Showing posts with label fraudclosuregate. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fraudclosuregate. Show all posts

Friday, 15 October 2010

Currency War Update.

Baltic Dry Index. 2769 +21
LIR Gold Target by 2019: $3,000.

"And if all others accepted the lie which the central banks imposed—if all records told the same tale—then the lie passed into history and became truth. 'Who controls the money' ran the central bankers’ slogan, 'controls the future: who controls the money controls the present.'"

With apologies to George Orwell. 1984

Later today, a speech by Dr. Bernanke on the US economy and monetary policy, I really can’t wait. The man hired by George Bush the younger for his supposed knowledge and expertise on the Great Depression and how to prevent new ones. He never saw the Great Recession coming, then denied it was here when it arrived. He expressed confidence in the US banking system just before it blew up with Bear Stearns and vey nearly took out the world financial system when Lehman Brothers collapsed, declared that there was no bubble in the US real estate market, just before it spectacularly imploded, then declared that it wouldn’t impact the wider US economy right before it did just that, went on to pontificate that house prices had reached bottom in 2008, right before they relapsed into a downward death spiral that continues to this day. This is the man now working on collapsing the dollar in some kind of bizarre plan to punish the Chinese by impoverishing ordinary Americans, most of whom have nearly 100% of their wealth tied up in the fiat dollar, in contrast to the ordinary Chinese who have virtually no exposure to the fiat dollar, this is the man who is about to share his destructive thoughts with us peons, later in the day.

Below, the state of the currency wars so far. Even Dr. Bernanke’s weak dollar policy isn’t working the way he thought it would.

'Si monumentum requiris, circumspice.' (If you seek Bernake’s monument, look around.)"

With apologies to Sir Chistopher Wren.

Dollar fall sparks stability warnings

By David Oakley and Peter Garnham in London and Michael Mackenzie in New York

Published: October 14 2010 19:55

The dollar tumbled against most major currencies on Thursday, prompting warnings that the weakness of the world’s reserve currency could destabilise the global economy and push other countries into retaliatory devaluations to underwrite their exports.

Increasing expectations the Federal Reserve will pump more money into the US economy next month under a policy known as quantitative easing sent the dollar to new lows against the Chinese renminbi, Swiss franc and Australian dollar. It dropped to a 15-year low against the yen and an eight-month low against the euro.

----A senior European policy-maker, who asked not to be named, said a further aggressive round of monetary easing by the US Federal Reserve would be “irresponsible” as it made US exports more competitive at the expense of its rivals.

Simon Derrick, chief currency strategist for BNY Mellon, said: “In narrow terms, the US is winning the currency wars as a weaker dollar will help its economy, but it could damage the other big economic blocs of China, Japan and Europe.”

The dollar’s fall was given fresh impetus after the Monetary Authority of Singapore surprised the market when it tightened policy by widening the trading band for its currency, allowing it to appreciate. The move by the Singapore authorities, responding to fears over inflation, helped push up other Asian currencies.

Russia’s finance minister Alexei Kudrin, in a meeting with European Union officials, blamed the US – and others – for global currency instability.

He said one reason for exchange rate turmoil “is the stimulating monetary policy of some developed countries, above all the United States, which are trying to solve their structural problems in this way”.

Commodities, which are mostly traded in dollars, were boosted by the US currency’s slide. Copper hit a two-year high of $8,490 per tonne at one point, while gold surged to a record of $1,387 per troy ounce.

http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/5505a7f0-d7c2-11df-b478-00144feabdc0.html

China warns US against making yuan dispute a 'scapegoat' for a flagging economy

China has again warned the US not to use the dispute over the value of the Chinese currency, the yuan, as a “scapegoat” for its high unemployment and flagging growth prospects.

By Peter Foster in Beijing Published: 6:30AM BST 15 Oct 2010

The remarks from China’s ministry of commerce came hours before the US was due to release a report on whether it considers China a “currency manipulator” as fears grow that tensions over the currency could lead to a protectionist trade war.

The report has been repeatedly delayed despite a growing chorus of demands from US legislators and union bosses for the Obama administration to take tougher action against China’s alleged trade distortions.

However Yao Jian, a Chinese Ministry of Commerce spokesman, rejected US complaints as unfair. “It's totally wrong to blame the yuan for the Sino-U.S. trade imbalance,” he said, “The Chinese yuan shouldn't be a scapegoat for the U.S.' domestic economic problems.”

The artificially weak Chinese currency, which some analysts say is trading up to 25pc below its true market rate, has become a growing political issue in the US where it is blamed for giving Chinese exporters and unfair advantage at the cost of millions of US jobs.

However China has repeatedly said it cannot afford the costs of substantially re-valuing the yuan at a time when global demand for its exports remains weak and the recovery from the global recession remains fragile.

“Job losses would hurt the Chinese economy and domestic consumption. A relatively large yuan appreciation would definitely hurt Chinese exports, so a stable yuan exchange rate is needed for domestic consumption and the stability of the world economy," Mr Yao added.

China has also said that legislation currently being formulated in the US to impose trade tariffs as a result of the yuan’s under-valuation would be in breach of World Trade Organisation regulations.

-----The issue of currency manipulation is expected to be the central theme of a meeting of Group of 20 finance ministers meet in South Korea on October 22-23 ahead of a heads of state meeting in early November.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/currency/8065529/China-warns-US-against-making-yuan-dispute-a-scapegoat-for-a-flagging-economy.html

China’s Trade Gap With U.S. Climbs to Record; First Since 2008

Oct. 15 (Bloomberg) -- China ran up a record $28 billion trade surplus with the U.S. in August, bolstering complaints from American business groups and lawmakers that a weak Chinese currency gives exports an unfair advantage.

“China’s decision to undervalue its currency has been a persistent thorn in the side of our relationship,” Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus, a Montana Democrat, said in a statement after meeting with Chinese officials in Beijing yesterday.

China’s exports to the U.S. climbed to a record $35.3 billion, while U.S. exports dipped to $7.3 billion, according to Commerce Department figures released yesterday. It’s the first record-setting trade gap since the financial crisis hit in 2008. A weak currency makes a country’s exports cheaper.

In previous years, China’s exports to the U.S. increased in August and peaked in October as retailers stocked goods for the holiday shopping season.

“A lot of what we are seeing is a resurgence in retail,” Art Wong, public information officer at the Port of Long Beach, California, said in an interview. “In this period we get all the Christmas stuff.”

-----A twice-annual report by the U.S. Treasury Department about whether China manipulates its currency is due later today. Under Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama, the department has resisted calls from Congress to make such a determination. In recent weeks, Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner has become increasingly vocal in pressing for China to act on its currency.

Overall, international trade subtracted 3.5 percentage points from U.S. growth in April through June, the most since 1947, as imports surged at the fastest pace since 1984.

The U.S. trade deficit grew 8.8 percent to $46.3 billion, an increase that took place even as the dollar’s value dropped, according to the Commerce Department.

http://noir.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601089&sid=a8M4DzO7s8eM

We end for the week giving the last word to the NY Times on the Black Swan that flew in to the banksters' fraudclosuregate. Even now the media and Wall Street still haven’t grasped the scale of the fraud and it’s implications. With many internet sites now showing exactly how to go about checking titles for fraudulent documents and fraudulent signatures, many home owners are going to do just that. Up to 60 million US residential home titles are clouded, a figure equal to the entire UK population. Potential new buyers will now demand the most thorough of title searches, anything suspicious is likely to block the sale whether fraudulent or not. And just wait until taxpayer owned Freddie and Fannie start putting back failed securitisations. My guess is that the banksters will want another TARP bailout to cover it all up.

Mortgage Mess May Cost Big Banks Billions

By NELSON D. SCHWARTZ Published: October 14, 2010

One billion dollars? Six billion? Ten billion? More?

After scratching their heads for weeks over how much the foreclosure mess will hurt banks’ bottom lines, investors got out their calculators Thursday to tally the potential costs — and sent bank stocks plunging.

Analyst estimates of the possible toll varied widely, but the fear was evident in the stock market. The share price of Bank of America fell 5.2 percent, while shares of JPMorgan Chase sank almost 2.8 percent.

“The market never likes uncertainty, and it seems like every day we’re adding to the list of things we need to worry about with the financials,” said Jason Goldberg, an analyst with Barclays Capital. “The industry needs to work quickly to put this issue behind them.”

Wall Street initially hoped the banks would do just that but as the political furor grew, a quick end to the crisis was looking less and less likely. On Wednesday, 50 state attorneys general announced they were investigating the practices of the mortgage servicing industry, while Florida’s attorney general subpoenaed the nation’s largest mortgage processor, L.P.S., as part of a broader investigation.

----I don’t see how it can be cleared up in a short period of time,” said Richard X. Bove, an analyst with Rochdale Securities. “The moratorium won’t last that long but the problem will last at least four or five years, maybe a decade.” In the short term, he said, “it could easily cost $1.5 billion per quarter.”

Meanwhile, the foreclosure machinery in many states has ground to a halt. Major institutions like Bank of America, JPMorgan and GMAC Mortgage have halted foreclosures in many states, and have not said when they would resume. As a result, foreclosed homes will remain on the bank’s books while racking up thousands of dollars a month in extra costs.

Until Thursday, Wall Street regarded the foreclosure issue as a risk to the banks’ reputations, rather than their bottom lines. Indeed, some analysts insisted it was unlikely that wide-scale abuses would be found.

-----Inside the investment houses, several traders said nerves were frazzled further by worries that banks could face much bigger mortgage related losses, not from foreclosures, but because of questions about how the money was lent in the first place. If it turns out that mortgages were bundled together and sold improperly, more holders could sue the banks and force them to buy back tens of billions in mortgage-backed securities.

An alarming report on Bank of America, compiled by Branch Hill Capital, a San Francisco hedge fund, circulated widely on Wall Street on Thursday. Branch Hill suggested that the bank, the nation’s largest, could be facing more than $70 billion in losses from mortgage securities that it may have to repurchase from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, as well as private investors.

“We think this is a very important issue, and the liability will be substantial,” said Manal Mehta, a partner at Branch Hill. “There has been pervasive bad behavior throughout the system.” The fund is betting that Bank of America shares could decline because of the potential liability.

----For now, bank executives are not making any predictions how long the foreclosure halt will last.

“If you’re talking about three or four weeks it will be a blip in the housing market,” said Jamie Dimon, chief executive of JPMorgan Chase, in a conference call on Wednesday. “If it went on for a long period of time, it will have a lot of consequences, most of which will be adverse on everybody.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/10/15/business/15bank.html?ref=business

"Until they become conscious they will never rebel, and until after they have rebelled they cannot become conscious."

George Orwell, 1984

At the Comex silver depositories Thursday, final figures were: Registered 52.20 Moz, Eligible 60.41 Moz, Total 112.61 Moz.

+++++

Crooks and Scoundrels Corner.

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

No crooks today, and a break from America’s black swan of massive bankster fraudulent foreclosures too. Today, a warning that the UK can expect snow next week. Not unprecedented but if it happens unusually early, especially since we’re all supposed to believe in the new age religion of “global warming”, now rebranded “climate change" after last year’s fiasco in snowy Copenhagen. Below The Telegraph covers next week’s weather and Russia Today covers the “coldest winter in 1,000 years" expected later this coming winter. I have my doubts, although anything is possible, but were it to happen, look for exceptional winter kill of wheat and barley, across much of Europe out as far as Kazakhstan. If that were to actually happen, I would expect grain prices to double again from here, with serious consequences for food price inflation. In an age of austerity, I would think that quickly leads to widespread social instability.

"Hot is Cold; Freedom is Slavery; Ignorance is Strength."

With apologies to George Orwell. 1984.

Snow to hit Britain

Winter will come early to Britain next week as snow is forecast for the north while the south will shiver in frosty sub-zero nights.

Published: 3:21PM BST 13 Oct 2010

The cold snap will seem worse after temperatures soared to 75F (23C) last weekend.

Forecasters warned snow is due in Scotland and possibly northern England next week, with frost as far south as southern England, which will see bitter 48F (9C) daytime maximum temperatures.

A northerly air stream in the middle part of next week means coldest conditions will probably be in Scotland, with sleet or snow showers and snow settling on higher ground,” said forecaster Brian Gaze of independent forecasters The Weather Outlook.

“Even southern England will feel distinctly chilly."

Forecasters Positive Weather Solutions have already predicted a ‘white-out’ winter almost as harsh as last winter - with widespread snow, temperatures down to -4F (-20C) and transport chaos.

The Weather Outlook, which has an accurate seasonal forecasting record, warned the UK is now being gripped by a bitter series of winters comparable with the harsh 1939-42 winters which made conditions so horrendous during the Second World War.

Last winter was the coldest for 31 years, with an average UK-wide temperature of just 34F (1.5C).

“Winters were mostly milder than average from 1991 to 2007, but this changed with a colder winter in 2008-09 and last winter being the worst since 1978-79,” Mr Gaze said.

“History shows cold winters do tend to come in clusters, indicating underlying factors cause them to persist for a number of years.

“It’s unusual to have three consecutive cold winters, a good example of which are the 1939-40 to 1941-42 winters.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/topics/weather/8061737/Snow-to-hit-Britain.html

Coldest winter in 1,000 years on its way

04 October, 2010, 07:20

After the record heat wave this summer, Russia's weather seems to have acquired a taste for the extreme.

Forecasters say this winter could be the coldest Europe has seen in the last 1,000 years.

The change is reportedly connected with the speed of the Gulf Stream, which has shrunk in half in just the last couple of years. Polish scientists say that it means the stream will not be able to compensate for the cold from the Arctic winds. According to them, when the stream is completely stopped, a new Ice Age will begin in Europe.Read more

So far, the results have been lower temperatures: for example, in Central Russia, they are a couple of degrees below the norm.

“Although the forecast for the next month is only 70 percent accurate, I find the cold winter scenario quite likely,” Vadim Zavodchenkov, a leading specialist at the Fobos weather center, told RT. “We will be able to judge with more certainty come November. As for last summer's heat, the statistical models that meteorologists use to draw up long-term forecasts aren't able to predict an anomaly like that.”

In order to meet the harsh winter head on, Moscow authorities are drawing up measures to help Muscovites survive the extreme cold.

http://rt.com/prime-time/2010-10-04/coldest-winter-emergency-measures.html/print

Another weekend and autumn is in full cry. The first icy blast of the winter to come is about to hit, just as Her Majesty’s coalition government is about to announce its draconian austerity cuts. Cuts that no party would talk about prior to last May’s election. Cuts that no party in the coalition has a true public mandate to carry out. Stay long precious metals against the coming public backlash. A backlash soon to catapult the UK into front position again in the international race to Reykjavik. Have a great weekend everyone. Time to see where I last left the snow shovel.

Rather more than a quarter of a year has passed since the new Government came into power in this country. What a cataract of disaster has poured out upon us since then!

With apologies to Winston S. Churchill. 1940.

The monthly Coppock Indicators finished September:

DJIA: +227 Down. NASDAQ: +321 Down. SP500: +221 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. September is the fourth down month in a row.

Wednesday, 13 October 2010

The lifeboat marked “gold and silver".

Baltic Dry Index. 2719 +24
LIR Gold Target by 2019: $3,000.

"About three dozen of the top publicly held securities and investment-services firms—which include banks, investment banks, hedge funds, money-management firms and securities exchanges—are set to pay $144 billion in compensation and benefits this year, a 4% increase from the $139 billion paid out in 2009, according to the survey. Compensation was expected to rise at 26 of the 35 firms."

Wall Street Journal.

In today’s update on “fraudclosuregate”, my thanks to Reggie Middleton for coining the term, GMAC has joined Bank of America in expanding its review of its dodgy and outright criminal foreclosures to all 50 states. Needless to say, so far the three monkeys investigating for BoA have found nothing amiss.

"Deeply regret advise you TITANIC sank this morning after collision with iceberg, resulting in serious loss of life. Full particulars later."

J. Bruce Ismay, Director of the White Star Line

GMAC Mortgage Expands Review of Its Foreclosures

By ANDREW MARTIN Published: October 12, 2010

Amid growing inquiries by law enforcement into dubious paperwork by home lenders, one of the nation’s largest, GMAC Mortgage, said Tuesday that it was expanding its review of foreclosures to all 50 states.

The company said it was hiring legal and accounting firms to conduct “independent reviews of the foreclosure process.

In addition, GMAC, which is part of Ally Financial, said separate specialized teams of its own employees, along with hired lawyers, would scrutinize every one of its foreclosure cases in the nation to make sure they complied with the law and that “home preservation” options were considered.

GMAC had previously imposed a suspension on foreclosures in the 23 states with judicial review of the proceedings so it could ensure they were done properly. Several other major lenders subsequently announced suspensions of their own that were limited to foreclosures in those 23 states.

But last Friday, Bank of America announced that it was expanding its suspension of mortgages to all 50 states, and some lawmakers and consumer groups have pushed for other lenders to do the same.

GMAC’s announcement stops short of halting foreclosures in each of the states, favoring reviews instead. After each case is scrutinized, the foreclosure process will resume if everything is in order. To date, GMAC has not found any evidence of inappropriate foreclosures, officials there said.

More

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/10/13/business/13mortgage.html?_r=1&hpw

Below, another warning on US banks from America’s best bank analyst. Get ready for the next Lehman even with what Mr Middleton wittily calls Fraudclosuregate.

As Earnings Season is Here, I Reiterate My Warning That Big Banks Will Pay for Optimism Driven Reduction of Reserves

Reggie Middleton

As those that follow me know, I have been bearish on US banks since 2007. That bearish outlook resulted in massive returns ensuing years, just to have nearly half of it returned due to rampant shenanigans and outright fraud. Needless to say, it pissed me off – but it did much more than that. It created a re-bubble before the bubble that was bursting had a chance to fully deflate. As a result, what we have now is one big mess that is getting messier by the minute.

More.

http://boombustblog.com/reggie-middleton/2010/10/12/as-earnings-season-is-here-i-reiterate-my-warning-that-big-banks-will-pay-for-optimism-driven-reduction-of-reserves/#more-3516

With the banks deeply dependent on mark to the fantasy model accounting, extend and pretend, mortgage finance and deeply involved in aiding and abetting criminal activity in “fraudclosuregate”, America’s banksters are about to loot the system one more time.

Christmas is coming and the geese are getting fat

Please put a billion in the bankster’s hat

If you haven’t got a billion, a million will do

If you haven’t got a million, then God damn you!

Squid’s Christmas Appeal 2010

US bankers set for record pay and bonuses for second year

Pay and bonuses at US banks and hedge funds are set to rise 4% this year – outpacing the growth in revenues – study finds

Wednesday 13 October 2010

US bankers are set for record compensation for a second consecutive year, shattering both the illusion of pay-reform and the expectation that bank bonuses would be tempered while the US economy remains weak.

With third-quarter figures from JP Morgan expected to begin a bumper profit reporting season today, a study of more than three dozen banks, hedge funds, money-management and securities firms estimates they will pay $144bn (£90bn) in salary and benefits this year, a 4% increase on 2009.

The research, by the Wall Street Journal, found pay was rising faster than revenue, which gained 3% to $433bn, despite a slowdown in stock trading.

And while profits have fallen from their 2007 peak, the percentage directed to compensation has increased by 23%.

"Until the focus of these institutions changes from revenue generation to long-term shareholder value, we will see these outrageous pay packages and compensation levels," Charles Elson, director of the Weinberg Centre for Corporate Governance, told the WSJ.

----At Goldman Sachs, where revenue is projected to fall 13.5% this year to $39.1bn, compensation is expected to rise 3.7% to $16.8bn.

Still, compensation experts say regulation has successfully kept compensations "relatively flat" and pay may not rise in the near future as new rules come into effect governing capital requirements that will limit compensation pools.

Where revenue falls short, the study found, Wall Street firms will lay off employees in order to keep bonus pools high. UK-based Barclays Capital and Credit Suisse have cut some staff, while Morgan Stanley has a hiring freeze in place.

The report also found that bankers at closely regulated businesses are looking to join less closely monitored firms and hedge funds. At private equity firms Blackstone and Fortress Investment, compensation is projected to climb 12% and 29% respectively.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2010/oct/12/us-bankers-record-pay-bonuses

We close for today with America’s favourite villain, China. China isn’t just eating Uncle Sam’s lunch anymore, the unstoppable Panda is now taking his afternoon tea and eating his dinner too. It looks to me that the phony currency war is coming to its end. The real currency war is now about to get underway. Casualty number one, the value of a dollar, this war is designed to weaken the dollar after all, in order to protect what little is left of the fiat dollar reserve standard.

"'It became necessary to destroy the dollar to save it,'

With apologies to provincial capital Bến Tre, Vietnam.

China Currency Reserves Surge to Record $2.65 Trillion

Oct. 13 (Bloomberg) -- China’s foreign-exchange reserves, the world’s largest, surged to a record $2.65 trillion at the end of September, adding fuel to complaints that the nation’s currency intervention is undermining the global recovery.

Currency holdings rose about $194 billion, more than economists forecast, in the third quarter, today’s statement from the People’s Bank of China showed. That compared with a $7.2 billion gain in the previous three months, which was the smallest increase in 11 years.

“The massive build-up of the foreign-exchange assets would only give more ammunition to those China critics who call for a rapid appreciation of the yuan,” said Tom Orlik, a Beijing- based analyst for Stone & McCarthy Research Associates who formerly worked for the U.K. Treasury. He commented before the release of today’s data.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner says a stronger yuan would stimulate demand in China, which replaced Japan in the second quarter as the world’s second-largest economy. Inflows of cash threaten to worsen inflation and asset-bubble risks in the Chinese economy and central bank Governor Zhou Xiaochuan said Oct. 8 that the nation needs to avoid the “shock therapy” of excessive appreciation.

The median forecast in a Bloomberg News survey of eight economists was for the reserves to increase to $2.5 trillion.

---- Chinese banks extended 595.5 billion yuan ($89 billion) in new local-currency loans last month, the People’s Bank of China said in today’s statement. That compared with the median 500 billion yuan forecast in a Bloomberg News survey of 18 economists.

M2, the broadest measure of money supply, rose 19 percent in September from a year earlier, the central bank added. That compared with economists’ 18.9 percent median estimate.

Exchange rates dominated the annual meeting of the International Monetary Fund in Washington on concern that officials are relying on cheaper currencies to aid growth, risking retaliatory devaluations and trade barriers. China was accused of undervaluing the yuan, while low interest rates in the U.S. and other rich nations were blamed for flooding emerging markets with capital.

Finance ministers and central bankers pledged to improve cooperation, yet did little to show how they would alter their ways beyond agreeing to let the IMF to study the matter.

http://noir.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=avNsXdYcrcH8&pos=3

Never in the field of human outsourcing was so much owed by so many to so few.

With apologies to Winston Churchill and the R.A.F.

At the Comex silver depositories Tuesday, final figures were: Registered 52.21 Moz, Eligible 60.66 Moz, Total 112.87 Moz.

+++++

Crooks and Scoundrels Corner.

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

Below, a must read article from a man who knows a thing or two about money. Trillion dollar deficits don’t matter, he writes sarcastically, until one day out of the blue, they do. Stay long precious metals. In America’s ever weirder attempt at defending the banksters in control of the Fed, the dollar is now expendable, to Mammon’s priests.

"The history of paper money is an account of abuse, mismanagement, and financial disaster."

Richard M. Ebeling

Monetizing all the debt, all the time

Commentary: Trillion-dollar deficits don’t matter

Oct. 13, 2010, 12:01 a.m. EDT

By David Stockman

GREENWICH, Conn. (MarketWatch) — The oracles at Goldman Sachs Group say that $750 billion of quantitative easing is priced in to the market, and possibly $1 trillion — a frightful prospect that was hardly diminished by last week’s lost jobs report.

On top of that, there’s $300 billion to $400 billion in annual GSE run-off that needs replenishment under QE1.5. So Brian Sack, the monetary apothecary who operates the New York Fed’s drive-thru window, is going to be giving Wall Street a lot of POMO. Call it $100 billion per month of Permanent Open Market Operations, and be done.

Not coincidentally, it appears that there’s also baked into the cake about $100 billion per month of new Treasury paper. According to CBO’s August update, the two-year, cumulative red ink under current law (FY 2011-2012) will total $1.7 trillion. But that doesn’t count the upcoming lame duck session’s predictable one-more-stimulus bacchanalia.

Juiced up by their election rout, the tax-side Keynesians in the GOP are certain to ram through a two-year extension of the Bush tax cuts for one and all.

In return, the hapless White House will insist this one-half trillion dollar gift to the “still haves” be matched with several hundred billion more in presently unscheduled funding for emergency unemployment benefits and other safety net programs for the “no-longer-haves.”

In combination, these measures — along with more realistic economic assumptions — mean that the FY2011-2012 deficit will be $700 billion higher than current projections, pushing the two-year total to at least $2.5 trillion. Read Minyanville’s “What a Republican Victory Means for Equity Markets.”

These considerations make one thing virtually certain: After the new Congress sinks into rancorous partisan stalemate and does absolutely nothing about this fiscal hemorrhage, the Treasury will be selling at least the $100 billion per month of new government paper for so long as the New York Federal Reserve is open to buy. Stated differently, national policy now amounts to monetizing 100% of the federal deficit.

In the olden times — say three years ago — the idea of 100% debt monetization would have been roundly denounced as banana republic finance. No more. Earlier this week, William Dudley, who occupies the Goldman Sachs permanent seat on the Fed’s Open Market Committee, helpfully clarified that the new-age Fed should be judged by what’s in its heart, not what’s on its balance sheet.

More.

http://www.marketwatch.com/story/trillion-dollar-deficits-dont-matter-2010-10-13

Run, do not walk, to the lifeboat marked “gold and silver”.

"If you don't trust gold, do you trust the logic of taking a beautiful pine tree, worth about $4,000 - $5,000, cutting it up, turning it into pulp and then paper, putting some ink on it and then calling it one billion dollars?"

Kenneth J. Gerbino

Fed Considers Raising Inflation Expectations to Boost Economy

Oct. 13 (Bloomberg) -- Federal Reserve policy makers may want Americans to expect inflation to accelerate in the future so they spend more of their money now.

Central bankers, seeking ways to boost flagging growth after lowering interest rates almost to zero and buying $1.7 trillion of securities, are weighing strategies for raising inflation expectations as well as expanding the balance sheet by purchasing Treasuries, according to minutes of the Fed’s Sept. 21 meeting released yesterday.

Some Fed officials are concerned that expectations of lower inflation will become self-fulfilling, damping demand by increasing borrowing costs in real terms, the minutes said. By encouraging Americans to believe prices will start rising at a faster pace, the Fed would reduce inflation-adjusted interest rates and stimulate the economy. Chairman Ben S. Bernanke said in 2003 that Japan could beat deflation by using a “publicly announced, gradually rising price-level target.”

http://noir.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601103&sid=acZudC6SsBGU

"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

The monthly Coppock Indicators finished September:

DJIA: +227 Down. NASDAQ: +321 Down. SP500: +221 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. September is the fourth down month in a row.