to Mr Obama are almost as negative. According to one, the US public’s loss of confidence in Mr Obama’s leadership is a factor above and beyond their dissatisfaction over the state of the real economy, which continues to slow as last year’s $787bn stimulus starts to run dry. The adviser, who asked to remain anonymous, said the public did not know what Mr Obama really believed.

----Next week, Mr Obama is likely to sign a historic Wall Street re-regulation bill into law. Earlier this year he did the same for healthcare. But polls show the public either does not care, or even opposes these otherwise big reforms. “The longer this goes on, the more it looks like Obama wasted his first year on healthcare,” said the outside adviser. “It’s still the economy, stupid.”

http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/434315b2-8ea6-11df-8a67-00144feab49a.html

We leave the last word on America this morning to the NY Times. Below the NYT on what passes in DC for reforming the Squids. From far away London, this cure looks as bad as the disease it seeks to cure. More bureaucracy heaped on bureaucracy, with no attempt at reforming the currency, the deficit, the Wall Street crony too big to fail Squids. With the “next Lehman” speeding towards its collapse, though this time round it probably won’t be an American company, 2011 looks to be a bad year to inaugurate gridlock in Washington.

"God, no, we don't club baby seals. We club babies."

Goldmanite. The Times of London. November 8 2009.

Financial Reform Bill Limps Toward Vote

By DAVID M. HERSZENHORN Published: July 13, 2010

WASHINGTON — It was supposed to be the one major piece of legislation this year that Republicans and Democrats could see eye to eye on, and vote aye on together in broad numbers. Instead, the sweeping overhaul of the nation’s financial regulatory system, a response to the economic crisis of 2008, will barely squeak through the Senate.

Senate Democrats on Tuesday said they had cobbled together the bare minimum of 60 votes needed to close off debate and advance to a final vote later this week. Supporters included three Republican centrists from the Northeast, Senator Scott Brown of Massachusetts, Susan Collins of Maine and Olympia J. Snowe, also of Maine.

The three Republicans may be joined by others, but the bill is still certain to fall far short of the wide bipartisan majority that some Congressional leaders had predicted given the unanimous agreement among lawmakers in both parties that the rules for Wall Street needed to be rewritten.

In the House, only three Republicans supported the bill. “I think it’s just the times we’re in,” said Senator Christopher J. Dodd, Democrat of Connecticut and chairman of the banking committee, a main author of the legislation along with Representative Barney Frank, Democrat of Massachusetts and chairman of the Financial Services Committee.

With a fiercely competitive midterm election cycle under way, the shared goal of tightening regulation of the financial industry gave way to charges by Republicans that Democrats were overextending the reach of government and failing to address the root cause of the crisis by not dealing with the mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

Democrats levied countercharges that Republican Congressional leaders were more interested in blocking President Obama’s legislative agenda and denying Democratic lawmakers the ability to boast of another achievement during the fall campaign than they were in safeguarding the financial system and protecting consumers.

In the end, even lawmakers known for working across the aisle said they were perplexed — and discouraged — that the financial regulation bill ultimately did not generate wider bipartisan support.

-----The bill seeks to avert future crises by giving government regulators the power to seize control of failing financial institutions, break them apart, sell off the assets and put them out of business, with shareholders and creditors taking losses.

The legislation would create a system risk council comprising the most senior government regulators to try to identify potential dangers in the financial system. It would create a powerful consumer financial protection bureau to be housed in the Federal Reserve and would impose a new regulatory framework on the trading of derivatives, the complex instruments that were at the center of the 2008 downturn.

The bill would also strengthen the Securities and Exchange Commission by giving it new authority over credit rating agencies, hedge funds and private equity companies.

-----The Senate majority leader, Harry Reid of Nevada, said Republicans had turned their backs on Americans by voting against the financial regulatory bill and by blocking an extension of unemployment benefits.

“Wall Street reform is preventive care; unemployment insurance is emergency care,” Mr. Reid said, adding, “I’m grateful that a few brave Republicans are doing the right thing for our country, but it’s still disappointing that you can count on one hand the number of Republicans willing to fix the system that caused the recession.”

A procedural vote on ending debate is scheduled for Thursday morning, and Mr. Reid expressed hope that a final vote could be held later that day. If Republicans object, he said, the vote could be scheduled for Saturday — a highly unlikely prospect in the summer of a midterm campaign year.

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/14/business/14regulate.html?_r=1&ref=business

Well not quite the last word. Below, Toyota blames US drivers for all the problems of sticking accelerators and failing brakes. An unusual way of drumming up sales, nevertheless. Actually it’s the Department of Transportation that’s doing the blaming, so I suspect that poor President Obama’s poll numbers are likely to fall again. My cheap suggestion for a quick fix, put a sticker on the windscreen, “brakes on the left, gas on the right,” and just make sure that Toyota buyers can read before selling them a car. Somehow, I don’t see America’s tort bar letting the DOT have the last word.

I know what's wrong, and if I could find it, I'd fix it.

Anon.

JULY 13, 2010

Early Tests Pin Toyota Accidents on Drivers

The U.S. Department of Transportation has analyzed dozens of data recorders from Toyota Motor Corp. vehicles involved in accidents blamed on sudden acceleration and found that the throttles were wide open and the brakes weren't engaged at the time of the crash, people familiar with the findings said.

The early results suggest that some drivers who said their Toyotas and Lexuses surged out of control were mistakenly flooring the accelerator when they intended to jam on the brakes.

But the findings—part of a broad, ongoing federal investigation into Toyota's recalls—don't exonerate the car maker from two known issues blamed for sudden acceleration in its vehicles: "sticky" accelerator pedals that don't return to idle and floor mats that can trap accelerators to the floor.

The findings by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration involve a sample of the reports in which a driver of a Toyota vehicle said the brakes were depressed but failed to stop the car from accelerating and ultimately crashing.

A NHTSA spokeswoman declined to comment on the findings, which haven't been released by the agency.

The data recorders analyzed by NHTSA were selected by the agency, not Toyota, based on complaints the drivers had filed with the government. Toyota hasn't been involved in interpreting the data.

The initial findings are consistent with a 1989 government-sponsored study that blamed similar driver mistakes for a rash of sudden-acceleration reports involving Audi 5000 sedans.

The Toyota findings appear to support Toyota's position that sudden-acceleration reports involving its vehicles weren't caused by electronic glitches in computer-controlled throttle systems, as some safety advocates and plaintiffs' attorneys have alleged. More than 100 people have sued the car maker over crashes they claim were the result of faulty electronics.

It is unknown how many data recorders NHTSA has read so far. The agency's investigators have been reading the data only since Toyota provided the agency with 10 reading devices in March.

Since then, investigators have responded to accidents involving sudden acceleration when the driver claims to have been stepping on the brakes.

Because the data recorders can lose their information if disconnected from the car's battery or if the battery dies—as could happen after a crash—the agency is focusing only on recent accidents, said a person familiar with the situation.

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703834604575364871534435744.html?mod=WSJ_hps_LEFTWhatsNews

Normal service resumes tomorrow, with more on those impulsive, socialist, work shy, tax dodging, irascible Europeans. From the continent made for tanks, more on the unloved, one [German] size fits all, Euro. Coming soon thanks to the Greeks, buy one get one free.

If a part can be installed incorrectly, it will be.

Murphy's Law

At the Comex silver depositories Tuesday, final figures were: Registered 52.47 Moz, Eligible 60.11 Moz, Total 112.58 Moz.

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Crooks and Scoundrels Corner.

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

No crooks or scoundrels today, just Fatso the kind hearted Aussie “saltie” and below that the classic news clip from the 1970s Oregon.

Some mistakes are too much fun to only make once

Anon

Police: Drunk Australian bitten by 'Fatso' the crocodile after trying to sit on animal's back

Published July 12, 2010 Associated Press

PERTH, Australia (AP) — A man ejected from a pub in Australia broke into a zoo and climbed onto the back of a crocodile named Fatso, which bit him on the leg but then let him go. Police say they're surprised the croc didn't inflict worse damage.

The 36-year-old man, who police said had just been thrown out of a pub for being drunk, told officials he scaled the barbed wire fence surrounding the Broome Crocodile Park in remote northwest Australia on Monday night because he wanted to give the 16-foot (5 meter) Fatso a pat.

"He has attempted to sit on its back and the croc has taken offense to that and has spun around and bit him on the right leg," Broome Police Sgt. Roger Haynes said.

The saltwater crocodile then inexplicably let the man go, and he climbed back over the fence to safety, police said.

The man, who was a tourist from eastern Australia and whose name was not released, suffered some "very nasty lacerations" and was taken to a hospital, Haynes said.

"Saltwater crocodiles ... once they get hold of you, are not renowned for letting you go," Haynes said. "He's lucky to have escaped with his life."

Saltwater crocodiles are the world's largest reptile and can grow up to 23 feet (7 meters). They have become increasingly common in Australia's tropical north since hunting that almost extinguished the species was banned in 1971

http://www.foxnews.com/world/2010/07/12/police-drunk-australian-bitten-fatso-crocodile-trying-sit-animals/

Drunken Aussies are probably too tough to eat, even for Australia’s fearsome salties, even the non drunk ones are tough enough, as Germany’s Sebastian Vettel found out last Sunday when Australia’s Mark Webber got mad at his second class team treatment and trounced Herr Vettel in style. Probably Fatso was just waiting for some sweet tasting whinging Pom to drop by, the outcome would probably have been one less whinging Pom.

May as well be here as where we are.

Australian Aboriginal saying

The world famous 1970s classic: Oregon’s Exploding Whale.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AtVSzU20ZGk

The monthly Coppock Indicators finished June:

DJIA: +269 Down. NASDAQ: +460 Down. SP500: +290 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.

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 July 13
Current Stretch:0 days

2010 total: 35 days (18%)
2009 total: 260 days (71%)
Since 2004: 803 days
Typical Solar Min: 485 days

http://www.spaceweather.com

The long minimum seems to have ended, or has it? Despite the record and near record heat waves sweeping the northern hemisphere, I’m beginning to think our new Dalton Minimum of arriving global cooling, might turn out in fact to be a much longer more severe Maunder Minimum. More on the Sunspot page on the website.