Kaye F. Nelson, 65, of Peachtree City

Kaye F. Nelson, 65, of Peachtree City, passed away November 29, 2013.

She was preceded in death by brother Owen Upshaw and father Luther Upshaw.

She is survived by her husband of 43 years, Harry M. Nelson; sons Michael (Tiffany) Nelson, Jr. of Fayetteville and Luke (Lindsey) Nelson of Buford; daughter Brandi Kaye (Mike) Dailey of Ola; grandchildren Clayton, Ryan, Tyler, Kanon, Colt, J. D. and Emmi Kaye; mother Ruth Carey of Pickens, MS; brothers Kenny, Eddie and Sid Upshaw and several nieces and nephews.

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via The Citizen http://www.thecitizen.com/articles/12-03-2013/kaye-f-nelson-65-peachtree-city

Katharina Schaer, 77, of Sharpsburg

Katharina Schaer, 77, of Sharpsburg, Ga. passed away on November 26, 2013 at Gentiva Hospice in Columbus, Ga.

Mrs. Schaer was born on June 10, 1936 to the late Kaspar and Maria Mollinger. In addition to her parents Mrs. Schaer was preceded in death by her husband, SSG U.S. Army (Ret) Bartlin Herman Schaer.

Memorial services for Mrs. Schaer will be held at 2 p.m. on Tuesday, December 3, 2013 at Main Post Cemetery, Fort Benning, Ga. According to Striffler-Hamby 4071 Macon Road Columbus.

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via The Citizen http://www.thecitizen.com/articles/12-03-2013/katharina-schaer-77-sharpsburg

Gracie Dodson Amos of Peachtree City

On our Lord’s Day November 27, 2013 at 3:00 PM Gracie Dodson Amos was called by her Lord to her eternal home.

A celebration of her life was held at 11 a.m., December 2, 2013, at Sandy Ridge Methodist Church, 1620 Amostown Road, Sandy Ridge, N.C., 27046. Interment followed in the church cemetery, where she joined her beloved late husband. Mrs. Amos had resided in Peachtree City, Ga. since 2006, following the passing of her husband.

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via The Citizen http://www.thecitizen.com/articles/12-03-2013/gracie-dodson-amos-peachtree-city

One “Big” Problem With Bitcoin…

Submitted by Simon Black of Sovereign Man blog,

At this point, you’d pretty much have to be living under a rock to have not heard of Bitcoin.

I actually asked this question (‘have you been living under a rock?) to someone recently who proudly proclaimed that he had never heard of Bitcoin, almost expressing gratification in his ignorance of a game-changing model.

Bitcoin is on fire. Mainstream media coverage is everywhere.

Today, in fact, the Forex Industry Conference kicks off at the W Hotel here in Santiago. And the lunchtime workshop is featuring an hour-long panel on Bitcoin, including the folks behind Coin4ce.com, Chile’s largest Bitcoin trader.

No doubt, digital currency is a growing trend in Latin America… particularly in neighboring Argentina where the government has been nationalizing everything that isn’t nailed down.

The Argentine government has imposed a series of desperate capital controls and price controls, including severe restrictions on purchasing gold and foreign currencies.

Most Argentines have been left to suffer the terrible inflation and erosion of purchasing power that comes with holding a rapidly depreciating paper currency.

But for some Argentines, Bitcoin has been a salvation. And demand for the digital currency has soared in the country as people have realized that Bitcoin cannot be controlled or nationalized by the Argentine government.

As a result, Bitcoins in Argentina frequently trade for more than 30% higher than in neighboring countries… presenting a rather interesting arbitrage opportunity.

With all the mainstream attention, though, Bitcoin has been building its share of detractors. I read an article on Forbes recently entitled something like “Why Bitcoin is doomed to fail”.

Most of these pieces roll out the same tired points– that nobody knows anything about the mysterious programmer who put it together… that it’s too volatile… etc.

True, Bitcoin is incredibly volatile. A lot of this is based solely on momentum and speculation.

Think about it– the premise behind Bitcoin is that it is an alternative to fiat currency. So is gold. Yet while Bitcoin has soared in the last few months by practically an order of magnitude, the nominal gold price has remained flat.

This suggests to me that a lot of the new Bitcoin buyers are speculators– people that are trading paper currency for Bitcoin, hoping to trade their Bitcoins back into even more paper currency at a later date.

This approach defeats the purpose of holding a fiat currency alternative. And it raises a rather interesting problem that is unique to Bitcoin: with such a huge runup in the nominal price of Bitcoin, how is it supposed to be taxed?

The capital gain rules for precious metals are very clear, especially if you’re a US taxpayer. But the IRS has literally issued ZERO guidance on Bitcoin.

If, for example, Bitcoin is considered a ‘currency’ by the IRS, then Bitcoin gains should be taxed as ordinary income according to IRC section 988(a)(1)(A).

But if Bitcoins are considered to be a long-term investment, such as shares of Google that you hold for more than a year, than it should be taxed at lower capital gains rates.

And what about if your Bitcoins are stolen? Are such losses deductible like other investment losses? Or would it be treated like personal property as if your car was stolen?

And what if you’re a US taxpayer holding Bitcoins at an overseas-based brokerage? Would this ‘account’ need to be reported on foreign financial disclosure forms?

Everything is up in the air. And while the IRS has issued fairly clear guidance on precious metals, they haven’t made a peep about Bitcoin… leaving, once again, the onus on the taxpayer to figure everything out.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/Po05rYePYbA/story01.htm Tyler Durden

One "Big" Problem With Bitcoin…

Submitted by Simon Black of Sovereign Man blog,

At this point, you’d pretty much have to be living under a rock to have not heard of Bitcoin.

I actually asked this question (‘have you been living under a rock?) to someone recently who proudly proclaimed that he had never heard of Bitcoin, almost expressing gratification in his ignorance of a game-changing model.

Bitcoin is on fire. Mainstream media coverage is everywhere.

Today, in fact, the Forex Industry Conference kicks off at the W Hotel here in Santiago. And the lunchtime workshop is featuring an hour-long panel on Bitcoin, including the folks behind Coin4ce.com, Chile’s largest Bitcoin trader.

No doubt, digital currency is a growing trend in Latin America… particularly in neighboring Argentina where the government has been nationalizing everything that isn’t nailed down.

The Argentine government has imposed a series of desperate capital controls and price controls, including severe restrictions on purchasing gold and foreign currencies.

Most Argentines have been left to suffer the terrible inflation and erosion of purchasing power that comes with holding a rapidly depreciating paper currency.

But for some Argentines, Bitcoin has been a salvation. And demand for the digital currency has soared in the country as people have realized that Bitcoin cannot be controlled or nationalized by the Argentine government.

As a result, Bitcoins in Argentina frequently trade for more than 30% higher than in neighboring countries… presenting a rather interesting arbitrage opportunity.

With all the mainstream attention, though, Bitcoin has been building its share of detractors. I read an article on Forbes recently entitled something like “Why Bitcoin is doomed to fail”.

Most of these pieces roll out the same tired points– that nobody knows anything about the mysterious programmer who put it together… that it’s too volatile… etc.

True, Bitcoin is incredibly volatile. A lot of this is based solely on momentum and speculation.

Think about it– the premise behind Bitcoin is that it is an alternative to fiat currency. So is gold. Yet while Bitcoin has soared in the last few months by practically an order of magnitude, the nominal gold price has remained flat.

This suggests to me that a lot of the new Bitcoin buyers are speculators– people that are trading paper currency for Bitcoin, hoping to trade their Bitcoins back into even more paper currency at a later date.

This approach defeats the purpose of holding a fiat currency alternative. And it raises a rather interesting problem that is unique to Bitcoin: with such a huge runup in the nominal price of Bitcoin, how is it supposed to be taxed?

The capital gain rules for precious metals are very clear, especially if you’re a US taxpayer. But the IRS has literally issued ZERO guidance on Bitcoin.

If, for example, Bitcoin is considered a ‘currency’ by the IRS, then Bitcoin gains should be taxed as ordinary income according to IRC section 988(a)(1)(A).

But if Bitcoins are considered to be a long-term investment, such as shares of Google that you hold for more than a year, than it should be taxed at lower capital gains rates.

And what about if your Bitcoins are stolen? Are such losses deductible like other investment losses? Or would it be treated like personal property as if your car was stolen?

And what if you’re a US taxpayer holding Bitcoins at an overseas-based brokerage? Would this ‘account’ need to be reported on foreign financial disclosure forms?

Everything is up in the air. And while the IRS has issued fairly clear guidance on precious metals, they haven’t made a peep about Bitcoin… leaving, once again, the onus on the taxpayer to figure everything out.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/Po05rYePYbA/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Complete Hedge Fund Performance For November And Year To Date

With November in the books, a month in which the S&P rose 2.85%, and a centrally-planned 27% year to date, it is time to check how the most prominent US hedge funds are doing heading into the home stretch. As usual – it is not pretty. And yes, while hedge funds don’t benchmark to the S&P, after 5 years of underperformance, their LPs sure start asking themselves why do they pay 2 and 20 at a time when one can buy the SPY for free and thanks to CIO Bernanke, outperform 98% of all hedge funds?

 

Best and Worst Hedge funds of 2013:

The complete latest HSBC presentation:

HSBC November 2013.pdf


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/S3hkWKxTkqA/story01.htm Tyler Durden

BofAML Warns Rising Treasury Volatility Suggests Either Higher Rates “Or” Lower Stocks

The broad-based measure of Treasury bond volatility – MOVE – has broken higher, and, as BofAML’s MacNeil Curry notes, confirms a base and change in trend (to higher or more volatility). With the month of December traditionally a strong month for the MOVE Index and Treasury volatility in general, Curry warns there are two ways the volatility can move higher – either higher rates or lower equities.

Via BofAML,

We look for Treasury volatility to head higher to 81/87 and potentially beyond

 

THERE ARE 2 WAYS THE MOVE CAN HEAD HIGHER: Higher rates OR lower equities.

We expect 10yr yields to run to the Sep highs at 3.00% and eventually beyond. However, we are very focused on 5yr yields, specifically the 1.451%/1.473% zone as KEY. Through here completes a 2m Head and Shoulders Base, 1.670%/1.659% and potentially beyond.

The other way the MOVE/Treasury volatility can rise is from a DECLINE IN equities. Yesterday’s price action in the S&P500 was a concern, resulting in cash a break of month long wedge support (1807) and ESZ3 breaking the 1799.75/1799.00 pivot.

However, for damage to transpire to the larger uptrend, we need to see a minimum of a close below the 21d in cash at 1786. Back above 1799.75 in ESZ3 is needed to indicate stabilization and a resumption higher.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/t_thKAmLB_w/story01.htm Tyler Durden

BofAML Warns Rising Treasury Volatility Suggests Either Higher Rates "Or" Lower Stocks

The broad-based measure of Treasury bond volatility – MOVE – has broken higher, and, as BofAML’s MacNeil Curry notes, confirms a base and change in trend (to higher or more volatility). With the month of December traditionally a strong month for the MOVE Index and Treasury volatility in general, Curry warns there are two ways the volatility can move higher – either higher rates or lower equities.

Via BofAML,

We look for Treasury volatility to head higher to 81/87 and potentially beyond

 

THERE ARE 2 WAYS THE MOVE CAN HEAD HIGHER: Higher rates OR lower equities.

We expect 10yr yields to run to the Sep highs at 3.00% and eventually beyond. However, we are very focused on 5yr yields, specifically the 1.451%/1.473% zone as KEY. Through here completes a 2m Head and Shoulders Base, 1.670%/1.659% and potentially beyond.

The other way the MOVE/Treasury volatility can rise is from a DECLINE IN equities. Yesterday’s price action in the S&P500 was a concern, resulting in cash a break of month long wedge support (1807) and ESZ3 breaking the 1799.75/1799.00 pivot.

However, for damage to transpire to the larger uptrend, we need to see a minimum of a close below the 21d in cash at 1786. Back above 1799.75 in ESZ3 is needed to indicate stabilization and a resumption higher.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/t_thKAmLB_w/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Stocks Are Having Their Worst Day In A Month

Since Friday’s holiday-shortened session, US equities have tried and failed to sustain the exuberance of the month, quarter, year. Volume is heavy but postive breadth is becoming narrower with fewer and fewer names leading the rise and the break in EURJPY is weighing heavily on the overall markets as stocks catch down to recent indications from bonds, the USD, precious metals, VIX, and credit that the Fed taper may be coming sooner than many hoped. And it’s a double-POMO Day… get to work Mr. Henry.

 

The carry unwind continues to drag stocks down…

 

as the Pre- and Post-Thanksgiving pop has folded quickly…

 

Can you tell from the lower pane (relative volume) which days were sell-offs?

 

Charts: Bloomberg

Bonus Chart: Did the S&P hitting its Fibonacci extension level mark a technical turning point?

(h/t Brad Wishak)


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/Nq5xy_n6zl4/story01.htm Tyler Durden

With Website “Fixed”, President Re-Pitches Obamacare 2.0 – Live Webcast

Amid proclamations of hundreds of thousands accessing the “fixed” website (though no details on who is signing up), admissions that work continues to be needed, delays, and broken promises; President Obama has deemed it fit to utilize his lectern to market the Affordable Care Act once again. From “easy” women to keg-standing kids, there is something for everyone in this special one-time offer… grab your popcorn…

 

 


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/uT8rrSsLvQ4/story01.htm Tyler Durden