Nostracodeus.com Pick Working Out

Not to make too big a point of it, but when our www.nostracodeus.com project started noticing lot and lots of references to Egypt in the mainstream, we inferred that something was in the making. I wrote as much in a column this week. And this morning, along come this report from al Jazeera:

Tax Robotics: Unwrapping the Future

OK, I couldn’t sleep in, dammit. “Enjoy Merry Christmas while you can,” said the Grinch. “There won’t be too many of them coming because while humans were sleeping, the machines (and their owners) have taken over damn near everything. ” To prove it, I cobbled up a chart that every American should look upon at least once a day and which congressoids ought to consider as they continue the de facto system of underwriting the Rich, which is (sadly) where America has gone. All dressed up in the fine fakery of right-left politics (as always) the winners are again, those on top.

Merry or Scary?

{Reader Note:  Coping with a cranky computer this morning so our usual formatting may not be as crisp as usual.  You may need to use your back button to read the whole column this morning until the problem is resolved.  Early this morning it was be a writer or computer geek.  Guess you can tell which one I picked.

Not to worry, computers live in fear of me and I will beat some respect into this i7-920 POS as soon as this morning’s report is done…for now, now computers were harmed in the making of this morning’s report.  That is, however, subject to change.}

Oh, sure, nice rally yesterday in the market.  But this morning, Santa’s apparently going to step out for a toke and a dram, at least that’s what the futures are hinting at.  One reason?  A press release from ShopperTrak has us wondering if the Old Fat Feller has lost his sway over the instant gratification crowd.  Why wait for one day a year, after all?

“Last week was the last chance for procrastinators to finish last-minute holiday shopping, but the weather prevented many from getting to the stores. ShopperTrak – the world’s largest counter and analyzer of retail shopper traffic – reported that for the week of Dec. 16 to Dec. 22, GAFO* in-store retail sales decreased by 3.1 percent from the same week last year. Retail brick-and-mortar shopper traffic decreased by 21.2 percent compared to the same time period in 2012.

“Bad weather throughout the country kept some shoppers away from stores,” said Bill Martin, ShopperTrak founder. “This past week was their final opportunity to complete their holiday shopping before Christmas – and though many did finish making their purchases, retailers did not see as many shoppers as last year.”

Despite more markdowns and promotional efforts from retailers, “Super Saturday” (Dec. 21) saw a decrease in retail sales by 0.7 percent compared to 2012. In-store shopper traffic decreased 18.1 percent from the same day last year. ShopperTrak predicts after-holiday markdowns to drive robust retail sales and store traffic days to come, particularly the day after Christmas (Dec.

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Coping: Over the River, and all that…

I have to imagine the biggest part of “coping” right now is all the last-minute holiday activities, so I’ll keep this morning’s comments short and to the point.  (yeah, right…)

As of this morning, it looks like the weather is not exactly cooperating:  There are plenty of reports of delays traveling around the East.  As usual, the mainstream media will be pointing out how serious the situation is, but a more relaxed ‘tude suggests that it is winter after all, so what’s the big?

The latest Triple A Gas Gauge report (over here) offers that the current price of regular (nationally) pencils out to $3.258 compared with a year ago when it was running $3.247.  That does tend to back up the recent assertion that there’s little inflation in the economy, so perhaps that’s something to be thankful for.

Around the ranch, we’ll be putting on a turkey later on this morning.  And, about 5 PM, or so, we’ll sit down to a Christmas Eve dinner with all the fixings.  But we’re not doing presents this year.  With the exception of recapturing more of our youth, and planning more travel, there’s not much left to want.

The kids, on the other hand, are getting their checks in the mail and all seems well with that.

There are a few people who contribute greatly to the content around here, who I’d like to personally thank for their help over the past year.  These include:

  • Grady at the www.nostracodeus.com project which is where we look at word frequencies of various things, since there have been many instances where words arriving, fresh into the headlines, indicate bits and pieces of the future to come.
  • Stephen, my consigliore/ (a real-life) attorney in the upper-Midwest, is on the mend from a skiing accident a week, or two back out in Colorado.  He’s going as fine as can be expected with a plate in his foot, and I just know he’ll be looking forward to future air travel and conversations with TSA about why he’s setting off alarms.  Our wishes for a speedy recovery.
  • Bernard Grover of our Jakarta Bureau deserves thanks for the many fine reports from the Dark Side.  That’s where many of the jobs that used to reside in the US have gone. SE Asia.
  • No list would be complete without mention of JB Slear over at www.fortwealth.com who always offers keen insights on how commodity markets are going.
  • So, too, the comments (particularly on Elliott wave counts) of Robin Landry up in Shawnee, OK are gratefully accepted.  They may get snow for New Years up in Oklahoma, according to the forecasts.
  • And then there’s Oilman2 who (right about now) is back offshore on a rig 200 miles out in the Gulf.  Hell, if I was making his day rate, I guess missing some of the meals shoreside would be worth it.  His insights into the real oil picture are very important.  Without oil, without gas, we’re toast as a civilization.
  • Our News Analyst fellow up in Winnipeg (David) contributes greatly.  He’s got a sharp, investigative streak and not only knows what the good questions are to ask, but also how to use the wide-open web to find the answers.
  • And then there’s Warhammer, our war gamer/expert who’s no longer flapping with the B-52 crowd, but instead if able to share his insights from the (relative) safety of East Coast academia.  Although, I wonder if the Air Force isn’t safer (in some ways) than the battles in higher ed.  Especially with the Student Loan Great Reckoning still ahead.
  • And last, but not least Gaye Levy up at www.backdoorsurvival.com. Between our two sites, there’s a carefully planned (sometimes, anyway) symbiotic relationship:  UrbanSurvival is about right now, get it done aspects of news and current events.  BackdoorSurvival offers the longer, more considered prepping plans with plenty of “How to do its” for when you get (properly) freaked by the headlines.

There are many more contributors, of course, but those folks have been like year-long Christmas presents for us:  People whose word you can “take to the bank.”  In their individual fields of expertise, they are great thinkers, with keen perceptions, and it helps us to have the “steady hand on the tiller” look toward the future.

And on days like this, when there’s not a cloudy in the sky and the chance of snow down in this part of Texas is way off to the right of the decimal point, we reflect on the things that matter:  The making and holding of memories.

And the realization that we’ve been living in that place that’s “Over the river and through the woods…”  But we’re not old enough for the rest of what’s in that song.

Have a very Merry Christmas.

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Adventures in Personal Income/Expense

Every month about in here, the Bureau of Economic Analysis pipes up with a “Personal Consumption & Expenditures report” which, while it ain’t no Clive Cussler novel – (Set of 4), still makes for some interesting reading.  Even if this is the time of the year to drift off from non-fiction for some mental escapism.

The set-up to this morning’s report is that Gold is teetering on the brink of dead and the underside of $1,200.  If you remember, last week (and it’s difficult, I’ll grant you that), I was hand-wringing about the price of gold and how once is sunk into the upper 1100’s, it might not be long (a month or four) before it could sink even further.  Like into the upper 1000’s on its way “Who knows how low?”

The Price of Gold (POG) is an important truth detector around here.  I look at it as a way of seeing-through government reports that insist how peachy keen everything is.  Yet, when the housing sales fell on its nose in the most recent read, one could think of a parallel between the price of gold’s decline and the ongoing correction in the housing market.

I could go on (at some great length) about how the Fed policy of “Print just a bit faster than the rate of deflation” is working and that hope no one notices their decline in lifestyles.  The trick is to keep things appearing normal  while the public’s actual standard of living it ratcheted back.

If Santa Claus leaves you a smaller collection of goodies this year, don’t feel bad.  It’s baked in the deflationary cookies.

It’s all because lifestyles are coming down (on average, YMMV) and that’s because of a lack of growth.  And that’s because of consumer super-saturation.  You probably have two, or three, of everything you need already, anyway.  Except for the latest darling phone from Apple, and for those, people will turn violent.  )Why, even in Berlin, raiders drove a care into an Apple store, so valued are their trinkets.)

Alas!  We live in a world which has done an ugly transition without most people knowing it.  We’ve gone from quiet, romantic dinners, to food & texting festivals; from looking into each other’s eyes to looking at an super-hi def display. Mark my words, the birth rate is in trouble.

And we’re gonna solve that one with immigration?

This is progress?

But enough social commentary from the old reprobate in the woods.  Like he was saying, there’s this personal income and expenditure report which is as near a present as the Public on Main Street is likely to get from government’s Grinch…

Personal income increased $30.1 billion, or 0.2 percent, and disposable personal income (DPI) increased $16.2 billion, or 0.1 percent in November according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis. Personal consumption expenditures (PCE) increased $63.0 billion, or 0.5 percent.

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Coping: A New Years Quake?

For those who missed my FB/G+ post this weekend, I need to post it here so you can follow the latest developments.  (If you read the G+/FB note, skip past this first indented part:)

A reader sent in an interesting reason why this might be the case: Hi George: I hope you have time to look into this one – Today you say What if 2012 was a year off?  Well it could be if the allowances for our calendar were not correct.  I have noted this for many years – where is our year 0 ie zero?  Between BC and AD – or whatever the PC crowd call it now – there is no zero.  Would that not screw up the counting of the big round rock? See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/0_%28year%29 Historians have never included a year zero. This means that between, for example, January 1, 500 BC and January 1, AD 500, there are 999 years: 500 years BC, and 499 years AD preceding 500. In common usage anno Domini 1 is preceded by the year 1 BC, without an intervening year zero. So astronomers and archeologists/historians count it differently… Best regards, B. So with this in mind, I asked 2012 researcher Patrick Geryl about it and his intriguing answer is this: Hi George, I am aware of this possibility… However there is something more. When the Spaniards invaded South America, they destroyed almost all the books. Also they lost the conversion from the Mayan calendar to ours.

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Peoplenomics.com: Seven Ways to Beat the Bank

These are hard times, whether the people in Washington will admit it, or not: For most of us, lifestyle declines are on the verge of showing up in 2014. One of the biggest indicators could be reductions in the rate of increase for military pensions which will punish those who serve. Those savings will, in part, benefit those immigrating to the US. So in this kind of an environment, we offer some year-end planning ideas for 2014 that may help you “beat the bank.

Follow-Up

Excuse the interruption, but there is more on the possibility that all the worry about 2012 was off by a year or longer. It’s up on the UrbanSurvival Google+ and Facebook pages. Now back to your shopping.

Here Comes Bitcoin Competition

Say, here’s an interesting one to keep an eye on:  Competition in the wings for Bitcoin:

Scharmbeck Worldcoin Financial Services launched live beta testing today of an online platform that will streamline the buying, trading and use of Cryptocurrency (Cryptocoin).  Beginning with the worldwide launch of Worldcoin’s new user-friendly system in February, the general public will not only be able to directly purchase Worldcoin instantly, but processing speeds for using Worldcoin will be 20x faster than Bitcoin. That means businesses will be able to process Worldcoin payments as effortlessly as accepting a credit card.

Until now Cryptocoins, such as Bitcoin and its Altcoin competitors, have been traded and praised primarily by the tech crowd, but the general public is now starting to take notice. Bitcoin, the most popular Cryptocoin, has seen its value skyrocket from $0.30 per coin in 2011 to a high of $1,224.00.  Last month, the value of Worldcoin hovered around $0.06, yet surpassed $1.00 on Black Friday. The value of Worldcoin is expected to spike drastically by February when they become the first Altcoin to sell directly to the public without having to first purchase Bitcoin.  Thereafter, Worldcoin will no longer be tied to Bitcoin’s violent swings in price.  Worldcoin’s new program will make buying, selling and converting into fiat currency a simple process. 

No idea how it’s going to play, but here comes well-backed competition…

Watch the POG (Price of Gold)

My friend Robin Landry and I have been watching the POG and shares of GLD rather closely, since gold is still hovering just under the $1,200 level this morning.  But, it is still in range to take out the June lows.  If that happens for a day, or three, then the odds of gold dropping down toward the $1,100 level and lower increase.

More likely, though, we are at a rallying point which might give us one more run up to the $1,400 level.  Which would fit nicely with a rally in stocks and other assets into January, but along about the end of January we come to a Bradley turn date and that’s when things ought to get really interesting.  Will the Bradley invert?

[A good explanation of the Bradley may be found here, although the more people that follow one stock market indicator, the worse it seems to work.]

The other thing we’re eyeing (with some suspicion) is the 10-year Treasury yields.  They were up yesterday to an intraday 2.95 on the CBOE and that’s against a 52 week high of 2.98.  A break above that could be friendly for Gold and painful for Stocks.

The mechanics being simple:  Stocks need the prospect of better returns than bonds and if interest rates go up, given stable earnings, stocks could make a major decline in the spring.

So we’ll be keeping a close eye on trading between now and year end to see what’s coming.  About the only thing to be said with conviction this morning is that we’re at a critical trading juncture for another few weeks which could set the stage for an early 2014 blow-off top, or it could set the stage for a massive collapse of stock prices.  Either way, we do live in “interesting times” indeed.

Robin’s take was that the higher interest rates (recent strength in the ^TNX) may discourage some of the long-term gold holders, weakening price.  But it all eventually could come around to monetary debasement, and that’s been one of the best (and easiest) bets I’ve ever made.

Blow Out GDP Report

Just out from the government Bureau of Economic Analysis this morning:

Real gross domestic product — the output of goods and services produced by labor and property located in the United States — increased at an annual rate of 4.1 percent in the third quarter of 2013 (that is, from the second quarter to the third quarter), according to the “third” estimate released by the Bureau of Economic Analysis. In the second quarter, real GDP increased 2.5 percent.

The GDP estimate released today is based on more complete source data than were available for the “second” estimate issued on December 5, 2103. In the second estimate, the increase in real GDP was 3.6 percent (see “Revisions” on page 3). With this third estimate for the third quarter, increases in personal consumption expenditures (PCE) and in nonresidential fixed investment were larger than previously estimated.

Of course, what goes unmentionable is the underlying Federal Reserve (easy) money supply figures.  In the latest weekly update, the Fed admits to M1 going up at an 8.9% (annualized 3-month) rate while M2 is going up 6.1% (annualized, 3-month rate).

So GDP up 4.1 while annual M2 is up 6.1%?  ‘Scuse me if that still looks like 2% deflation in play.  Now toss in house sales falling and tell me where the green shoots are?

News releases, like this one insist on recovery, despite my skepticism:

NEW YORK, Dec.

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Coping: Was “2012” a Year Off?

From the “What IF Department:  Remember what was going on a year ago this weekend?  The world was supposed to end when the Mayan calendar flipped over.

Yet, if your eyes are open, you’ll notice that things are still here.  (If not, I’d be interested in how you’re reading this…)

HOWEVER, whether things will still be “normal” come February, well, that becomes a matter for a bit of speculation.

Let me run through this for you since I received a fascinating email from 2012 research & writer Patrick Geryl.  This email was titled “Mayan Doomsday = Ragnarok = February 22, 2014

Hi George,

This will interest everyone… Finally somebody who was able to find the real Mayan Long Count formula! Sorry if it is quite long…

The Mayan Long Count formula decoded at last!

Read down through (and including) the part of the post that begins “The Mayan Long Count is at most a good approximation….”  Once you’ve nibbled on that, then let’s pick up with Patrick’s email of this morning…

There will be a grand cross alignment on January 1, 2014… Uranus and Mars will form a straight line perpendicular to the alignment made by Jupiter-Pluto-Venus-Mercury-Moon-Sun-Earth!

Let me add to the alignment on January 1, 2014. Earth will be “crucified” by planets at four corners:
Venus, Moon, Sun, Mercury, Pluto on one corner with Jupiter at the opposite corner.
Perpendicular to the straight line alignment above, Uranus and Mars will form a straight line, with Uranus at one corner and Mars at the opposite corner.

Doomsday Sunspot Formed on 360 day Calendar round!

January 1, 2014 + 3 days = 357 + 3 = 360 days

This day is January 4!

= day Mayan doomsday sunspot is formed! See my publication on Facebook. Go to December 4: Solar Superstorms and Plantar Alignments.

This sunspot will start to grow rapidly from these Triple Line Ups:

January 17 – February 19, 2014: Triple Line Up Jupiter – Earth – Pluto

January 19 – March 21, 2014: Triple line Up Venus – Jupiter – Pluto
January 22- February 4, 2014: Triple Line Up Venus – Earth – Jupiter

26 – February 9, 2014: Triple Line Up Pluto – Venus -Earth

Conclusions:

1.Carrington event possible from end of January 2014

2. Pole Shift somewhere in February 2014…

Pole Shift Date:

Adding 3 days, starting from January 1 we find 357 + 3 = 360 = formation Mayan Doomsday Sunspot.

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11 Questions About the Longwave Cycle

As some readers may know, this website’s core, solid, founding value point is something called longwave economics.  Before running off simpering to some pop-news anti-think site screaming “I don’t get it!” it’s really very simple, so this morning we will give you a quick dose of the reality.

1.  Cycles Are Real

There are cycles in everything.  Life, relationships, and, current case in point:  Investing.

The sun comes up, the sun goes down.  That’s a cycle.  Same thing works for markets.  They rise (like yesterdays predictable reaction to the Easy-Money Gang at the Fed, which continues making up money through “quantitative easing” because if they don’t print, we crash.   And they fall.  Like at the open this morning, likely.

Now, see?  I told you this would be easy.

2.  We in a SMALL recovery cycle inside a LARGE DEFLATION cycle.

The small recovery cycle is because the Fed is printing money like crazy.  The SMALL recovery is seen when you look at a 5-year chart of the S&P.  Since the bottom of the 2009 market bottom, when the S&P was around 683, the S&P has risen to a remarkable 1,810 and change as of yesterday’s close.  Almost a 3X rise.  Better than your house, huh?

You can see, however, the larger BIG DEFLATION CYCLE when you look at a 10-year Treasury Note chart at maximum zoom out over here.  Notice that in July of 1981, the 10-year note was paying almost 16%. As of the close Wednesday, it was paying 2.89%.

This is called DEFLATION and when it ends, maybe in the 2014 – 2017 period, we still likely start up the inflation path, yet again.

3.  Proofs of Deflation

God, this is simple!  Look at housing prices.  Look at the declines of income.  Inflation-adjusted consumer discretionary.  Your lifestyle.  Are you blind?

4.  Then Why are Stocks Going Up?

There are two simple reasons: 

First is the Fed is making money extraordinarily available for its buddies.  You and I have to deal at the retail level, but at the wholesale level, if you will, money is cheap.  When the Fed stops passing out money on street corners the market goes into a tizzy.   And when you see a good-sized decline going into a Fed meeting, it’s really just the market trying to strong-arm the Fed into passing out still more money

And in yesterday’s “easy way out” decision, Ben Bernanke, el al, did exactly this, because they read the same history we do.  And they probably have a very good idea of where we are.

The second reason stocks are going up?  The returns on stocks, which would have been a laughing matter at these level 10-years ago, look pretty good compared to what banks are paying.  Last time I looked (two weeks ago) the Big National Banks were paying little guys like us one-tenth of one frigging percent.  Per year.

That’s BS because you know what?  Government figures out this week showed, if you were paying attention, that prices of stuff we actually BUY are going up at 1.2% per year.  Official numbers are right here.

5.  What’s Ure point?

Lookie here, and I’m talking to that dodo next to you:  If you put money in a bank at 0.1% and the cost of stuff is going up at 1.2%, that means you’re actually losing money putting it in a bank!  Yes: I think only an idiot puts money they want a return on their dough.  Buy something there will be a greater demand and price for in the future!

Sure, a bank is a great place to stash tax payments, property tax money, and you need it for transactions, of course.  But with the bad taste the public has for stocks (thanks to the lack of dough due to the housing disaster and memories of the Tech Wreck/Internet bubble collapse, stocks have been screaming.

6.  But stocks can go down…

So can  banks.  In fact: There have been about 6,500 bank branches closed in the USA since the IndyMac crisis.  Just last week, the Texas Community Bank, National Association down in the Houston area went down.  The painful purge is still with us.

7.  But can’t companies go bankrupt?

Maybe, but remember the Fed has been passing out money like crazy.  Pick solid companies with products you really use (medical supplies like Band-Aids, or food products, toilet paper, or whoever makes that next computer you’re thinking about).  They can go bankrupt, too, but by then if they do, banks will have done a bail in anyway.

8.  But stocks can go down…

Would you shut up on risk? Driving is a risk, getting out of bed is a risk.  If you think a stock, or group of stocks is going into free-fall, read up on the intelligent use of options to protect your position from downside. 

And better, learn to use the triple-levered exchange-traded funds (ETFs).  These are amazingly simple, liquid as hell, and our Peoplenomics trading model, based on using triple levered funds turned in 39% year to date when we ran the numbers a couple of weeks back.  The market’s still moving up and I figure it will end the year up about 44%.

This is NOT investment advice.  All I do is advise people to think.

9. I’m not sold on the Longwave view of Life.

Suit yourself.

Back in April of this year, I presented Peoplenomics readers with a Kondratieff view of 2013.  And in it was a most revealing chart that most people are totally ignorant of.  Even professional economists hold something magical about the 1930’s Depression, but from the Longwave perspective, the Great Depression was NOT, as it turns out the “biggy”.

Here’s what I think many of the hackademics miss:  There were actually four distinct panics in the period 1903 to 1921.  Only one of these is attributable to the outbreak of hostilities in World War I.

And then what happened?  Easy money, good times, and the run-up to what turned out to be the 1930’s Great Depression event.

However, since the Kondratieff wave timing low was likely “set” with the trough war (called the US Civil War, if you’ve heard of it?) then when would we expect the first of the panics to arrive, given that the nominal length of a longwave period is 54,5 years?

Well, the Civil War broke out in 1861.  So adding 54-years to that would give us what?  1905, ideally, and yet here we are with the 1903 and 1907 panics and this latter one saw the market drop half of its value, as measured by the Dow Jones average.

Where does that 1905 ideal low land us in the next cycle?  Well, at another little trough war called the Vietnam War, which you may have also heard of.

And OMG, look:  the K-wave low was hit in 1962.

Which brings me to the Big Picture of where we are today and where I think we’re going.

I’m just penciling 1962 plus 54 and you can do the math yourself. These charts do not decrement for purchasing power dilution/monetary inflation, which make the assertion even more obvious.

10.  So when do we get to the bottom of this crappy economy?

This is what I reported to Peoplenomics subscribers in April 2013. 

When our “Bottom is Due”

Well, the short answer is that it should have been here on February 14, 2013. However that would only be true if we had perfect symmetry between the 6/22/1962 low and the mini-crash low on 10/19/1987. Unfortunately, the date range as Kondratiev himself notes, may vary by as much as 25%.  We’ll study this in detail as we move forward this morning.

Still, that does give us a pretty good insight into the market timing: We observe an implied rather precise economic cycle length here as being made up of ~9,250 days, which would translate to a recent K-Wave length of 50.6849 years.  From this basic calculation we can inspect how well this fits by looking back through market history.

9,250 days before that 1962 low was 2/23/1937. But the actual market low for what most economists figure to have been a secondary Depression, off the 1929 collapse, showed up about a year off-schedule on March 31, 1938.

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Coping: OH, That Typo, Newsroom Insights

Our phone service was out for about 12-hours out here at the “end of the string” into the early hours of today.  Reason being the local water company had put in some pipe years and years ago, and thanks (probably to all the oil drilling around us) the land has gotten kind of “shifty-like.”  Old water lines break.  And so they ripped out a particular section  about a block-long that has been breaking on a regular basis, and they’ve replaced it with newer stuff.  Which will last another hour, or two anyway.

In the process, of course, dig laws and marker flags or not, the local water company managed to tear out phones for a half mile around and – bless him – a CenturyLink fellow named Jim and his crew were up until past 3 AM getting all our phones and internet connections working again. We appreciate that.

It goes to show that what makes a company good is the people, and sometimes that gets overlooked.

And so as things came back on line here? What’s the second email I get? After the :”secret that turns women on” spam?

“Disclaimer is misspelled on top bar – sorry about that, could not help mydelf.”

Once again, we come to the matter of typos around here.

A bit of background to put things into perspective:  I worked in my (real) news-gathering life in RADIO.  And, since we had to SOUND good, as opposed to WRITE well, I got to the point after 15-years of on air news-reading that you could put the most hacked-up, mis-spelled piece of garbage in front of me and I could read it like it was the authoritative word from On High.

The skill is finely honed when colleagues get ahold of the freshly written copy for the next newscast and write in a few clever lines which land you in trouble if you don’t read ahead. 

And example might be something like this… (try reading this aloud as though you were actually on the air…go ahead…good for training the mind…)

“…and in other news from City Hall, the Mayor is schedule to meet with the city council president tomorrow is discuss the budget.  And don’t fart.  As the city continues to work on solutions to a revenue shortfall which could leave the city millions of dollars short of necessary revenue.  You asshole.

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Fed Takes the Easy Way Out

…out, that is for Ben Bernanke, who in a few minutes will waltz up to the microphones and undoubtedly try to walk a soft middle between reining in runaway government money printing (in the back room via quantitative easing) while at the same time, putting enough of a scare in the market that higher rates are still likely coming…just not yet….to keep runaway inflation from setting in.

To support continued progress toward maximum employment and price stability, the Committee today reaffirmed its view that a highly accommodative stance of monetary policy will remain appropriate for a considerable time after the asset purchase program ends and the economic recovery strengthens. The Committee also reaffirmed its expectation that the current exceptionally low target range for the federal funds rate of 0 to 1/4 percent will be appropriate at least as long as the unemployment rate remains above 6-1/2 percent, inflation between one and two years ahead is projected to be no more than a half percentage point above the Committee’s 2 percent longer-run goal, and longer-term inflation expectations continue to be well anchored. In determining how long to maintain a highly accommodative stance of monetary policy, the Committee will also consider other information, including additional measures of labor market conditions, indicators of inflation pressures and inflation expectations, and readings on financial developments.

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