Monday, July 5, 2010
Is Capitalism Making a Comeback?
((King Obama may be more a more apropos title at this juncture, as my view suggests he is merely a figure-head (though not all that well liked of a figure head because King's don't normally take such derisive positions as it makes the State dinner's less enjoyable.)) Of course, he hosts these State dinners and has guests in the White House from all over the world - including sworn enemies of the US, capitalism, and Israel, but getting McChrystal in for a meeting on Afghanistan last year was too hard, spending more than 20 minutes with BP almost 2-months into the crisis didn't fit the agenda (surprisingly so given that it was an opportunity for Obama to pore more fuel onto the populist fire he's been fanning), and while we are giving away hundreds of millions to Hamas..ahem, I mean Palestine (someone show me where Palestine is on the map again??), the President is busy with Beyonce, the guy from Britian that was in the Beatles, and hyping Lebron James to come to Chicago.
So why do I feel that Capitalism, after 18 months of hibernation, is making a comeback vs. Imperialism/Marxism/Socialism etc-ism?
Let's look at a few recent events that suggest the balance of powers, which has also been in hibernation despite our Founder's design, is still in place. The DOE/Obama attempt to shut down Yucca Mountain as a nuclear repository has been rejected by an NRC panel of judges. The ruling says the President (any President) does not have the power to act without Congressional action on a matter of policy.
Why is this important? So much of Obama's agenda has involved using un-elected officials and czars to legislate and impose taxes/fines/levies/penalties on the US population. Whether it's EPA or DOE, solar or carbon, the President has driven his agenda through appointed bureaucrats.
Can't get Cap & Trade passed? Let the EPA make an endangerment finding that, despite contradicting the same agencies views over the previous decades to circumvent the Constitution.
Want renewables? Well, renewables aren't 'technically affordable' (as in they are on where near cost effective under any circumstances at any time)....unless of course you artificially increase the price of coal and other fossil fuels. Some would argue this would make the price of solar more affordable, on a relative basis. Other's - as in those that can do math - would argue that this does nothing to change the fact that renewables are no-where near as cost effective (let alone reliable for base-load generation.) All it does is add another indirect/direct tax on consumers as there would no longer be ANY reliable, cheap source of power. So Obama lives up to his pledge to "bankrupt" the coal industry, which is exactly what he said he would do when running for office ("shoot, there was a mike on me?" to anyone that wants to build a coal plant.
So maybe we are starting to see signs of a mean-reversion back towards capitalism. It would be a welcomed change. I read a very successful investment managers quarterly letter to investors last week where the manager noted that there are industries that are simply un-investable given the President's hand in matters. Obviously, if we begin to sense a shift in this control, stock's would rally. And while Obama would have you believe that means rich people get more rich, which is true and by no means a crime either, pension funds recover (limiting the long-term tax burden to offset losses in defined benefit plans), and consumers look at their statements and gain confidence, which drives investment and R&D spending for future business opportunities (blasphemy!?!?!! Has seemed that way.)
Lets Hope for Change after-all.
Thursday, May 27, 2010
A Repeat Performance? (Or Damn am I that GOOD)
Education
David Einhorn graduated Summa cum laude with distinction in all subjects from Cornell University, where he earned a BA in Government from the College of Arts and Sciences in 1991.
In May 2002, at the Ira W. Sohn Investment Research Conference, Einhorn made a speech about a mid-cap financial company called Allied Capital, and recommended shorting it. The stock opened down 20% the next day. Einhorn claimed that Allied was involved in lending practices that actively defrauded the Small Business Administration in the US, and therefore, indirectly, the US taxpayer. Allied said that Einhorn was engaged in market manipulation. To prove this, Allied fraudulently accessed his phone records using pretexting.
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) investigated Einhorn for market manipulation. Eliot Spitzer announced that he intended to start another investigation. In June 2007, the S.E.C. found that Allied broke securities laws relating to the accounting and valuation of illiquid securities it held.[4]
Einhorn has published a book, Fooling Some of the People All of the Time[5] regarding his battle. FoolingSomePeople.com, the website to promote the book, has information on his angle of the dispute, including a press release from Allied in February 2007 admitting that an agent of the company obtained Einhorn's phone records fraudulently.
His battle against Allied Capital lasted 6 years in all. Einhorn would come to view Allied as a microcosm of market trends. "What we've seen a year later is that Allied was the tip of an iceberg; that this kind of questionable ethic, philosophy and business practice was far more widespread than I recognized at the time," he said. "Our country, our economy, is paying a huge price for that."[6]
In late 2008, the Office of the Inspector General of the Securities Exchange Commission announced that it is investigating some of the charges that Einhorn has made about the SEC's mishandling of this matter, including the possibility that "a former SEC attorney may have taken confidential investigative materials with him when he left the Commission and provided those materials to a company he went to work for as a lobbyist."
Lehman Brothers
Starting July 2007, Einhorn became a short seller in Lehman Brothers stock. He believed that Lehman was under-capitalised, and had massive exposures to CDOs that were not written down properly.[7] He also claimed that they used dubious accounting practices in their financial filings.[1]
When Bear Stearns had to be bailed out by the Federal Reserve in March 2008, Lehman was widely considered to be in a fragile state. Lehman's CFO was Erin Callan, hailed by the Wall Street Journal as "Lehman's Straight Shooter". But she had been on the job for just six months and her background was as a tax lawyer, not in finance.[1]
In a speech at a conference in April, Einhorn started talking publicly about his Lehman short positions. Lehman called Greenlight and asked for a copy of the speech, which was sent over.[1][8]
In May 2008, Lehman CFO Callan had a private call with Einhorn and his analysts.[9]. The conversation with Callan was to give her a chance to explain discrepancies he had uncovered between the firm’s latest financial filing and what had been discussed during its conference call about that filing.
Ms. Callan is said to have fumbled some of her responses to questions on Lehman's asset valuations. When Einhorn later went public with the conversation, the declining Lehman share price took a further knock. Callan was fired a few weeks later, when Lehman reported a worse than expected $2.8bn second-quarter loss.
Lehman went bankrupt in September 2008.
References
- ^ David Einhorn, "About David", Fooling Some of the People All of the Time: A Long Short Story" (website/blog), last visited 2010/03/09.
- ^ Bob Pajich, "David Einhorn Donates All $659,730 WSOP Winnings", CardPlayer (website), 2006/08/08.
- ^ Following Clues the S.E.C. Didn’t
- ^ http://www.amazon.com/dp/0470073942/
- ^ Opalesque (13 March 2009). "Einhorn: Allied’s rise and fall shows poor oversight". http://www.opalesque.com/50800/david%20einhorn/Comment_Study_says_could_be208.html.
- ^ Lina Saigol, "Denial disguises Lehman reality", Financial Times / FT.com, 2008/09/15.
- ^ Cyrus Sanati, Erin Callan: the Greta Garbo of Wall Street, New York Times, 2010/03/09.
- ^ "How to play the short game". Financial Times. 2008-07-16. http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/499c2242-5356-11dd-8dd2-000077b07658.html. Retrieved 2008-09-18.
- 'David the Goliath'[dead link] Worth Magazine interview with Einhorn
- "The End of the Financial World as We Know It," New York Times
- "Einhorn bets on major currency 'death spiral'" Marketwatch.com
Before this recession it appeared that absent action, the government’s long-term commitments would become a problem in a few decades. I believe the government response to the recession has created budgetary stress sufficient to bring about the crisis much sooner. Our generation — not our grandchildren’s — will have to deal with the consequences.
According to the Bank for International Settlements, the United States’ structural deficit — the amount of our deficit adjusted for the economic cycle — has increased from 3.1 percent of gross domestic product in 2007 to 9.2 percent in 2010. This does not take into account the very large liabilities the government has taken on by socializing losses in the housing market. We have not seen the bills for bailing out Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and even more so the Federal Housing Administration, which is issuing government-guaranteed loans to non-creditworthy borrowers on terms easier than anything offered during the housing bubble. Government accounting is done on a cash basis, so promises to pay in the future — whether Social Security benefits or loan guarantees — do not count in the budget until the money goes out the door.
A good percentage of the structural increase in the deficit is because last year’s “stimulus” was not stimulus in the traditional sense. Rather than a one-time injection of spending to replace a cyclical reduction in private demand, the vast majority of the stimulus has been a permanent increase in the base level of government spending — including spending on federal jobs. How different is the government today from what General Motors was a decade ago? Government employees are expensive and difficult to fire. Bloomberg News reported that from the last peak businesses have let go 8.5 million people, or 7.4 percent of the work force, while local governments have cut only 141,000 workers, or less than 1 percent.
Public sector jobs used to offer greater job security but lower pay. Not anymore. In 2008, according to the Cato Institute, the average federal civilian salary with benefits was $119,982, compared with $59,909 for the average private sector worker; the disparity has grown enormously over the last decade.
The question we need to ask is this: If we don’t change direction, how long can we travel down this path without having a crisis? The answer lies in two critical issues. First, how long will the capital markets continue to finance government borrowings that may be refinanced but never repaid on reasonable terms? And second, to what extent can obligations that are not financed through traditional fiscal means be satisfied through central bank monetization of debts — that is, by the printing of money?
The recent United States credit crisis was attributable in large measure to capital requirements and risk models that incorrectly assumed AAA-rated securities were exempt from default risk. We learned the hard way that when the market ignores credit risk, the behavior of borrowers and lenders becomes distorted.
It was once unthinkable that “risk-free” institutions could fail — so unthinkable that the chief executives of the companies that recently did fail probably didn’t realize when they crossed the line from highly creditworthy to eventually insolvent. Surely, had they seen the line, they would, to a man, have stopped on the solvent side.
Our government leaders are faced with the same risk today. At what level of government debt and future commitments does government default go from being unthinkable to inevitable, and how does our government think about that risk?
I recently posed this question to one of the president’s senior economic advisers. He answered that the government is different from financial institutions because it can print money, and statistically the United States is not as bad off as some other countries. For an investor, these responses do not inspire confidence.
He went on to say that the government needs to focus on jobs now, because without an economic recovery, the rest does not matter. It’s a valid point, but an insufficient excuse for holding off on addressing the long-term structural deficit. If we are going to spend more now, it is imperative that we lay out a credible plan to avoid falling into a debt trap. Even using the administration’s optimistic 10-year forecast, it is clear that we will have problematic deficits for the next decade, which ends just as our commitments to baby boomers accelerate.
Modern Keynesianism works great until it doesn’t. No one really knows where the line is. One obvious lesson from the economic crisis is that we should get rid of the official credit ratings that inspire false confidence and, worse, are pro-cyclical, aggravating slowdowns and inflating booms. Congress has a rare opportunity in the current regulatory reform effort to eliminate the rating system. For now, it does not appear interested in taking sufficiently aggressive action. The big banks and bond buyers have told Congress they want to continue the current system.
As William Gross, the managing director of the bond management company Pimco, put it in his last newsletter, “Firms such as Pimco with large credit staffs of their own can bypass, anticipate and front run all three [rating agencies], benefiting from their timidity and lack of common sense.”
Given how sophisticated bond buyers use the credit rating system to take advantage of more passive market participants, it is no wonder they stress the continued need to preserve the status quo.
It would be better to have each investor individually assess credit-seeking entities. Certainly, the creditworthiness of governments should not be determined by a couple of rating agency committees.
Consider this: When Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner promises that the United States will never lose its AAA rating, he chooses to become dependent on the whims of the Standard & Poor’s ratings committee rather than the diverse views of the many participants in the capital markets. It is not hard to imagine a crisis where just as the Treasury secretary seeks buyers of government debt in the face of deteriorating market confidence, a rating agency issues an untimely downgrade, setting off a rush of sales by existing bondholders. This has been the experience of many troubled corporations, where downgrades served as the coup de grĂ¢ce.
The current upset in the European sovereign debt market is a prequel to what might happen here. Banks can hold government debt with a so-called zero-risk weighting, which means zero capital requirements. As a result, European banks stocked up on Greek debt, and sold sovereign credit default swaps, and now need to be bailed out to avoid another banking crisis.
As we saw first in Dubai and now in Greece, it appears that governments’ response to the failure of Lehman Brothers is to use any means necessary to avoid another Lehman-like event. This policy transfers risk from the weak to the strong — or at least the less weak — setting up the possibility of the crisis ultimately spreading from the “too small to fails,” like Greece, to “too big to bails,” like members of the Group of 7 industrialized nations.
We should have learned by now that each credit — no matter how unthinkable its failure would be — has risk and requires capital. Just as trivial capital charges encouraged lenders and borrowers to overdo it with AAA-rated collateral debt obligations, the same flawed structure in the government debt market encourages and therefore practically ensures a repeat of this behavior — leading to an even larger crisis.
I don’t believe a United States debt default is inevitable. On the other hand, I don’t see the political will to steer the country away from crisis. If we wait until the markets force action, as they have in Greece, we might find ourselves negotiating austerity programs with foreign creditors.
Some believe this could be avoided by printing money. Despite the promises by the Federal Reserve chairman, Ben Bernanke, not to print money or “monetize” the debt, when push comes to shove, there is a good chance the Fed will do so, at least to the point where significant inflation shows up even in government statistics.
That the recent round of money printing has not led to headline inflation may give central bankers the confidence that they can pursue this course without inflationary consequences. However, printing money can go only so far without creating inflation.
Government statistics are about the last place one should look to find inflation, as they are designed to not show much. Over the last 35 years the government has changed the way it calculates inflation several times. According to the Web site Shadow Government Statistics, using the pre-1980 method, the Consumer Price Index would be over 9 percent, compared with about 2 percent in the official statistics today.
While the truth probably lies somewhere in the middle, this doesn’t even take into account inflation we ignore by using a basket of goods that don’t match the real-world cost of living. (For example, health care costs are one-sixth of G.D.P. but only one-sixteenth of the price index, and rising income and payroll taxes do not count as inflation at all.)
Why does the government understate rising costs? Low official inflation benefits the government by reducing inflation-indexed payments, including Social Security. Lower official inflation means higher reported real G.D.P., higher reported real income and higher reported productivity.
Subdued reported inflation also enables the Fed to rationalize easy money. The Fed wants to have low interest rates to fight unemployment, which, in a new version of the trickle-down theory, it believes can be addressed through higher stock prices. The Fed hopes that by denying savers an adequate return in risk-free assets like savings deposits, it will force them to speculate in stocks and other “risky assets.” This speculation drives stock prices higher, which creates a “wealth effect” when the lucky speculators spend some of their gains on goods and services. The purchases increase aggregate demand and lead to job creation.
Easy money also aids the banks, helping them earn back their still unacknowledged losses. This has the perverse effect of discouraging banks from making new loans. If banks can lend to the government, with no capital charge and no perceived risk and earn an adequate spread, then they have little incentive to lend to small businesses or consumers. (For this reason, higher short-term rates could very well stimulate additional lending to the private sector.)
Easy money also helps the fiscal position of the government. Lower borrowing costs mean lower deficits. In effect, negative real interest rates are indirect debt monetization. Allowing borrowers, including the government, to get addicted to unsustainably low rates creates enormous solvency risks when rates eventually rise.
While one can debate where we are in the recovery, one thing is clear — the worst of the last crisis has passed. Nominal G.D.P. growth is running in the mid-single digits. The emergency has passed and yet the Fed continues with an emergency zero-interest rate policy. Perhaps easy money is still appropriate — but a zero-rate policy creates enormous distortions in incentives and increases the likelihood of a significant crisis later. It was not lost on the market that during this month’s sell-off, with rates around zero, there is no room for further cuts should the economy roll over.
EASY money has negative consequences in addition to the risk of inflation and devaluing the dollar. It can also feed asset bubbles. In recent years, we have gone from one bubble and bailout to the next. Each bailout has rewarded those who acted imprudently. This has encouraged additional risky behavior, feeding the creation of new, larger bubbles.
The Fed bailed out the equity markets after the crash of 1987, which fed a boom ending with the Mexican crisis and bailout. That Treasury-financed bailout started a bubble in emerging market debt, which ended with the Asian currency crisis and Russian default. The resulting organized rescue of Long-Term Capital Management’s counterparties spurred the Internet bubble. After that popped, the rescue led to the housing and credit bubble. The deflationary aspects of that bubble popping created a bubble in sovereign debt, despite the fiscal strains created by the bailouts. The Greek crisis may be the first sign of the sovereign debt bubble bursting.
Though we don’t know what’s going to happen next, the good news for our grandchildren is that we will have to face our own debts. If we realize that our own future is at risk, we might be more serious about changing course. If we don’t, Mr. Geithner and others might regret having never said never about America’s rating."
"David Einhorn is the president of Greenlight Capital, a hedge fund, and the author of “Fooling Some of the People All of the Time.” Investment accounts managed by Greenlight may have a position (long or short) in the securities discussed in this article."
Guns and Gold people, Guns and Gold. It's gonna be a ....
-----The Angry Trader
Tuesday, May 18, 2010
So How Much Worse Is the Gulf of Mexico Spill Than The Exxon Valdez?
I know Alaska still deals with the tragedy of the Valdez. Check out this conclusion from a study conducted no earlier than 2003:
"The amount of Exxon Valdez oil remaining substantially exceeds the sum total of all previous oil pollution on beaches in Prince William Sound, including oil spilled during the 1964 earthquake. This Exxon Valdez oil is decreasing at a rate of 0-4% per year, with only a 5% chance that the rate is as high as 4%. At this rate, the remaining oil will take decades and possibly centuries to disappear entirely."
Saturday, May 8, 2010
How The Ipad Is Reducing My Carbon Footprint
Tuesday, May 4, 2010
"Some" Muslims Sure are Dumb!!
At some point I will update this post to put this retards picture up for viewing but our government is not done torturing the shit out of him before they can show us the "before we beat the shit out him" photos. 3 kerosene cans, black powder, firecrackers in a car, which I am going to assume was filled with gasoline (although these guys are so dumb it was probably on empty) and he cannot light the fucking wick? What is wrong with these guys?
Sunday, April 11, 2010
Our First Product Review--Slingbox--They can go F Themselves
I used to watch sports events when I would travel to the west coast. East coast game on at 1? Get into hotel, fire up the wireless high speed connection, a few clicks and BOOM--I'm watching the football game my dvr recorded. Moreover, you could actually take control of your TV and watch live events as well. A great piece of electronics, and at the time, they had the best customer service.
A few years ago....you would click on the "chat" button and have a real interaction with customer support. they ultimately would ask for permission to take control of your pc and set everything up very quickly. It was great. It was as good as the service they offer....rarely did you ever get that level of customer service, anywhere. It was a better customer service than they offer at Linksys (owned and controlled by Cisco). It was such a great experience, I would tell people unsolicited about it!!
That has all changed. It's funny actually. I was out at the CES (Consumer Electronic Show) in Vegas last year. Slingbox was there and so were some pretty significant players from senior management. I pulled them aside and told them they had a broken business plan/model. That they could not just charge for hardware and give the software away for free--that they would not grow the way they planned. They smiled and shook my hand.
Fast forward a year later. Hardware is still free, but when you have a technical issue, they want to charge you $30 FUCKING DOLLARS PER CALL TO THE CALL CENTER----YOU HAVE GOT TO BE FUCKING KIDDING ME!!!!!
I just tried to get Alberto from slingbox to fix my issue for free. He kept humping the $30 fee. I told him to go F off. I told him that the new2. A new device costs anywhere from $199-$299. There are additional attachments running in the $100 range. Knowing that it is not as simple as they say to set up, it will take 2 or 3 telephone calls over the first several months to get it all up and running consistently. That's a hundred bones right there.
So I say FUCK SLINGBOX, you cheap ass mother fuckers. Take your $30 and cram it into a little ball, and then SHOVE IT UP YOUR CORPORATE ASS!
Sunday, April 4, 2010
NO GRAPE JELLY!!!!
Sunday, February 7, 2010
08-09 Was Just a Tune-Up
This week, we got word that the PIGS were in trouble. Funny acronym. They are PIGS. Drowning in their own debt, these 4 countries are incapable of paying off said debt. So what exactly is going on here? An article in The Observer dated Feb. 7, 2009 gives a great summary written by Ashley Seager:
"The governments of Greece and Portugal, and also Spain and Italy, are under attack from the bond markets. That may not sound like a national emergency for the countries concerned but the financial impact is real.
Greece started the rot late last year when it revealed that its budget deficit would be twice as big as it thought. Markets hate uncertainty, and being lied to.
So they sold Greek government bonds with a vengeance. That matters because governments that run big deficits need to finance them by selling new bonds to financial markets. If people don't want to buy them, they have to offer a higher coupon, or interest rate, to investors.
By selling off existing Greek bonds, dealers pushed up the yields on those bonds because yields move inversely to price.
In normal times you would expect any sovereign debt of a member country of the euro zone to trade at similar yields to those of the bloc's heavyweight – Germany.
But no longer. The so-called "spread", or difference, between Greek bond yields and bunds (German bonds) widened to nearly 400 basis points late last month. That means if bunds are yielding 3%, Greek bond yields are more like 7%. When Greece recently made a new bond issue, it had to put a coupon on the gilt of a hefty 6.2%. This "risk premium" that investors demand in exchange for holding Greek bonds has shot up because the risk of default has surged with the budget deficit.
That means that the Greeks have to pay twice as much to borrow money to finance their deficit as the Germans. And that is bad news for a country already running a deficit of nearly 13% of national income.The spread of Greek bonds over bunds fell back a bit last week after the European Commission accepted Greek government assurances that it would slash its budget deficit this year.
But the problems are no longer confined to Greece. Attention swung last week to the other southern Europe economies, known rather unkindly as the "Pigs" (Portugal, Italy, Greece and Spain).
The spread of Portuguese debt shot up to around 175 basis points over bunds, but remained well below that of Greece.
"The state of Portugal's public finances is challenging. Gross government debt reached 77% of GDP in 2009 and, with an expected deficit of over 8% this year, it should rise further. We expect the debt ratio to reach 95% of GDP in 2014," said Christel Aranda-Hassel, economist at Credit Suisse. "Portugal's relatively weak economic performance poses one of the main medium-term risks."
And all the uncertainty surrounding sovereign debt worries spread late last week into many other markets, spreading renewed fears about the strength of the recovery in the global economy.
If all main economies have to struggle to pay off the huge deficits run up as a result of their recessions, they could be squeezed by rising taxes and spending cuts for years to come. Suddenly, the robust global recovery world stock markets were pricing in looks a bit overoptimistic.
Ole Hansen, a senior manager at Saxo Bank, put it like this: "On Thursday Portuguese and Spanish stocks suffered their biggest daily fall since 2008 as the worries surrounding Greece spread to other weak economies within the Euro zone.
"This fear led to sharp falls in shares across continents and a worldwide flight to the safety of US dollar and treasuries. The euro traded down to a seven month low and all projections about a year of continued dollar weakness has all but disappeared, for now at least."
Finally, though, a note about Ireland. The Irish economy tanked in the global recession, losing more than 10% of its national output. The accompanying graph, though, shows that markets were convinced by the Irish government's emergency, austerity budget last year. The spread of Irish debt over bunds has fallen back somewhat.
Ireland has decided to take the whole thing on the chin and make the painful budget adjustments straight away. The markets believe them, but they don't yet believe Greece and the other Pigs."
Thursday, January 28, 2010
Sunday, January 24, 2010
Supreme Courts Sets Themeselves Up To Be Thrown Out With Congress
The law, as narrowed by a 2007 Supreme Court decision, applied to communications “susceptible to no reasonable interpretation other than as an appeal to vote for or against a specific candidate.” The five opinions in Thursday’s decision ran to more than 180 pages, with Justice John Paul Stevens contributing a passionate 90-page dissent. In sometimes halting fashion, he summarized it for some 20 minutes from the bench on Thursday morning.
Justice Kennedy’s majority opinion said that there was no principled way to distinguish between media corporations and other corporations and that the dissent’s theory would allow Congress to suppress political speech in newspapers, on television news programs, in books and on blogs.
Justice Stevens responded that people who invest in media corporations know “that media outlets may seek to influence elections.” He added in a footnote that lawmakers might now want to consider requiring corporations to disclose how they intended to spend shareholders’ money or to put such spending to a shareholder vote.
On its central point, Justice Kennedy’s majority opinion was joined by Chief Justice Roberts and Justices Alito, Thomas and Antonin Scalia. Justice Stevens’s dissent was joined by Justices Stephen G. Breyer, Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Sonia Sotomayor.
IT MEANS THAT TIMES ARE GOING TO BE GETTING WORSE, NOT BETTER. It means that the media now will not only have their political slants to run with (fox vs. msnbc) but now corporations will be able to add serious cash to their political allies in the media...bombarding the public with their messages.
Saturday, January 23, 2010
Pissing into the Wind
Fast forward to 2010 (it is amazing how things change in a few months) and it does appear that a few chinks in the Obama Economic team are starting to appear.
Lets just deal with Holiday Sales were. The data that has recently been published is quite contrary to the data points being jammed down American's throats in an effort to keep the Obama Administration's plan of hope and hype to continue. In reality, the Commerce Department released numbers last week indicating that retail sales FELL by .03% in the month of December. Were you aware of that fact? I doubt it because it would run counter to the Administration's plan to feed you data you need to hear, not want to hear. Let me explain a simple fact to you out there: THAT IS NOT A SIGN OF A TRUE RECOVERY!!!! Take a look at the chart below I pulled from Reuters.
Now...granted the chart looks a hell of a lot better than 2008. However, a RECOVERY is what we have been talking about, but in reality what we have is a very fragile stability from April through the end of 09. This brings me to the beginning of what I feel will be months and months if not years of ranting again about bad policy coming from D.C.
Take a look at this chart:
Notice anything strange in this one? See that big spike in jobless claims that started again? Know what that means? There is ONLY ONE answer: The Obama Administration has failed to create any sustainable jobs for the American people. Zip. Zero. Zilch. None.
When Obama ran for office and shortly after taking office, he promised real job creation. This was to be driven by the revamping and recreation of our country's infrastructure that is in desperate need of repair. Moreover clean energy jobs were to be created right out of the shoot, also helping the unemployed find new but more importantly sustainable jobs for the future. THIS HAS NOT HAPPENED.
Instead, as you all know the Dopes at 1500 Pennsylvania decided to change health care for the last year. Now that that is dead on arrival....they announced they are focused on job creation. WHAT A FUCKING JOKE. What the Democrats have proven in year 1 of the Obama term is that they cannot look out for others. They cannot spend, spend and spend more. Nothing that has happened in DC this year has had a positive impact on the average American (I do not include bullshit printing of money to give to consumers for programs like cash for clunkers as that free money will be the real undoing of our economy in the years to come).
People have less money, fewer prospects for new or sustainable jobs and more uncertainty about their future than they ever have. This is why you see Democrats being thrown out of office and being replaced by Republicans. It is the ONLY reason, despite what liberals will try and tell you. The libs actually had the audacity this week to try and argue with me that Massachusetts is NOT that liberal any longer and its not the Blue state many think it is. Pa-Leeese.
What we saw in Massachusetts this week was a populist revolt AGAINST Obama and his policies. It is not the first time this year we have seen it but clearly it is the most pronounced due to the direct correlation to the ability of one party's intent to jam a 1500 page bill down the American public's collective throat. Kudos to the voters of Massachusetts. No better message could have been sent then to elect a Republican to Ted Kennedy's seat in Congress.
Given the bullshit in DC these days, the new war on Banks being led by Mr. Obama and the complete inability to create on single new job for Americans has got me off the bench and man it feels good to NOT be pissing into the wind any longer. It feels good to be back, even better to vent.