Tuesday, 25 May 2010

BP – Beyond the Pale.

Baltic Dry Index. 3844 +41 (Friday)
LIR Gold Target by 2019: $3,000.

“BP attempted to ease the strength of US feeling by providing up to $500m (£346m) over a 10-year period to assess the impact of the spillage on the marine and shore environment around the Gulf.”

For more on BP scroll down to the Crooks & Scoundrels section where a bad error of judgment continues to go from bad to worse. We can only hope that their “top kill” efforts tomorrow go as intended, there’s quite a high chance of making things even worse. BP’s offer of up to $500 million spread over 10 years, is risible, and right out of Goldman Sacks’ asinine PR manual for squids.

Today we are pleased to activate our mining stock update page. The first update is an excellent review of Endeavour Silver, by Chris Berry. My thanks to Chris for letting me share his review. Click on the page link at the top of the blog.

We open today with Europe putting on sack cloth and ashes. Well the little people anyway, no banksters are going on a Lenten diet. Austerity is now the only game in town, as Europe’s snake bitten leaders reel from crisis to crisis attempting to prop up Europe’s banks. Up first, the UK’s unelected coalition on the first down payment of pain. Later today, the Queen gets to deliver the coalition’s speech on the austerity plans that they avoided talking about during the election. Trouble lies ahead I think. The Pound is headed towards parity with the dollar as the UK competitively devalues against the world.

"With the exception only of the period of the gold standard, practically all governments of history have used their exclusive power to issue money to defraud and plunder the people."

F.A. von Hayek

May 24, 2010

Worst is still to come as Osborne lists £6.2bn cuts

George Osborne today warned the worst was still to come as he announced £6.2 billion worth of spending cuts with the axe falling immediately across Whitehall departments.

The bulk of the money saved will be used to start paying down Britain’s £156 billon budget deficit and to try to preserve the country’s credit rating.

The most severe spending reductions announced by the Chancellor and by David Laws, the Lib Dem Chief Secretary to the Treasury, will affect the Department of Business Innovation and Skills (BIS), which will see £836 million ripped out of its budget during the current financial year.

The cuts — which are £243 million more than expected — have been identified over the last week by civil servants and Treasury officials.

Mr Osborne made it clear today that difficult conversations between the Treasury and Cabinet ministers have been conducted by Mr Laws. The Lib Dem Chief Secretary also was responsible for spelling out the details of the cuts this morning.

Both ministers warned that there will be “many more difficult decisions” over the coming year on spending cuts.

Mr Laws stressed that Britain’s economic future was in grave danger if the Government failed to cut spending and reduce the deficit, but at the same time he tried to reassure voters by insisting that the Coalition would “cut with care”.

The Government has chosen to scrap future contributions to Child Trust Funds, and has backed down on a jobs pledge made by the previous Labour Government to find work or training for any individual who has been unemployed for more than six months.

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/politics/article7135030.ece

Queen Elizabeth to open British parliament

AFP May 25, 2010 12:35PM

QUEEN Elizabeth II officially opens Britain's parliament tonight in a ceremony of pomp and history following the election, and will set out the new coalition government's legislative program.

The queen takes part in the traditional State Opening of Parliament, before outlining what are expected to be the coalition's ambitious plans in an address to lawmakers delivered from a throne in the upper house of the legislature.

A leaked draft of the Queen's Speech - in which she sets out proposed legislation in a speech entirely drawn up for her by the government - showed the coalition planned an 18-month program of at least 21 parliamentary bills.

Within days, key school reforms and the scrapping of proposals to introduce a compulsory national identification cards would be brought in, according to the draft revealed in newspapers at the weekend.

A major proposal was a program of political reform, with measures to provide for fixed-term parliaments and powers to enable voters to get rid of lawmakers found guilty of serious wrongdoing, said the Sunday Telegraph newspaper.

It could also lead to a referendum on voting reform - a key demand of the Liberal Democrat party when they were negotiating to go into coalition with the Conservatives, led by Prime Minister David Cameron, after the May 6 poll.

"Freedom, fairness and responsibility" lie at the heart of the program, as well as a "great repeals bill" to abandon laws introduced by the previous Labour administration but opposed by the coalition parties, said the Telegraph.

The finance ministry will be at the forefront of efforts to push through five bills, according to the draft, which highlights the new government's priority of tackling Britain's record deficit.

Another proposal will aim to ensure that "this parliament and the British people have their say on any proposed transfer of powers to the European Union".

-----In the State Opening of Parliament, the queen proceeds from Buckingham Palace to the Houses of Parliament - the lower house of the legislature - escorted by cavalry in a ceremony which attracts large crowds.

Traditions surrounding the ceremony trace their history back 500 years. In its current forms, it dates from the opening of the Houses of Parliament in 1852 after a huge fire.

http://www.news.com.au/breaking-news/queen-elizabeth-to-open-british-parliament/story-e6frfku0-1225871043445

Below, cash rich Germany gets in on the new sack cloth and ashes European fad. If you didn’t know better you’d think we weren’t operating in an upside down world of fiat currencies. On fiat, all decisions are purely political. Banksters and car makers can get bailouts ad nauseum. Candlestick makers, nurses and the working poor need not apply. It’s a funny old bankster world on fiat. To him that hath will be given more. To him that hath not, even the little he hath will be taxed away and given to banksters. This system will collapse within the decade. Stay long precious metals.

"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

Berlin prepares for €10bn yearly cuts

By Quentin Peel in Berlin Published: May 23 2010 17:40 Last updated: May 24 2010 09:27

The German government is to begin a drastic budget austerity programme next year to set an example to the rest of the eurozone, and comply with a “debt guillotine” that has been written into the German constitution.

The cuts are expected to total at least €10bn ($13bn, £9bn) a year until 2016, ­government officials said.

Tax rises as well as reduced spending are likely to be considered, in spite of a previous promise by the coalition to put tax cuts at the centre of its programme. Lower state subsidies and the abolition of tax exemptions and allowances are a top target.

Wolfgang Schäuble, finance minister, suggested, in an interview published on Sunday, that reforms of unemployment and social benefits could provide some of the savings if they helped to boost employment rates. He promised that there would be no budget “trickery” in the cuts, and that education and training would be protected.

His proposal was instantly condemned by the centre-left opposition Social Democrats as an attack on the poor. Sigmar Gabriel, SPD leader, called instead for tax rises on the bankers and speculators who had caused the crisis.

http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/9862a1a8-6687-11df-aeb1-00144feab49a.html

Euro Falls for 2nd Day on Concern Europe Debt Crisis Spreading

May 25 (Bloomberg) -- The euro weakened for a second day against the yen and dollar as signs the European debt crisis is spreading revived concern the region’s recovery will slow.

The single currency dropped to within one yen of its weakest in more than eight years after the International Monetary Fund urged Spain to do more to overhaul its ailing banks, adding to speculation Europe’s financial institutions face more losses. The yen strengthened as a decline in Asian stocks boosted demand for Japan’s currency as a refuge. The won slumped as tensions escalated between the two Koreas over the sinking of a warship from the South’s navy in March.

“I’m concerned about what policy makers can do to contain the debt crisis should it spread from Greece to bigger nations like Spain and Italy,” said Tetsuya Inoue, chief researcher for financial markets at Nomura Research Institute, a unit of Japan’s largest brokerage. “Economic growth can’t help but lose momentum. The euro will stay under downward pressure.”

------Spain’s banking industry “remains under pressure,” as consolidation has been “too slow,” the Washington-based IMF said in a report yesterday after a regular review of Spain.

“We fully support” the new austerity measures, it said, referring to Spain’s plans to rein in its budget deficit with the deepest spending cuts in three decades.

Spain’s Banks

Four Spanish savings banks plan to combine to form the nation’s fifth-largest financial group with more than 135 billion euros ($166 billion) in assets, as regulators push ailing lenders to merge with stronger partners.

-----Stresses in Spain’s banking system are intensifying concern that the Greek debt crisis may spread, Mohamed A. El-Erian, whose company runs the world’s biggest mutual fund, said in an interview with PBS.

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=a6dY3BHv1qZE&pos=4

We end on the subject leaving the last word to the Telegraph. While us hapless Brits wait today to hear what austerity horrors will descend on us from the parties who totally avoided the subject during the recent election, the Telegraph’s top economics writer covers the EU adopting the wrong remedy in a desperate effort to bailout German and French banks. Nothing good will come from this, I suspect. The end result will still likely be the breakup of the Euro and a giant restructuring of EU sovereign debt. The whole article is well worth the read.

"When paper money systems begin to crack at the seams, the run to gold could be explosive."

Harry Browne

Europe's deflation torture is a gift to the Far Left

If Europe’s ultra-Left has so far reaped little dividend from the great "Crisis of Capitalism", this will surely change as the eurozone’s 1930s policies of wage deflation sap the credibility of the governing centre and the EU itself.

By Ambrose Evans-Pritchard Published: 6:20PM BST 23 May 2010

The tragedy of the interwar years in Germany was that the Social Democrats - then the world’s foremost socialist party - became fatally tainted by acquiescing in Bruning’s deflation torture from 1930 to 1932. They did so, of course, because they dared not confront the orthodoxies of the Gold Standard.

By then the fixed-exchange mechanism had gone horribly wrong - in much the same way that EMU has gone horribly wrong - because the surplus countries were not recycling demand to maintain equilibrium. It had become a job-destruction machine. The result in Germany was the Reichstag election of July 1932 when the Communists and Nazis won over the half the seats.

As historian Simon Schama wrote over the weekend in the Financial Times - "The world teeters on the brink of a new age of rage: we face a tinderbox moment" - there is typically a lag-time between economic shocks and social fury. Luckily there is no Fascist threat this time. It is the (more benign) Marxist Left that stands to gain.

Perma-slump has already chipped at the left flank of the ruling Socialists in Portugal. The Communist Party (PCP) and the Maoists and Trotskyists of the Left Bloc together won 18pc of the vote in September 2009, leaving premier Jose Socrates with the lonely task of enforcing yet more austerity by minority government.

Communist leader Jerónimo de Sousa said last week that the country was being reduced to a "protectorate of Brussels", cowed into submission by financial blackmail. He invoked the civil war in 1383 when the country rallied heroically to expel the foreign opressor - with English help, the "ultimato inglês" as he calls it - from Portuguese soil.

-----What this comes down to is "ownership" of austerity policies. It is hard enough for the elected parliament of an ancient and sovereign nation to impose cuts - as Britain discovered in September 1931 when Royal Navy ratings at Invergordon refused to set sail after the Admirality docked pay by a shilling - but what is the charisma and ordaining legitimacy of an EU council of ministers meeting behind closed doors in Brussels?

Portugual is not unique. I spent Saturday delving into the subcultures of Italy’s Rifondazione Comunista, Spain’s Izquierda Unida, Olivier Besancenot’s Parti Anti-Capitaliste in France, and Germany’s Linke (Left). While it is too early to talk of a pan-European revolt against EMU-deflation, the Left is starting to offer the only coherent critique of what has gone wrong with monetary union and why there can be no durable solution until the EU creates full fiscal union (which creates its own problems of permanent subsidies, as from Ostrogoth Padania to Berber Sicily under the lira) or until this latter day Gold Standard is broken into viable halves.

------This belt-tightening is intellectually absurd, comes too late to rebalance EMU, and has now run amok. Spain is cutting public sector wages by up to 7pc this year. Greece has swallowed a de facto cut of 16pc. Italy is preparing a wage freeze as part of a €25bn austerity plan over two years. France has joined with plans for a three-year freeze and a hair-shirt clause in the constitution. Pre-EMU Romania is cutting wages by 25pc, so that take that you wimps. Romania’s police union has vowed to bring down the government, threatening to "do what we did in 1989, when we overthrew the dictatorship".

The IMF’s Dominique Strauss-Kahn is having second thoughts about a synchronized fiscal squeeze across half Europe. "Growth in Europe is by far too low. Germany and the other countries must urgently do more to accelerate growth. The whole world is watching this and is losing confidence in Europe," he said.

The Left always warned that EMU was a "Bankers’ Ramp", an instrument of creditor control that would lock in reactionary policies. Little did they know how extreme this would prove to be. Greece is having to go through the harshest fiscal cuts ever attempted in a developed economy under its EU-IMF plan, without offsetting exchange and monetary stimulus. The agony is pointless. The IMF admits that Greece’s public debt will rise from 120pc to 150pc of GDP by 2014. The country is already past the point of no return.

-----Such a policy is not in the interests of Greek society. Greece should leave the euro and carry out a controlled default, sharing the pain with foolhardy creditors. The EU is preventing this cure: either to protect bond-holders - ie, French and German banks - giving them time to shuffle off their bad debts onto EU taxpayers; or because Brussels refuses as a matter of ideological principle to countenance any step back, ever, in the sacrosanct Project.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/comment/ambroseevans_pritchard/7756879/Europes-deflation-torture-is-a-gift-to-the-Far-Left.html

"Gold would have value if for no other reason than that it enables a citizen to fashion his financial escape from the state."

William F. Rickenbacker

At the Comex silver depositories Monday, final figures were: Registered 52.60 Moz, Eligible 64.84 Moz, Total 117.44 Moz.

Day 16 of Hitler’s attack in the west that almost brought down western civilization. We continue our daily update on the “Dunkirk” page.

Dunkirk & the Battle of France – Day by day 70 years on.

http://londonirvinereport.blogspot.com/p/dunkirk-battle-of-france.html

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Crooks & Scoundrels Corner.

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

Below, more on the rising frustration in America with BP, and the rising clamor to bring in modern regulation of deep water drilling. BP’s profits will be going to non shareholders for many quarters to come, I suspect. The cost/benefit of deep water drilling are changing by the day. Dare BP allow BP America to file bankruptcy, while the parent company step aside? I doubt it. Dare BP America play hardball on the damage claims submitted in the months ahead? My guess is that Bp has no other option but to try to play hardball on the claims submitted, but that is likely to set off a new PR disaster and fuel yet more punishing legislation. And hanging over all of BP, the prospect of criminal charges over the death of 11 missing workers. The shareholders of troubled BP are still in denial of just what a disaster has befallen them. BP is a very troubled company now, no one’s takeover target nor able to takeover anything itself. Even the most backward country is going to minutely micro manage every BP future application to drill. And still to come, the aftermath of who screwed up, once the calamitous spill is capped.

“I want to share something with you: The three little sentences that will get you through life. Number 1: Cover for me. Number 2: Oh, good idea, Boss! Number 3: It was like that when I got here.”

Homer Simpson.

Oil Hits Home, Spreading Arc of Frustration

By CAMPBELL ROBERTSON, CLIFFORD KRAUSS and JOHN M. BRODER Published: May 24, 2010

PORT FOURCHON, La. — For weeks, it was a disaster in abstraction, a threat floating somewhere out there.

Not anymore. In the last week, the oil slick in the Gulf of Mexico has revealed itself to an angry and desperate public, smearing tourist beaches, washing onto the shorelines of sleepy coastal communities and oozing into marshy bays that fishermen have worked for generations. It has even announced its arrival on the Louisiana coast with a fittingly ugly symbol: brown pelicans, the state bird, dyed with crude.

More than a month has passed since the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig blew up, spewing immeasurable quantities of oil into the Gulf of Mexico and frustrating all efforts to contain it. The billowing plume of undersea oil and water has thwarted the industry’s well-control efforts and driven government officials to impotent rage.

It has demonstrated the enduring laxity of federal regulation of offshore operations and has shown the government to be almost wholly at the mercy of BP, the company leasing the rig, to provide the technology, personnel and equipment to stop the bleeding well.

Senators and administration officials visiting the southern Louisiana town of Galliano lashed out again at BP on Monday, saying they were “beyond patience” with the company. The day before, Interior Secretary Ken Salazar, who early in the crisis vowed to “keep the boot on the neck” of BP, threatened to push the company out of the way.

But on Monday, Mr. Salazar backed off, conceding to the reality that BP and the oil companies have access to the best technology to attack the well, a mile below the surface, even though that technology has proved so far to have fallen short of its one purpose. The government’s role, he acknowledged, is largely supervisory and the primary responsibility for the spill, for legal and practical reasons, remains with the company.

-----Oil industry experts said they did not take seriously the sporadic threats by the administration that the federal government might have to wrest management of the effort to plug the well from BP. The experts said that the Interior and Energy Departments do not have engineers with more experience in deepwater drilling than those who work for BP and the array of companies that have been brought into the effort to stem the leak.

“It’s worse than politics,” said Larry Goldstein, a director of the Energy Policy Research Foundation, which is partly financed by the oil industry. “They have had the authority from Day 1. If they could have handled this situation better, they would have already.”

As the verbal warfare between officials and company executives escalated, the slick from the April 20 well blowout continued to spread in billowing rust-colored splotches in the gulf, raising urgent questions about what lay beneath.

On land, shrimpers were stuffing their catch into coolers in hopes of having some in store if the season ends altogether. Hotel owners all along the gulf were trying to persuade tourists to keep their vacation plans.

-----Several things have become clear over the past month. Neither BP nor the government was prepared for an oil release of this size or at this depth. The federal Minerals Management Service, charged with overseeing offshore oil development, has for too long served as a handmaiden of industry. Laws governing deepwater drilling have fallen far behind the technology and the attendant risks. And no one can estimate the extent of the economic and environmental damage, or how long it will last.

More.

http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/5adc64f6-676b-11df-a932-00144feab49a.html

Gulf of Mexico oil spill: BP recovering 40pc less oil than previously claimed as it prepares fourth attempt to halt leak

BP was back on the defensive on Monday amid growing political and public frustration in the US at its failure to stem the massive Gulf of Mexico oil spill and the start of preparations for a fourth attempt to cap the damaged well.

By Roland Gribben Published: 8:24PM BST 24 May 2010

The oil giant admitted it was recovering less oil from a tube inserted into the mile-long pipeline that snapped after the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig exploded with the loss of 11 lives a month ago.

BP initially said that most of the estimated 5,000 barrels a day spewing out of the well was being collected and taken a mile to the surface but yesterday the company disclosed that the average daily recovery is running at just over 2,000 barrels.

-----BP conceded that the siphoning system involved "significant uncertainties" because of its novelty and said that it was impossible to "assure its success or put a definite timescale on its deployment".

The use of a special tube to collect the oil is the third technique used by BP to control the flow after the failure to reactivate the blow out preventer and erect domes over the damaged seabed installations.

Now BP is pinning its hopes on operation "top kill" involving the injection of heavy drilling fluids to stop the flow and sealing the well with cement to end the nightmare. Engineers hope to start work on Wednesday while work continues on the slower process of drilling two relief wells.

-----BP chairman Carl-Henric Svanberg, criticised for keeping a low profile as BP came under fire, said that Tony Hayward, chief executive, had the full support of the board in the way he was handling the accident. Mr Svanberg, back from a visit to the Gulf, told business website e24.se: "It is our sub-contractor's drilling equipment that has defaulted but it is our responsibility. We will do everything as humanely possible to plug the leak, clean up after ourselves and take care of all requirements."

BP attempted to ease the strength of US feeling by providing up to $500m (£346m) over a 10-year period to assess the impact of the spillage on the marine and shore environment around the Gulf. So far BP has spent about $760m (£525m) to control the slick, meet 9,000 out of 23,000 compensation claims tabled up to now and cover the cost of the relief wells. More than $170m has been paid to neighbouring states, including an allowance for the loss of income from tourism.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/newsbysector/energy/7760678/Gulf-of-Mexico-oil-spill-BP-recovering-40pc-less-oil-than-previously-claimed-as-it-prepares-fourth-attempt-to-halt-leak.html

The enemy was repelled. But victory was not won. The war dragged on for a year and there was no decision. Gold grew scarce, and again the Government was in despair.

"I easily relieved them. 'Write,' I said, 'promises on paper to be repaid in gold.' They did as I advised, paying me (at my request) a trifle of half a million for the advice. I handled the affair on a merely nominal profit. I punctually met for another year every note that was paid in. But too many were presented, for the war seemed unending and entered a third year."

"Then did I conceive yet another stupendous thing. 'Bid them,' said I to the Sultan, 'take the notes as money. Cease to repay. Write, not 'I will on delivery of this paper pay a piece of gold,' but, 'this is a piece of gold.'"

"He did as I told him. The next day the Vizier came to me with the story of an insolent fellow to whom fifty such notes had been offered as payment for a camel for the war and who had sent back, not a camel, but another piece of paper on which was written 'This is a camel.'"

Hilaire Belloc.

The monthly Coppock Indicators finished April:

DJIA: +245 UP. NASDAQ: +448 UP. SP500: +276 UP. The great Bull market goes on with the all three continuing higher in positive numbers. But how much Bull is enough?

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 May 24
Current Stretch:0 days

2010 total: 33 days (23%)
2009 total: 260 days (71%)
Since 2004: 802 days
Typical Solar Min: 485 days

http://www.spaceweather.com

The long minimum seems to have ended, or has it?

Monday, 24 May 2010

Double Up.

Baltic Dry Index. 3844 +41
LIR Gold Target by 2019: $3,000.

We are, as I have said, one equation short.

John Maynard Keynes.

Up first this morning, the early word on the US – China Strategic and Economic Dialogue talks. Ever so politely the US asks China to keep buying US bonds and to revalue the yuan against the dollar. Right now, pegged to the dollar, it is only inadvertently revaluing against the dodgy Euro and the competitively devaluing UK Pound. Rather less politely, China says that they will revalue the yuan when they feel like it, and that they will switch to pegging the yuan to a basket of currencies at some point ahead. That point is likely to be sooner rather than later if the dodgy euro keeps on disintegrating. The EU is now China’s largest export market and the falling Euro has now squeezed China’s profit margins to the point of non existence. Tying the Yuan to the falling Euro, makes a whole lot of sense, but only if the Euro is going to stay around. Last week we learned that President Sarky threatened to pull France out of the Euro if Germany’s Chancellor Merkel didn’t reverse her position on bailing out Greece, she did, and that Germany is now advocating a mechanism for tossing out the failing states in the EMU that won’t shape up. Floating in the background, the threat of Germany using its EMU exit clause and setting up a new D-Mark block, converting the Euro overnight into a worthless Club Med lira-like currency. China will wait to see what happens in the continuing EMU crisis.

Below, Bloomberg covers the world’s largest debtor visiting its largest creditor.

If you owe your bank a hundred pounds, you have a problem. But if you owe a million, it has.

John Maynard Keynes.

Hu Says China Will Move Gradually on Yuan Policy

May 24 (Bloomberg) -- President Hu Jintao said that China will move gradually and independently in making changes to the nation’s exchange-rate mechanism as talks with the U.S. opened in Beijing today.

China will continue to “steadily advance” reform “under the principles of independent decision-making, controllability and gradual progress,” said Hu, 67, echoing language in a May 10 central bank outlook for policy making.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner said today that a more market-driven currency would help Chinese officials to sustain growth, keep inflation low and adjust the nation’s growth model. So far, China has resisted calls from trading partners to let the yuan strengthen after maintaining a peg of about 6.83 to the U.S. dollar for 22 months as a crisis policy.

Hu is “sending a signal” that China is working on the currency issue even if the nation isn’t yet ready to announce a policy shift, Frank Lavin, a former U.S. undersecretary of commerce, said on Bloomberg Television in Hong Kong today. “They are trying to say we know this is high on your agenda.”

---- Zhang Xiaoqiang, vice chairman of China’s National Development and Reform Commission, said the currency’s exchange rate wasn’t mentioned in talks this morning between officials including central bank governors Zhou Xiaochuan and Ben S. Bernanke. China hasn’t changed its yuan policy, Zhang added at a press briefing.

Both nations’ representatives agreed that caution is needed in exiting from crisis policies because the foundation of the world recovery isn’t solid and Europe’s sovereign-debt crisis has added to uncertainties, Zhang said.

----- “Both the U.S. and China agree on something: that is that China will switch from a peg to the dollar to a peg to a basket” of currencies, Lu Ting, Hong Kong-based economist with Bank of America-Merrill Lynch, said on Bloomberg Television. “The timing of the initial move and whether or not there will be a one-off revaluation, those will be the questions.”

As the two-day Strategic and Economic Dialogue began, Geithner said that the U.S. and China shared the goals of a more balanced world economy and stronger economic ties.

Chinese Vice Premier Wang Qishan said that the European crisis had “impacted market confidence.”

“It has brought many uncertainties to the slowly recovering world economy, and added to the difficulties of countries concerned in implementing their macro policies,” Wang said.

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aYa6CCwhHkpg&pos=3

Next, more on last week’s Euroland crisis. Below the Telegraph covers the failure at the ECB and its irrelevance so far in the continuing crisis. Unfortunately the article proposes the same tired old Keynesian solution that got us into the crisis in the first place. The answer, it seems, is to get Germany to act like spendthrift Greece! Why getting the doctors to drink like the drunks they’re treating is still proposed as a solution to our problems, isn’t a mystery, it’s a reflection that mainstream economists are still in denial that the problem stems from the great Nixonian error of forcing the world on to a fiat currency reserve standard, dependent on the honesty of Wall Street and US politicians. Time to double up gold and silver holdings.

When the ECB should be about leadership, all Europe has is chaos

Many in the markets now fear a full-scale financial meltdown, amounting to a second Lehmans crisis. Last week's weakness in world equity markets was not so surprising.

By Roger Bootle Published: 5:40PM BST 23 May 2010

-----The horrors that beset the banks in the financial meltdown have not so much been dealt with as transferred from the private to the public sector. All along, the danger was that if a recovery in private sector spending did not cause public deficits to fall back sharply, then a crisis of confidence would cause a spike in bond yields. Alternatively, sharp and early fiscal tightening would send the economy back into recession. The present crisis is based on both of these threats.

-----What really spooked the markets last week was the evidence that eurozone unity is cracking. First came the story that at the summit to put together the "shock and awe" rescue package, President Sarkozy had banged the table and threatened to pull France out of the euro. Germany's Chancellor Merkel, having been forced to go further than she wanted to, later claimed that the very existence of the euro was at stake, and if the euro failed then Europe would fail.

This is the context in which the German announcement of measures to ban so-called "naked short-selling" rattled the markets. It wasn't so much the direct effect of such measures but the shock of seeing Germany going it alone and the premonition that this could be the way of the future.

There is a worrying parallel here with the 1930s. It is widely believed that the Great Depression was worsened, if not caused, by mistakes made by the US Federal Reserve. It is noteworthy that at the time the Fed was extremely young and inexperienced. It had only been established in 1913.

No prizes for guessing which modern central bank falls into that category. In fact, the weak link now is not so much the European Central Bank as such, but rather the whole European economic and political system. This is a time when what is required is strong economic structures, powerful institutions and a clear political will. It is no accident that the half-baked scheme called EMU, without a common fiscal policy or common political institutions and certainly without strong popular support across Europe, came into being at a time of comparative stability well before the financial collapse.

-----If there is to be economic recovery then there will have to be increased spending. If there is to be increased spending without increased borrowing then those entities that are sitting on piles of cash must spend it.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/comment/7756631/When-the-ECB-should-be-about-leadership-all-Europe-has-is-chaos.html

Below, more from the NY Times and the Wall Street Journal. This Euro crisis is going to simmer all summer and explode again in the autumn I think. Unhappily, Germany’s “Iron Chancellor” has turned into plastic.

How Will Greece Get Off the Dole?

By TYLER COWEN Published: May 21, 2010

GREECE is a relatively wealthy country, or so the numbers seem to show. Per-capita income is more than $30,000 — about three-quarters of the level of Germany.

What the income figures fail to capture is the relative weakness of Greece’s economic institutions. They are not remotely comparable to those of Germany and some of the other better-governed European Union nations, which is why the current crisis will prove so difficult to solve.

The European Union and the International Monetary Fund have arranged an enormous bailout package. But it’s not just a question of supplying funds to get Greece through a short-term debt crisis, or of cutting the Greek government budget, but of whether the country will see much future economic growth.

Consider the World Bank’s Doing Business index, which ranks countries according to the quality of their regulatory environment for commerce. The index places Greece at No. 109, just behind Egypt, Ethiopia and Lebanon. For the category of “high-income countries,” the Greek ranking is next to last, ahead of only Equatorial Guinea, which has oil wealth.

Greece has a malfunctioning fiscal system in which the shadow economy is estimated to be roughly 20 to 30 percent of the reported economy and tax evasion may run at $30 billion a year. Simply collecting taxes that are legally due would help bring Greece’s books into balance, yet even this simple remedy does not appear imminent.

-----Over all, the greater expense of Greek goods and services, which are paid for in euros, lowers the country’s international competitiveness. Ideally, they should be priced in a weaker currency, which would be appropriate for a poorer country.

Over time this problem will worsen if productivity in Germany and France grows at consistently higher rates and the value of the euro puts Greek exports increasingly out of sync with market realities. One painful way out of this dilemma would be for Greece to engineer a continuing deflation of wages and prices, but Greek voters have already taken to the streets to pressure their government to preserve salaries and benefits, and planned deflation is difficult to sustain in any case.

----At this stage, it’s a moot point whether Greece is a poor country masquerading as a wealthy country or vice versa. The announced bailout requires that an ailing Greek economy borrow and repay even greater sums of money. If the old illusion was that Greece was a wealthy country, the new illusion is that Greece will, in short order, become wealthy enough to pay back ever-growing sums of debt.

Since the Greek economy accounts for only about 2 percent of the euro zone gross domestic product, in theory it could be made a permanent recipient of largess. Yet that’s hardly an appealing solution, both because Portugal, Spain and others might want the same deal and because Europe doesn’t have much social solidarity across national boundaries.

----GREECE is not the only country that suddenly feels poorer. Britain faces budget deficits at about 12 percent of G.D.P., and Italy has a debt-to-G.D.P. ratio of 110 percent. In the United States, the housing and job markets are recovering only in fits and starts and we face significant future Medicare liabilities. This is the era of the rude economic awakening, and Greece is simply an extreme manifestation. The new European bailout plan is a denial of this truth rather than recognition of the new reality that a lot of countries, most of all Greece, aren’t as rich as we used to think.

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/05/23/business/global/23view.html?ref=business

MAY 24, 2010

Merkel Faces Loss of Political Clout

German Backlash Puts Pressure on Chancellor to Resist Efforts for Greater Euro-Zone Integration Amid Debt Crisis

BERLIN—German Chancellor Angela Merkel faces a growing popular backlash over her handling of the European debt crisis that could undercut efforts to forge closer integration of the euro zone.

Recent poll data suggest that a majority of Germans have lost confidence in Ms. Merkel's leadership ability while support for her center-right coalition has reached a low point.

More than 60% of Germans believe Ms. Merkel has shown poor leadership during Europe's debt crisis and that she no longer has full control of her government, according to a poll by research institute Emnid and German television news channel N-24 that was published late last week.

The latest poll data follow a stinging election defeat for Ms. Merkel's coalition this month that cost it control of Germany's upper house of parliament and the power to push through legislation on its own.

Taken together, the developments indicate Ms. Merkel lacks the political capital she would need to push through overhauls of the euro zone that could cost Germany some sovereignty over its budget and economic policies, analysts say.

A consensus has been building among economists and European Union officials that euro-zone members need to closely coordinate fiscal policies to prevent future crises like the one that has pushed Greece to the brink of default.

Many economists believe such cooperation would be necessary to alleviate the chronic imbalances that currently exist between Germany and much of the rest of the euro zone.

Yet Germany, the political and economic linchpin of the 16-nation currency bloc, has resisted proposals for deeper integration that would force countries to coordinate economic and tax policies. That position is in keeping with Germany's traditional stance on closer integration within the euro zone. But some political observers say that Ms. Merkel, a pragmatist with a record of bucking party ideology, might support deeper reforms to keep the euro zone intact if she could.

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704904604575262802823783996.html?mod=WSJEUROPE_hps_LEFTTopStories

We end for today with what’s shaping up to be make or break week for BP. BP said Friday, that they hope to have the oil leak stopped this week. I can only hope that they succeed. I sense that the long suffering, outraged US public have just about lost faith in BP. The suspicion is that all along BP has been hiding the full scale of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill, and that all along it’s known that the only way of stopping it is via one of the two relief wells being drilled and hopefully ready by late July. If BP again fails the public’s expectations this week and the spill continues or even gets worse, public pressure will be unstoppable to remove BP from coordinating the response. Once BP loses control of the disaster, BP will no longer be in control of the costs. BP’s profits will be going to people other than the owners for years to come.

MAY 23, 2010, 1:42 A.M. ET

BP Chief Warns New Effort to Cap Leak Isn't Guaranteed

LONDON—BP PLC's chief executive told staff he was frustrated by the company's failure to stop an oil leak in the U.S. Gulf of Mexico and warned an attempt to do so starting next week could fail.

In an email to staff late Friday, Tony Hayward said, "Like all of you, and the outside world, I have shared a huge sense of frustration that we have not yet been able to stop the leak" that started a month ago when a rig leased by BP exploded and sank in the Gulf of Mexico.

Mr. Hayward said that an effort by BP to cap the well using heavy drilling fluids, a process known as "top kill" that's due to be implemented early next week, "would be another first for this technology at these water depths and so, we cannot take its success for granted."

BP said it would be at least Tuesday before engineers could start attempting the top kill, Associated Press reported.

Should the effort misfire, scientists told AP, it could lead to new problems. Ed Overton, a Louisiana State University professor of environmental studies, said the crippled piece of equipment called a blowout preventer could spring a new leak that could spew untold gallons of oil if there's a weak spot that is vulnerable to pressure from the heavy mud.

-----The U.K.-based oil giant has been using long tubes to siphon oil from the damaged well and transfer it to a vessel on the ocean's surface. BP was collecting about 2,200 barrels a day from the well, a company spokesman said Saturday. The rate was in line with the amount that BP said was being collected the previous day.

On Thursday, BP had said that it was collecting 5,000 barrels a day, which until then had been the official estimate of the rate of oil flowing from the well a mile below the water's surface. BP was forced to acknowledge that officials didn't have a clear sense of how much oil was leaking.

In recent days, just as heavy oil started to make landfall on the Louisiana shore, BP and government agencies have come under intense pressure to provide a clear sense of how large the leak is. Lawmakers have posted on the Internet BP's videos of the leak—shot by the robots—showing a dark cloud of oil continuing to billow toward the surface.

BP, the U.S. Coast Guard, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the Minerals Management Service, the Department of Energy and the U.S. Geological Survey have formed a task force to provide a new estimate of the oil flow from the well. The work of the task force is expected to be completed this weekend.

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704546304575260641893421742.html?mod=WSJEUROPE_hps_LEFTTopStories

Louisiana demands federal action on dredge plan

By the CNN Wire Staff May 24, 2010 -- Updated 0358 GMT (1158 HKT)

Venice, Louisiana (CNN) -- Frustrated Louisiana officials Sunday demanded the federal government approve their plans to dredge up walls of sand to protect delicate inland estuaries from the Gulf of Mexico oil spill.

"Either the Coast Guard has to side with its American citizens and protect its communities, or it has to side with a major world corporation named BP and betray American citizens in that process," St. Bernard Parish President Craig Taffaro told reporters.

With oil sloshing ashore along the state's barrier islands and seeping into marshes around the mouth of the Mississippi River, state and parish leaders want to use dredges to close channels between the Gulf and the coastal estuaries.

They said those plans have been held up by the Army Corps of Engineers and the agencies in charge of the spill response, including the Coast Guard and BP, the company responsible for the spill.

Coast Guard Rear Adm. Mary Landry, the federal on-scene coordinator for the response effort, told reporters the barrier island project was still under review. Environmental and wildlife officials "are weighing in on the impact to endangered and threatened species and other impacts this large-scale project could have," she said.

http://edition.cnn.com/2010/US/05/23/oil.spill.louisiana.officials/index.html?hpt=T2

The outstanding faults of the economic society in which we live are its failure to provide for full employment and its arbitrary and inequitable distribution of wealth and incomes.

John Maynard Keynes. 1935.

At the Comex silver depositories Friday, final figures were: Registered 53.22 Moz, Eligible 63.36 Moz, Total 116.58 Moz.

Day 15 of Hitler’s attack in the west that almost brought down western civilization. We continue our daily update on the “Dunkirk” page.

Dunkirk & the Battle of France – Day by day 70 years on.

http://londonirvinereport.blogspot.com/p/dunkirk-battle-of-france.html

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Crooks & Scoundrels Corner.

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

Today, more follow up on Mossad’s embarrassing “Pink Panther” operation in Dubai. The whole point of a secret service is that its activities are supposed to stay secret. Success is known only to a handful of the need to know senior echelon. In our dumbed down 21st century world, this operation is widely watched on YouTube, and was a direct affront to the whole idea of international cooperation among western intelligence agencies. Below, Australia confirms what all intelligence agencies have known for months.

Dreyfus: The beggar was the lookout man for the gang.
Clouseau: That is impossible. How can a blind man be a lookout?
Dreyfus: [Insinuating Clouseau] How can an idiot be a police officer?
Clouseau: Well, all he has to do is enlist...
Dreyfus: Shut up!

Sydney: Israel faked Australia passports in Hamas op

By the CNN Wire Staff May 24, 2010 -- Updated 0529 GMT (1329 HKT)

Melbourne, Australia (CNN) -- Australia on Monday called for the expulsion of an Israeli diplomat over fake passports used in the assassination of a Hamas operative in the United Arab Emirates.

An investigation had confirmed that Israeli agents were behind the forgery of Australian passports used in the January 20 killing of Mahmoud al-Mabhouh, a founding member of Hamas' military wing, Foreign Minister Stephen Smith said.

The four Australians whose passports were used were victims of passport fraud and had nothing to do with the killing, he said.

Smith did not elaborate whom Australia wanted expelled from the Israeli diplomatic mission in Canberra but said diplomat has to leave within the week.

He briefed parliament on the results of the investigation Monday morning and said the forgeries were so sophisticated, only a state intelligence service could have carried them out.

"These investigations and advice have left the government in no doubt that Israel was responsible for the abuse and counterfeiting of these passports," he said.

Smith said the decision to call for the expulsion was made after consultation with the British, American and United Arab Emirates foreign ministries. The forgeries, he said, "are not the actions of a friend."

"Australia's relationship with Israel has always been founded on a basis of mutual respect and trust. But Israel's actions in this regard have undermined that respect and trust," Smith said, addressing lawmakers. "Mr. Speaker, the government takes this step much more in sorrow than in anger or retaliation. It is a decision taken in our national security interests.

---- A total of 28 suspects have been identified by Dubai police. The suspects are believed to have acquired faulty passports to arrive in Dubai for the killing and then fled to other far-flung locations, police said.

The 26 named suspects do not include two Palestinians previously arrested in Jordan and returned to the United Arab Emirates.

The suspects used British, Irish, French, Australian and German passports.

In February, the European Union condemned the use of false EU passports in connection with al-Mabhouh's slaying.

Police in Dubai said toxicology results show al-Mabhouh was injected with succinylcholine, a drug used to relax muscles during surgery or as an anesthetic, before he was suffocated.

http://edition.cnn.com/2010/WORLD/asiapcf/05/23/australia.israel/index.html?hpt=P1

The monthly Coppock Indicators finished April:

DJIA: +245 UP. NASDAQ: +448 UP. SP500: +276 UP. The great Bull market goes on with the all three continuing higher in positive numbers. But how much Bull is enough?

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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 May 21
Current Stretch:0 days

2010 total: 33 days (24%)
2009 total: 260 days (71%)
Since 2004: 802 days
Typical Solar Min: 485 days

http://www.spaceweather.com

The long minimum seems to have ended, or has it?

Saturday, 22 May 2010

Weekend Update – May 22, 2010

Britain and France 2 Germany 0.

Baltic Dry Index. 3844 +41
LIR Gold Target by 2019: $3,000.

America was "now only one cyclical mishap from joining Japan in outright deflation. Given our view that this cyclical recovery will end surprisingly early, slipping into the deflationary mire will trigger further, more extreme rounds of central bank monetisation, inevitably driving us towards our ultimate destination – 1970s-style 20pc-30pc inflation will surely return.

Albert Edwards. Strategist at Societe Generale

They came, they met, they talked, and talked, and talked, then they talked away some more. We are of course referring to the EU gathering of the 27 finance ministers, who met up Friday in the midst of the worst crisis to hit the Euro since the whole dodgy project was foist on the Germans for starting the two world wars that wrecked Europe. (Yes I know it was the Austrians who started WW1.) At the modern European equivalent of the tower of Babel, everyone then jetted home for the Whitsun weekend, now sadly no longer a holiday weekend in Godless Britain, removed by diktat from neo-communist Godless Brussels. Luckily, the German Parliament was voting in favour of funding Chancellor Merkel’s U-turn on bailing out Greece, at the same time, so the dither and inaction of the useless EU finance ministers, didn’t get to generate another Black Friday in the European stock markets, but this wasn’t their finest hour.

Quite what the Greeks and the other tax and work shy members of Club Med will do with the near trillion Euros they’ve been promised, is anyone’s guess, they were closed for a party yesterday, but I’d bet money they won’t implement anything near the austerity measures they promised to get German cash. The euro is doomed in its present form. Thankfully, in an unexpectedly blunt move by Britain’s new Prime Minister, obviously still green in the job, Mr. Cameron told Chancellor Merkel in Berlin in the press Q&A session, that the UK will veto any attempt to force a Euro-zone rescue on the UK and other non members of the failing European Monetary Union. Chancellor Merkel looked on bewildered and stunned, probably much as she did when President Sarky slammed the table the previous week and screamed at her that if she didn’t cough up German cash for Greece PDQ, he was off taking France out of the EMU. This would all be quite humorous, if it wasn’t that any day now the whole fiat Euro currency fiasco looks like wiping out most of Germany’s banks.

Below, the Telegraph covers the rising summer crisis. I suspect that we will be revisiting this crisis time and again all summer.

Markets left reeling after week of global drama

No one – not Britain, the US nor Japan – is immune to a Greek-style debt crisis, one of Europe's chief policymakers has warned, as investors reeled from a week of market drama.

By Edmund Conway, Economics Editor Published: 9:40PM BST 21 May 2010

The sovereign debt crisis could claim new victims, including those outside the euro area, according to Lorenzo Bini Smaghi, a member of the European Central Bank's executive board. He was speaking as finance ministers met in Brussels to discuss their response to the crisis.

The new Chancellor, George Osborne, urged them to cut deficits faster and with more urgency, pointing towards the £6bn of in-year spending cuts he is set to unveil on Monday.

The warning came on another tense day for capital markets worldwide.

London's benchmark FTSE 100 dipped briefly beneath the 5,000 mark, recovering later in the day but nevertheless closing down 10.2 points at 5062.93. The FTSE has fallen by 3.8pc this week alone, and is 13pc down on its peak in April.

Although markets across Europe spent most of the day in negative territory, they recovered in late trading after German politicians backed their part in the $1 trillion safety net euro area members are constructing to prevent re-runs of the Greek economic catastrophe. On Wall Street, the Dow Jones closed up 1.3pc at 10,193.39 points.

Strategists said that the disruption was likely to continue for some time, as pessimism spreads throughout the marketplace. Some metrics put the level of risk appetite down at the lowest level since the peaks of the Lehman Brothers collapse in 2008.

While last week most attention had been focused on Europe's specific problems, this week has seen investors shift their focus to other leading economies, including the US, Japan and China, which some believe is overheating.

Albert Edwards, strategist at Societe Generale, said that markets still had yet to realise the significance of falling inflation in the US.

He said America was "now only one cyclical mishap from joining Japan in outright deflation. Given our view that this cyclical recovery will end surprisingly early, slipping into the deflationary mire will trigger further, more extreme rounds of central bank monetisation, inevitably driving us towards our ultimate destination – 1970s-style 20pc-30pc inflation will surely return."

The euro, which has fallen sharply against the dollar in recent weeks, rose against a range of currencies amid hopes the German vote may pacify investors.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/markets/7750896/Markets-left-reeling-after-week-of-global-drama.html#postComment

May 21, 2010

Cameron tells Merkel he would veto transfer of budget powers to EU

David Cameron gave a blunt warning to Angela Merkel today that he would veto any attempt to reopen the Lisbon treaty to give the EU more power over national budgets.

Standing alongside the German Chancellor, Mr Cameron insisted that he wanted to see a strong single European currency but pledged to block moves to prop it up that involved a transfer of power from Westminster to Brussels.

The Prime Minister held robust and cordial talks with Mrs Merkel in Berlin where they also disagreed over hedge-fund regulation and Mr Cameron refused to reconsider his decision to pull the Conservatives out of the main centre-Right group in Europe.

The two leaders put on a relaxed show for the cameras, with Mrs Merkel’s mood buoyed by securing a “yes” vote in the German Parliament for the eurozone’s 750 billion euro bailout fund, to which Berlin will contribute up to €147 billion in loan guarantees.

But the convivial atmosphere could not mask their differences, with Germany leading calls at a finance ministers’ meeting in Brussels today for EU treaty changes to help restore confidence in the euro by introducing new sanctions and powers of co-ordination.

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/politics/article7133106.ece

Below, Bloomberg covers what was decided at the EUFM-27. We note the reappearance of the dreaded Caesar van Rompuy, aka Herman Hu. If everything runs according the EU plan, the first implementation of rule changes should be in place for the crash of 2018. For a view of where we are headed, scroll down to the hell hole of modern Venezuela, a Workers' Paradise with oil and gas.

EU Backs Stiffer Deficit Sanctions, Rules Out Default Mechanism

May 22 (Bloomberg) -- European Union finance ministers pledged to stiffen sanctions on high-deficit countries and ruled out setting up a mechanism to manage state defaults, saying no euro country will be allowed to renege on its debts.

After committing as much as 860 billion euros ($1.1 trillion) to halt a European sovereign debt crisis, the ministers vowed to plug holes in the euro region’s system of penalties for countries with runaway deficits.

“We will provide new sanctions, more than is now provided,” EU President Herman Van Rompuy said after the four- hour brainstorming session in Brussels yesterday. “Everyone is ready to go ahead with a strong stability and growth pact.”

Concern that the Greece-fueled European fiscal crisis would drag Europe back into recession pushed down European stocks to a six-month low before the Euro Stoxx 50 Index rebounded to gain 0.2 percent. Rates for three-month loans in dollars between banks rose to the highest level in almost 10 months.

Deliberations over the revamp of Europe’s economic management came after German Chancellor Angela Merkel won parliamentary backing for Germany’s contribution of as much as 148 billion euros to the EU’s planned 440 billion-euro debt- stabilization fund, the largest single share. Spain, meanwhile, enacted the first public wage cuts since returning to democracy in 1978 and cut its economic growth forecast for next year.

Both “financial and non-financial sanctions” are under consideration for repeat violators of the euro area’s deficit cap of 3 percent of gross domestic product, Van Rompuy said.

----- Under the German-inspired Stability and Growth Pact, countries with deficits above the ceiling face fines of as much as 0.5 percent of GDP unless they get the budget back into compliance. No country has been fined during the euro’s 11-year lifespan. Germany and France teamed in 2005 to dilute the rules after overstepping the limits for three years in a row.

----- “There are a lot of reservations about this,” Greek Finance Minister George Papaconstantinou said. “We aren’t the only country with reservations.”

The goal is to make legislative proposals by October, with the EU setting no deadline for when the policy changes would take effect. Some proposals may require an overhaul of EU treaties, a process that took eight years for the 27-nation bloc’s current rulebook.

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aMUKfcpOm7zg&pos=1

Next a report that got heavy spin the wrong way during the week. The Telegraph, again, tries to set part of the record right. Very few will pay it any attention.

Mobile phones: Is there an epidemic on hold?

The world’s most important study into the dangers of mobile-phone use raises serious worries, writes Geoffrey Lean.

By Geoffrey Lean Published: 8:03PM BST 21 May 2010

---- This week, the scientists who had completed one of the world’s biggest and most important health studies effectively admitted that it had wasted everyone’s time.

They didn’t put it quite like that, of course. But after 10 years of research and deliberation, the expenditure of £16.5 million, and comparing the health of many thousands of mobile phone users and non-users in 13 countries, the world’s biggest study into whether the phones cause brain cancer – published this week – admitted that its main finding was “implausible” and that its conclusions were undermined by “bias” and “error”.

Not that this stopped the mobile phone industry and establishment scientists suggesting that the study has exonerated handsets. But it does no such thing: indeed, as The Daily Telegraph exclusively predicted back in October, it produces evidence that suggests that they pose a very serious threat indeed.

----- In sober truth, it is extraordinary that this evidence emerged. For the way the study, partly financed by the industry, was set up appears to militate against it. It covered only those aged between 30 and 59, omitting children, teenagers and young adults, who are most vulnerable to the radiation: one study shows that people who start using a mobile before the age of 20 increase their chances of getting the disease fivefold. It chose a ludicrously wide definition of “regular mobile phone users”, including those who only made one call a week over six months – a negligible exposure that could not possibly cause harm.

Worst of all, it looked at people who had used their handsets for far too short a time for cancers to have developed. Tumours almost always take at least a decade – usually several – to emerge after the initial damage has been done. But, on average, the people examined for the research had only been using mobiles for just over two years, far too little time for even the most virulent cancer-causing agents to show an effect. As a commentary accompanying the publication of the paper in the International Journal of Epidemiology put it: “None of today’s established carcinogens, including tobacco, could have been firmly identified as increasing risk in the first 10 years or so since first exposure.”

----- And yet, despite all this, one worrying finding did emerge. The heaviest users of mobile phones – on them for a total of 1,640 hours, equivalent to just half an hour a day over 10 years – were 40 per cent more likely to get glioma, the brain cancer that killed Ted Kennedy.

And they were fully twice as likely to develop it on the same side of the head as they held the handset.

The authors of the study dismissed this result, saying that – wait for it – “biases and error prevent a causal interpretation”. But an appendix to the paper provides strong supporting evidence. It got around the cause of bias that most worried the researchers – that fewer people who did not use mobiles volunteered to be studied than those who did – by comparing light with heavier users. And this revealed consistent increases in glioma among those who had phoned most, and those who had used their handsets for 10 years or more.

These results, among the only people who could possibly be expected to develop the disease, are truly worrying.

For only the most powerful carcinogens show any effect after just a decade, suggesting that very many more people will fall victim after 20 or 30 years, or more. And even the heaviest users were relatively modest callers by today’s standards: many people, particularly the young, use them for an hour a day, often much more.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/health/7751142/Mobile-phones-Is-there-an-epidemic-on-hold.html#postComment

Later today, another BP briefing on the disaster. Finally over 4 weeks from the disaster we should get some realistic idea of the size of the problem. Then the experts in the blogosphere can really get to work.

New estimates on Gulf spill rate due Saturday, BP says

NEW YORK (MarketWatch) -- As the oil major posted a live video of the well pipe gushing oil at the bottom of the Gulf of Mexico, BP said Friday that estimates claiming the flow of oil is running as high as ten times the official daily rate of 5,000 barrels are not accurate.

Pushing back against critics, BP PLC said estimates based on the width of the 19.5-inch pipe aren't correct because the opening was narrowed by about 30% in the accident, plus the flow has been reduced by 10% from a broken drill pipe inside the riser. About half of the flow coming from the pipe is natural gas, not oil, the company said.

"Thus, some third-party estimates of flow, which assume a 19.5-inch diameter, are inaccurate," BP said.

The U.S. government's set up a Flow Rate Technical Team to develop a more precise estimate of the flow, BP said.

Agencies involved in the project include the Coast Guard, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the Minerals Management Service, the Energy Department and the U.S. Geological Survey.

The team's mandate is to produce a report by close of business on Saturday, BP said.

http://www.marketwatch.com/story/bp-says-study-due-saturday-on-size-of-gulf-spill-2010-05-21?reflink=MW_news_stmp

We end with more news from the failing state of Venezuela. Where the “workers’ paradise” of socialism leads, not that the G-7’s banksterist corporate socialism isn’t almost as bad. Stay long precious metals.


VenEconomy: Rabbits keep on popping out
This week more rabbits have popped out of Hugo Chávez' communist hat. The first one of the week was official confirmation of something that all Venezuelans have been feeling in their wallets: Inflation is picking up speed, with an April-to-April rate of 31.9%, and 12.0% so far this year.

That was not all, however. The bad news just kept on coming throughout the remainder of the week: It wasn't just the news that another turbine at the Guri Dam had broken down. Experts continue to say that the critical situation of the nation's electric power grid is likely to last on into 2013. What the country risks, they say, is the possibility of a “long-lasting national collapse.” Meanwhile, Corpoelec has announced that they will only be able to bring 1,621 MW, of the 5,900 MW needed, on line. Meanwhile, the people are still putting up with rationing and fines if they fail to cut back on their use of electric power.

The scandal of the week was not that the Aban Pearl Platform sank in waters off the east coast of Venezuela, but all the information that bubbled to the surface afterwards regarding another murky government business deal: Despite the fact that it is over 33 years old, is obsolete and has structural flaws, the platform was being leased with a surcharge of $374,000 per day. According to the government, however, this mishap is simply a little “stumble” on the road to reclaiming sovereignty.

The bad news is not that, without any valid financial reason whatsoever, another name has been added to the list of thousands of expropriated companies: Molinos Nacionales (Monaca). It is not even the fact that, with this latest expropriation, the government now controls 37% of the pre-cooked cornmeal market. What does not bode well at all is that, once again, the government has taken over a business about which it knows nothing, while totally ignoring its obligation to provide well-run public services, especially health services. This during the same week that 15 cases of Chagas disease have been diagnosed in a single Caracas parish, and triatomine bugs ( chipos) -- the vector for this disease -- have been found in at least five neighborhoods in the capital city.

The bad omen is not only that, this past Thursday, the National Assembly approved the first reading of an amendment to the Lands and Agricultural Development Act. What points to dire consequences is that that government is reserving for itself “the activities of primary [agricultural] production, industrialization, distribution and marketing,” allegedly for the purpose of consolidating food sovereignty. The major contradiction here is that, even with 50 million hectares to its name, the government depends almost entirely on imports to meet the country's basic food requirements.

As the finishing touch to another black week, following the second reading, the National Assembly passed the new Foreign-Exchange Crimes Act. What is terrible in this case is not the witch-hunt against brokers and alleged speculators. What really spells disaster is that this means the end of the securities-swap market, the market where industry, businesses and the man on the street could still buy foreign exchange, leaving them at the mercy of a black market and a system of justice that does whatever Miraflores orders.
http://www.petroleumworld.com/ed10051901.htm

Have a great weekend everyone.

GI.

Friday, 21 May 2010

The Double Dip

Baltic Dry Index. 3803 -29
LIR Gold Target by 2019: $3,000.

Political rent seeking tends to be a negative sum game. Economic exchanges may become involuntary in whole or in part. One party is forced into something they would not otherwise agree to, and the result easily is no benefit for that party and an absolute loss of value.

We open today with global stock markets in full retreat and the VIX at a 13 month high. After months of complacency, and assisted by the Feds NY market fixers aka the plunge protection team, stocks were always vulnerable to a major correction once fickle “sentiment” changed from one of recovery to one of a second leg down. Since the extraordinary stock market event of May 6th, when $40 stocks managed to trade at $0.01, stocks had been living on borrowed time. Two weeks on, no one can still say for certain what exactly triggered it, with the prime suspects High Frequency Trading programs and Exchange Traded Funds resting stops. The sad fact is nowadays, that the rent seeking program trading of the great vampire squids, now makes up 80 to ninety percent of the daily volume. Investing it aint, gambling it is, backed up by a central bankster desperate to get another Greenspanian bubble gowing again. Events have combined to undo him. Below, the gamblers get caught out by the crisis in Europe, and China and America starting to retrench. Next week’s US-China Strategic and Economic Dialogue meeting in Beijing, will now have more than North Korea and Iran to talk about at one level, and revaluing the yuan and Uncle Sam putting his finances in order and living within his means at another.

"There may be a recession in stock prices, but not anything in the nature of a crash."

Prof. Irving Fisher, Yale economist, September 1929.

'Perfect storm' as market tremors hit China, Europe and the US

Capitulation fever has swept global markets on triple fears of faltering recovery in the US, Chinese credit curbs and Europe's intractable escalating debt crisis.

By Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, International Business Editor
Published: 8:32PM BST 20 May 2010

"It is the perfect storm," said Andrew Roberts, credit strategist at RBS. "People have been too complacent about risky assets. This is a global deflation scare and people need to get ready for falls in US and European bond yields to 2pc."

Wall Street shares plunged 3pc after new jobless claims in the US rose to 471,000 last week, the biggest jump in three months. The S&P 500 index of shares fell to 1080, triggering automatic stop-loss sales as it crashed through support on its 200-day moving average.

The US Conference Board leading indicator turned negative in April, the first drop since the depths of the Great Recession. This follows data showing an 11pc slide in building permits, pointing to a double-dip slump in the US housing market later this year. Lumber prices have fallen 26pc from their peak in April.

David Rosenberg from Gluskin Sheff said a fresh "train wreck" may be coming in the US mortgage market as rates on a wave of "option ARM" contracts reset upwards in September. This may compound a deflationary process already eating at the US economy as Washington's fiscal stimulus wears off and the effects of a stronger dollar feed through. Core inflation has dropped to the lowest since 1964.

Meanwhile, monetary tightening in China has begun to set off tremors. Shanghai's bourse has tumbled 20pc since mid-April (or 58pc from its 2007 peak), dragging down oil and base metals.

This may prove more than a refreshing pause. Ben Simpfendorfer, RBS's China economist, said credit tightening since April was needed to cool the property bubble, but "regulatory tightening is not a precise science and there is a risk the measures cause an abrupt correction in property prices and construction. It might be that China provides the next surprise."

Goldman Sachs said that there were signs "beneath the radar" that China may be slowing, citing reports that property sales had dropped 80pc in Beijing in the first half of May compared to a month earlier.

Above all, nothing has been resolved in Europe. The short-ban on bond trades this week by Germany's regulator BaFin comes as the Libor-OIS spread used to gauge strains in the interbank market flashes warning signs, rising to a nine-month high of 25 basis points. The iTraxx Crossover measuring corporate bond risk jumped 45 points to 620 yesterday. "The way the market is behaving right now suggests that investors are getting set for something nasty to happen," said Suki Mann from Societe Generale.

Regulatory clamp-downs are often symptomatic of stress. Wall Street crashed 28pc over eight days after the US Securities and Exchange Commission imposed a short ban in September 2008. While BaFin's move has been dismissed political posturing, the story may be more complicated.

An internal BaFin note in February said German banks held €522bn of exposure to state bonds in Portugal, Italy, Ireland, Greece and Spain. It warned of "violent market disruptions" if contagion spread beyond Greece, triggering a "downward spiral in these countries, as in the case of Argentina".

Investors are baffled by the cacophony of voices in Europe. A day after German Chancellor Angela Merkel said the euro was in "existential danger", French finance minister Christine Lagarde replied that "the euro is absolutely not in danger".

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/financetopics/financialcrisis/7746915/Perfect-storm-as-market-tremors-hit-China-Europe-and-the-US.html

At the LIR, we have long suggested carrying a few purchased puts, and not just on stocks, plus using the PPT as buyer of last resort to exit stocks. Below, Professor Doom, thinks that there’s further downside to go. I can hardly disagree except to say stocks usually over react on the upside and downside. Professor Roubini’s 20% might prove to be way too optimistic, if another May 6th lies ahead. In the G-7 and much of the G-20, our central banksters are now at the mercy of events beyond their control. “Sell in May, go away,” was very apt this year, provided you got out of stocks before the great vampire squid gamblers broke the great machine back on May 6th.

Stocks to Tumble Another 20%, Cash the Safest Place: Roubini

Published: Thursday, 20 May 2010 4:25 PM ET

Stocks are likely to continue their aggressive decline and shed another 20 percent in value as the world economy weakens, economist Nouriel Roubini told CNBC.

As the market slides into correction territory, Roubini said weakness in euro zone countries and a slowdown in the US and other developed countries will make things even more difficult for investors in the months ahead.

"There are some parts of the global economy that are now at the risk of a double-dip recession," said Roubini, head of Roubini Global Economics. "From here on I see things getting worse."

Prices in both stocks and commodities are likely to take a hit, and investors may only be safe in cash and other safe havens. Roubini said investors also can use options to hedge against future market risk that he said is sure to come as conditions weaken in the US, Japan, China and through much of Europe.

-----That will lave little room for growth both in economic measures and in most investment classes, Roubini said.

"There is that risk because the problems on the macro level are first in the euro zone. Then in China there is evidence of economic slowdown...Japan is in trouble and US economic growth is going to slow down," he said. "There is also regulatory risk because we don't know how financial reform is going to occur."

-----As for Europe, he called fixing the debt problems in Greece and other troubled nations "mission impossible" and said tough decisions will need to be made.

"What needs to be done is clear. We need to raise taxes and cut spending. Otherwise we're going to get a fiscal train wreck," he said. "It's going to take years of sacrifices."

http://www.cnbc.com/id/37259541

With an EU finance ministers meeting underway, and the UK’s new BOGOF Prime Minister off touring Paris and Berlin, we’ll give Europe a rest for today. More probably on the blog at the weekend.

We end today with, probity challenged BP, who now say that they are capturing 5,000 barrels of “oil” a day from their leaking oil well in the Gulf of Mexico. So that’s alright then, since the well was officially only leaking 5,000 barrels a day into the Gulf. Very generously, BP, is not going to seek reimbursement from the American people, they say, presumably following PR advice from Ebenezer Squid.

“We have said we're not going to hide behind a $75 million cap on the liabilities. To date, we have spent more than half-a-billion dollars on the spill response. We're not going to ask for reimbursements for the American people for that effort.”

Bob Dudley. BP.

BP now siphoning 5,000 barrels a day from sub-sea spill

Disaster marks one-month anniversary of April 20 accident

NEW YORK (MarketWatch) -- The daily volume of oil being collected from the leak on the sea floor of the Gulf of Mexico is now around 5,000 barrels, BP PLC said Thursday, as the environmental disaster marks one month since the Deepwater Horizon rig exploded in a fireball.

BP Plc spokespeople conceded that despite the oil sucked up the mile-long siphon hose inserted into the broken well pipe on the sea floor, more oil continues to leak into the Gulf of Mexico. That means the leak is greater than the official estimate of 5,000 barrels a day.

To get to the bottom of the issue, the White House asked BP to publicly disclose measurements of the size of the leak under the sea, and its impact on air quality.

-----BP said it's managed to boost to 5,000 barrels a day the amount of oil running from a mile-long collection pipe that reaches down to the broken well pipe, up from 3,000 barrels on Wednesday.

-----Meanwhile, the Environmental Protection Agency asked BP to use a less toxic form of chemical dispersants to break up its oil spill.

BP must apply the new form of dispersants within 72 hours of submitting the list of alternatives, according to reports.

http://www.marketwatch.com/story/deepwater-horizon-disaster-marks-one-month-2010-05-20

Of course, anyone who has looked at BP’s video of the two parts of the leak, has been well aware that far more than 5,000 barrels a day was pouring out into the Gulf. Experts have estimated the oil spill at anywhere from 12,500 bpd to 87,000 bpd, with many experts suggesting a flow of between 30,000 bpd and 50,000 bpd. So where is all that unrecovered oil going? My guess is that by using toxic dispersants at the site of the leaks, BP is generating a hidden massive plume(s) of heavy oil emulsion, that is very slowly making its way to the surface far from the scene of the disaster. Where it ends up is anyone’s guess because no one is looking for it anymore following last weekend’s announcement of a Manhattan sized plume of what appears to be oil, slowly drifting at three to four thousand feet down in the Gulf. I suspect that bad as BP’s troubles have been, BP hasn’t seen anything yet. So where did the “official” estimate of 5,000 bpd come from? The legal or the PR department? Sooner or later someone important is going to ask “what did you know and when did you know it?” BP’s stock is likely to be as toxic as BP’s missing oil for many years to come.

Video of BP oil flow from the BOP

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V7Vkgr-FEgg

Below, a dark plot gets a whole lot darker.

"Nothing contributes so much to the prosperity and happiness of a country as high profits."

David Ricardo, 19th century economist.

BP Smoking Gun? Oil Giant Skipped Critical Testing Hours Before Explosion

First Posted: 05-20-10 02:15 PM Updated: 05-20-10 06:10 PM

New revelations about BP's operations on the Deepwater Horizon oil rig on the day of the explosion are being described as the smoking gun that proves the oil giant's culpability in the disaster.

BP hired a reputable oilfield service company to test the strength of cement linings on the well, but then sent the company's workers home 11 hours before the explosion on April 20 -- "without performing a final check that a top cementing company executive called 'the only test that can really determine the actual effectiveness' of the well's seal," reports the New Orleans Times-Picayune:

A spokesman for the testing firm, Schlumberger, said BP had a Schlumberger team and equipment for sending acoustic testing lines down the well "on standby" from April 18 to April 20. But BP never asked the Schlumberger crew to perform the acoustic test and sent its members back to Louisiana on a regularly scheduled helicopter flight at 11 a.m., Schlumberger spokesman Stephen T. Harris said.

At a few minutes before 10 p.m., a belch of natural gas shot out of the well, up a riser pipe to the rig above, igniting massive explosions, killing 11 crewmembers and sending millions of gallons of crude oil into the Gulf. The rig's owner, Transocean, blames failed cement seals, installed by Halliburton, for the disastrous blowout.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/05/20/bp-smoking-gun-oil-giant_n_583590.html

20%20Deepwater%20casing%20Halliburton2

At the Comex silver depositories Thursday, final figures were: Registered 52.82 Moz, Eligible 64.35 Moz, Total 117.17 Moz.

Day 12 of Hitler’s attack in the west that almost brought down western civilization. We continue our daily update on the “Dunkirk” page.

Dunkirk & the Battle of France – Day by day 70 years on.

http://londonirvinereport.blogspot.com/p/dunkirk-battle-of-france.html

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Crooks & Scoundrels Corner.

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

Today, the NY Times of yet another rising pension problem in the land between the now iridescent seas. Once America belatedly starts on its own austerity programs, I suspect that financially stressed US taxpayers are going to go ballistic over public pensions.

"There's a sucker born every minute."

P.T. Barnum.

Padded Pensions Add to New York Fiscal Woes

By MARY WILLIAMS WALSH and AMY SCHOENFELD Published: May 20, 2010

In Yonkers, more than 100 retired police officers and firefighters are collecting pensions greater than their pay when they were working. One of the youngest, Hugo Tassone, retired at 44 with a base pay of about $74,000 a year. His pension is now $101,333 a year.

It’s what the system promised, said Mr. Tassone, now 47, adding that he did nothing wrong by adding lots of overtime to his base pay shortly before retiring. “I don’t understand how the working guy that held up their end of the bargain became the problem,” he said.

Despite a pension investigation by the New York attorney general, an audit concluding that some police officers in the city broke overtime rules to increase their payouts and the mayor’s statements that future pensions should be based on regular pay, not overtime, these practices persist in Yonkers.

The city has even arranged for its police to put in overtime as flagmen on Consolidated Edison construction sites. Though a company is paying the bill, the city is actually reporting the work as city overtime to the New York State pension fund, padding future payouts — an arrangement at odds with the spirit of public employment, if not the law.

The Yonkers experience shows how errors, misunderstandings and wishful thinking are piling hidden new costs onto New York’s public pension system every year, worsening the state’s current fiscal crisis. And the problem is not just in New York. Public pension costs are ballooning everywhere, throwing budgets out of whack and raising the question of whether venerable state pension systems are viable.

In fact, the cost of public pensions has been systemically underestimated nationwide for more than two decades, say some analysts. By these estimates, state and local officials have promised $5 trillion worth of benefits while thinking they were committing taxpayers to roughly half that amount.

According to pension data collected by The New York Times from the city and state, about 3,700 retired public workers in New York are now getting pen-sions of more than $100,000 a year, exempt from state and local taxes. The data belie official reports that the average state pension is a modest $18,000, or $38,000 for retired police officers and firefighters. (The average is low, in part, because it includes people who worked in government only part time, or just a few years, as well as surviving spouses getting partial benefits.)

Roughly one of every 250 retired public workers in New York is collecting a six-figure pension, and that group is expected to grow rapidly in coming years, based on the number of highly paid people in the pipeline.

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/05/21/business/economy/21pension.html?hp

In 1863, a rival of Cornelius Vanderbilt, Daniel Drew, began shorting the stock of Vanderbilt's New York and Harlem Railroad (later to merge into the New York Central). This was in league with New York politicians who revoked construction permits to damage the value of the railroad. Vanderbilt, however, had bought up all the outstanding stock. Drew and his allies were legally liable to produce stock that Vanderbilt wouldn't let them purchase. In the end, Vanderbilt let them off with a $5 million loss. Drew summed up the mess with a jingle: "He that sells what isn't his'n, must buy it back, or go to prison."

Another weekend, and our weather is finally turning hot to match the political mood in Europe. As seen from London, the French are mad at the Germans for not working hard enough to maintain Club Med’s lifestyle and future aspirations. The Germans are mad with the Greeks, for bringing up the war, cheating on their taxes and avoiding work. Everyone else in Euroland is also mad at the Greeks for turning the world’s spotlight on the other cheating EMU nations and trashing the ECB, turning it from a Bundesbank clone into a passable copy of the Argentine central bank. Stay long physical precious metals. It doesn’t get any better as the fiat currencies start to fail. Have a great weekend everyone.

"There is nothing in the business situation to justify any nervousness."

Eugene M. Stevens, President Continental Illinois Bank, October 1929.

The monthly Coppock Indicators finished April:

DJIA: +245 UP. NASDAQ: +448 UP. SP500: +276 UP. The great Bull market goes on with the all three continuing higher in positive numbers. But how much Bull is enough?

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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 May 20
Current Stretch:12 days

2010 total: 33 days (24%)
2009 total: 260 days (71%)
Since 2004: 802 days
Typical Solar Min: 485 days

http://www.spaceweather.com

The long minimum seems to have ended, or has it?