shinnosuke wrote:Ah, the dangers of posting on an Internet forum (especially in a jet-lagged condition). I see now that my comments towards you were too strong. Conditions are just so Orwellian lately.
No worries
shinnosuke wrote:Ah, the dangers of posting on an Internet forum (especially in a jet-lagged condition). I see now that my comments towards you were too strong. Conditions are just so Orwellian lately.
Despite what central banks may claim, inflation is alive and well.The cost of Thanksgiving dinner will be 13% higher this year than last, as prices rose for everything from turkey to green peas. A meal for 10 people will rise to $49.20 this year, up from $43.47 in 2010, the biggest increase since 1990. The American Farm Bureau Federation has based its estimate on prices for foods traditionally served on Thanksgiving, including stuffing and pumpkin pie. Turkey was the most expensive item on the bureau’s report, and also had the biggest gain, with a 16-pound bird up 22% to $21.57.
68Camaro wrote:And from... (http://finance.yahoo.com/news/Gold-Silv ... ml?x=0&l=1)Despite what central banks may claim, inflation is alive and well.The cost of Thanksgiving dinner will be 13% higher this year than last, as prices rose for everything from turkey to green peas. A meal for 10 people will rise to $49.20 this year, up from $43.47 in 2010, the biggest increase since 1990. The American Farm Bureau Federation has based its estimate on prices for foods traditionally served on Thanksgiving, including stuffing and pumpkin pie. Turkey was the most expensive item on the bureau’s report, and also had the biggest gain, with a 16-pound bird up 22% to $21.57.
68Camaro wrote:Overnight, Silva, President of PORTUGAL is recommending to the ECB that they extend their mission and be prepared to buy unlimited amounts of European sovereign debt. (Practically speaking, this can only happen if someone - either Europe or US - prints money. If the US does this then effectively it is America that would be buying their debt.) Of course he (with a Doctorate in ECONOMICS) would say this - Portugal is worse off even than Italy! And while a smaller country, it is arguably next in line before Italy to collapse, even though they are officially propped up by the ECB.
The headlines are working to try to calm the masses, noting that just because the Greeks have selected a new PM (a former BANKER!) and the Italians seem to have a major candidate in their sights (again, an ECONOMIST, of all things) as replacement for Berlusconi, that this is positive news. Positive? Wow - I'm glad they are stable enough to be able to transition governments. That certainly makes me want to invest in them!
The Slovak Republic has 63 billion Eur of GDP with debt of 29 billion. That is only 46% debt to GDP, but they are only rated A1/A+ with S&P having them on positive outlook. Their credit has been on an upward trend. It was A3 back in 2004 with Moody's and has been steadily clawing its way up. It got their by being fiscally prudent. It hasn't seen credit improvement by taking on debt obligations willy nilly. Its EFSF guarantee commitment is 7.8 billion euro. That is just over 10% of GDP, which as the high end, but it is 27% of its current debt outstanding. That is a staggering amount of money. If this country had wanted to raise 5 billion and spend it on itself, the quality of life would be much higher. With just of 5 million people, that is about 1,000 euro per person that they are using to support countries that have more benefits than they provide their own citizens. People can pooh-pooh what is going on in Slovakia. They can make fun of how the whole world is focused on this little country, but they are wrong to. This country, like Finland, is being dragged into something they don't want to do. They are going into debt to provide money to countries who spend more per citizen than they do. Shouldn't they be spending that money on themselves? Taking on debt to help someone else when they have survived by being responsible makes no sense to a lot of people there. They have a nice 2015 bond that trades about 3%. Not great like the best countries in the Eurozone, but sustainable. Will their commitments start impacting their own ability to raise money?
Clearly the 63% destruction of the dollar unit reference point over the last three years did not immediately translate into a 170% rise in prices at the grocery store. And I wouldn't expect it to. It never works like that. Henry Hazlitt explained it like this: "The value of the monetary unit, at the beginning of an inflation, commonly does not fall by as much as the increase in the quantity of money, whereas, in the late stage of inflation, the value of the monetary unit falls much faster than the increase in the quantity of money."
68Camaro wrote:Milton Friedman interview from 1979, compare to today
No need to either put Milton Friedman on a pedestal, nor vilify him, and before you do either, get the facts on him first. But regardless of your opinion of him or his policies his core conservative/libertarian ideals speak as loud now from the grave than they did then, in this 5-part ~45 minute interview and Q&A on the Donahue show from 1979. Amazing how far down we've come since then, and how our problems now were the same then. If you only have time for one, pick the 3rd one, especially the first 2-3 minutes of that one.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E1lWk4TCe4U
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5Lp2kGJASGY
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GapXLpLoZBs
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I0Ocv8aMBjk
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=brBvdjoNC6Y
68Camaro wrote:68Camaro wrote:Milton Friedman interview from 1979, compare to today
No need to either put Milton Friedman on a pedestal, nor vilify him, and before you do either, get the facts on him first. But regardless of your opinion of him or his policies his core conservative/libertarian ideals speak as loud now from the grave than they did then, in this 5-part ~45 minute interview and Q&A on the Donahue show from 1979. Amazing how far down we've come since then, and how our problems now were the same then. If you only have time for one, pick the 3rd one, especially the first 2-3 minutes of that one.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E1lWk4TCe4U
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5Lp2kGJASGY
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GapXLpLoZBs
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I0Ocv8aMBjk
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=brBvdjoNC6Y
As I suggested above, be careful about why you dislike someone's views, and which views you object to. No one is perfect. Friedman was a strong defender of capitalism, even libertarianism. But (IMHO) he had it completely wrong on monetarism. I've had a nice quiet Sunday afternoon to do a lot of enjoyable miscellaneous reading, and this never-presented speech on Friedman's views, by Antal Fekete, is priceless. He takes Friedman fully to task for his views on money, and on his support of the dismantling of the gold standard.
http://www.safehaven.com/article/6411/w ... went-wrong
68Camaro wrote:Theo - while I have read only excerpts from Jekyll, it is highly recommended. As to if what we have is a formal ponzi scheme with plans behind it, or greed masquerading as ill-informed plan, I'm not sure, but I'm also not sure it makes a difference.
shinnosuke wrote:68, mind if I drop this article into the discussion? Watch the video of the Blackrock CEO. He makes several telling comments, but he's definitely in kicking (down the road) mode.
http://www.ftense.com/2011/11/european-debt-to-gdp-map-french.html
shinnosuke wrote:And this? It's an excellent video of our Texan friend, Kevin Bass, the man with 20 million nickels. In this BBC interview he actually says, "short hairs" on TV.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/programmes/hardtalk/9639507.stm
68Camaro wrote:Back to comments on the market in general, and what decisions that drives.
The economic news is - still, and even more - psychotic. It's almost impossible to feel trust from any news - this is the "fog of war". The big picture messages indicate looming chaos which TPTB - by their methods - can only avert, for a time, by the printing of more money - if enough of that cash creation is even possible in Europe. What is real and what is not? Well, physical gold and silver are real, that's for sure. So are cans of beans on the shelf, and a Beretta 92G 40SW in a holster (or HK P30 40SW, or Kimber 45).
For those of you with non-optional funds in 401Ks that cannot be removed, like me; I'm stuck with trying to make the best long-term investment I can (physical gold and silver funds for the discretionary portion which I am lucky to be able to direct there), against the possiblity of total loss should the brokerage (which I can't control) go under. So I have to plan my life around the possibility that (as with SSI and my pension) I will never see any of that "wealth" (assuming it is lost in some market chaos like MF Global), or that those parts which I have no control over will be inflated down to nothing by the time I have access to it.
68Camaro wrote:I can own gold/silver in the 401K via PSLV and PHYS, such as that is. And I do. However, if the brokerages go down, and they haven't kept their accounting straight (e.g., MF Global), I may be out of luck.
I have two 12-gauge shotguns and three rifles, just didn't list them. But I am less well equipped in the rifles. Have been shopping around for a 30-06/308 type, but haven't quite found what I want.
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