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More Bot Hits

From our colleagues at www.halfpasthuman.com and their eerie web scanning/future seeing software:

apparently some general just got demoted to col. as indicated by

the bots for this week about the general who rewarded the

undeserved.

and the hero captain spoken about was likely the Hackworth death..

as a hero to the common soldier and the foe of TPTB....

getting scary good I think

Sinko de Mayo

We noted with great surprise yesterday that despite the reduction of GM and Ford debt to junk status by S&P that the market didn't fare worse than it did - but then it dawned on us that one of the keys to the market - the Dow Transports - didn't reflect carmakers any more.  What?  Shocked?  Yeah, I was too.  But when I looked at the list that makes up the Dow Transportation Index, there's not a carmaker to be found.  How long ago was GM booted off the list?  I'll leave that for your research, as I'm pressed for time.  But what a way to jigger Dow Theory around:  Dow Theory says as goes the transports, so goes the rest of the market.  But with the autos in trouble and not wanting to scare the bejezuz out of the market, if you ,take the autos out of the index - Surprise!  No mo problems!

 

Thus, the jobs report out this morning holds good - and the pending layoffs at IBM, well just forget about itg!

http://biz.yahoo.com/ap/050506/wall_street.html?.v=4

 

About that jobs report:

Employment rose in April, and the unemployment rate was unchanged at 5.2 percent, the Bureau of Labor Statistics of the U.S. Department of Labor re- ported today. Nonfarm payroll employment increased by 274,000 over the month. Job growth was widespread, with gains in construction, mining, and several service-providing industries.

Unemployment (Household Survey Data)

Both the number of unemployed persons, 7.7 million, and the unemployment rate, 5.2 percent, were unchanged in April. The jobless rate was down from 5.5 percent a year earlier. Over the month, the unemployment rates for adult men (4.4 percent), adult women (4.6 percent), teenagers (17.7 percent), whites (4.4 percent), and blacks (10.4 percent) showed little or no change. After declining in March, the unemployment rate for Hispanics or Latinos increased to 6.4 percent, the same as in February. The jobless rate for Asians was 3.9 percent, not seasonally adjusted. (See tables A-1, A-2, and A-3.)

The number of long-term unemployed--those unemployed 27 weeks and over-- was about unchanged over the month. This group accounted for 21.2 percent of the unemployed. (See table A-9.)

Total Employment and the Labor Force (Household Survey Data)

Total employment grew by 598,000 in April to 141.1 million, and the employment-population ratio--the proportion of the population age 16 and over with jobs--edged up to 62.6 percent. The civilian labor force increased by 605,000 in April to 148.8 million; the labor force participation rate, at 66.0 percent, also was up over the month. (See table A-1.)

Persons Not in the Labor Force (Household Survey Data)

There were 1.5 million persons who were marginally attached to the labor force in April, about the same as a year earlier. (Data are not seasonally adjusted.) These individuals wanted and were available to work and had looked for a job sometime in the prior 12 months. They were not counted as unemployed, however, because they did not actively search for work in the 4 weeks preceding the survey. The number of discouraged workers, at 393,000 in April, declined over the year. Discouraged workers, a subset of the marginally attached, were not currently looking for work specifically because they believed no jobs were available for them. The other 1.1 million marginally attached had not searched for work for reasons such as school attendance or family responsibilities.

The catch to all this is in the definitions:

People are classified as employed if they did any work at all as paid employees during the reference week; worked in their own business, pro- fession, or on their own farm; or worked without pay at least 15 hours in a family business or farm. People are also counted as employed if they were temporarily absent from their jobs because of illness, bad weather, vacation, labor-management disputes, or personal reasons.

People are classified as unemployed if they meet all of the following criteria: They had no employment during the reference week; they were available for work at that time; and they made specific efforts to find employment sometime during the 4-week period ending with the reference week. Persons laid off from a job and expecting recall need not be looking for work to be counted as unemployed. The unemployment data derived from the household survey in no way depend upon the eligibility for or receipt of unemployment insurance benefits.

The civilian labor force is the sum of employed and unemployed persons. Those not classified as employed or unemployed are not in the labor force. The unemployment rate is the number unemployed as a percent of the labor force. The labor force participation rate is the labor force as a percent of the population, and the employment-population ratio is the employed as a percent of the population.

Now the statistical confessional:

Statistics based on the household and establishment surveys are subject to both sampling and nonsampling error. When a sample rather than the en- tire population is surveyed, there is a chance that the sample estimates may differ from the "true" population values they represent. The exact difference, or sampling error, varies depending on the particular sample selected, and this variability is measured by the standard error of the estimate. There is about a 90-percent chance, or level of confidence, that an estimate based on a sample will differ by no more than 1.6 stand- ard errors from the "true" population value because of sampling error. BLS analyses are generally conducted at the 90-percent level of confidence.

For example, the confidence interval for the monthly change in total employment from the household survey is on the order of plus or minus 430,000. Suppose the estimate of total employment increases by 100,000 from one month to the next. The 90-percent confidence interval on the monthly change would range from -330,000 to 530,000 (100,000 +/- 430,000). These figures do not mean that the sample results are off by these magnitudes, but rather that there is about a 90-percent chance that the "true" over-the-month change lies within this interval.

This means the alleged increase is well within the error rate of +/- 430,000!  Whoopee! Of course the private Swiss report on jobs making the rounds in Europe's financial community alleges the numbers to be twisted and the decline was more like a net loss of 300,000 jobs, but for today, look for the Cinco de Mayo party to rock onward and upward.

 

Impeachable, but who cares?

As the market's are still holding 10,000 and above, the US press won't get the world until the Uberklassen meetings later this month about dumping GWB - but we have a series of interesting - and damning - reports surfacing now.  Things like the  memo out saying Iraq was planned long before WMD talk...  But, like I said, cake and circuses time - who cares?  Gaygate pending?  Who cares?

 

Fractal View

Our Fractalist thinks the market is at a crossroads - once the froth of this morning wears off:

George, the markets are at fractal crossroads. While the major Asian markets have been closed recently for holidays, many of the major European markets have nearly filled their nonlinear downward gaps made two to three weeks ago ­ a day or so of additional trading should plug the gap. A lateral fractal basing formation in the US equities started 15 days ago with the beginning of an upstroke movement 5 days ago. The breakdown gap of two to three weeks ago in the NASDAQ has been triply filled. This last 5 day upstroke which represents the third growth fractal of the basing pattern also can potentially represent the initial portion of a first fractal of a new longer multi-week growth pattern. Many analysts seeing this basing pattern and using technical indicators are targeting higher valuations.

These analysts base their projections more on daily and weekly oversold technical indicators, directional oscillators, and summation indices rather than on current economic data, which has weighed negatively on the economic balance scales. Technical indicators are useful but should be employed in the context of an appreciation of either a dominant expanding or a dominant contracting credit system. The duration of the time units of indicators are equally important ­ especially near terminal portions of an expanding credit cycle, i.e., phase transitions. Equity valuations may be oversold on a daily and weekly level, but be overbought on a yearly level and extremely over bought on a decade level.

GM¹s rocket assisted boost by a Œplanned¹, not actual, bid for 28 million shares of stock by a ultra wealthy investor - who had incidentally acquired slightly less than that number of shares over the last two weeks - put a vice like squeeze on those shorting GM, with both speculators and short coverers propelling GM stock upward by fifteen to twenty percent. Unlike this questionable antecedent short squeeze Œjunky¹ equity move, GM on May 5, 2000 received its unquestionably appropriate official junk bond status by the S and P bond raters. Interestingly100 million GM shares have been traded in the last few days; this would present ample opportunity to unload million of shares acquired at 15 percent less during the preceding two weeks.

If fractal interpretation of market valuations is to have any value, specific patterns must be elucidated prior to turning points. The nonlinear drop in multiple world equity markets two to three weeks ago was such an elucidation. Gapping down to new lows characterizes nonlinear movement. The nodal low 5 days ago was day 130 (2.5x) of a 52 day (x) base.

Declining fractals, which are decay and credit contraction dependent, start their descent at the top of a growth cycle. Just as the first day of the first 40 day cycle of the Wilshire TMWX 40/100/100 cycle started near the high of preceding growth period and ended in early January 2005, the first day of the sequential decay cycle started on the last day of that preceding third cycle or on day 100. From the January top, the declining fractal sequence has been 15/37/ and May 5, 2005 - 36 of? 37. (X/2.5X/2.5X) Significantly the high of this potentially nearly completed growth pattern is lower than the high in January. To corroborate this declining fractal scenario with an ongoing well-trafficked simultaneous growth fractal entity, RMS can be used. RMS, a REIT index and a housing bubble protégée, shows a low nodal determined growth sequence of 16/39/ and 5 May 2005 -31 of 32. Notably the ideal projected terminal growth day of the growth fractal entity and the declining Wilshire fractal sequence terminal day are on the same day, Friday May 6, 2005.

If the lows of the preceding 2-3 week period are exceeded, a downdraft of major proportions is highly likely. If equity valuations increase steadily over the next three trading days, a further multi-weekly fractal growth cycle is yet possible. The current short term US treasury rates are still below current inflation rates and markedly below the double digit number the wise Mr. Volcker used to curb growing commodity price rises in the early 1980¹s.

The devaluation and deflation of assets remain not a question of if, but when. Only if the central government owned all businesses and employed all citizens, could continuous inflation by arbitrarily increasing wages remedy the current expanding debt and consumer saturation difficulties. American private businesses, unlike the government, cannot arbitrarily borrow and expand credit to increase wages and accommodate growing inflation and debt. Unlike the government, private enterprises must be generally profitable in order to continue their existences and continue to employ wage earners. G. Lammert

Blair Ditch Project Fails - He's Back

Tony is in for another round, but he's not as smug as before...

 

Plundering Pensions

Letter from a reader:

Well, our UAL pensions have been in the court system all this year with the final hearing before the judge set for May 10 & 11. This enterprising group is working on replacement funds as we all know the pensions at UAL are finished. A good sign of the times for you.
 
(name withheld)
 

Sadly Right - again

From a reader:

Been what, two years now? You came online and said that the airlines would lead the pack into a downward spiral. They did. You said that the autos would follow on quickly. They are: http://apnews.myway.com/article/20050505/D89TADPO0.html  Your next prediction was that pension funds would crater and The End would me Nigh. Well...guess what...

Well, we modestly confess that was our call and it did  happen that way and yes, the end is off there somewhere after we get through the end of this b ounce, but nothing to get upset about - like the dolphins sing in Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, "Thanks for all the fish!"

 

Pricing Popemobiles

In case you wonder what the Pope used to drive, try a Volkswagen Golf.  Used, it fetched just under a quarter million at auction.

 

Hypocrites will burn Department

Houston Bureau Laughing

The reason our Houston Bureau is laughing is Tom DeLay asking for prayers on National Prayer Day.  Help me here: He's asking prayers for what? a) Saving his ass from his colleagues, b) more brains, c) Integrity or d) mercy from real Christian voters? Hello, Houston, we have a problem..

 

Movie Plug

Eldest daughter Denise (a/k/a/ Wendy Treat) is in an indy movie - http://go-kustom.com/danews.html - Trailer doesn't stream well but the pictures will give you the idea.

 

Honor for Our Best and Bravest
Although I differ greatly with the present administration on economic matters, and even on matters of Commander in Chief level decision-making where it comes to full disclosure and honesty, make no mistake about my loyalty, feelings and undying respect for America's military. I lost a lot of friends to the jungles south of the DMZ like Mike Garrett and Gil Pfeifer. A fellow ham radio nerd turned gunship pilot and a kindred Renaissance guy.

Col David Hackworth was controversial to be sure, but when someone like Hack dies, we put aside partisanship and agendas to honor the most decorated American soldier.

NEW YORK, May 5 /PRNewswire/ -- Col. David H. Hackworth, the United States
Army's legendary, highly decorated guerrilla fighter and lifelong champion of
the doughboy and dogface, groundpounder and grunt, died Wednesday in Mexico.
He was 74 years old. The cause of death was a form of cancer now appearing
with increasing frequency among Vietnam veterans exposed to the defoliants
called Agents Orange and Blue.
    Col. Hackworth spent more than half a century on the country's hottest
battlefields, first as a soldier, then as a writer, war correspondent and
sharp-eyed critic of the Military Industrial Complex and ticket-punching
generals he dismissed as Perfumed Princes. He preferred the combat style of
World War II and Korean War heroes like James Gavin and Matthew Ridgeway and,
during Vietnam, of Hank "The Gunfighter" Emerson and Hal Moore. General Moore,
the author of  "We Were Soldiers Once and Young," called him "the Patton of
Vietnam" and General Creighton Abrams, the last American commander in that
disastrous war, described him as "the best battalion commander I ever saw in
the United States Army."
    Col. Hackworth's battlefield exploits put him on the line of American
military heroes squarely next to Sgt. York and Audie Murphy. The novelist Ward
Just, who knew him for forty years, described him as "the genuine article, a
soldier's soldier, a connoisseur of combat." At 14, as World War II was
sputtering out, he lied about his age to join the Merchant Marine, and at 15
he enlisted in the U.S. Army. Over the next 26 years he spent fully seven in
combat. He was put in for the Medal of Honor three times; the last application
is currently under review at the Pentagon. He was twice awarded the Army's
second highest honor for valor, the Distinguished Service Cross, along with 10
Silver Stars and 8 Bronze Stars. When asked about his many awards, he always
said he was proudest of his 8 Purple Hearts and his Combat Infantryman's
Badge.
    A reputation won on the battlefield made it impossible to dismiss him when
he went on the attack later as a critic of careerism and incompetence in the
military high command. In 1971, he appeared in the field on ABC's Issue and
Answers to say Vietnam "is a bad war...it can't be won. We need to get out."
He also predicted that Saigon would fall to the North Vietnamese within four
years, a prediction that turned out to be far more accurate than anything the
Joint Chiefs of Staff were telling President Nixon or that the President was
telling the American people.
    With almost five years in country, Col. Hackworth was the only senior
officer to sound off about the Vietnam War. After the interview, he retired
from the Army and moved to Australia.
    "He was perhaps the finest soldier of his generation," observed the
novelist and war correspondent Nicholas Proffit, who described Col.
Hackworth's combat autobiography About Face, a national best-seller, as "a
passionate cry from the heart of a man who never stopped loving the Army, even
when it stopped loving him back."
    Having risen from private by way of a battlefield commission in Korea,
where he became the Army's youngest captain, to Vietnam, where he served as
its youngest bird colonel, he never stood on rank.
    From the beginning his life was a soldier's story. He was born on
Armistice Day, now Veteran's Day, in 1930. His parents both died before he was
a year old and the Army ultimately stood in for the family he never had. His
grandmother, who rescued him from an orphanage, raised him on tales of the
American Revolution and the Old West and the ethos of the Great Depression.
After the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor, he got his first military training
shining shoes at a base in Santa Monica, where the soldiers, adopting him as
mascot, had a tailor cut him a pint-sized uniform. "At age 10 I knew my
destiny," he said. "Nothing would be better than to be a soldier."
    He always credited his success in battle to the training he received from
the tough school of non-coms who won World War II, hard-bitten, hard-drinking,
hard-fighting sergeants who drilled into him the basics of an infantryman's
life: sweat in training cut down on blood shed in battle; there was nothing
wrong with being out all night so long as you were present for roll call at
5:00 a.m., on your feet and in shape to run five miles before breakfast in
combat boots.
    In Korea, where he won his first Silver Star and Purple Heart before he
was old enough to vote, he started his combat career in what he later called a
"kill a commie for mommie" frame of mind. He was among the first volunteers
for Korea and later for Vietnam, where he perfected his skill. "He understood
the atmosphere of violence," Ward Just observed. "That meant he knew how to
keep his head, to think in danger's midst. In battle the worst thing is
paralysis. He mastered his own fear and learned how to kill. He led by
example, and his men followed."
    Just met him in the ruins of a base camp in the Central Highlands in 1966,
where he was a major commanding a battalion of the 101st Airborne. "He was
compact, with forearms the size of hams. His uniform was filthy and his use of
obscenity was truly inventive." What struck the journalist most forcefully was
"his enthusiasm, his magnetism, his exuberance, his invincible cheerfulness."
    To young officers in Vietnam and long afterwards, he presented an
unforgettable profile in courage. "Everyone called him Hack," recalled Dennis
Foley, a military historian and novelist who first saw him in action with the
1st Battalion of the 327th Infantry in 1965. "He was referred to by his radio
call sign of 'Steel Six.' He was tough, demanding and boyish all at the same
time, stocky with a slightly leathered complexion. His light hair and deep tan
made it hard for us to tell how old he was. He wore jungle fatigue trousers,
shower shoes, a green T-shirt and a Rolex watch. In the corner of his mouth
was a large and foul smelling cigar. As we entered the tent, he was bent over
a field table looking at a map overlay and drinking a bottle of San Miguel
beer."
    With Gen. S.L.A. "Slam" Marshall, he surveyed the war's early mayhem and
compiled the Army's experience into The Vietnam Primer, a bible on a style of
unconventional counter-guerrilla tactics he called "out gee-ing the G." His
finest moment came when he applied these tactics, taking the hopeless 4/39
Infantry Battalion in the Mekong Delta, turning it into the legendary Hardcore
Battalion. The men of the demoralized outfit saw him at first as a crazy
"lifer" out to get them killed. For a time they even put a price on his head
and waited for the first grunt to frag him.
    Within 10 weeks, the fiery young combat leader had so transformed the 4/39
that it was routing main force enemy units. He led from the front, at one
point getting out on the strut of a helicopter, landing on top of an enemy
position and hauling to safety the point elements of a company pinned down and
facing certain death. Thirty years later, the grateful enlisted men and young
officers of the 4/39, now grown old, are still urging the Pentagon to award
him the Medal of Honor for this action. So far, the Army has refused.
    On leaving the Army, Col. Hackworth retired to a farm on the Australian
Gold Coast near Brisbane. He became a business entrepreneur, making a small
fortune in real estate, then expanding a highly popular restaurant called
Scaramouche. As a leading spokesman for Australia's anti-nuclear movement he
was presented the United Nations Medal for Peace.
    As About Face was becoming a best seller, he returned to the United States
to marry Eilhys England, his one great love, who became his business and
writing partner. He became a powerful voice for military reform. From 1990 to
1996, as Newsweek Magazine's Contributing editor for defense, he covered the
first Gulf War as well as peacekeeping battles in Somalia, the Balkans, Korea
and Haiti. He captured this experience in Hazardous Duty, a volume of war
dispatches. Among his many awards as a journalist was the George Washington
Honor Medal for excellence in communications. He also wrote a novel, Price of
Honor, about the snares of Vietnam, Somalia and the Military Industrial
Complex. His last book, Steel My Soldiers' Hearts, was a tribute to the men of
the Hardcore Battalion.
    He was a regular guest on national radio and TV shows and a regular
contributor to magazines including People, Parade, Men's Journal, Self,
Playboy, Maxim and Modern Maturity. His column, Defending America, has
appeared weekly in newspapers across the country and on the website of
Soldiers For The Truth (http://www.sftt.org), a rallying point for military
reform. He and Ms. England have been the driving force behind the
organization, which defends the interests of ordinary soldiers while upholding
Hack's conviction that "nuke-the-pukes" solutions no longer work in an age of
terror that demands "a streamlined, hard-hitting force for the twenty-first
century."
    "Hack never lost his focus," said Roger Charles, president of Soldiers for
the Truth. "That focus was on the young kids that our country sends to bleed
and die on our behalf. Everything he did in his retirement was to try to give
them a better chance to win and to come home. That's one hell of a legacy."
    Over the final years of Col. Hackworth's life, his wife Eilhys fought
beside him during his gallant battle against bladder cancer, which now appears
with sinister regularity among Vietnam veterans exposed to Agent Blue. At one
point he considered dropping their syndicated column, only to make an abrupt
about face, saying, "Writing with you is the only thing that keeps me alive."
The last words he said to his doctor were "If I die, tell Eilhys I was
grateful for every moment she brought me, every extra moment I got to spend
with her. Tell her my greatest achievement is the love the two of us shared."
    Col. Hackworth is survived by Ms. England, one step-daughter and two
step-grandchildren, and four children and four grandchildren from two earlier
marriages. At a date to be announced, he will be buried in Arlington National
Cemetery with full military honors.
    Soldiers For The Truth is now working on legal action to compel the
Pentagon to recognize Agent Blue alongside the better known Agent Orange as a
killer and to help veterans exposed to it during the Vietnam War. Memorial
contributions can be sent to Soldiers For The Truth either by internet
(http://www.sftt.org) or by mail to, PO Box 54365, Irving, California,
92619-4365.

I asked Panama Bates about Hackworth and he described him as "clear-headed, forthright,

 politically and worldly astute."

 

God rest his soul and those of all other fallen defenders of our Constitution.

 

Around Here

Peoplenomics

Next week on Peoplenomics, we'll explore the relationship between technology transfers and the ends of empires. Especially in light of how we have transferred technology to China and other outposts of global corporatism.  Subscription information. This week's Peoplenomics (formerly inside Report) goes through a process of elimination trying to scope out what market-rocking event is bearing down on us around May 20th. 

 

Other stops of interest:  Elaine's head hunting page, a must read if you are in a medical related field.  Our book How to live on less than $10,000 a year is available at our bookstore.

 

Think this is an interesting site?  We'd appreciate it if you could send an email to a few friends telling them about it.  Click here...

 

Elaine has added a VP Biopharmaceutical (Boston) to her executive recruiting page...

 


Thursday

Jobs Report - Blahs Continue

Let's start with Productivity:

The Bureau of Labor Statistics of the U.S. Department of Labor today reported preliminary productivity data--as measured by output per hour of all persons--for the first quarter of 2005. The seasonally adjusted annual rates of productivity change in the first quarter were:

2.1 percent in the business sector and 2.6 percent in the nonfarm business sector.

Productivity in the business sector grew more slowly than in the fourth quarter of 2004, when it increased 3.7 percent. In the nonfarm business sector, however, productivity increased more in the first quarter than it had in the previous quarter. Nonfarm business labor productivity increased 2.1 percent in the fourth quarter of 2004.

In manufacturing, productivity changes in the first quarter were:

3.9 percent in manufacturing, 6.3 percent in durable goods manufacturing, and 1.3 percent in nondurable goods manufacturing.

Productivity growth in manufacturing in the first quarter of 2005 reflected a 3.3-percent increase in output and a drop of 0.7 percent in hours worked in the sector. Output and hours in manufacturing, which includes about 13 percent of U.S. business sector employment, tend to vary more from quarter to quarter than data for the aggregate business and nonfarm business sectors. First-quarter measures are summarized in table A and appear in detail in tables 1 through 5.

The data sources and methods used in the preparation of the manufacturing series differ from those used in preparing the business and nonfarm business series, and these measures are not directly comparable. Output measures for business and nonfarm business are based on measures of gross domestic product prepared by the Bureau of Economic Analysis of the U.S. Department of Commerce. Quarterly output measures for manufacturing reflect indexes of industrial production independently prepared by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System.

Let's see - output up, wages fairly flat - and a bigger than expected rise in the unemployment filings.  That ought to just set the market on fire. Of course we all know productivity numbers are a dream, but still, increase productivity and you can lay off more workers. Want proof?

 

"Good" Job Cuts

I am always amazed when a headline comes along like the ones out this morning alluding to IBM's cut of 13,000 jobs from its payrolls.  The stock is up well over 1% in the preopen, yet the reason that a big company sheds jobs is that it doesn't have something productive for them to do.  It's another one of those events where the market acts in a crazy way - rewarding a company for making cuts, yet hiding the fact that the underlying company made those cuts for a reason - one that may still exist going forward.

 

Weighing on the market after the happy talk will be a report that oil is up on supply concerns again. Lemme see: Oil goes up because of a healthy global economy and we have an oil shock.  Or, oil demand is met by having a recession that scrubs demand.  My, what a fine kettle of fish this is! Retail sales are up only slightly in reports out today.

 

If you have been following Michael Nystrom's series on the housing bubble, here's a link to part three of the series. A slow housing pop, Jim Kunstler's Long Emergency, can't we just speed some of this stuff up so we can work on the recovery side of the developing *hitstorms?  Events take so long to catch up with projections.

 

Then we have the  jobs numbers that are due out tomorrow, so the market is expected to turn in a mixed performance today. It's not too often that I mention television, mostly because I don't watch much of it.  That said, Warren Buffett being interviewed by Lou Dobbs last night on CNN was great and what Buffett didn't say about nuclear and biological terrorism and the pending further decline of the dollar was as interesting as what he did say.

 

Gaygate About to Impact

OK, we watch tremendous number of web sites but check out what's popping up in data: As many as five national magazines - mainstream  media - are about to pounce on the Gaygate story this month.  We have heard - and this is only rumor stuff so far - that Vanity Fair has a story in the works, and there are rumors about Rolling Stone, Wired, and a few others which may press dynamite content.  So be watching for this one to come down the pike like a railroad train. How many can the spinsters control at once?  How all this fits with the web bot predictions for the period is something we'll work on when there's time, but this could have a dramatic impact on the already lowering presidential approval ratings.

 

UK Voting

Tony Blair is expected to win reelection in England, which is voting today.  It will likely be our turn to ask the question of the Brits tomorrow that they asked by the island's press when Bush was re-elected - "How can so many people vote so stupidly?"  We expect to ask the same question back tomorrow. Meantime, there have been small explosions at the British consulate in New York.  We wouldn't be surprised to learn that this was a LIHOP/MYHOP deal to drive Brits toward the "safety" of re-electing TB.

 

In the BBC (Bush/Blair Conflict) MSM (mainstream media) reports that 21 people have been killed in Iraq in attacks aimed at security forces.  Talk in Washington about $100 million in funding for Bush's war that can't be accounted for - but then isn't that what a good war is about?

 

Speaking of which...

 

Thanks, Adobe

Someone in the Pentagon not knowing the ins and outs of Acrobat has given the world much more information about events surrounding the Italian journalist case.   From the coverage:

"The uncensored Pentagon report at least allows the international public to know that there were no less than 15,527 attacks on the occupation forces from July 2004 to March 2005. In Baghdad alone, from November to March 12, there were 2,404 attacks. These numbers confirm that when US Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and his minions spin that the situation in Iraq is under control they are essentially lying."

Shocked and awed.

 

Friends that Bite

We have been watching the case of an American-Israeli lobbying group which has been involved in a spy scandal - Israel spying on the US.  Latest development is an intelligence analyst has been charged with passing secrets to the group. In the crazy world we live in today, the Bush administration and CONgress seem baffled by the line between Judaism which is a religion, and Zionist which is a political agenda. If any other country was getting $5 billion a year in foreign aid and was spying on us, there would be immediate actions.  Or would there?  What about our relationship with China?  Same kind of thing:  Nothing wrong with Chinese people - but the government of China spying on the US with a technology theft agenda while we stock Wal-Mart with their products?  You see the non sequitors, no?  (That's more polite than admitting to any stupidity on our part.)

 

DeLay Delays Don't Work

Still, there are some members of the press who seem to have enough recall of elementary school government lessons to keep dogging Tom DeLay, one of the best politicians money can buy.  Already two GOP CONgressmen are stepping aside because they anted up to DeFend DeLay.

 

Polio is Back

Nigeria and Indonesia so far.  We expect more countries, cases, and problems.

 

 


Wednesday

Lots of 5+ Quakes

We have been alerted to the number of 5+ earthquakes today...no specific worries, just a trend change.  http://www.emsc-csem.org/cgi-bin/QDM_all.sh  Couple this with all the recent very deep (>50 km depth) quakes) and a question about the possibilities of a super quake are again rising.

 

Rates: 'No Right Answer'

As we reported right after the Fed decision on Tuesday, it is extremely rare for the Fed to have a typo like the one explained as an omission in something as important as the FOMC meeting statement - so much so that we just can't buy it.  The markets are expected to open a bit down this morning, but we expect that the downside momentum may be only a few days from really taking hold.  Maybe some tech strength due to semiconductor sales figures out this morning.

 

In truth the Fed's steno problem comes as a surprise to us, sort of like a policy speed bump warning that the Fed has just about reached the end of the line as the dual forces of hyperinflation on the one hand and fleeing foreign investors on the other leave the Fed with little freedom of movement.  Clearly, the Fed's raise of rates was due to something but one has to consider what.  If, as the statement said, long-term inflation expectations are well contained, it would seem there is little reason to raise rates, especially when the durable goods orders have recently hit the skids. There's also evidence of a slowing of consumer confidence, and if I were a practicing economist, I would have to say the evidence on the table should have kept the Fed from raising.  Nevertheless, they did, and the reason lurking off in the background is foreign bond sales which are necessary to keep the U.S. solvent.

 

We have picked up some interesting intelligence now from our colleagues at www.halfpasthuman.com which runs the web bot project:  In the present data streams there is some movement around a Swiss employment analysis of the U.S. which suggests that jobs in the latest month are down in excess of 300,000 persons.  When the latest BLS figures come out later this week, we expect modest growth of jobs to be shown.  The net of this will likely be more cognitive dissonance in the market - the condition arising when the mind rebels against the reality of what the eyes and other senses present.

 

A very knowledgeable reader writes in response to this:

George, in order for the yoy rate of payrolls to sustain current growth or higher (see chart), assuming no major revisions to the previous months' data, payrolls need to grow at least ~440,000 for Apr., 350,000 for May, and 239,000 for June or an average of 263,000 payroll jobs per month. To match the average yoy rate of growth for past expansions, payrolls would need to grow at an average monthly rate of ~225,000 versus the ~186,000-200,000 per month during the past 8-12 months.

Implausible? Perhaps not, at least in the short run. From the CBO's figures below, annual growth of social insurance receipts (a good proxy for payroll growth) has risen from the recession-like 1%-2% from '01 to summer '04 to the expansionary rate of in excess of 6%, at or above the rate of the '90s bubble era. One should note, however, that the quality of jobs are poor in this expansion, compared to previous periods, making these jobs more vulnerable than in pervious expansions to even a modest deceleration of GDP growth.

http://www.cbo.gov/showdoc.cfm?index=6236&sequence=0 

So, at this point in the US$-reflationary- and war-induced expansion, the headline payroll figures might seem strong on the surface, but the yoy comparisons are a bit tougher going forward, requiring historically STRONG payroll figures in the 260,000 range or else the yoy rate will decelerate. CBO figures, at least over the past 4-6 months support the expansionary growth suggested by the yoy payroll figures. It bears watching the CBO figures in the coming months, as the UoM survey (see below), which reflects the sentiment of the top 20% of households ("management" and "investor" class) and tends to lead the CB survey, is now below 90 and at levels typically seen at the onset of bear markets and recessions. If managers are becoming less confident going forward, we are likely to see investment, orders, and production scaled back, along with a slowdown in hiring later in the year.

http://www.martincapital.com/chart-pgs/CH_conco.HTM

But for the Fed, what is being painted as an oversight is more likely the last speed bump: As we see it, the Fed must keep raising rates to compel foreign bond buyers, yet another hike (as was signaled by the markets yesterday after the first cut announcement) means the housing bubble (which is already popping) would let go in a huge splat - assisted you understand by credit card debt, which is also tied to rates by the predatory lenders.  Last time I checked, this was virtually everyone.  8th hike in a row, if you track it.
 

A Reader's Theory

Behind the Fed moves, we are seeing all kinds of machinations in the bond market.  This has led one reader to offer up the following theory:

1. As we know, major foreign holders of U.S. treasury debt
include a significant, yet, mysterious and growing chunk
of T-Bills held by Caribbean hedge funds.

http://www.treas.gov/tic/mfh.txt
 

               MAJOR FOREIGN HOLDERS OF TREASURY SECURITIES
                       (in billions of dollars)
  
                     HOLDINGS 1/ AT END OF PERIOD

                                                2005            2005
COUNTRY                                          Feb             Jan

Japan                                          702.0           701.0
Mainland China                           196.5           195.2
United Kingdom                         171.0           160.7
Caribbean Banking Centers 2/     103.6            92.6
Korea                                           67.1            67.7
.
.
.
Grand Totals                            1995.8          1957.8

Of which official                        1180.5          1176.2
 Bills                                         235.2           242.3
 Bonds and notes                      945.3           934.0

Department of the Treasury/Federal Reserve Board
April 15, 2005
1/   Estimated foreign holdings of U.S. Treasury marketable and nonmarketable bills, bonds and notes
      are based on Treasury Foreign Portfolio Investment Survey benchmarks and on monthly data
      reported under the Treasury International Capital (TIC) reporting system.
2/    Includes Bahamas, Bermuda, Cayman Islands, Netherlands Antilles, and Panama.

2. These data are updated monthly:

http://www.treas.gov/tic/using-tic.html#release

"Historical Monthly Data. Data are UPDATED on or about the
11th business day of each month, with a 1.5 month lag. The
2005 release dates are Jan 18, Feb 15, Mar 15, Apr 15, May 16,
June 15, July 18, Aug 15, Sept 16, Oct 18, Nov 16 and Dec 15.
The time of release is normally at 09:00 a.m. in Washington D.C."

The March numbers will come out on May 16th.  If Japan and China
purchased as anemically as they did in February, the numbers are
going to be interesting, to say the least.

3. I'm wondering if the Spitzer/AIG "send reporters to Barbados
and dig deeper into what insurance companies are doing offshore"
thing could intersect with this...

http://biz.yahoo.com/ap/050503/spitzer_offshore_insurers.html?.v=2

He called this aspect of the insurance industry a "black hole" and
called for a fundamental rewriting of insurance laws.

"The states have ultimately failed in their regulation of the
insurance industry," Spitzer said. "The Feds can get the data and
they have refused to do it."

He criticized the Bush administration for its emphasis on tort
reform while ignoring deeper problems in the insurance industry.

4. Barbados is not part of the "Caribbean Banking Centers", but
could somehow be involved in laundering magical funny money on
its way from New York to the Caymans...  Factbook lists it as
an "offshore banking center and drug transshipment point":

http://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/geos/bb.html


Thoughts?  The May 16th date fits nicely.  What else is going on
around that time?

Interesting theory...

 

Nuclear Warning

Kofi Annan was busily chatting up the dangers of small countries developing nuclear weapons, telling a group that this threatens nuclear catastrophe.  Well, it does, it doesn't, and it does.  It does because because small country programs likely don't have the same attention to detail that the Super Powers now employ.  But, it never did, because when you look at the earliest days of the US or Soviet nuke programs, pollution and catastrophe were not part of the concerns, and it does because even if small countries are careful and responsible, we are likely to bomb their facilities, which will release radioactive problems anyway.

 

Al Qaeda #3 Captured

It's not Osama, but it's the number three player in al Qaeda being captured in Pakistan. With the capture, we have to return to the "stumper" of a problem:  If say the top 10 of al Qaeda were all caught tomorrow, do you believe there would be any change in travel hassles and the behavior of the government which is determined to 'search Grandma" at the airport, yet won't effectively close the leaky border with Mexico?  Doubt it. I mean it's nice that a capture has occurred, but even if every "evil doer" were safely confined, it would not turn our lost Constitutional freedoms back on.  Once power is taken, it's seldom returned.   I'd like to be happily wrong on this.  Doubt it, though.

 

Bombings

One mechanism, of course, that may be used by government to maintain it's power is to point to foreign developments and cast them as security problems at the heart of the empire.  Thus when we see items like the explosions in Iraq, which took 60 lives today, we look for some linkage being made as to how this is a threat to middle America. 

 

As was the case when Rome was falling, the press seems to be feeding us "cake and holidays' of such things like the Jackson (who cares?) trial, and now the craziness about American Idol - another who cares?  It's all distractions because the press doesn't want to ask hard questions about the misnamed Fed, the banksters, where the economy really is, and about insurance companies.  A reader concurs, writing:

On the subject of distractions, don't forget the "Runaway Bride", and the fact that the media is calling for a felony conviction for embarrassing them publicly. Maybe they should help pay the freight on the search costs out of their advertising revenues for their news infomercials.

Of course, my favorite is the "baseball steroids" controversy, wherein Congress wants to get involved to show they are "protecting our kids", when they conveniently turn their backs on the steroids pumped into all of us by the meat and dairy industries. I wrote both of my Senators about this and got nothing but form letters in reply stating how "concerned" they were about sports figures influence over children.

US Military Question

A leaked report says the US military has been sapped by Afghanistan and Iraq (no need for genius level thinking here) and that these conflicts have dramatically reduced our ability to win new conflicts quickly.  Notice that the version of the report that I linked to is the Chinese Xinhau press agency - which means (you go it!) that they have to be looking at North Korea and Taiwan and thinking "So much for capitalist hegemony..."

 

Air Force Academy - Christian School?

That's the report - that fundamentalist Christian values are being officially promoted at the Colorado Springs school.  Not that there's anything wrong with the values, but when any official religion creeps in to a military institution, there are separation of powers issues (Church/State) to be considered. Mandatory prayer, that kind of thing.

 


Tuesday

Fed Ups a Quarter, Trips a Lot

No surprise in that - but even more fun is the revision of the Fed comments after their initial release. Why?  because the market sensed a train wreck and the Fed got wind of it when markets turned down...

 

The Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System has issued the following press release(s):

Corrected FOMC statement http://www.federalreserve.gov/boarddocs/press/monetary/2005/20050503/

For immediate release

(Note: Corrects previous release to add sentence in second paragraph, which was dropped inadvertently.)

The Federal Open Market Committee decided today to raise its target for the federal funds rate by 25 basis points to 3 percent.

The Committee believes that, even after this action, the stance of monetary policy remains accommodative and, coupled with robust underlying growth in productivity, is providing ongoing support to economic activity. Recent data suggest that the solid pace of spending growth has slowed somewhat, partly in response to the earlier increases in energy prices. Labor market conditions, however, apparently continue to improve gradually. Pressures on inflation have picked up in recent months and pricing power is more evident. Longer-term inflation expectations remain well contained.

And yes, you would not be alone to read something approaching panic into the revision. Our other reader writes in:

"I think that the US Government has just hit an all time low.

The Fed, a few minutes before the market was closing and after Uncle Al saw that his legacy was being jeopardized by the stock markets, ex post facto revised the FOMC statement.

Now from what I read and understand, Uncle Al goes into these meetings with the statement already prepared and he gets the various voting members to sign off. So, neither Uncle Al or any of the other Board members (voting or not) or any of the minions who assist, saw this supposedly critical omission before the market was closing.

How can any of the other board members permit this to happen?

Not a single iota of intellectual honesty.

The Plunge Protection Team is not bad enough, but to compound the manipulation with these lies. A human with a sheep’s brain may be an evolutionary improvement since the survival of the fittest no longer seems to be workable.

I would appreciate if you could comment on this your UrbanSurvival site."

I could never have put it so eloquently. Lord help those still in the market who remain skeptical after this one...

An Unfortunate Web Bot Hit

Once again the "future seeing" technology of www.halfpasthuman.com has shocked us with its accuracy in apparently describing in emotional impact terms, the reported collision between two military jets over Iraq on Monday.  According to the BBC report:

"At least one US Marine Corps pilot has died and another is missing after two F/A-18 Hornet jets crashed in Iraq. The planes are thought to have been involved in a mid-air collision in bad weather on Monday evening, reports say.

A US military spokesman said the planes had been flying too high to have been shot down by hostile fire.

The search is continuing for the second pilot whose condition is not known. The planes were operating from the aircraft carrier USS Carl Vinson."

As to the forecast written and posted recently - well in advance of events:

Within the aspect of the [armies] we note that the press will be occupied with [two evil/unskilled captains], the [possibility of ominous defeat], and the [actions] of the [unwise](general) who is seen as [rewarding] (those) (without) [accomplishment]. These primary stories are to be augmented with some large level of press discussion about [confusion] and [massacre]. Further there is also some indications of [ships] (determinations) by their (captain) as being [outside] the [law], but nonetheless also seen within the Populace as being both [courageous] and [self-sacrificing]. In the end apparently a duality will exist wherein the [actions] of the [captain] will be seen by the Press as those of an [outlaw] while the Populace is seen [lauding a hero]. Our indications are that the Press will actually be aware enough to note the duality themselves.

Some of the labeling, such as works like "evil" are emotive words in modelspace, and do not reflect our assessments of the military. They arise in model space (after distilling millions upon millions of words) due in part to the globe-spanning nature of the linguistic shifts, which arise in some non-English languages.  Again, when it's a bot "hit" the underlying store is usually of high negative emotive impact, which tends to jump out of the processing.  Whether it turns out to actually have been a collision doesn't matter - what does matter is the immediate emotional impacts which are a near perfect fit.

Needless to say, this increases our concerns about the May 15-May 29 period  for markets which has shown up in data for about 4-months - because the larger the emotive values, the further into the future events seem to be located.  The Indonesia tsunami, for instance, was visible in August of 2004 as references to "300,000 dead", earthquakes shaking land back to a prior age, and "rising waters" - references which in retrospect may be seen as a perfect fit - yet again an unfortunate one - to later events five months on. 

One thing we are watching for - off money for a moment - is something having to do with 'double sun" and 3 bursts of something from the sun in a 24-hour period.

Thus with an event pinging four to five months out like whatever it is coming in May (and impacting the populous entity fully by the June 6 to July 28th period, we take renewed urgency in our preparations to be ready for anything.  The references on West Coast earthquakes, for example, are one possibility...the 3 CME's (or whatevers) are another

As an aside: We won't be attending the Time Travelers convention next week - too many people who don't get it.

French Could Vote "Yes!"

Many investors on Wall St have been semi-conscious of the fact that France has an election coming up which will be vital to maintaining the integrity and growth of the European Union.  Not that investors care a bit about society level change, mind you, but it's the currency fallout that does matter.  So when we read reports that French voters may adopt the Union, then we look at the possibility of sudden catastrophic collapse of the dollar (another one of those damn web bot predictions) as becoming a more real possibility.

 

Internet Impact?

We notice that newspaper circulation in some major cities, such as Los Angeles, is down significantly in the past year according to reports out Monday. We don't find anything particularly amazing about the report - as newspapers are a luxury few people can afford when compared to the much broader content offerings of the internet, or the more compact news reporting offered by television.

 

Taking Down Nukes

While it is unlikely to provide for a genuine solution to the problems of nuclear arms proliferation, the UN is starting meetings today to try and jawbone away the spread of atomic muscle.  Lots'a luck. For one thing, Iran says it will resume nuclear activities, but insists that enrichment is not part of the program.

 

What's even more frightening than proliferation is a report that US military commanders are asking for permission for a "first use" of nukes policy.

 

Sheep with Human Brains

We were once again amazed by CNN's coverage of the story sheep with human brains.  What they didn't point out was that we already are witness to another miracle - humans with sheep brains...

 

Papier Bitte

The move to standardize the driver's license nationally is picking up steam again. 11 states grant licenses to noncitizens. Notice the burden doesn't go on insurance companies?

 

Social Security Doublethink

Although there has been plenty of hype in the media bout the President's ideas on getting social security money in to bail out markets and buy US bonds, we find the so-called intellectual reasons to end social security misleading at best.  As Senator John Kerry pointed out recent, just not making the free lunch tax reductions for rich Americans permanent would more than fill the gap - besides no one is talking about Medicaid which runs out 30 years earlier.  (Bush's misnamed plan is not a plan - just some ideas.) Such is hyperbole when sleepovers in the White House are making headlines on the net. 

 

Road Rage Extremes

Because we're living (albeit temporarily) in the Los Angeles area, we've been watching the rash of people being shot on the freeways here. A little spooky...the headline number is 4 dead so far, but local police by press reports put the number of shooting at 11 this year.

 


Monday

ISM - Growth Slowing

"(Tempe, Arizona) — Economic activity in the manufacturing sector grew in April for the 23rd consecutive month, while the overall economy grew for the 42nd consecutive month, say the nation's supply executives in the latest Manufacturing ISM Report On Business®.

The report was issued today by Norbert J. Ore, C.P.M., chair of the Institute for Supply Management™ Manufacturing Business Survey Committee. "In April, the manufacturing sector grew for the 23rd consecutive month based on the ISM data. This represents the longest period of growth in the last 16 years. However, the rate of growth slowed to its lowest level since July 2003. The trend is definitely toward a slower pace of growth, and that should relieve some of the pricing pressure that the sector has experienced during 2004 and year to date in 2005. Declines in Inventories indicate that manufacturers are adjusting to slower growth in new orders."

Full details at http://www.ism.ws/ISMReport/ROB052005.cfm but the gist of this from a trading standpoint is that with ISM's numbers falling, a lot of sage street-wise guys (like Carter Worth at Oppenheimer) view the coming week as critical to a market which could break either way. Our own bias is to the downside, especially with the Fed meeting this week...

Seesaw Markets

The market is poised to open this morning on the upside, but whether than will be any more than a huge "buy the rumor" which will be greeted with a big "sell the news" on the other side of this week's Fed meeting seems to be the real question.  While most of the intelligent speculation centers on the odds of the Fed raising rates a quarter point, the fly in the ointment seems to be the rumor that the Feds can now raise a half point with relative impunity because of President signing the new corporate indenture laws - misnamed bankruptcy reform. This may seem like a good day trading opportunity, but it's in the "catch falling knives" department.

 

Missile?  What Missile?

Bury head, admit nothing - that's what's coming out of Asia in the wake of the latest North Korean missile test.  The UN meantime is ready to meet on a 1970 treaty on nuclear weapons to see if there's some way to deal with NK and Iranian developments.

 

Blair War/ Bush War

As Tony Blair faces reelection in the UK reports are surfacing that he was preparing Britain to take part in the war to topple Saddam almost a year before events.  This despite advise from top consultants that it was a bad move...

 

Standup Laura

Turns out Laura Bush was the real hit at the White House Correspondents Association dinner.  Of course we know she'd have to have a fine sense of humor....

 

Explosive Monday

28 people are dead from a munitions dump explosion in Afghanistan today.  In Iraq, 25 are dead from an attack on a funeral.  More important from a trend standpoint is the appearance of militant Islamic groups in Egypt. Then we get to this...

 

Exploding Cell Phone

We read the report of a cell phone exploding and injuring a 10-year old boy with interest.  We've had other reports about the high power batteries failing and causing fires - one more reason we're not carrying around the electronic dog leashes, thanks. It's one of our few sympathies with the Luddites, but cell phones and drivers, questions about health, and now more battery problems - thanks, but Ned Ludd was right. None of which is stopping Verizon from upping it's MCI bid to $8.5 billion.  ?

 

Speaking of buyouts, Neiman Marcus has been on the bloc and now apparently sold for a bit over $5 billion.

 

Berkshire Meeting

Warren Buffett5 was in usual form this weekend for the Berkshire Hathaway annual meeting - complete with a Ukulele. A few shareholders are worried about AIG fallout...  Speaking of which, AIG has announced another filing delay - and 3.3% of its net worth is going, going....

 

Hitchhikers Hit

We took in the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy last night as a little theatre up in Pasadena - great movie, thanks for the fish, and the mice are still in control. May we suggest that you be at least 3/4 awake to see this one for all the one liners in it.

 

News from Elliott Wave International

 
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Write when you get rich,

 

George Ure, The People's Economist

 

 

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