Is There an “Invention Horizon?”

Double-up on the coffee ration this morning: There is so much going on in finance that it takes in excess of 4,600 words to “cover the waterfront” this morning. The deep thinking is caused by an analysis of why the market failed to break to the downside on or before our November 10 target date. This morning we follow a circuitous trail that leads from the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency’s latest report to the changes at what used to be the Treasury’s Bureau of the Public Debt (Yes, America is bankrupt by the way and we haven’t fixed the problems of the 2008 crisis, but we’ll get into that, too) and from there we consider two business models either one of which could decide whether we head into two more years of inflation and pseudo-growth, or whether the new savior of retail (subscriptions) will drive us to the deflationary side. And all this fell out or research when we started off looking for a simple “best play” in robotics.

Government’s “Creative Accounting”

You may get sick of me talking about government’s “creative accounting” but here we go again.

With president Obama’s new amnesty plans out last night, we have to wonder how quickly these folks who are in the US illegally, but not now being deported, will show up in unemployment figures?

It’s not a pointless question because 4.5 million people will have to show up somewhere…or not.  Perhaps a good sleuthing reporter (like John Crudele at the NY Post) could find the answer.

So what will five million additional workers look like when tossed into the jobs hopper?  I suspect it will improve the unemployment rate, but that’s just a guess. We hear that 8.1 million are already in the workforce and unemployment data, so who knows?  Mexicans in the US is dropping while OTMs continue to climb. 

Questions about “how the numbers work” are fairly straightforward with publicly traded companies.  I found Disney’s 10-K report an interesting read this week, for example.

When you’re dealing with government, though, it’s a more difficult problem. Take the little matter of how many people have signed up for Affordable Care Act coverage.

The original story (thus, the one most people will remember) is that 7-million had signed up by August, or so.  But, it turns out, 380,000 signups were for dental plans, so the real ACA number was smaller and did not hit government goals.

While the republicats and democans battle out another point of minutia, what we have is a larger problem of lack of government candor.

And even width the election behind us, that’s a problem that’s not going away.

If you were facing an airline flight on a plane with the same kind of safety record as the government (both parties) have, I’m sure you’d walk, drive, or take a train.  And I’d be right there with you.

Executive Amnesty

Oh, sure, it still ignores the law, but it could have been worse.  Besides, when comes down to it, doesn’t a president have the ability to grant pardon’s?  Just think of it as 4.5 million of them all at once.

As the WaPo reported this morning, last night was a mix of celebration and disappointment.  And, oddly, I’d offer that this is what America really has become, thanks largely to the folks in Washington:  A “mix of celebration and disappointment” but shading more to the disappointment side here lately.

Wall St.

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Coping: With “HGTV Disease”

The symptoms are subtle, at first. The wife says “Could you tighten that whatchamacallit for me?” And then, as though there’s a prepubescent teenager in the house, suddenly possessed, furniture begins to move. Not on its own, but with a few pointers picked up in some ancient video archive from HGTV. The disease may quietly be in remission for nearly two months, or until just this week.

Hitting Your Emo-Buttons, Hang on for Stupidity

I was sort of surprised this morning when the USA Today folks did a piece on the disproportionate number of blacks arrested by police in the US, especially when the article didn’t get into the more important number: Conviction rates.

Don’t get me wrong, the USA Today story that can be found online over here makes some fine points.

And yes, blacks really are arrested more frequently.  But that’s could change due to illegal immigration being made suddenly legal.

Quite telling on the conviction rates point is this Wikipedia snip:

Various studies have shown that, in recent decades, there has been no noticeable disparity in black vs white conviction likelihood for those accused in black-run vs white-controlled cities, say Atlanta vs San Diego. In the largest counties, the rates of prosecution for accused blacks was slightly less than the prosecution rates for whites, for example. “…the only hint of racial disparity was to the advantage, not disadvantage, of blacks accused of crimes.”

There may some disparity in the arrest rate, but I suspect that if the arrest rates were really different than the actual perp rate (which is not measurable) that conviction rates would be different.  They are not.

Which gets me to the first ponder of the morning in the area of Peoplenomics:  Do cops tend to “go fishing” where they catch the most fish? D’oh…

I hold that Americans are a lot less biased that guilt-peddlers would like to admit.  I would also suggest that when black “leaders” like Bill Cosby are getting hounded on date-rape accusations and where black urban music features lyrics about “popping a cap in yo ass” every drug ref in the PDR and such, that the drug underculture and “do overs”  conspire against black culture.  It’s been largely destroyed by well-intended welfare overseers who drove black male heads of households from homes with the inevitable outcome from parentless upbringings.  What the hell did the nation expect?

More trouble.

Do you think I’ll give reporting like this arrests story, which seems incomplete and polarizing in what could be two of the toughest days in America’s history of trying to get race relations right a “gold star”?

Think again.  I’m not that guy.  But it likely will sell newspapers.

While we await Ferguson  and Executive Amnesty, seems to me we ought to look to the sources of the real problem – which is all that money spent on social programs since the Great Society has not significantly changed poverty in America or the injustice that breeds what?

More after this…

Consumer Prices

Say hello, again, to deflation…

The Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers (CPI-U) was unchanged in October on a seasonally adjusted basis, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reported today.

Over the last 12 months, the all items index increased 1.7 percent before seasonal adjustment. Gasoline and other energy indexes declined, offsetting increases in shelter and an array of other indexes to leave the seasonally adjusted all items index unchanged.

The gasoline index fell for the fourth month in a row, declining 3.0 percent, and the indexes for natural gas and fuel oil also decreased. The food index rose slightly in October, with major grocery store food groups mixed. The index for all items less food and energy increased 0.2 percent in October.

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Coping: With Government that Can’t Hear “No!”

There was a report in one of the polls I subscribe to recently that said “People in Ohio are sick of Hillary already…”

No shit, Roger that.

For the past week, I have been trying to unsubscribe from the “Friends of Hillary” email system which sends me email, sometimes several times per day.

Now, I’m sure that if I started sending you email several times a day and ignored your unsubscribe notes and clicks that you’d be pissed.

There is some logic to my thinking on this, so follow along.

Starting with GW and fine-tuned by BO, we see that presidential candidates and others such as congressoids, do a much better job on email than they seem to do in office.

Another example of unwanted emails?  I tried multiple times to unsub from Texas governor candidate Wendy Davis’ email list.  I kept getting emails from her right up to (and a one past) the bitter end.

I’m pretty sure Greg Abbott who will replace “fair-hair” Rick down here will do a pretty good job in office.

Reason?

I received I think it was one email from him.

Here’s my new life hack:

Set up Outlook to sort all emails into office holders and seekers files.  Like president in 2016.

When it comes time to vote, since most politicians are pathological liars including the guy in the WH who will be on the boob tube tonight trying to convince you he was sincere in 22 previous statements against wholesale amnesty) that whoever sends the most email is likely going to do the worst job once in office.

I realize that this may sound a bit harsh, but I mean it to be so.

The usual political hooey is that this is “voter communication.”

No, it has the pungent odor of panhandling on the net.  Because panhandling is defined as “beg in the street.”  This is electronic Main Street.

Especially when it’s not REALLY Hillary who’s running.  Says so right here:

That’s close enough to panhandling for me. You?

Why would I send money to a group that seems to support a candidate who isn’t being honest about whether she’s running for office?  Of course she’s running.  You think this dough will go to Jeb or Ted?

I believe (being an East Texas nutjob who will make up answers to fit the facts) that the lying starts slowly with political hacks then builds overs time.  They get away with it because America cares more about Dancing with the Stars and Gomer Pyle than it does who’s in office.  It’s outrageous, but our national stupidity catches up with us ever two, four, and six years.

Giving money to political panhandlers just encourages ‘em. And if Hillary won’t be forthright about her fundraising proxies now, why would we put her in office? 

I’ve decided to run for office, but not which one.  so I’ve begun  an exploratory committee.

Oh, my new broad spectrum emotional radio ad:

“Consider my stand on healthcare:  Free for all  And look how it works:  I’m overweight, drink too much, and I sometimes forget to floss.  But friends, I can deliver that…plus if you vote for me I promise excess cholesterol at levels that would shock any doc.  But that’s who we are…fat, indolent, lazy and victims.  Trust me when I say Ure’s your man.  Transfats and all.

On immigration, I promise to vote against amnesty for everyone especially all Swedes in the US illegally.  And I’m calling for a full scale investigation of Lutfisk Bell. The administration has yet to reveal the horrible truth of Herring Walker.

Ask any resident of border states like Wisconsin or Montana and they’ll tell you the dangers of Swedes hiking in from Canada ruining their tree farms  These illegal lefse runners and Social Democrats can not be tolerated especially by peaceful citizens in places like Ferguson Missouri where lefse is no longer served, ear as we can tell. 

Do you see it?  This is how America falls apart, one lingonberry at a time.  And I will not allow entry to those hordes of children from Denmark, either.  Let these repressive regimes hear us loud and clear!  Borders AND Butter.

Honestly, I haven’t made a decision whether to run, or not.  But give me your money voluntarily now because I’ll be coming for it anyway, just  as soon I get into office.

Paid for by Ures Truly,  Not endorsed by Hillary Clinton.”

Like it?  America will never again elect an honest politician either because  1) there aren’t any, or 2) because the public can’t outbid the special interests.

I’m asking you to help me raise $63-million dollars so I too can buy one of those $150,000 a year jobs serving the public.  Sure, the numbers don’t wash…but they will in the end.  Yours.

Solving Some Woo-Woo

Our lady up near Trinidad wrote back to update us on where she lives and such, southwest of Trinidad, Colorado.

If you missed your Adderall this morning, this was the lady whose shop vac in the garage goes on sometimes in the middle of the night – by itself.

Helpful readers jump in:

Hi George,

Could a rodent have tripped the shop vac switch?

If not, I live perhaps 40 miles south of our largest Army base, Fort Hood. When I installed a buried gate opener, which responds to passing metal, I quickly had to disable it, when dialing down the gain didn’t work.

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The Soft War for World Leadership

This morning we look at the “soft war” for control of the world. We review a multiplicity of organizations that are in the running for the honor of becoming the global tax collectors, from the UN on down. And we review how Germany was strong-armed out of demanding its gold (allegedly) on deposit at the NY Fed. We then consider a Swiss vote on gold backing for the franc that could cause turmoil in global financial markets next month. But on nippy mornings like this, no point is going to work without coffee, headlines, and our Trading Model.

Ferguson: Crossing the Fine Line to the Divided States

OK, here it comes.

Media Frenzy101 course.

First you lead with the governor of Missouri putting the National Guard at the ready.

Then have the FBI actually forecast violence.

Then you talk about how protesters have been training for weeks, now.  Key quote from one of the organizers from that story:

“And I also think we’re not going to get change in this society unless white people are just a little bit afraid.”

Hold the phone.

Sounds to me like what great evil?  Racism.

There is a fine line between free speech and sedition. Peaceful assembly?  No problem.  Rioting?  Big problem.  That would be an attempted revolution.

Wrapped up in fuzzy-think liberal jargon like “deep love” and it might just get pulled off.  Forget that the “target list” smacks of military thinking and revolution tactics.  Just claim free speech often enough to keep the “public” supporting the “revolution.”

Worst of all:  The organizers seem bent on rioting no matter what the Grand Jury comes out with.

Now, last time I checked, we were still a country of Laws  If a Grand Jury, with all the evidence before it comes out with a verdict that stops short of what the “organizers” want, which seems to  a lynching, by the way, then at what point does freedom of speech turn to revolutionary hate speech?  Inciting to riot was a crime, last I heard.

The law is the law.  But when two bit organizers in positions from the White House on down, ignore the law (like on immigration) and due process (pending in St. Louis), then that, dear reader, is a revolution.

Because the Left didn’t win at the polls, look for them to turn this into a media frenzy that ignores the founding principles of this once-Great Nation:  Rule of law, due process, and the peaceful pursuit of life, liberty, and happiness.

Unless you believe in lynch mobs, which seems to be the mindset of the revolutionaries and being promoted by the mainstream media.

I am no great supporter of Eric Holder (Gunwalker/Fast & Furious and contempt of congress, remember?) or how the administration is about to break a lot of other laws.

But the pending Media Frenzy over Ferguson seems curiously timed to coincide with the administration’s amnesty agenda.

If a genuine despot were planning to overthrow America, would video of a lynch mob and throwing out laws on illegal immigration be sufficient? 

Watch closely.

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Coping: With the Arithmetic of Healthcare & Bullchange

Speaking of healthcare, as we do often around here,  the chief programmer of our www.nostracodeus.com project, Grady up in Alberta, just laughs whenever I begin to whine about how the US has the more f/u’d healthscarce system in the world due to three major factors.

The first, of course, is the pharmaceutical industry which lies about every alternative treatment that comes along if they can’t patent it.  There’s no money is a great vitamin regimen, something I totally believe in (and feel great because of).

The second point is that there are natural medicines that have been around since time immemorial that do absolute wonders.  A leading physician we know who holds many patents in his specialty, practices in one of the enlightened marijuana states. He’s gone the alternative medicine route after conducting more than a year of exhaustive research on the elementals of marijuana.  It’s not the THC (the getting high part) that is the miracle drug, although it does chance how music sounds.  No, in terms of ridding people of cancer and a whole shopping list of other ailments, it’s the cannabinoids (CBDs) that yield results that shame many FDA approved drugs.

And third, of course, there’s the how it all gets paid for.

In a rational government-run program there would be no  profit. Not that profit is bad, but the whole point of government is to provide profit-free services, although most (like fire and police) do provide jobs.  In the USA we have a wonder-kluge that pretends to provide healthcare yet at a price that is absurd compared to other places.

Grady, up in Alberta, pays $44 a month for whatever comes along.  And, he assets, most everyone else does, too.

So as you watch your lifestyle ratchet down over the next couple of years as healthscarce ramps up, pay attention to what this one lawyer/reader shared with me about the healthcare mess:

My version of your I Ching in box is what our family used to call “The Book Fairy” but now call “The Information Fairy”. Open a book and the page you open to will have the answer to your current pondering. Now it’s expanded to multiple media. And weeks now have themes. Last week was “Liberals can’t do math” week, a version of which one sees in every French election.

I love my many left leaning friends, but last week when the Obamacare bills were unleashed after the election, I posted my brother’s new rate, which went up 36%, or by $450 a month, and politely thanked Obama for nothing. I also asked liberals, who are in denial that the country is sick of their policies, to stop trying to help me. The storm of blue jerseys was astounding.

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Monday on a Strange Planet

Once upon a time, in a galaxy far away, there lived a race of people who existed, near as anyone could tell, expressly for the purpose of fooling one another.

It was a happy planet, at least when the fooling was going right.  But much less so, when the fooling was going wrong.

On a particular Monday, Gazorp Universal Time, a ship that entered orbit around this odd planet, reviewed its recent observations and reported the following:

  1. The inhabitants of the planet are enthralled with a time-wasting activity highlighted by excessive alcohol consumption in which they imagine there is meaning to a sport called “football.”  Everyone knows they can’t play football, and neither can a lot of the players.  Without the help of drugs.  When the government of the football country pulled a surprise “inspection” to see if drugs were being use, it was front page news .  We sadly report this as only our first example of a country “Fooling itself.”  Absent worthwhile leadership pushing toward conquest of space and time, this planet is absorbed in sports marketing as a multi-billion dollar industry, a prime example of “fooling itself.”
  2. A second prime example was the G20 finance meeting this weekend.  Where it is clear that the world is quickly running out of resources to feed and energize its population, the G20 nevertheless persists in agreements to make up more paper (substitute for hard assets) and boldly (and stupidly) announcing its “Blueprint for Growth.”  We offer this as a confirming example of a planet “fooling itself.”  While it could be sharing knowledge and valuing all inhabitants more highly, their main preoccupation is with creating paper which is then traded for consumables.
  3. Religions contribute to human conflict as we report their Pope is planning a visit to the football country in 2015 while at the same time, another religious group is working out the process of ‘tasteful beheadings to advances its goals.  Again, a planet doing what?  We have to recommend against any further external intervention agents such as we have sent previously.  This planet has a history of taking the core concepts we’ve shared and monetizing them for gains of money, power, or both.
  4. While there are pockets of equality, most of the planets inhabitants engage in segregation of some kind.  The football country, having officially ended slavery 150 years ago, the segregation is now mainly along economic lines.  Again, an example of a ruling class fooling itself and imposing that error on everyone else.  We will report how well that plays when a grand jury report is handed down in Ferguson, Missouri, perhaps this week.
  5. Our concluding observation that really clinches the “world fooling itself” comes as a company called Facebook announces plans for a “work” version of a playtime distraction.  As we previously reported on the Facebook model:  companies were convinced that they needed to move customer interaction away from their own websites onto Facebook pages.  Since there was no money in that, Facebook then held the moved audience hostage and now “rents back” the audiences brought by others in order to profit.  As we understand it, the Facebook work product would be a kluge of features already existent in products like LinkedIn, WebEx, GoToMeeting, and GoogleDocs and we expect a dash of Skype. As a previous report noted, this planet keeps inventing things until no one makes enough money and it is praised as “capitalism.” 
  6. We believe that the sum of these and other observations will lead to another Global Financial Disaster, the timing of which could be anywhere from now until 5-rotations (years they call them) from today.  It’s an inevitable outcome we’ve seen on other planets when deeply delusional states take hold, and where the highest profits are made from fooling one another “most successfully.”.  Very similar to what happened on Betelgeuse 21 and Sagittarius 4.
  7. We strongly recommend we repossess our Moon and move it to a planet better-suited to developing  civilization with a chance of maturing to direct-contact level.  Should we remind them it is a dimensional fold problem and not a rocket powered solution, or let them figure it out?  They’re leaving dead batteries and space junk on comets now…

More after this…

Book of Numbers

No,  not that one.  I’m talking initially about the NY Fed Empire State Manufacturing report just out.  From the NY Fed website:

The November 2014 Empire State Manufacturing Survey indicates that business activity continued to expand for New York manufacturers.

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Coping: With the $500 Christmas Tree

I happened to be in the big city this weekend on business:  The Big City being Palestine, TX, population less than 20,000.

There, in the local Big Box store that specializes in tools and hardware was a Christmas Tree.  Plastic.  And priced at just $499.95.  The joy of this tree seemed to be the craftsmanship and it looked like even an idiot like me could assemble this designer-looking marvel with only a glass or two of wassailing juice.

How could I resist?

Resist, I did.  Promptly went over to hand tools and grabbed a 12” pairs of Channel-Locks and applied them to my forearm for the better part of 3-minutes.  Then I went back to the tree to recheck the price. 

It hasn’t changed and I was surely sober and in the moment, as evidenced by the edema on the arm.

I picked up a few things I’d come for and left shaking my head.  For a country where Social Security is going up only 1.7% it sure seemed odd to see a $500 plastic tree.

My next stop, Wally World, was a little more productive.  For one, I spent more money, and for a second, they had a kind of full-sized Santa that was like the Disney audio-animatronic.  This marvel of machinery would come two life at the damnedest times and begin “Fa-la-la-lah-lah’ing” all over himself and whoever was nearby.

Little kids in their grocery carts would point at the moving fatso and their indulgent parents would go over to observe the effects.  I would have paid big to find out what was going through their heads, but I knew what was going through mine:  The world has gone frigging mad.

Nearby was another lighted tree that I could buy and take home.  This one was only $249.95. 

Still, somehow at the advanced age of 65, spending money on a Christmas tree doesn’t seem like a wise environmental choice.  Trees sequester carbon.  And it stands to reason that if the world has high CO2 levels, sequestering carbon is a good thing.  So what cut them down?

Oil, on the other hand, an even more dense source of carbon, is used to make the fancy plastic trees so again, back to the sequestration problem.

It occurred to me that there’s a serious conflict between saving the environment and saving Christmas; at least in the retail sense.

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Is the Next Collapse Underway?

Three items for breakfast this weekend.  In our first serious Focus piece, we look at dynamics of oil pricing.  And how what goes on in oil could be setting up the Global Financial Collapse. Secondly, we look at timing the problem of the Global Depression. The third item involves the little matter of how to maintain the integrity of a system that seems to accurately forecast the future, as we discussed in the Friday UrbanSurvival.com column.

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MH-17 Shot Down by Western Jet?

As the G20 is about to meet in Brisbane, Russia Channel 1 has released satellite photos this afternoon that allegedly show a fighter jet launching a missile that show down Malaysian Airlines flight MH-17 over Ukraine. The story has been picked up by British media and should hit dinner time news shows in the US. It is all over Russian media. When you look at the photos, remember the plane is heading East and the photo supposedly hacked by the Russians off a US or British intel satellite clearly shows the jet approaching the path of MH-17 from the West. Airspace controlled by the who?

A Major Stock Prediction Breakthrough

OK, sure, sure, we’ll get to the “usual” stuff in a minute.  Retail sales and such…

But before we do that, Chris McCleary has a couple of columns up this week over at the National Dream Center site that demand reading.

Why?  Because (as we’ve long expected) when sliced consistently with Grady’s Nostracodeus software. Chris is getting extremely high correlations between future stock market prices and what people DREAM.

Part 1 is here: For those with eyes to see: Secret mirror to Wall St.

Part 2 is here: The Secret Mirror to Wall St., Part II

The basic drift of it is that dreams seem to be able to predict the future of the stock market up to as much as the 70% kind of range.

And this would make sense because as I’ve told you for years, there is likely a correlation simply because human systems all seem to have a major “As above, so below…” aspect to them.

But beyond this, about 70-80 percent of all that passes for “news” in today’s world is pre-planned.  So much so that I can tell you that I’ll be looking for New Zealand’s retail sales figures on Sunday afternoon at 3:45 PM because it will already be Monday where?  Just one example, but enterprising reporters (Attkisson aside) are rare as hell.  In reality we live in a sanitized press release scheduled world.

Just like the Fed capacity and utilization report will be out Monday morning at 8:15 local time. 

It has always stood to reason that people will dream about things in advance…want my rap on structural hysteresis?   We know (at least in my very cursory look at dream time delays) that if a person experiences something shocking (like getting fired), the dream resulting from that experience may crop up to anywhere from that night  to 10-days later.

So by the time a dream is aggregated and considered by Chris & Grady’s Dreambot version of Nosty software and other tools Chris has developed, you can see how there might be a lag.

But the lag may happen to place the dream results just ahead of physical manifestation.

Let’s take that worker laid off on April 1.  He has a dream with work layoff content on April 7th. Chris then might pick out the trend on April 8the or 9th.

But it’s on April 15th when the company issues the press release that triggers the stock decline…

This is just the kindergarten version.  And tomorrow on Peoplenomics we’ll discuss a lengthy email that I’ll be sending Chris (and Grady) today about how to move forward.  There are ways to improve not only the integrity of the data, but also navigate certain other issues.

For this morning, however, the main thing to watch is what?  Dreams.  And for reasons I won’t go into yet, you really, really, REALLY want to be posting your dreams on a regular basis on the National Dream Center‘s DreamBase.

When Chris mentions “The meek shall inherit the earth” who do you think the “meek” are?  Another hint:  We’ve had plenty of “future can be bought” but now we’re seeing a path where future can be “earned” by the sincere.  And, in the process, ways to maintain predictive integrity going forward which is way cool and the whole point of things.

But more on that tomorrow.  We now return you to the regular scheduled news, such as this morning’s retail sales report…

Spending Our Way to Oblivion

Imagine you just won the Powerball for $500-million.  What would be the first thing you bought?

Many people will name this bauble or that trinket.  But other than a large ring for Elaine, I can’t think of much else, right off the bat.  Everything we buy is really a two-edged sword.

I might want a bigger & faster airplane than our old Beechcraft.  Which sounds really cool, but the problem that comes along with it is it would increase my chances of killing myself.  Complex airplanes (yes I can fly them) are where many more things can go wrong.  Like the landing gear might not come down…that kind of thing.

So the mindset “auspicious” is critical. Must be present to win, and so would a 200 mile per hour sports car extend or shorten your life?  Do you really have serious experience driving over 100 miles an hour? 

The Retail Sales figures that follow are always interesting.  Not as interesting as winning the Powerball might be, but with proper mindset, you can infer the national mood a bit from reviewing the data:

The U.S. Census Bureau announced today that advance estimates of U.S. retail and food services sales for October, adjusted for seasonal
variation and holiday and trading-day differences, but not for price changes, were $444.5 billion, an increase of 0.3 percent (±0.5%)* from the
previous month, and 4.1 percent (±0.9%) above October 2013.

Total sales for the August through October 2014 period were up 4.5 percent
(±0.7%) from the same period a year ago. The August to September 2014 percent change was unrevised from -0.3% (±0.2%).

Retail trade sales were up 0.3 percent (±0.5%)* from September 2014, and 3.8 percent (±0.7%) above last year. Nonstore retailers were up 9.1
percent (±2.1%) from October 2013 and auto and other motor vehicle dealers were up 8.3 percent (±3.0%) from last year.

What is terribly obvious is that it’s only Auto Sales that are keeping the economy afloat:

One of these days I’m either going to have to report we have reached consumer super-saturation where every man woman and child has two cars and an SUV, or the next great boom in ‘Merica will be the garage building business.

Under the surface, this is NOT a good report.  The national mood, at least as far as I’ve been able to pick up going into town and just listening to people’s “between the lines” implications seems to be something like “Yeah, sure the economy sucks, but you only go around once, so I’m going to buy me a new…(fill in the blank).

Futures are flat, gold under $1,150 on the futures.

Critical Fed Number

Holy shit! Money supply is cratering —>>>

The M1 money supply figure for the most recent three month period has gone negative on an annualized basis.

And the money supply growth of M2, basis the last three months and then annualized was up a total of 3.4%.  This means the dollar is still getting stronger, not weaker, as the wealth continues to accrue to the rich.  It also means the rates will be firming and when that happens, car loans will move up and the stage will be set for another decline.

But this kind of action could be a year or longer working out.

My Consigliore’s Ebola Tracking

When a tax attorney/CPA looks at Ebola, I pay attention:

Official Numbers as of November 9, 2014
Total 14,098
Deaths 5,489
Note: the CDC estimates that actual cases in Liberia, Sierra Leone, and Guinea are two to three times higher than officially reported numbers
Some important things to note wrt the Ebola epidemic:
The Good News:
1) It appears that in the early stages of infection it is NOT very contagious, if contagious at all.

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