Thursday, May 31, 2012

STOCKS GO NOWHERE AFTER WAVE OF BAD NEWS: Here's What You Need To Know (SPY, EZU, TLB, FB)

wave, surfing

The first 24-hours of the economic Super Bowl are nearly done.

First the scoreboard:

Dow: 12,393, -26.41, -0.21%
S&P 500: 1,310, -2.99, -0.23%
NASDAQ: 2,827, -10.02, -0.35%

And now the top stories:

Don't Miss: Morgan Stanley's Complete Outlook For The 14 Most Important Commodities In The World >

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FTC Chairman Leibowitz: More Privacy Could Actually Bring Bigger Revenues For Web Giants

Screen Shot 2012-05-31 at 9.38.32 AMPrivacy guidelines such as the "Do Not Track" option proposed by the Federal Trade Commission does not necessarily mean the end of the kind of targeted online ads that have brought such riches to web companies over the past decade. In fact, FTC Chairman Jon Leibowitz says, more privacy on the Internet could actually bring the industry much more money that it attracts now.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/ERppbFKH3vk/

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The Truth About Europe: There Is No Solution

intervention sabine jacques-louis david

I like that title, The Truth About Europe: There Is No Solution. But I don't think it can all be summed up, the reasons why I mean, in one article. So I think I'll make it a running series. Still, whatever data we can look at, past, present and future, none of it will make an essential difference. The title stands: There Is No Solution For Europe. Period.

All I can do is keep pointing to news and stats and data that confirm that. All of them do, so that should make it a lot easier, even if most voices out there never tire from pointing out the opposite.

Nor do I need to limit my topic to Europe; it's not as if the US, or Australia, or any other industrialized country, has any other fate to look forward to. This global debt deflation is truly global, the only thing that differs is the exact time the hammer comes down. Maybe those people are best off who never had much, though they will be sure to be squeezed ever harder by us, the declining rich.

On our travels, we repeatedly met/meet people who claim that "there is always a solution". I think that notion keeps people from understanding crucial issues, it looks more like a faith-based point of view to me than a realistic or scientific one. And no, for Europe there is no solution. In the same way that there is none for global debt deflation (keep an eye on that one!) in general. The latter is quite simply the former writ large.

It’s like people saying that if you're not part of the solution, you're part of the problem. Sounds cute, but it's not exactly helpful when there are no solutions available. May be we should all be fed quantum mechanics in grade one, just so we understand the folly of "there is always a solution". I digress.

Well, then again, of course, everything will be "solved" one way or another in the sense that the sun will rise again tomorrow in various places (others will be cloudy on any given day) , i.e. time will run its course and something will come out of all this. That's a kind of solution too. But there won't be some clever man-made scheme that makes all the bad things go away. It simply doesn't work like that. Not this time, if ever. The ECB or IMF or Bernanke or whoever will not be able to stop the financial rut. The issue is more that they ain't even trying, but manage to make people believe they are.

What they can and will all do, however, is make everything worse. Much worse. For the man in the street.

Who is being told that he needs to have his wages and pensions cut and lose his home so the economy can recover. While his sparse remaining wealth is transferred to bankrupt financial institutions.

The future European situation, from the point of view of the man in the street, could be mitigated, made better, improved, enormously, though two simple measures. Which will not be executed. Because those who make the decisions don’t do so with the man in the street in mind. Quite the contrary. But still.

First, the ECB and the troika it represents (which all represent the financial institutions, but that’s another story) could treat their own claims on Greece - and, eventually - Spain, Italy etc., like they insisted private creditors' claims were treated. That is, take a 50-70-90% haircut on those claims. That would give Greece a lot of breathing space. And Spain too. Not even considered.

But much more than that, Europe should restructure its banks. And not in the way Spain tries to do with Bankia, by pumping $20-odd trillion into it. How that was ever labeled "restructuring" is beyond me, frankly. No, banks should be restructured in the "old fashioned" sense. Put their books on the table out in the open, see what debts there are, what assets, what liabilities, and if the ultimate count is negative, let it go under. Simple. Shave creditors, save depositors.

Europe, like America, could have used all those trillions in bailout money to guarantee their citizens deposits. Instead, both have opted to guarantee their banks' losses. A clear and simple choice. But also one that just about nobody seems to have understood.

There are tons of people, I read and hear them every day, who think that the extend and pretend phase can last for years more. After all, they argue, it's already lasted for four or five.

They miss the point. Or A point, a big one.

Which is that if and when bankrupt financial institutions (and they are bankrupt, or they wouldn't have needed those trillions) are saved with our money, there is a direct claim on our wealth. And even more importantly, there is a claim on our future earning power. Those trillions will have to be earned back, after all.

The problem is that there is a limit to our earning power. That limit is there today, and there is precious little reason to believe it's not going to be there tomorrow (barring divine intervention). And that means that the financial world will come to the conclusion one day that any additional funds derived from government guarantees based on our (yourself, your children and grandchildren) future earning power are losing credibility.

The European safety nets, the ESM and EFSF, are already - hilariously and only on paper, but still officially - relying on contributions from Italy and Spain. Which will not be able to comply. And will count on Germany to make up the difference. And there's a limit there too. So the bond markets will conclude some day soon that even if the EU sold all its children into unpaid slavery, they still couldn't possibly pay for all the commitments made in European societies. And there the buck will stop.

What we can learn from all this is that our money is used to prop banks, and the banking system, while at the same time our debt to those same banks, and that same system, rises. The ECB and the Fed lend money to banks, money "underwritten" by our present and future earning power, at something like 0.05%, money the banks use to either buy sovereign bonds which pay interest rates that are 5 or 10 or 20 times higher (depending on the country we live in), or to prop up their accounts at the central banks, which also earn them higher rates. Both options, again, are underwritten by our earning power.

Our money keeps our banks alive through a mechanism that makes our debt to them grow while we keep them alive. All our central banks need to do is make sure that bond yields are higher than the interest they charge banks on "emergency loans".

Oh wait, they can't even do that forever. Yields on US, German, Japanese bonds will fall mercilessly as investors seek safety. But hey, who's talking about forever? All they need is something that works today, and provides the time to think about an equally profitable scheme tomorrow. If you're too big to fail today, why not buy some Spanish bonds? Losses can always be transferred and profits pocketed.

Now you may say: the banks are bankrupt regardless, so why would a central bank or government pull these stunts? To answer that, you need to know who rules the banking system and the governments systems. And who votes for the latter. You.

To be continued.

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Barton Biggs Spoke With A Well-Connected Businessman Who Says Saudi Arabia Has A Plan To Bankrupt Iraq And Iran

barton biggs

Barton Biggs, the storied hedge fund manager who runs Traxis Partners, recently had an interesting encounter recently over lunch with a Saudi businessman who explained to him the real motivations behind Saudi Arabia's ramp up in oil production and why oil prices will likely continue to fall as a result for an extended period of time.

It's all part of a plan hatched by the Saudi royal family, according to Biggs, who relays this conversation in a note just published by Itaú BBA. Biggs says he asked the man what his outlook for Saudi Arabia was in the medium and long term, and the man was particularly negative about this, even given the vast riches of Saudi Arabian oil wealth.

Here is what Biggs writes about his conversation with the Saudi man:

"You have to understand our geo-political equation and vulnerability,” he said calmly but intensely.
“Our two most dangerous enemies are Iraq and Iran. Both are Shia, and both are trying to destabilize the Arab world and our Sunni kingdom by funding terrorism. Our only weapons against them are our wealth and our oil. Their current vulnerability is their financial fragility. Their financial reserves are a fraction of ours, and they desperately need money to prop up their economies.

The ruling council has decided that over the next two years we have a brief window of opportunity to impoverish and weaken them by driving down the price of oil. Iraq and Iran need to produce and sell their oil at well over one hundred dollars a barrel. In the next twenty four months, we will gradually increase our production with the objective of breaking the price of crude down to sixty dollars a barrel.

The man also pointed out to Biggs the opportune timing of this plan from the Saudi standpoint:

"Don’t forget we have the wind at our backs because of Europe’s problems and the weak global economy. Under normal recessionary circumstances, we would be reducing production to maintain current prices. Instead, we will be flooding a weak market already suffering indigestion. You also should understand that Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates are with us. Royal families tend to stick together.

Biggs, when posing the question to himself whether or not he believes what he heard from the Saudi man, says "maybe." He described the man as "very rich and presumably well-connected" but "not part of the extended Saudi royal family." He also notes that the Saudi plan as described to him could hit a lot of snags along the way, given the political hotspot the region is, with many competing actors and a dynamic plot.

However, Biggs sees some light in all of this, saying that if the scenario were to play out as described, it would essentially amount to "a giant tax cut, which is just what this sickly old world needs." And he ends his story with another interesting note:

Meanwhile the Saudis, perfectly reasonably, are hedging their bets. Last week they signed a $3 billion
contract with British Aerospace to provide the training jets and combat management of the new fighter jets that The Saudi Royal Air Force has purchased. The best, high-performance jets don’t protect you from suicide bombers, but obviously they could be handy in preventing the bad guys’ aircraft from blitzing your oil lifting installations or in a shooting war in the Gulf.

See also: ANALYST: Chesapeake Energy Looks Like A Pretty Good Buyout Target

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Wednesday, May 30, 2012

15 Fun & Cheap Things to Do and See in Paris, France

Paris, France has been called many things: “The City of Light,” “The City of Love”…unfortunately, it may also be called “The City of Potentially Bank-Draining Vacations.” Millions of tourists visit Paris every year, and many spend far more money than they need to or plan to. Even though Paris consistently ranks as one of the [...]

15 Fun & Cheap Things to Do and See in Paris, France is a post from the Money Crashers personal finance blog.


Source: http://www.moneycrashers.com/fun-cheap-things-do-paris-france/

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Here's Why Facebook's Stock Is Tanking, According To Internet Analyst Mary Meeker (FB)

Facebook CFO David Ebersmann

Why is Facebook's stock getting hammered?

Former Morgan Stanley Internet analyst, and current Kleiner Perkins partner Mary Meeker blames NASDAQ.

Speaking at the AllThingsD conference she said the big problem was that NASDAQ got overwhelmed by orders. Then traders weren't sure if they had the shares or not. They got spooked and stopped buying.

Once the stock started cratering, it was curtains for Facebook, says Meeker.

This has become a relatively standard line of thinking on the IPO. On the first day of trading, it makes sense, but we're over a week removed from the IPO. The kinks have been ironed out.

The real problem is that Facebook's business doesn't appear to justify a hefty valuation. Should Facebook trade at 60X next year's EPS versus Apple at 10X? Does that make sense?

She added, "This is a great company," and "it will do well over time." She thinks the $38 IPO price wasn't a mistake because it's not like Facebook, or its bankers were operating in a "black box." They had constant information on demand for the stock and pricing.

Facebook had an opportunity to raise $16 billion in one fell swoop. Its biggest rivals, Google, Microsoft, and Apple, all have piles of cash. If it's going to compete with them, then it needs a healthy war chest too, said Meeker.

DON'T MISS: Mary Meeker's Full Report On The State Of The Internet (It's Another Awesome Presentation)

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How to Stop Fighting About Money With Your Spouse

Money is among the top reasons for martial strain and divorce, and those of us who are married understand why. Think about your single years: You had complete control over your finances and your bank account. Fast-forward to combining your finances with your spouse, and it’s easy to see why arguing about finances can put [...]

How to Stop Fighting About Money With Your Spouse is a post from the Money Crashers personal finance blog.


Source: http://www.moneycrashers.com/stop-fighting-money-spouse/

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Paperless Payphone: Doxo Now Lets You Receive & Pay Bills From Your Mobile Device

Doxo_mobile_attSince launching in mid-2011, doxo has been on a mission to make your life paperless. With its "digital filing cabinet" software, the Seattle-based startup aims to create a single place for users to manage their bills, be they phone, cable, or credit card. Of course, the world is quickly going mobile, and payment solutions are going right along with it. So, in an effort to close the loop between web and mobile services, Doxo is today launching a new mobile payment and management solution, along with a new Android app, to finally allow users to both receive and pay bills from their mobile devices.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/_0qaaqxEmA4/

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Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Why Sitting Is Bad for You ? 6 Tips to Move More & Improve Health

Think about how much time you spend each day sitting down. You may sit down throughout the entire working day at a desk in front of a computer. You sit during your commute to and from work. And you sit when you’re watching TV in the evening, or surfing the web. ABC News reports that [...]

Why Sitting Is Bad for You – 6 Tips to Move More & Improve Health is a post from the Money Crashers personal finance blog.


Source: http://www.moneycrashers.com/why-sitting-bad-health/

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