Tags: Ron Paul

France Downgraded by S&P

Editor’s Note: As long as the bankers don’t get their way, the downgrades and raids on national treasuries / economies will continue. When they bankers get their way, the pain stops. Just go back and take a look at the chronology of what has happened over the past several years and it becomes very obvious.

Standard & Poor’s has downgraded France’s credit rating, French TV reported Friday, while several other euro zone countries face the same fate later in the day, according to reports.

Germany and the Netherlands aren’t among those facing a downgrade, a senior euro zone government source told Reuters. Another source confirmed “several” countries would be hit.

“Remain alert tonight when U.S. markets close,” said another euro zone source.

US stocks slumped in reaction to the report that S&P had downgraded France. European shares also extended their decline.

In December, S&P placed the ratings of 15 euro zone countries on credit watch negative— including those of top-rated Germany and France, the region’s two biggest economies—and said “systemic stresses” were building up as credit conditions tighten in the 17-nation bloc.

Since then, the European Central Bank has flooded the banking system with cheap three-year money to avert a credit crunch. At the time, the U.S.-based ratings agency said it could also downgrade the euro zone’s current bailout fund, the EFSF.

“The consequence (if France is downgraded) is that the EFSF cannot keep its triple-A rating,” said Commerzbank chief economist Joerg Kraemer.

“That may irritate markets in the short term but wouldn’t be a big problem in a world where the U.S. and Japan also don’t have a triple-A rating anymore. Triple-A is a dying species,” he said.

S&P has said that if a downgrade did materialize, countries such as Germany, Austria, Belgium, Finland, the Netherlands and Luxembourg would likely see ratings cuts of only one notch.

The other nine countries—most notably triple A-rated France—could suffer downgrades of up to two notches.

A spokesperson for S&P in Paris declined to comment on the reports. A French financy ministry spokesperson was not immediately available for comment.

John Wraith, Fixed Income Strategist at Bank of America Merrill Lynch told CNBC the confirmation of a mass downgrade would be another serious step in the crisis and would lead to a serious worsening of sentiment.

“To a large degree it’s widely anticipated,” Wraith said. “However, we think the reality of it is going to have a knock-on, ongoing impact on these markets.”

“It clearly deteriorates still further the credit worthiness of a lot of the European banks and just keeps that negative feedback loop between struggling banks and the sovereigns that may have to support them if things go from bad to worse in full force,” Wraith added.

A downgrade could automatically require some investment funds to sell bonds of affected states, making those countries’ borrowing costs rise still further.

“It’s been priced in for several weeks, but the market had been lulled into complacency over the holidays, and the new year began with a bounce in risk appetite, thanks partly to a good Spanish auction,” said Samarjit Shankar, Director Of Global Fx Strategy at BNY Mellon in Boston.

“But the Italian auction brought us back to earth and now we face the spectre of further downgrades.”

Italy’s three-year debt costs fell below 5 percent on Friday but its first bond sale of the year failed to match the success of a Spanish auction the previous day, reflecting the heavy refinancing load Rome faces over the next three months.

 

Greece’s Clock is STILL Ticking

Editor’s Note: Not again! Weren’t we told a month ago that this problem was fixed? Guess it had to be kept quiet over the shopping season so that spending would be healthy..

Lucas Papademos, Greece’s new technocrat prime minister, faces a race against time to secure a second financing package from the country’s international creditors if Greece is to avoid a disorderly default in March.

The country must redeem a €14.4bn bond on March 20. Almost all analysts agree it will be unable to do so unless its official creditors approve a second €130bn bail-out package and unless a deal is agreed to cut the country’s debt by imposing a 50 per cent haircut on €206bn of privately held bonds.

Greece has already received about €73bn from the first bail-out package of €110bn, financed by the European Union and the International Monetary Fund. That package was approved in May 2010 to help the country stave off default.

Government officials hope the terms of the bond exchange, known as private sector involvement, or PSI, will be finalised well in advance of the EU summit on January 30. By the same deadline, the government hopes to have reached an agreement on “conditionality” – the set of economic policies and structural reforms required by the EU, IMF and European Central Bank.

Only when these requirements have been met will the so-called troika of lenders agree to disburse a large amount of funds, estimated at €89bn, in the first quarter of this year. That will include money towards implementing PSI, since private creditors will most likely receive €30bn in cash or equivalent upfront, while Greek banks will also be recapitalised by some €30bn.

According to a government official, the ECB will also have to receive guarantees from the EU financial bail-out fund, the European Financial Stability Facility, to cover the few weeks that Greece will be in “selective default” after implementing PSI, if the bank is to continue providing liquidity to Greek lenders.

If everything goes well, the bond swap offer will be available to private bondholders in the first two weeks of February and the settlement will take another week, meaning PSI should be implemented by the end of that month, government officials say. If the participation rate among bondholders is insufficient, Greece and its EU partners say they will then decide what to do with the holdouts.

Part of the challenge facing Mr Papademos, the former ECB vice-president who took charge of a temporary coalition in mid-November, is to rally the disparate interests in his government, which includes the socialist Pasok party, the conservative New Democracy party and the smaller nationalist LAOS party.

He recently urged union leaders and employers to consent to some sacrifices to make the economy more competitive and to address the concerns of the country’s lenders.

But his coalition government, made up of 48 members, mostly former Pasok ministers and just three of his own choice, has been criticised for being less productive than some had hoped.

“Time is money. More than six weeks have passed since this government was formed, but it has little to show for it,” says one senior official at a large Greek bank who requested anonymity. “I have respect for Papademos but I am a bit disappointed because I expected more.”

The interim government has secured the sixth instalment of €8bn from the first bail-out package, passed the 2012 budget and taken some significant decisions, such as approving a rise in electricity charges. But it has yet to pass important structural reforms and has not reached an agreement with private creditors, although both the Greek side and the Institute of International Finance, representing the leading banks, are optimistic that a deal is close.

An aide close to Mr Papademos admitted that time could have been used more efficiently, but said: “Deliberations between the political parties participating in the government lead to solutions, but take more time.”

He added that the government was determined to resolve all “pending issues” before the troika arrived in Athens in mid-January. An omnibus bill to be tabled in parliament this week should introduce further reforms required under the terms of the bail-out, including lifting barriers to entry for closed professions.

But some analysts, such as Takis Michas, a researcher at private think-tank Forum for Greece, point out that Greece’s problem has often been that bills are passed, but not implemented.

According to Mr Michas, political parties in government have fewer incentives to implement structural reforms when they know that elections will be held soon. This could be particularly true for the New Democracy party, he said, which leads in the polls by a wide margin over Pasok. Most observers expect an election in March or April.

Christos Staikouras, a spokesman on the economy for New Democracy, told the Financial Times: “We are committed to the implementation of structural reforms and privatisations along with other policy initiatives to restart the economy, but we also want to modify other [fiscal] policies which have not worked.”

Senate Approves $500B Debt Limit Extension

Editor’s Note: This was not a surprise, but it should serve to illustrate the acceleration of the debt blowout in this country. Sure, the government will say that it was just ‘catching up’ for a summer of lost borrowing and spending. However, this action proves that our leaders are still morally (and intellectually in many cases) bankrupt and have learned nothing. This guarantees the pain will continue and get even worse.

The U.S. Senate, in an unusual procedure, cleared the way Thursday for the U.S. to lift its borrowing authority by $500 billion to $15.19 trillion, enough to keep the support federal government borrowing through late January or early February.

The action came under an unusual legislative procedure spelled out under the August agreement to raise the U.S. debt ceiling and avoid a U.S. credit default. In a 52-45 vote, the Senate blocked an attempt by Republicans to slow down the process that will result in the $500 billion debt-ceiling increase.

The increase stems from a deal between Congress and the White House, finalized last month, that spells out how the borrowing limit would be increased by $500 billion. Under the process, lawmakers in both the House and Senate must vote on a resolution of disapproval against the increase in the borrowing limit. President Barack Obama would then have to veto the resolution of disapproval, and Congress would then vote to try and override that veto.

The complicated procedure, designed by Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R., Ky.), would allow an increase of the borrowing limit while allowing most Republicans to vote against such an increase.

There was a twist in this scenario Thursday evening, however. Democrats held firm, rejecting the resolution of disapproval, thereby speeding the process and increasing the borrowing limit immediately.

Only Sen. Ben Nelson (D., Neb.) broke from his party to vote with the Republicans in trying to move forward with the measure.

The next increase in the borrowing limit, likely in the first quarter of next year, will be dependent on the ability of a panel of 12 lawmakers to reach a deal that cuts at least $1.2 trillion from federal budget deficits over the next decade.

The Great GDP Caper – Andy Sutton

Last week the Commerce Department released its revised numbers for Quarter 2 GDP. The results were much less than satisfactory, with annualized ‘growth’ coming in at a pathetic 1.0%. Think of this as an economic stall speed. We know the GDP deflator allows the metric to be overstated to begin with, so it is VERY likely that America has re-entered the ‘great recession’ as it has been dubbed by the media. There are some burning issues in here that need to be discussed and they go way beyond the methodology of how GDP is calculated. I will end with the assertion, backed with output methodology, that is at least as reliable as what the Commerce Dept. offers that we never left the great recession.

Ben Bernanke, the official spokesman for Bankers, Inc. was quick to pontificate from Jackson Hole Wyoming that the second half of the year bodes very well for GDP and economic growth in general. This is where the shuck and jive starts. What nearly all commentators are missing here is that USGovt borrowing nearly ceased in the second quarter. On the surface, that might look positive, because it would indicate that a greater percentage of that 1% growth was real; that the economy was actually able to stand on its own, if even in a very small way. This is where the price deflator comes in. The GDP price index came in at a very tepid 2.4% in the second quarter of 2011 after coming in at 2.3% in the prior quarter. This number is a complete fabrication in that it certainly doesn’t properly discount the impact of price increases experienced on Main Street. Inflation metrics have been understating inflation for years in order to rip off transfer payment recipients. For example, the last SocSec cost of living adjustment came three years ago. Does anyone believe that the cost of living has remained unchanged in 3 years? The CPI, Core CPI and GDP price index have been manipulated to discount inflation and by definition, to overstate economic growth. Failing to properly discount for inflation is more than likely responsible for all of the 1% growth experienced in Q2 – and then some. I’ll provide more substantiation for that opinion a bit later.

Now the second part of the shuck and jive. Bernanke and everyone else knows what happened when the debt ceiling was raised. The government went on a borrowing binge, adding around $400 billion to the public debt within days of the bill’s signing. This bolus of new debt was pumped into the economy, and will go right into Q3 GDP calculations. When Q3 GDP shows a boost, Bernanke will get up in front of Congress, smile, and talk about how the Fed’s policies actually work, how government action is the best way to generate economic growth, and, by the way, please give us more power to create even better GDP results moving forward. Washington politicians who are hooked on the idea of a centrally planned economy will do the same. Think I’m cynical? Watch what happens. The overall lack of jobs will only be of minor concern, but enough to likely justify another ‘stimulus’ attempt at some point before the elections next year. They’re already cooking up something to bail out underwater homeowners, calling that a stimulus.

Let’s go out a bit further. There is now an economic kill-switch built into our economy in the form of massive (and allegedly mandatory) spending cuts. These cuts need to be agreed on and passed before Thanksgiving or else automatic cuts will be triggered. So either way, some of the cookies and candy ought to be coming out of the equation in Q4. Has anyone noticed that very little attention was given to this reality? The debt ceiling deal has long been forgotten and we haven’t felt even a single nudge from the negative consequences yet. So we see a boost of GDP in Q3, and likely Q4 as well from the increased borrowing. The massive budget deficits are still firmly in place and are being built on daily. Once the mandatory cuts take place, GDP drops, depending on the timing of the cuts. However, it is very likely that through manipulation of the GDP price index, that an official recession will be avoided – in governmentspeak at least.

The Consequences of a Fraudulent GDP

The entire notion of including government spending in economic output is tainted to begin with. Mainline economists will argue that it must be counted since the dollars are real and end up on Main Street where the vast majority of them are spent into the economy. My assertion would be that if the government butted out and left the dollars on Main Street, they would be spent anyway, and horror of all horrors, some might actually get saved. Keynes was quick to point out the evils of savings, though, and his followers are quick to maintain the tradition. If mainstream economists can make a case for including government spending in GDP, how about when half of that money is borrowed? Count it anyway, they say! Never mind that the debt must be paid back with interest, thereby reversing the infusion (plus a little extra for interest). There are plenty of folks who will quickly point out that ‘by accounting definition, borrowing makes us rich since the money goes into the economy’. You guys know who you are. You never tell anyone about what happens when the money must be repaid though. These folks are following Keynes to the letter – forget the long run – it doesn’t matter.

Government Expenditures

Unfortunately, GDP numbers are used in many financial activities, from capital spending decisions to financial asset purchases. Distorted numbers lead to distorted assumptions, which lead to bad financial decisions. Is it any wonder that corporate debt is at an all-time high? These folks are borrowing money in anticipation of a boom that never arrives. Granted, GDP isn’t the only metric they use, but I spent enough time in budget meetings to know that it is the biggie when next year’s budget allocations are on the table.

Those seeking to purchase financial assets often look at GDP for an insight as to how a particular company might fare in its quest for increased profits. A solid economy is likely to generate better profits, thereby increasing stock prices, etc. I don’t need to lay out the rationale; everyone understands it. Perceptions about the economy play into many other consumer decisions as well, although one thing I am noticing is that people are paying less attention to government numbers than they are to their own personal economic realities these days. This is one of the reasons why consumer confidence can be at recession levels despite the fact that the government doesn’t own up to it.

One thing a flagging economy also tends to do is drive people out of stocks and into bonds. This action lowers interest rates and allows the government to borrow money more cheaply. In that regard it is certainly in Washington’s interest to keep the idea of the never-ending recession going. Phony GDP numbers prevent accurate price discovery in the bond markets, although, admittedly, this isn’t nearly the issue it was a few years ago. Back then there was actually a bond market, as opposed to now where we have a group of primary dealers laundering bond market monies for the fed and little in the way of other activity taking place.

In a normal world, the fed wouldn’t have to conduct all these illicit bond-purchasing activities. The recession would do it for them, driving investors to grab USGovt debt in a flight to safety. However, the magnitude of USGovt borrowing has overwhelmed the savers of the world. Erosion of confidence in the dollar hasn’t helped matters. The realization that the US will never get its house in order has prompted savers around the world to seek out other safe haven assets, notably commodities, which people are learning don’t come off a printing press. The recently passed debt deal and the plan to switch to a chained-CPI are two landmark initiatives that lay bare the intentions of the powerbrokers to keep the Ponzi scheme going a little while longer.

An Alternative to Traditional GDP Metrics

With these matters in mind, one of the items of high priority should be discovering an authentic measurement of output. There will be no perfect measurement, since the definition of output varies depending on whom you happen to be conversing with. So I’ll frame this part of the essay by stating that my goal in seeking an alternative was to find a measurement that allowed capital, labor, and productivity to assume their proper roles in the determination of output. My earlier assumption that government shouldn’t be in the economics business means that I will not count any government spending in this definition of output. Government monies either arrive by taxation or borrowing. Taxed dollars would have stayed in the economy anyway if they hadn’t been taxed out of it, so there is no reason to count the taxed portion of government spending. There is definitely no sane reason to count the portion of government spending that arises out of debt accumulation. It must be paid back and constitutes a drag on future output. I also believe that corporate debt and bailout dollars don’t represent authentic capital and cannot be used to determine output. These are my biases; I’m being forthright and honest about them, rather than trying to use subterfuge to cover my motives.

That said we could simply revise the existing GDP formula to exclude all government spending and be done. That would be one way of doing things for sure, and people have done it. Another way would be to take labor and capital inputs, understanding the relationship between the two as they relate to output, then adjusting for changes in multifactor productivity. The Cobb-Douglas output function is a rather simplified way of doing that.

I am not going to get into the nitty-gritty of the methodology in this article, as this is not the forum. Frankly, we have subscribers and clients who pay good money for this information and there is way too much work involved to just hand out anything recent. What I will do is provide the graphic below and submit to you that (and I have said this many times) the great recession began in late 2006 – a year before my original call of the recession on 11/25/2007 – and has yet to end, despite what the Commerce Department has to say. This in itself should not be an earthshattering statement; it dovetails with what so many of you are experiencing. The real value is that we have empirical evidence to connect with our perceptions. Better yet, we have another tool in the toolbox for making financial and economic determinations.

Cobb-Douglas Based Output for the US - 2000-2010

There is an old adage that figures lie and liars figure, and I am sure there are those of you that will call me the latter because this empirical evidence doesn’t match up with your particular worldview. That is fine; the traditional measurement of GDP certainly doesn’t match up with mine – or the vast majority of Americans.

Clueless or Crafty Bernanke??

Editor’s Note: We continue to see ‘alternative’ news sources pushing the idea that Bernanke is clueless and this is all nothing more than a big accident. It is not; the circumstantial and physical evidence is overwhelming. Hold your alternative news sources’ feet to the fire over these types of innuendos.

For most informed people in the United States, it has become clear that over the past century the private Federal Reserve has been doing nothing other than systematically devaluing and debasing the dollar while destroying the American economy in every way imaginable.

This notion was just made that much more concrete after this year’s central bank meeting in the Teton Mountains of Wyoming.

The stock market continues to be marked with increased volatility, which some analysts believe will be the new norm for months or years to come, and hiring has slowed while the jobless rate, which is now conservatively exceeding 9%, continues to rise.

By all metrics the American economy has not recovered in any way and by most metrics it is continuing to degrade at a dangerous pace.

However, the mainstream media continues to pretend that none of this is true by pointing to small rallies in certain stock sectors and currencies as proof of “investors […] starting to entertain the notion that the economy may yet avoid slipping back into recession” as Reuters reports.

Where they get the support for this notion is beyond me as even Ben Shalom Bernanke, the current chairman of the private Federal Reserve cartel, has yet to present any solutions or even ways to mitigate this economic disaster.

Instead of presenting a single solution, all Bernanke is able to do at this point is give hollow guarantees and weak assurances of an economic recovery.

Take, for instance, Alan Ruskin, the head of G10 currency strategy at Germany’s Deutsche Bank, who was quoted by Reuters as saying, “For all the focus on QE issues, we should not lose sight of (Bernanke’s) most important message that the Fed does not foresee the economy heading into renewed recession, even if there is plenty of fragility.”

Of course, like Bernanke, Ruskin could not give a single concrete answer or solution if pressed to do so. Then again, the mainstream media fails to ever press for answers from these individuals, instead opting to pretend these ambiguous and questionable statements are somehow legitimate.

Recently I published an article going over just a few of the options we have to actually get America back on the road to economic recovery.

Unsurprisingly, not a single of these options has been offered as a solution by the corrupt and highly criminal banking cartels like the Federal Reserve and the International Monetary Fund or their media lapdogs.

Why? Because these organizations have no real interest in economic recovery so long as it means clamping down on rampant speculation, high-frequency trading and stock manipulation, fraudulent savings and loan practices and anything that impinges on the ludicrous profit margins afforded to multinational corporations thanks to “free trade” and globalism.

Like their American counterparts, the overseas banking cartels are making ambiguous demands of politicians. Take, for instance, the new Chief of the International Monetary Fund, Christine Lagarde’s call on legislators to “act now” in order to prevent further economic downturn.

No actual plans of action are ever presented, the only thing it seems these individuals are good far is making demands. Unfortunately, demands will not put us back on the road to recovery, nor do they do anything other than create an atmosphere of fear.

The demands coming from Lagarde and others are confusing to say the least. They want governments to rein in the budget problems and fix their economies, but they do not want them to make too many spending cuts.

Without outlining specific, viable solutions, these statements are all but totally useless. Our economy in the United States, and in turn the entire world’s economy, needs a concrete direction, and one that is not based on austerity measures.

If we continue to just complain and demand others make the changes necessary to return the economy to a positive trajectory, we will continue to stagnate indefinitely.

Debt Ceiling or QE3? – by Andy Sutton

With the debt deal now signed and the crisis proclaimed to be over by the government and the mainstream lapdog media, it is time to take a serious look at the debauchery that was just perpetrated on the American people – again. The names have barely changed from 2008. The tactics certainly haven’t.  The magic of government accounting has had another chapter added to it as something that actually adds to the deficit and requires money be borrowed on its behalf is now a ‘cut’. Isn’t that just special? There are several big myths about the past few weeks that we need to uncover before anyone is really going to understand what is really going on here.

QE3 in Disguise

QE2 was winding down and when you go back and look at it, the USFed had already been blamed (quite properly too) for record high food prices around the globe and some of the unrest in certain locales as well. The overt monetization stage is generally the last one in the fiat life cycle, and obviously it is in Bernanke et al’s best interests to prolong the fleecing, er, rather prosperity, as long as they possibly can. The debt ceiling non-issue was really a work of semi-genius when you think about it. Set an artificial date for the end of the world, get your buddies in the media to put countdown clocks all over their news broadcasts – really a nice touch guys, and then proceed to scare the daylights out of everyone that those checks might not go out if everyone doesn’t get together and take one for the banksters. Uh, the team. So what really happened on 8/2 anyway? Well, I will tell you. QE3 was born. Come again? Here’s the stick. The consumer is now in pullback mode – again. The government is up against the wall with the full light of day being shown on its foolishness. The only institution with any wiggle room is the fed.

I have gotten confirmation from several well-placed sources that the USFed is now buying nearly 80% of all new Treasury bond issues. Most of these are being purchased directly from the primary dealers, who are required to place bids at all auctions. This is one of the reasons why it seems everyone around the world is divesting; yet the Treasury always has plenty of buyers for new debt. Pension funds and other mutual/closed-end funds are good for most of the rest. So follow the logic. The USFed needs cover to launch another round of monetary stimulus even though the first two were an abysmal failure. The USGovt needs to be able to issue a trainload of bonds to make payments on a bunch of ill-advised promises. The best bet at this point would be to borrow enough to divest everyone from SocSec at a 4% per annum rate and opt everyone out and shut the system down. People could invest their own money accordingly and at least if they blow it, it would be on them. And here’s the carrot: we get a debt ceiling extension for $2.8 trillion-ish and this gives the government the ability to borrow and spend while giving the Fed cover for the next round of semi-overt monetary stimulus. The mechanisms may be slightly different, but this one will likely mimic QE1 and 2 in most ways. The fed will be monetizing debt and the government will be spending more of its borrowed money to try to stimulate an economy, and, more and more lately, appears to be beyond stimulation. It would appear that we’ve now reached the phase in Keynes ‘theory’ where the long run is upon us and we’re not dead so now what? Unfortunately, Keynes left us no answers because there weren’t any and he knew it. This may come as a shock to many Keynes proselytizers, but we’re in uncharted territory, with not even the basis of a clue as to how to right this ship. So what we can expect moving forward is more of the same. The ‘cuts’ in this debt deal, from what I’ve been able to see so far, are going to gut the middle two quartiles of the economy. Not at once or immediately, but slowly. Many of the prescribed cuts won’t happen for a while, but others are yet unknown. The ‘super congress’ will have frighteningly dictatorial powers in deciding the winners and the losers and obviously there will be fierce battles by industries, corporations, banks, and pretty much everyone with a lobbyist – except the American people – to get people sympathetic to their cause on that commission. Go figure that 300 million Americans have not one single suite on K Street. Not even a single kiosk. Nothing.

Priming Demand for GBonds

On cue, USEquity markets have deteriorated over the past several weeks, pushing investor money across the aisle into Treasuries. I have made the case both anecdotally and factually in our paid publication for almost 2 years that the small investor is largely out of markets. Much of Middle America’s investments are in managed plans such as 401s, pension plans, and the like. Funds and banks have been driving the markets for quite some time now, shaving pennies off each other each day, with everyone claiming victory at the end of the quarter. I’ve chronicled how several firms have bragged on quarter long winning streaks. When you look at all the information, it becomes very clear that the big banks are running that show now more than ever. So why the recent selloff?  There are a couple of reasons really, and the first is the easiest to understand. The general public, for the most part, regards the stock market as the economy itself. Running down the markets was one way of making the fear campaign launched by Washington stick. Thanks to subterfuge and disinformation, Main Street really doesn’t understand most of the economic reporting other than unemployment, and perhaps GDP, but it certainly understands the stock market.  Dropping the markets was part of the psyop against the American people over the past several weeks. Secondly, there is typically a flow from more risky to less risky assets. Let me be clear that I preface both of those qualifiers with ‘perceived’. Perceived increased risk in the equity markets will push money into bonds and vice versa. That has been a basic paradigm for many years now and is fairly well understood by most investors. That paradigm is going to be ending in the not-too-distant future, but that is another article for another week.

The mere fact that so much money is piling into the long end of the yield curve reeks of manipulation since it simply defies common sense. A stay of execution is not a pardon, and the ridiculous spending spree in Washington will continue, albeit, most likely to a lesser extent in Middle America’s direction. There will be plenty of money for wars, regulation, and plenty of money for the next bailout when the banksters get zapped (most likely by design) by the derivatives time bomb they’ve created on a global scale. Nothing has been done to alter the trillions that SocSec and Medicare pass onto the nation’s plate in terms of unfunded liabilities each year. Perhaps the plan is simply to make the liabilities go away, and then there will be no need for funding. The supercongress could easily have that as its mandate. It will not be comprised of Ron and Rand Paul types, that is for sure, or even main line fiscal conservatives. Or advocates for the people. I wouldn’t be surprised if General Electric CEO Jeff Immelt wasn’t given a spot despite the fact that he isn’t even a Congressman.

Gold Smells the Rat(s)

In short, the run-up of the bond market is to push the perception that US government bonds are safe. There is likely a minor residual effect from the ongoing (and worsening) crisis in Europe, which is spreading well beyond Greece. Gold is properly responding to the debt and derivatives mess globally. At this point, it is one of the few markets that is ‘working’ yet the mainstream press calls the rally ‘ludicrous’.  And make no mistake, the roiling of markets is just as much about derivatives as anything else. Remember all the credit default swaps that were written on junk US mortgages? There are plenty of those written against various European (and American) government bonds, banks, and pretty much anything else that isn’t bolted down. And the nature of the derivatives time bomb is such that it will not matter where it begins, once the avalanche starts, it will take the entire financial system with it. That is the magnitude of the greed that has been poured into this rather unknown and virtually unregulated arena.

Ratings Russian Roulette

Another benefit to pushing up the bond market is to cover what declines may occur if a ratings agency actually does something other than talk about downgrading USGovt bonds. At this point at least it would appear to be a rather safe bet that this will not happen. Moody’s has already affirmed the top rating while saying everything negative they possible can in a vain attempt to save face. These agencies are merely political animals, serving the masters who pay their exorbitant fees. Nothing more. They are not independent by any stretch, because as anyone can understand, your allegiance is to who pays you. When a bank pays the agency to rate its mortgage tranches, the rating agency has a choice. Make the rating pleasing to the customer or lose the business. It is very simple. Amazingly the agencies essentially admit this, claiming their sovereign ratings are ‘more independent’. More independent than what? Than the AAA ratings slapped on C mortgage tranches?

If the Eurozone nations want the ratings agencies to stop arbitrarily and capriciously downgrading them, then they’d better take some of that rescue fund and send a large check. That is what appears to work best with these firms – a large application of money. There is also a little talked about motivator in there for the ratings agencies to keep the USGovt’s rating sterling. If they cut it that could very well mean that fewer bonds will be issued, and therefore diminished demand for ratings. When in doubt, always, always, follow the money.

There was certainly a lot of borrowed money to be followed today as the debt curve resumed its relentless upward climb to oblivion and the loss of the American standard of living we’ve come to enjoy. Meanwhile, awful economic reports continue to flow out of the various reporting agencies and if nothing else, maybe this time folks will come to understand you just can’t put humpty dumpty back together with endless monetary and fiscal stimulus; it is truly the ultimate exercise in financial futility.

If you haven’t taken an opportunity to download our free report entitled ‘If You Have Paper Assets… There are Three Things You Must Consider’, think about doing so now. As debt contagion swirls in Europe and now on our shores, it is more important than ever to take a protective stance towards the entirety of your assets. Simply Click Here to go to the download page. No obligations, no hassles, just common sense investing wisdom. There are also several other compilations available by clicking the above link as well.

Why We’re in This Mess

The first shows the declining value of the dollar…. So much for the Fed mandate of price stability..

The Dollar's value: down the drain

The second shows what happens to your debt when you decide to become a consumer nation as opposed to a producer one and pay for it all with borrowed money.

The Cost of Consumerism

S&P Cuts Greece’s Credit Rating – AGAIN

Editor’s Note: S&P warns Greece on restructuring its debt, but has no problem with the US Govt and Fed colluding to restructure America’s debt by inflation. This is why the ratings agencies have zero credibility – they are shills of the federal reserve and its primary policy tool – the US government.

Standard & Poor’s has again cut Greece’s credit rating, downgrading it by two notches to B as investor expectations of a debt restructuring continue to rise.

The rating is the lowest yet for Greece and is six notches below investment grade. It comes after European officials acknowledged for the first time that Greece’s €110bn rescue package a year ago was insufficient and that further help would be needed.

Strikingly, Greece has now been at a “junk” credit rating from S&P for more than a year. Recent research from the International Monetary Fund shows that every country that has defaulted since 1975 was junk-rated for at least a year beforehand.

S&P cited the increased likelihood of an extension of the debt payment maturities for Greece’s loans from the European Union as a reason for the downgrade, as private creditors would probably be asked to do the same.

“Such private sector burden sharing would likely constitute a distressed exchange according to our criteria, for which we assign a rating of ‘SD’ for selective default,” it added in a statement on Monday.

The US rating agency also kept Greece on credit watch negative, meaning further downgrades are possible.

Market interest rates on Greek debt continued to rise on Monday with the yield on benchmark 10-year bonds rising 0.22 percentage points to 15.73 per cent. That corresponds to a price of about 56, well below the 100 the bondholder would get if he held it to maturity without a default. The yield on three-year bonds rose 0.4 percentage points to 24.21 per cent.

Push to Bring Back Gold Standard Intensifies

Starting in May, Utah residents will be able to shop
in a currency other than the dollargold,
something that hasn’t happened since 1933.

Utah became the first U.S. state last month to
recognize gold and silver coins minted by the federal
government as legal tender. More than a dozen other
states are considering similar measures, and are
expected to follow Utah’s example. The move,
proponents say, is caused by declining faith in the U.
S. monetary system and concern about rising
inflation.

The gold standard, a monetary system in which the
dollar is valued against a certain weight of gold,
lasted until the Great Depression, when the Federal
Reserve confiscated gold held by the public.
President Nixon abolished the conversion of dollars
to gold at a fixed rate in 1971.

It doesn’t literally mean people would pull out gold
coins at the cash register. Instead, the Federal
Reserve would be required by law to make their notes
redeemable for gold and hold gold coins and bullion
as reserves. The printing of U.S. dollars would also
be weighed against the value of gold.

The last time the gold standard was seriously
considered was during President Ronald Reagan’s
administration. Reagan appointed a commission in
1981 to study the role of gold in the U.S. monetary
system, but the group mostly came out against it –
except for two members, including now-Rep. Ron
Paul, R-Texas, a champion of the Tea Party movement.

Despite continued calls by proponents like Paul to
consider the gold standard, it had mostly stayed
under the radar, until now.

The Tea Party‘s growing momentum and rising
inflation is giving new life to the issue, as evident in
Utah.

“We are just now starting to see some interest. These
actions by state legislatures are mostly symbolic –
declaring that people can use a one-ounce federally-

minted gold coin at its face value of $50 doesn’t
really give people a reason to do that. But it’s a
statement by the state legislators that they are
concerned by the state of the dollar,” said Lawrence
H. White, a professor of economics at George Mason
University who has published several reports on the
topic.

State lawmakers are “concerned about the future of the
dollar, worried that [worse] inflation is coming,” White
said. “People need to have an alternative if the dollar
melts down.”

Saudis Doing What We Do Best

Editor’s Note: Now that the King is scared, he’s tackling popular dissent the American way – with handouts..

The king, who had been convalescing in Morocco after back surgery in New York in November, stood as he descended from the plane in a special lift. He then took to a wheelchair.

Hundreds of men in white robes performed a traditional Bedouin sword dance on carpets laid out at Riyadh airport for the return of the monarch, thought to be 87.

Abdullah left his ailing octogenarian half-brother, Crown Prince Sultan, in charge during his absence.

Before Abdullah arrived, state media announced an action plan to help lower- and middle-income people among the 18 million Saudi nationals. It includes pay rises to offset inflation, unemployment benefits and affordable family housing.

Saudi Arabia has so far escaped popular protests against poverty, corruption and oppression that have raged across the Arab world, toppling entrenched leaders in Egypt and Tunisia and even spreading to Bahrain, linked to the kingdom by a causeway.

Significantly, Bahrain’s King Hamad bin Isa was among the princes thronging the tarmac when Abdullah flew in.

King Hamad freed about 250 political prisoners on Wednesday and has offered dialogue with protesters, mostly from Bahrain’s Shi’ite majority, who demand more say in the Sunni-ruled island.

Riyadh would be worried if unrest in Bahrain, where seven people were killed and hundreds wounded last week, spread to its own disgruntled Shi’ite minority in the oil-rich east.

“DAY OF RAGE”

Hundreds of people have backed a Facebook call for a Saudi “day of rage” on March 11 to demand an elected ruler, greater freedom for women and the release of political prisoners.

Saudi analysts said the king might soon reshuffle his cabinet to inject fresh blood and revive stalled reforms.

Saudi stability is of global concern. A key U.S. ally, the top OPEC producer holds more than a fifth of world oil reserves.

The king announced no political reforms such as municipal council polls demanded by opposition groups. Saudi Arabia has no elected parliament or parties and allows little public dissent.

Jeddah-based Saudi analyst Turad al-Amri welcomed what he called “a nice gesture” from the king, saying the measures were not unprecedented or prompted by Arab protests elsewhere.

But other Saudis were critical. “We want rights, not gifts,” said Fahad Aldhafeeri in one typical message on Twitter.

“They are under pressure. They have to do something. We know Saudi Arabia is surrounded by revolutions of various types, and not just in poor countries, but in some such as Libya which are rich,” said Mai Yamani, at London’s Chatham House think tank. “Basically what the king is doing is good, but it’s an old message of using oil money to buy the silence, subservience and submission of the people,” she said. “The new generation of revolution is surrounding them from everywhere.”

Mahmoud Sabbagh, 28, said he and 45 other young Saudi activists had sent the king a petition advocating more profound change, not just economic handouts. He listed the group’s demands as “national reform, constitutional reform, national dialogue, elections and female participation.”

Saudi Arabia holds more than $400 billion in net foreign assets, but faces social pressures such as housing shortages and high youth unemployment in a fast-growing population.

“Housing and job creation for Saudis are two structural challenges this country is facing,” said John Sfakianakis, chief economist at Banque Saudi Fransi, who put the total value of the king’s measures at 140 billion riyals ($37 billion).

He said some benefits were one-off and others were already budgeted. “The inflationary impact will not be significant.”

G20 member Saudi Arabia has outlined spending of 580 billion riyals for 2011 in its third consecutive record budget.

Investment bank EFG-Hermes put the king’s benefit package at 100 billion riyals, saying it could rally a stock market that lost 4 percent in the past week on unrest in Bahrain and elsewhere.

Ahmad al-Omran, who runs the popular Saudi Jeans blog, said on Twitter that the measures would benefit many people, but were equivalent to fighting the symptoms and ignoring the disease.

“People don’t revolt because they are hungry. People revolt because they want their dignity, because they want to govern themselves. Money won’t solve our issues. We need true political and social reform. We need freedom, justice and dignity.”

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