Monday, February 23, 2009

handbook 2009

Health:
1. Drink plenty of water.
2. Eat breakfast like a king, lunch like a prince and dinner like a beggar.
3. Eat more foods that grow on trees and plants and eat less food that is manufactured in plants.
4. Live with the 3 E's -- Energy, Enthusiasm, and Empathy.
5. Make time to practice meditation, yoga, and prayer.
6. Play more games.
7. Read more books than you did in 2008.
8. Sit in silence for at least 10 minutes each day.
9. Sleep for 7 hours.
10. Take a 10-30 minutes walk every day. And while you walk, smile.

Personality:
11. Don't compare your life to others'. You have no idea what their journey is all about.
12. Don't have negative thoughts or things you cannot control. Instead invest your energy in the positive present moment.
13. Don't over do. Keep your limits.
14. Don't take yourself so seriously. No one else does.
15. Don't waste your precious energy on gossip.
16. Dream more while you are awake.
17. Envy is a waste of time. You already have all you need.
18. Forget issues of the past. Don't remind your partner with his/ her mistakes of the past. That will ruin your present appiness.
19. Life is too short to waste time hating anyone. Don't hate others.
20.. Make peace with your past so it won't spoil the present.
21. No one is in charge of your happiness except you.
22. Realize that life is a school and you are here to learn. Problems are simply part of the curriculum that appear and fade away like algebra class but the lessons you learn will last a lifetime.
23. Smile and laugh more.
24. You don't have to win every argument. Agree to disagree.

Society:
25. Call your family often.
26. Each day give something good to others.
27. Forgive everyone for everything.
28. Spend time with people over the age of 70 & under the age of 6.
29. Try to make at least three people smile each day.
30. What other people think of you is none of your business.
31. Your job won't take care of you when you are sick. Your friends will. Stay in touch.

Life:
32. Do the right thing!
33. Get rid of anything that isn't useful, beautiful or joyful.
34. GOD heals everything.
35. However good or bad a situation is, it will change.
36. No matter how you feel, get up, dress up and show up.
37. The best is yet to come.
38. When you awake alive in the morning, thank GOD for it.
39. Your Inner most is always happy. So, be happy.

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

China Needs U.S. Guarantees for Treasuries

By Belinda Cao and Judy Chen

Feb. 11 (Bloomberg) -- China should seek guarantees that its $682 billion holdings of U.S. government debt won’t be eroded by “reckless policies,” said Yu Yongding, a former adviser to the central bank.
The U.S. “should make the Chinese feel confident that the value of the assets at least will not be eroded in a significant way,” Yu, who now heads the World Economics and Politics Institute at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, said in response to e-mailed questions yesterday from Beijing. He declined to elaborate on the assurances needed by China, the biggest foreign holder of U.S. government debt.
Benchmark 10-year Treasury yields climbed above 3 percent this week on speculation the government will increase borrowing as President Barack Obama pushes his $838 billion stimulus package through Congress. Premier Wen Jiabao said last month his government’s strategy for investing would focus on safeguarding the value of China’s $1.95 trillion foreign reserves.
China may voice its concerns over U.S. government finances and the potential for a weaker dollar when Secretary of State Hillary Clinton visits China on Feb. 20, according to He Zhicheng, an economist at Agricultural Bank of China, the nation’s third-largest lender by assets. A People’s Bank of China official, who didn’t wish to be identified, declined to comment on the telephone.
Clinton Talks
“In talks with Clinton, China will ask for a guarantee that the U.S. will support the dollar’s exchange rate and make sure China’s dollar-denominated assets are safe,” said He in Beijing. “That would be one of the prerequisites for more purchases.”
Chinese Foreign Ministry Spokeswoman Jiang Yu said yesterday that talks with Clinton would cover bilateral relations, the financial crisis and international affairs, according to the Xinhua news agency.
U.S. government bonds returned 14 percent last year including price gains and reinvested interest, the most since rallying 18.5 percent in 1995, according to indexes compiled by Merrill Lynch & Co. Concern that the flood of bonds would overwhelm demand caused Treasuries to lose 3.08 percent in January, the steepest drop in almost five years, Merrill data show. The yield on the benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury has risen to 2.80 percent from 2.21 percent at the end of last year.
Blackstone Loss
China’s loss of more than $5 billion from investing $10.5 billion of its reserves in New York-based Blackstone Group LP, Morgan Stanley and TPG Inc. since mid-2007 may increase its demand for the relative safety of Treasuries.
“The government will be a net buyer of Treasuries in the short term because there’s no sign they have changed their strategy,” said Zhang Ming, secretary general of international finance research center at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences in Beijing. “But personally, I don’t think we should increase holdings because the medium- and long-term risks are quite high.”
Bill Gross, co-chief investment officer of Pacific Investment Management Co., said on Feb. 5 the Federal Reserve will have to buy Treasuries to curb yields as debt sales increase. U.S. central bank officials said Jan. 28 they were “prepared” to buy longer-term Treasuries.
“The biggest concern for China to continue buying U.S. Treasuries is that if Obama’s stimulus doesn’t work out as expected, the Fed may have to print money to cover the deficit,” said Shen Jianguang, a Hong Kong-based economist at China International Capital Corp., partly owned by Morgan Stanley. “That will cause a dollar slump and the U.S. government debt will lose its allure for being a safe haven for international investors.”
Currency Rese
rvesChina’s foreign-exchange reserves, the world’s biggest, grew about $40 billion in the fourth quarter, the smallest expansion since mid-2004 as an end to yuan appreciation since July prompted investors to pull money out.
The world’s third-biggest economy grew 6.8 percent in the fourth quarter, the slowest pace in seven years. Policy makers cut interest rates by the most in 11 years and announced a 4 trillion yuan ($585 billion) economic stimulus plan in November to spur domestic demand.
Yu said China won’t channel its reserves toward stimulating the economy because its trade surplus is sufficient to fund any import needs. China’s trade surplus was $39 billion in December, the second-largest on record.
A decline in reserves “isn’t likely because of China’s huge twin surpluses,” Yu said. China “should diversify its reserves away from U.S. Treasuries if the value of China’s foreign-exchange reserves is in danger of being inflated away by the U.S. government’s pump-priming,” he said.
Linking Disputes
China may try to link trade and currency policy disputes to its future investment in Treasuries, said Lu Zhengwei, an economist in Shanghai at Industrial Bank Co., a Chinese lender partly owned by a unit of HSBC Holdings Plc.
U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner accused China on Jan. 22 of “manipulating” the yuan to give an unfair advantage to its exporters in the global market. The currency has dropped 0.16 percent since the start of this year to 6.8342 per dollar, following a 21 percent gain since a peg against the dollar was abandoned in July 2005.
“China can also use this opportunity to get a promise from the U.S. not to make inappropriate requests on bilateral trade and the Chinese yuan,” Lu said. “We can’t afford more yuan appreciation as the economy is facing a serious slowdown.”

Saturday, February 7, 2009

The Ship of Death

David Herbert Lawrence (1885-1930)

Version 1

I
1Now it is autumn and the falling fruit
2and the long journey towards oblivion.

3The apples falling like great drops of dew
4to bruise themselves an exit from themselves.

5And it is time to go, to bid farewell
6to one's own self, and find an exit
7from the fallen self.

II
8Have you built your ship of death, O have you?
9O build your ship of death, for you will need it.

10The grim frost is at hand, when the apples will fall
11thick, almost thundrous, on the hardened earth.

12And death is on the air like a smell of ashes!
13Ah! can't you smell it?
14And in the bruised body, the frightened soul
15finds itself shrinking, wincing from the cold
16that blows upon it through the orifices.

III
17And can a man his own quietus make
18with a bare bodkin?

19With daggers, bodkins, bullets, man can make
20a bruise or break of exit for his life;
21but is that a quietus, O tell me, is it quietus?

22Surely not so! for how could murder, even self-murder
23ever a quietus make?

IV
24O let us talk of quiet that we know,
25that we can know, the deep and lovely quiet
26of a strong heart at peace!

27How can we this, our own quietus, make?

V
28Build then the ship of death, for you must take
29the longest journey, to oblivion.

30And die the death, the long and painful death
31that lies between the old self and the new.

32Already our bodies are fallen, bruised, badly bruised,
33already our souls are oozing through the exit
34of the cruel bruise.

35Already the dark and endless ocean of the end
36is washing in through the breaches of our wounds,
37Already the flood is upon us.

38Oh build your ship of death, your little ark
39and furnish it with food, with little cakes, and wine
40for the dark flight down oblivion.

VI
41Piecemeal the body dies, and the timid soul
42has her footing washed away, as the dark flood rises.

43We are dying, we are dying, we are all of us dying
44and nothing will stay the death-flood rising within us
45and soon it will rise on the world, on the outside world.

46We are dying, we are dying, piecemeal our bodies are dying
47and our strength leaves us,
48and our soul cowers naked in the dark rain over the flood,
49cowering in the last branches of the tree of our life.

VII
50We are dying, we are dying, so all we can do
51is now to be willing to die, and to build the ship
52of death to carry the soul on the longest journey.

53A little ship, with oars and food
54and little dishes, and all accoutrements
55fitting and ready for the departing soul.

56Now launch the small ship, now as the body dies
57and life departs, launch out, the fragile soul
58in the fragile ship of courage, the ark of faith
59with its store of food and little cooking pans
60and change of clothes,
61upon the flood's black waste
62upon the waters of the end
63upon the sea of death, where still we sail
64darkly, for we cannot steer, and have no port.

65There is no port, there is nowhere to go
66only the deepening blackness darkening still
67blacker upon the soundless, ungurgling flood
68darkness at one with darkness, up and down
69and sideways utterly dark, so there is no direction any more
70and the little ship is there; yet she is gone.
71She is not seen, for there is nothing to see her by.
72She is gone! gone! and yet
73somewhere she is there.
74Nowhere!

VIII
75And everything is gone, the body is gone
76completely under, gone, entirely gone.
77The upper darkness is heavy as the lower,
78between them the little ship
79is gone

80It is the end, it is oblivion.

IX
81And yet out of eternity a thread
82separates itself on the blackness,
83a horizontal thread
84that fumes a little with pallor upon the dark.

85Is it illusion? or does the pallor fume
86A little higher?
87Ah wait, wait, for there's the dawn
88the cruel dawn of coming back to life
89out of oblivion

90Wait, wait, the little ship
91drifting, beneath the deathly ashy grey
92of a flood-dawn.

93Wait, wait! even so, a flush of yellow
94and strangely, O chilled wan soul, a flush of rose.

95A flush of rose, and the whole thing starts again.

X
96The flood subsides, and the body, like a worn sea-shell
97emerges strange and lovely.
98And the little ship wings home, faltering and lapsing
99on the pink flood,
100and the frail soul steps out, into the house again
101filling the heart with peace.

102Swings the heart renewed with peace
103even of oblivion.

104Oh build your ship of death. Oh build it!
105for you will need it.
106For the voyage of oblivion awaits you.

Version 2 ('Ship of Death')
1I sing of autumn and the falling fruit
2and the long journey towards oblivion.

3The apples falling like great drops of dew
4to bruise themselves an exit from themselves.

5Have you built your ship of death, oh, have you?
6Build then your ship of death, for you will need it!

7Can man his own quietus make
8with a bare bodkin?

9With daggers, bodkins, bullets, man can make
10a bruise or break of exit for his life
11but is that a quietus, oh tell me, is it quietus?

12Quietus is the goal of the long journey
13the longest journey towards oblivion.

14Slips out the soul, invisible one, wrapped still
15in the white shirt of the mind's experiences
16and folded in the dark-red, unseen
17mantle of the boays still mortal memories.

18Frightened and alone, the soul slips out of the house
19or is pushed out
20to find himself on the crowded, and margins of existence.

21Oh, it is not so easy, I tell you it is not so easy
22to set softly forth on the longest journey, the longest journey.

23The margins, the grey beaches of shadow
24strewn with dim wreckage, and crowded with crying souls
25that lie outside the silvery walls of our body's builded city.

26It is easy to be pushed out of the silvery city of the body
27through any breach in the wall,
28thrust out on to the grey grey beaches of shadow
29the long marginal stretches of existence, crowded with lost souls
30that intervene between tower and the shaking sea of the beyond.

31Oh build your ship of death, oh build it in time
32and build it lovingly, and put it between the hands of your soul.

33Once outside the gate of the walled silvery life of days
34once outside, upon the grey marsh beaches, where lost souls moan
35in millions, unable to depart
36having no boat to launch upon the shaken, soundless
37deepest and longest of seas,
38once outside the gate
39what will you do, if you have no ship of the soul?

40Oh pity the dead that are dead, but cannot take
41the journey, still they moan and beat
42against the silvery adamant walls of this our exclusive existence.
43They moan and beat, they gnash, they rage
44they fall upon the new outcoming souls with rage
45and they send arrows of anger, bullets and bombs of frustration
46over the adamant walls of this, our by-no-means impregnable existence.

47Pity, oh pity the poor dead that are only ousted from life
48and crowd there on the grey mud beaches of the margins
49gaunt and horrible
50waiting, waiting till at last the ancient boatman with the common barge
51shall take them aboard, towards the great goal of oblivion.

52Pity the poor gaunt dead that cannot die
53into the distance with receding oars
54but must roam like outcast dogs on the margins of life,
55and think of them, and with the soul's deep sigh
56waft nearer to them the bark of delivery.

57But for myself, but for my soul, dear soul
58let me build a little ship with oars and food
59and little dishes, and all accoutrements
60dainty and ready for the departing soul.

61And put it between the hands of the trembling soul.
62So that when the hour comes, and the last door closes behind him
63he shall slip down the shores invisible
64between the half-visible hordes
65to where the furthest and the longest sea
66touches the margins of our life's existence
67with wincing unwilling waves.

68And launching there his little ship,
69wrapped in the dark-red mantle of the body's memories
70the little, slender soul sits swiftly down, and takes the oars
71and draws away, away, away, towards the dark depths
72fathomless deep ahead, far, far from the grey shores
73that fringe with shadow all this world's existence.

74Over the sea, over the farthest sea
75on the longest journey
76past the jutting rocks of shadow
77past the lurking, octopus arms of agonised memory
78past the strange whirlpools of remembered greed
79through the dead weed of a life-time's falsity,
80slow, slow my soul, in his little ship
81on the most soundless of all seas
82taking the longest journey.

83Pulling the long oars of a life-time's courage
84drinking the confident water from the little jug
85and eating the brave bread of a wholesome knowledge
86row, little soul, row on
87on the longest journey, towards the greatest goal

88Neither straight nor crooked, neither here nor there
89but shadows folded on deeper shadows
90and deeper, to a core of sheer oblivion
91like the convolutions of shadow-shell
92or deeper, like the foldings and involvings of a womb.

93Drift on, drift on, my soul, towards the most pure
94most dark oblivion.
95And at the penultimate porches, the dark-red mantle
96of the body's memories slips and is absorbed
97into the shell-like, womb-like convoluted shadow.

98And round the great final bend of unbroken dark
99the skirt of the spirit's experience has melted away
100the oars have gone from the boat, and the little dishes
101gone, gone, and the boat dissolves like pearl
102as the soul at last slips perfect into the goal, the core
103of sheer oblivion and of utter peace,
104the womb of silence in the living night.

105Ah peace, ah lovely peace, most lovely lapsing
106of this my soul into the plasm of peace.

107Oh lovely last, last lapse of death, into pure oblivion
108at the end of the longest journey
109peace, complete peace!
110But can it be that also it is procreation?

111Oh build your ship of death
112oh build it!
113Oh, nothing matters but the longest journey.

Notes

1.17] See Shakespeare's Hamlet III.i.69-32):

For who would bear the whips and scorns of time,
Th' oppressor's wrong, the proud man's contumely,
The pangs of despis'd love, the law's delay,
The insolence of office, and the spurns
That patient merit of th' unworthy takes,
When he himself might his quietus make
With a bare bodkin ...

2.23] Lines omitted in Last Poems and inserted by Vivian de Sola Pinto and F. Warren Roberts in their definitive Complete Poems (Penguin, 1993): 961, note on 1042. In doing so, they emend "that" (line 23) to "the".


Online text copyright © 2009, Ian Lancashire (the Department of English) and the University of Toronto.
Published by the Web Development Group, Information Technology Services, University of Toronto Libraries.

Original text: D. H. Lawrence, Last Poems, ed. Richard Aldington (London: Martin Secker, 1933): 60-64 (MS "A"), 173-77 (MS "B," dated Nov. 23, 1928). PR 6023 A93 A17 Robarts Library
First publication date: 1933
Publication date note: See Roberts A62
RPO poem editor: Ian Lancashire
RP edition: RPO 2000.
Recent editing: 4:2002/1/12

Composition date: 26 August 1929 - November 1929
Composition date note: See Ellis, 603



P.S. this was writtenby lawrence on his death bed,and its interesting to see the different takes taken by him between this poem and bavarian gentians which was written a year before.
in this particular poem he looks at death up close and personal and tries to make out what exactly it is that happens to you when you die.where is it that you go.the interesting aspect of the poem is that it deals with a topic that we all think about at some point,difference being that he is actually facing death when he questions it.
in part one he compare death to dew..implying that it happens to everyone but its very different when your the one facing it.he questions whether killing ones self could be a better way then facing this painful death when he says 'quietus'.but wonders whether that could actually give you peace.he plans not to fight death anymore but to prepare for all that lies ahead...
he tells himself and us that the body is a mere armour to the soul.we cannot contol our fate as we do not know what lies ahead.
in bavarian gentians again death is seen as the unknown darkness by him.he feels that the darkness that he is in has made him loose his was and control over life.he reaches a point where he is ready to die..however this does not happen...the moment passes him by and he has come 'out of oblivion',though he continues to drift towards death.
till the last line he pleads his reader to build there ship of death and be prepared for this inevitable that will come there way.
i myself feel (through personal experience)you can try to do this...but when you lose someone,no matter who...i don't think that death is something you can be ready for.it comes when it does...

Saturday, January 31, 2009

A parrot's dance

Backstreet Boys - Everybody

Sunday, December 28, 2008

A man who barely made it through a particularly brutal day in the market called his financial advisor the next day and asked: "May I please speak to Artie, my advisor?" The operator replied: "I'm sorry. Artie is deceased. Can anyone else help you?" The man said no and hung up.
Ten minutes later he called again and asked for Artie, his advisor. The operator said: "You just called a few minutes ago, didn't you? Artie died. I'm not making this up." The man hung up again.
Fifteen minutes later he called a third time and asked for Artie. By this time, the operator was fuming. "I've told you twice already. Artie is dead. He's not here! Why do you keep asking for him when I say he's dead?"
The man replied: "I just like hearing it."

Wednesday, December 10, 2008

THE STREETS OF REYKJAVIK HOT UP AS FINANCIAL MELTDOWN HITS ICELAND

Even on TV and radio phone-ins callers are saying that maybe anarchy isn’t such a bad idea after all,” Siggi Pönk, lead vocalist of Icelandic punk band Dís explains, “people are saying capitalism in Iceland is dead, kill capitalism.
The crisis facing the global economy is particularly acute in Iceland. Before the credit crunch Icelanders were, per capita, the world’s fifth richest population. According to the UN Iceland is the most developed country in the world (whatever that means). Unemployment and homelessness was virtually unknown; the island of just over 300,000 people was one of the greatest success stories of neo-liberalism. Now, precisely because of the Thatcher inspired ‘good years’, the odds are strong on it being the first ‘developed’ country to collapse into full economic depression.
So it’s fair to say that Icelanders are mildly angry. There’s been an upsurge in grassroots mobilisation as the scale of the damage to the economy has become apparent. Approximately 9,000 people (3% of the population) hit the streets in the last weekly anti-government-bank-billionaire demonstration. Open forums discussing the current situation are packed out - and politicians aren’t allowed through the door - unless they’re ordered to attend. New political groups are everywhere - 500 people even physically attacked Reykjavik’s main Police station and broke out a political prisoner. The collapse of capitalism in Iceland seems to have re-awakened the island’s traditional spirit of independence.
Precisely who caused this crash is the main unanswered question. What is perfectly clear is that it was the governments free market economic policy in the 80’s and 90’s which caused the nosedive. The Independence Party has ruled in every government since Iceland won it’s sovereignty in 1944. Now, for the first time, it has had to hire private bodyguards for it’s members, not least for Davíð Oddson (Mayor of Reykjavik 1982-1991; Prime Minister 1991-2005; Governor of Central Bank 2005-present), its most vigorous exponent of neo-liberal policies.
Unlike other Scandinavian countries, Iceland closely followed a Thatcherite route of privatising all its major industries and banks; slashing or abolishing corporate, inheritance, net wealth, income and company turnover taxes; signing National Accords (suicide pacts) with trade unions. The right-wing thinktank Economic Freedom of the World's annual survey rated Iceland 53rd of the 72 'free-est' (read deregulated) economies in 1975, while it was one of the poorest countries in Western Europe; by 2006 it had risen to be the 12th out of 141 and was amongst the richest on the planet. (Britain went from 23rd to 5th in the same period).
How does being 'economically free' translate into being ridiculously rich? Any fishmonger will tell you that no matter how many tax cuts you get, selling fish, Iceland’s main export, hardly makes you a millionaire. Instead their wealth came from debt. Icelandic bankers stuck their interest rates high so that foreign investors would leave their money with them. They then went on spending sprees across the world, especially in the UK and Denmark. Amongst the UK companies bought by the Icelandic Baugur group were Topshop, Debenhams, Iceland (the supermarket, for novelty value) and the biggest toy shop in Europe - Hamleys (well if you’re a billionaire you can’t just buy your kid an action man). Iceland’s glorious wealth however, was based on borrowed money.
Then the credit crunch bit the world, investors wanted their money back and it became blindingly obvious that the Icelandic bankers couldn’t pay. When all three of its main banks collapsed and were nationalised in the beginning of October (keeping most of the same management, of course), it was revealed that Iceland owed foreign investors $60 billion, 12 times their GDP! But, as these banks were now owned by the nation, it fell on the population as a whole, not the bankers and billionaires who’d taken out these loans, to repay. That’s a debt of about $100,000 per person! And of course, with foreign debts there’s interest and exchange rates to add on. The children of todays Icelanders will still be facing the hangover of the Good Years.
SLUMS GONE TO ICELAND

Out of the $11 billion package to ‘rescue’ its banks, the Icelandic government signed a $2.1 billion “International Monetary Foundation (IMF) conditionality agreement”. In Godfather like tones the IMF once described themselves as “the credit community’s enforcer.” Whereas the logic of investment is usually based on getting money for the risks you take, just like betting on Kazakhstan winning the World Cup would make you rich if they came through but would hit you in the face if they didn’t; the IMF guarantees that it will get its investment back regardless, like someone who bets on Kazakhstan and then points a gun at the bookie to demand their ‘winnings’ when they lose.
The IMF has ruined countless poorer countries with its debt-enforcement, forcing countries to repay loans by raising interest rates; increasing tax whilst reducing public spending; selling off public industries and property; removing restrictions on the movement of money; taking out more loans...and so on. In short it’ll be business as usual for the current Icelandic government, which is probably why their only comments on the conditions for the loan (there are always conditions to IMF loans) were that they wouldn’t have to do anything they wouldn’t have needed to do anyway. Meanwhile they raised interest rates to 18% - step one of the programme. With billions of pounds of British cash nestling in the now decimated Icelandic banks the government has frozen assets using anti-terrorism laws. The Icelandic government was distinctly unimpressed, but has bigger issues to deal with on the home front.
ICE BREAKER

The movement that’s erupted in response to all of this has some unifying demands. 1) Immediate elections - for individuals instead of parties. 2) The entire Icelandic elite be jailed and forced to pay their debts themselves. 3) The entire finance regulatory organisation be replaced, including Davið Oddson, now the most hated man in over a millennium of history. 4) That nobody should lose their home - after Christmas unemployment is predicted to jump to 7% and you can bet that under the gaze of the IMF the already inadequate benefits will be cut.
One shred of good news is that the last 15 years of ecological devastation on the island is grinding to a halt. There’s simply no money to build more mega-dams, geothermal energy plants and aluminum smelters, especially as the aluminum industry itself has gone belly up from the credit crisis.
On a recent demonstration someone climbed on top of the Icelandic parliament and hoisted the symbolic flag of the billionaire Baugur Group, a grinning fat pink piggybank - the logo of their supermarket Bónus. The idea being that Iceland’s recent and hard won parliament was nothing more than an office for the arrogant super-rich and so it should fly its own flag. But while on a university trip to Parliament two weeks later, the same protester was spotted by an MP who got him nicked and locked up for an action against the aluminum industry that he participated in two years ago.
Word spread and 500 people turned up outside the police station, at first demanding his release and then forcing their way in, lobbing stones at the building’s windows and ramming its doors down with poles. Police responded with teargas. Someone paid for his release because a giant group of riot cops were forming behind the station to attack supporters. Once out of nick, the protester gave a speech to the cheering crowd, shouting “Such unity and power that you were upholding in front of this station should not be focused on getting some punk out of a prison cell. I’d rather you used this energy to bring the government to their knees. Launch a complete and general and immediate revolution!
All this, and yet, the effects of the crisis have yet to even set in…
link

Saturday, December 6, 2008

The Upcoming Hedge Funds Crisis

Up to a fifth of managers in the $1.6 trillion (1.1 trillion pound) hedge fund industry are at risk of going out of business in the next two years, a Man Group strategist said on Wednesday.
Thomas Della Casa, head of the research, analysis & strategy group at Man Investments, told a briefing in Frankfurt one in 10 hedge funds tended to fold after a few years even in favourable market conditions.
"The number will go down from 10,000. In the next two years 2,000 (hedge funds) could perhaps disappear," he said.
Overall, hedge funds are on track for their third ever year of losses, based on industry data going back 18 years, Della Casa noted. Hedge funds last failed to earn money for their investors in 1998 and before that in 1994.
"Assets under management will remain relatively unchanged, we don't expect net inflows," Della Casa said about prospects for 2009. Many investors are likely to go on shunning risky assets, preferring to hoard cash for quite some time, he said.
"Every dollar parked on the sidelines and held as cash usually stays away from markets for about 12 months. We don't expect this liquidity to return any time soon.
"The beginning of 2009 will be hard. We will still see liquidations and fire sales," Della Casa said, referring to hedge funds and their assets, such as corporate bonds.
Yet such conditions could create buying opportunities, he said.
Credit was trading at $0.67-$0.68 to the dollar compared with a "normal" recovery value of $0.70, he said, adding Man Group saw "enormous opportunities here."
Man Group sees the global economic recession lasting at least between four and six quarters. With history as a yardstick, equity markets tend to bottom out half-way through a recession, Della Casa said.
Globally, investors withdrew $40 billion from hedge funds in October, leaving $1.56 trillion in assets under management, Chicago-based tracking firm Hedge Fund Research said on November 20.
October's redemptions exceeded the third quarter's net outflow of $31 billion as retail and institutional investors alike fled to the safety of cash after the collapse of U.S. investment bank Lehman Brothers Holding Inc (LEHMQ.PK: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz).
London-based Man Group, the world's largest listed hedge fund group, said recently its assets under management dwindled to $61 billion by early November from $67.6 billion at the end of September, mainly due to the strengthening of the U.S. dollar.
Reuters

Could Tsys Be the Next Bubble?

By Dan Burrows

We may be through the looking glass here, people. Treasurys, the world's invincible vault of wealth and stability, are acting pretty weird these days. They're behaving like stocks, or at least how stocks used to behave.
Remember, Treasurys are debt instruments, not equities. They're supposed to be kind of boring and not terribly rewarding. But then what do you expect from Uncle Sam's big snuggly security blanket? After all, Treasurys are "riskless," right?
Well, yes and no. They simply can't default, the thinking goes, because the government actually owns the machine that prints money. So you lend the feds some cash, they guarantee your money back, and they throw in a little vigorish for your trouble. (Although those meager yields won't help much later when all this fed paper eventually fuels inflation.)
But we digress. No risk, no reward, whatever. When stocks go down, bonds go up. This time it's different. So much cash has poured into Treasurys that yields are scraping the deck. And bond prices? They're up, up and away. (Remember, when bonds trade, their prices and yields move in opposite directions.)
Which brings us to this: Has the world's panicked flight to safety become a mass exodus to insanity? Could Treasurys (gulp!) be the next bubble?
No doubt it has been a strong and long bull run for Treasurys. The total return generated by the Treasury market was 5.1% in November, making it the best month since 1981. Back then the yield on the 10-year note was 15%, wrote David Rosenberg, Merrill Lynch's North American economist. Ahem, but today the yield on the 10-year note is dabbling with, uh, 2.7%.
"What a great time it has been to have been long the Treasury market as we head into the home stretch of this massive bull market," Rosenberg wrote Nov. 28. "And to think that the asset class most despised and the most underowned in pension fund, household, commercial bank and mutual fund portfolios is the one generating the greatest returns."
It gets weirder. For the first time in 50 years the dividend yield on the S&P 500 index (it's 3.7%) rose above the interest rate on the 10-year note. Historically this ain't how it's supposed to go. Over the long haul stocks generate better returns than bonds, but bonds are less risky and supply a steady stream of fixed income. As one goes up, the other goes down, but to this degree, and in Treasurys, no less?
Here's some data that will make equity investors throw up in their mouths a little bit. The Dow Jones Industrial Average, S&P 500 index and Nasdaq Composite index have bled out 35%, 40% and 45%, respectively, year-to-date. Now take a look at the total returns generated by various U.S. Treasury indexes.
It's almost too good to be true, as Merrill Lynch's Rosenberg was careful to point out. "Investors should understand that while we maintain a constructive posture, Treasurys have moved into overvalued territory," he wrote.
Not that it has to end anytime to soon. Helicopter Ben is circling his Huey, firing cash down around the perimeter of a hot LZ. Meanwhile, down on the ground, sheer and ongoing financial terror is enveloping the globe.
Almost perversely, that's great news. It means this overvalued condition is likely to persist, Rosenberg says, "as the Fed, households and institutional investors emerge as large-scale buyers, even as foreign central banks pull back."
Ugh. This scenario seems spooky and familiar. Are Treasurys setting up for that classic mania-turn-to-bubble phase we've seen too often and too recently? Tech stocks in 2000. Real estate in 2006. Once the general public crowds itself 10 deep at the craps table, it might be time to take some winnings off the table.
SMARTMONEY.COM

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

What MUST Be Done

To Avoid Financial Destruction by Jim Sinclair

My Dear Extended Family,

Things are now "Out of Control."
This international financial crisis is now out of control as the world asks if the USA has two presidents, one president or no president at all.
It would appear that Paulson is in financial control with Bernanke as his second.
I warned you by personal email long before the statement was proven totally correct that “This is it.” That was followed by “This is it, and it is now.” Many people laughed it off.
This is it, and it is now.
Now it is out of control.
Now we enter the Collapse of Confidence period.
Then we begin the Weimar Experience.
It has all hit the fan, and still the absolute majority have no clue. The OTC derivative dealers broke the system into millions of pieces of glass. This broken glass cannot be put back together.
It is heart rending to see a picture of GM autoworkers holding a prayer meeting for their retirement funds. The retirement money was never funded. It is a lost hope. This is another responsibility the government has undertaken that is going to go wild.
Those of you still in freeze frame are headed for lines around your bank. Your bank will likely be acquired by another bank that also is in deep trouble.
The US dollar, like a leaderless company, will lose its respect and therefore value.
In order of importance the following MUST be done unless you want to be one of the suffering masses that will be all too visible this winter:
1. You must have your assets held anywhere they are in true custodial-ship accounts. That type of account at a bank or broker states clearly that the assets held there are not on the balance sheet of the host financial entity. Those assets are clearly segregated in your name. This must be reviewed by counsel to be sure you have what you think you have. Don’t cheap out. All you have is depending on the validity of true custodial-ship accounts.
You cannot know all the banks are broke, however I feel ALL banks are broke because finance is an intertwined system that if visible would look like a spider’s web. Problems on the top will materialize all along the web. Therefore the singular most important step you must take is the establishment of a true custodial-ship account.
Do not assume you have this type of account unless a competent attorney reviews the account papers.
2. I am extremely concerned about those of you who persist in holding certificates for gold rather than holding the actual metal either delivered to you or held for you in a true custodial-ship type account. The scams out there in gold are plentiful. The only way to avoid these scams absolutely is to have your gold in your own possession.
Every other means of holding gold is steps away from perfection. Some will be ok, but many will not.
3. Why would anyone fail to either take paper certificates or order their financial agent to make direct registration book entry at the transfer agent? In most cases you only have until year-end to accomplish this strategy.
4. Withdraw from ETFs.
5. If you carelessly keep large assets with your broker you are as mad as a hatter. The FDIC DOES NOT have the money to guarantee all they are undertaking. Withdraw excess money constantly from any net broker. If you are so stubborn that you think you can trade to insure yourself when your funds are not making money while still getting your money that counts you are nuts. Admit to yourself you are nothing more than a gambling addict in a downward spiral.
6. Leave no gold or coins with any coin dealer.
7. If you can withdraw from your corporate retirement plan do it.
8. Withdraw from credit unions.
9. Withdraw from all money market instruments.
10. This is it.
11. It is now.
12. It is out of control NOW.
The next two months are going to be shocking, but nothing compared to what you will have to experience in 2009.

Respectfully yours,
Jim

Thursday, November 20, 2008

China PBOC Mulls Raising Gold Reserve by 4,000 T

BEIJING (Dow Jones)--China's central bank is considering raising its gold reserve by 4,000 metric tons from 600 tons to diversify risks brought by the country's huge foreign exchange reserves, the Guangzhou Daily reported, citing unnamed industry people in Hong Kong.
The Guangzhou-based newspaper didn't elaborate on the plan.
China's forex reserves, at US$1.9056 trillion at the end of September, is the world's largest. U.S. dollar-denominated assets, including U.S. treasury bonds and mortgage agency bonds, account for a big proportion of the forex reserves.
Newspaper Web site: http://gzdaily.dayoo.com

Thoughts

I see the SP drifting below 800 by the week... Yet some is cooking around, or better the liquidity was cut in waiting the next event so to try to curb again the fall...but Its just curbing, a spike and then sell again....
this has just no sense of holding stock so overvalued imo..now youll be telling me am mad in saying overvalued....actually not ...since overvaluation was a factor of a wrong based global boom, that will end very poorly..
There's simply no phsical room for growth as we have seen in the past 10-40 years anymore. There were some huge mistakes made by our leading classes.
But at the very end am happy of It, as current model of falsification and selling dreams has been eroding most of our planetary resources, from copper to zinc to food and water etc.. Plus the 6.8 billions of consumers are now Ill, nothing to buy...no economy to sustain, no production to be made....
As am saying the bigger human fraud of history under the name of falsifications from a wealthy bunch of gangsters..

Como Perrie November 19, 2008

Saturday, November 15, 2008

Iran switches reserves to gold

TEHRAN (Reuters) - Iran has converted financial reserves into gold to avoid future problems, an adviser to President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said in comments published on Saturday, after the price of oil fell more than 60 percent from a peak in July.
Iran, the world's fourth-largest oil producer, is under U.N. and U.S. sanctions over its disputed nuclear programme and is now also facing declining revenue from its oil exports after crude prices tumbled.
"With the plans of the presidency...the country's money reserves were changed into gold so that we wouldn't be faced with many problems in the future," presidential adviser Mojtaba Samareh-Hashemi was quoted as saying by business daily Poul.
He gave no figures or other details.
Before oil prices plunged by more than 60 percent from a peak of $147 per barrel in July, Iran made windfall gains from its crude exports and in April estimated its foreign exchange reserves at about $80 billion.
Iranian officials in July denied reports Iranian banks were moving funds from Europe, with one report suggesting as much as $75 billion had been withdrawn and converted into gold or placed in Asian banks, because of a threat of tightening sanctions.
The International Monetary Fund said in August that if the price of Iranian crude fell to $75 a barrel, Iran would face a current account deficit in the medium term that would be tough to sustain due to Tehran's financial isolation.
On Friday, U.S. crude fell $1.20 at $57.04.
Gold futures ended more than 5 percent higher on Friday and bullion ended the week about $10 higher compared with its last Friday's close of $735.95 as investors covered short positions.

Thursday, November 13, 2008

Medvedev market

MOSCOW, Nov 13 (Reuters) - Russian stocks have shed more than $1 trillion during Dmitry Medvedev's presidency as investors dump Russian assets on concerns the economy is sinking
into the worst crisis for a decade, investors said on Thursday. Stocks, bonds and the rouble have plummeted since a brief period of euphoria following Medvedev's May 7 inauguration.
The dollar-dominated RTS exchange <.IRTS> said the capitalisation of the stocks it handles has fallen more than $1 trillion to less than $400 billion since a market peak on May 19.
The crisis has further undermined confidence, already shaken by a series of corporate conflicts, worries about state intervention in companies and the war in Georgia.
"Things are as bad as they possibly could be: the Russian market no longer functions," said James Beadle, an asset manager at Pilgrim Asset Management, which invests in stocks and bonds. "The main reasons are obviously what is going on globally, particularly with commodity prices, and political issues within Russia," said Beadle. The crisis has undermined the Kremlin's ambitions to take Russia to the top table of world finance and illustrated the weaknesses of Russia's economy, which is heavily reliant on the export of oil, gas and natural resources.
The price of Urals crude , the main type of oil sold by Russia, fell to just over $50 on Thursday, the lowest since the start of 2007, from more than $140 in July. Trading on Russia's MICEX rouble denominated stock index <.MCX> was halted 35 minutes after opening on Thursday after the index tumbled as much as 17 percent, Gazprom , the world's largest natural gas company by reserves, has seen its market capitalisation slide $270 billion since late May to less than $100 billion.
DEATH SPIRAL?
The Russian stock market is now in what some investors are calling a "death spiral." Sovereign bond yields have soared and the central bank is being forced to sell tens of billions of dollars of reserves to support the rouble. The meltdown has revived memories of the 1998 devaluation of
the rouble and Russia's default on $40 billion in debt, an event which sent a wave of volatility through world markets. "This is on par with 1998 in terms of value destruction though it is not as structural as it was in 1998 -- it is now more about confidence and liquidity issues," said Beadle. Economists say falls in the price of oil threaten a ten-year economic boom and the stability that former President Vladimir Putin, who is now prime minister, was credited with enforcing after the chaos of the 1990s. The market falls under Medvedev -- whose name derives from the Russian word for bear -- have even spawned a series of quips from traders about bear markets. But investors said Medvedev, a 43-year-old former corporate lawyer, has fallen victim to the failure of his predecessor to reform the Russian economy. "This crisis shows what we all knew: that the Russians have not implemented any of the reforms they really needed to over
the past four or five years," said one investor who asked not to be named because of the sensitivity of the situation. The political fallout from the market slump has so far been muted, with opinion polls giving high popularity ratings to Putin and Medvedev. Critics say the Kremlin uses its power to contain any dissent. Plummeting confidence has been further diminished by a
series of state probes into Russian companies, including Uralkali and Mechel . Russia had a net capital outflow of $50 billion in October, the biggest on record, and more than $100 billion has been shaved off gold and forex reserves in three months. The turnaround in Russia's fortunes could not be sharper: in July Medvedev told an investor conference that the rouble should
be a reserve currency and Moscow a financial capital. Russia has hoarded the third largest gold and forex reserves in the world during the bull market for oil but all eyes are now on the rouble .
Dollars were on sale in Moscow at exchange offices on Thursday at 28.25 roubles. In May, the dollar cost about 24 roubles. "The population has seen its savings destroyed several times
in the last twenty years, and will not take any chances," Beadle said. "Popular as Russia's current leaders are, citizens have learned to be cautious with their savings."

Friday, November 7, 2008

God bless America

The country is is trouble anyway and no one including McCain's Mcplan and Obama's no-plan can bail things in 4 years..it's too deep of a crap hole, too screwed up. So on a lighter note, from a travel agent's point of view, THE COUNTRY IS IN TROUBLE:
Why our Country is in Trouble according to a DC airport ticket agent who offers some examples of 'why' U.S.A. is in trouble:

1. I had a New Hampshire Congresswoman ask for an aisle seat so that her hair wouldn't get messed up by being near the window. (On an airplane!)

2. I got a call from a candidate's staffer, who wanted to go to Capetown. I started to explain the length of the flight and the passport information, and then she interrupted me with, ''I'm not trying to make you look stupid, but Capetown is in Massachusetts .''

Without trying to make her look stupid, I calmly explained, ''Cape Cod is in Massachusetts , Capetown is in Africa ''. Her response - click.

3. A senior Vermont Congressman called, furious about a Florida package we did. I asked what was wrong with the vacation in Orlando. He said he was expecting an ocean-view room. I tried to explain that's not possible, since Orlando is in the middle of the state. He replied, 'don't lie to me, I looked on the map and Florida is a very thin state!'' (OMG)

4. I got a call from a lawmaker's wife who asked, ''Is it possible to see England from Canada ?''
I said, ''No.'' She said, ''But they look so close on the map.'' (OMG, again!)

5. An aide for a cabinet member once called and asked if he could rent a car in Dallas. When I pulled up the reservation, I noticed he had only a 1-hour layover in Dallas. When I asked him why he wanted to rent a car, he said, ''I heard Dallas was a big airport, and we will need a car to drive between gates to save time.'' (Aghhhh)

6. An Illinois Congresswoman called last week. She needed to know how it was possible that her flight from Detroit left at 8:30 a.m., and got to Chicago at 8:33 a.m. I explained that Michigan was an hour ahead of Illinois , but she couldn't understand the concept of time zones...Finally, I told her the plane went very very fast, and she bought that.

7. A New York lawmaker called and asked, ''Do airlines put your physical description on your bag so they know whose luggage belongs to whom?'' I said, 'No, why do you ask?'
She replied, ''Well, when I checked in with the airline, they put a tag on my luggage that said (FAT), and I'm overweight. I think that's very rude!'' ...After putting her on hold for a minute, while I looked into it. (I was dying laughing). I came back and explained the city code for Fresno , C A is (FAT - Fresno Air Terminal), and the airline was just putting a destination tag on her luggage.

8. A Senator's aide called to inquire about a trip package to Hawaii . After going over all the cost info, she asked, ''Would it be cheaper to fly to California , and then take the train to Hawaii ?''

9. I just got off the phone with a freshman Congressman who asked, ''How do I know which plane to get on?'' I asked him what exactly he meant, to which he replied, ''I was told my flight number is 823, but none of these planes have numbers on them.''

10. A lady Senator called and said, ''I need to fly to Pepsi-Cola , Florida. Do I have to get on one of those little computer planes?'' I asked if she meant fly to Pensacola , FL on a commuter plane. She said, ''Yeah, whatever, smarty!''

11. A senior Senator called and had a question about the documents he needed in order to fly to China . After a lengthy discussion about passports, I reminded him that he needed a visa. 'Oh, no I don't. I've been to China many times and never had to have one of those.'' I double checked and sure enough, his stay required a visa. When I told him this he said, ''Look, I've been to China four times. and every time they have accepted my American Express!''

12. A New Mexico Congress woman called to make reservations, ''I want to go from Chicago to Rhino, New York .'' I was at a loss for words. Finally, I said, ''Are you sure that's the name of the town?'' ' 'Yes, what flights do you have?'' replied the lady. After some searching, I came back with, ''I'm sorry, ma'am, I've looked up every airport code in the country and can't find a rhino anywhere.' ''The lady retorted, ''Oh, don't be silly! Everyone knows where it is. Check your map!'' So I scoured a map of the state of New York and finally offered, ''You don't mean Buffalo , do you?'' The reply? ''Whatever! I knew it was a big animal.''

Tuesday, October 28, 2008

Don't worry, be happy

Investment analyst and entrepreneur Dr. Marc Faber concluded his monthly bulletin (June 2008) with the following:
''The federal government is sending each of us a $600 rebate. If we spend that money at Wal-Mart, the money goes to China.
If we spend it on gasoline it goes to the Arabs.
If we buy a computer it will go to India.
If we purchase fruit and vegetables it will go to Mexico, Honduras and Guatemala.
If we purchase a good car it will go to Germany.
If we purchase useless crap it will go to Taiwan and none of it will help the American economy.
The only way to keep that money here at home is to spend it on prostitutes and beer, since these are the only products still produced in US".
and you?"

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

Pakistan's military to fire on US troops


Pakistan's military said today its forces had received orders to fire on US troops if they entered Pakistani territory, after a cross-border raid inflamed public opinion.

The country's civilian leaders, who have taken a tough line against militants, have insisted Pakistan must resolve the dispute with the US through diplomatic channels. But the military has taken a more robust line.

General Athar Abbas, an army spokesman, told the Associated Press that after a cross-border assault in the south Waziristan region earlier this month, the military told its field commanders to take action to prevent any similar raids.

"The orders are clear," Abbas said in an interview. "In case it happens again in this form, that there is a very significant detection, which is very definite, no ambiguity, across the border, on ground or in the air: open fire."

Friday, September 12, 2008

Barack Obama : "You can put lipstick on a pig"


- a reference the Republican campaign claim to their Sarah Palin. "You can wrap an old fish in a pieceof paper called change. It's still going to stink."

Tuesday, August 12, 2008

Americans dont need a coach to win


In the days since a knifing attack at a Beijing tourist attraction, the coach of the U.S. men's volleyball team said his family has been consumed with the shock of his father-in-law's death and with arranging care for his severely wounded mother-in-law. Hugh McCutcheon said he has been helping his wife Elisabeth Bachman, a former Olympian, "talk through" the grief. Beyond that, he said he realized the attack has affected his men's team, which worked hard to qualify for the Beijing Olympics, and the women's team, including teammates of Elisabeth at the 2004 Athens Games.

USA - Venezuela 3-2 USA -Italy 3-1. I suspect the Americans are main challengers of the Gold in Beijing.

Thursday, July 3, 2008

Is the ECB chasing its own tail?

Should they shock oil speculators by leaving
rates unchanged tomorrow?
Over the last week a few analysts have argued that the European Central Bank
is chasing its own tail. The argument goes like this: The ECB hikes interest
rates to fight inflation, a higher interest rate in Europe pushes EUR/USD
higher, a rising EUR/USD pushes oil prices higher, record oil prices increase
inflation pressures, and we're back at square one. These analysts argue that
the ECB is actually fueling inflation by raising interest rates