Who Is Who In The Central African Republic Crisis: The Infographic

Much has been writtien about the latest straight to YouTube humanitarian conflict (France involvement comment and then the US ) this time not in the middle east but in Africa, specifically the Central African Republic, which has so far pitted French troops and US drones against… it is unclear whom exactly, but supposedly the perpetual strawman, Al Qaeda, is once again involved. So instead of more talking, here is a simple infographic courtesy of AFP (more here) that lays out who is who in the latest hot bed set to escalate, especially if China, as some expect, gets involved.

Source


    



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

Why is Gold Trading So Low During Balance Sheet Expansion?

Collectively, the world’s Central Banks have put more than $10 trillion into the financial system since 2008. To put that number into perspective, it’s equal to roughly 15% of global GDP.

 

Despite this rampant money printing, the price of Gold has in fact fallen against every major world currency since 2011.

 

 

 

In a time in which every major central bank is expanding its balance sheet through money printing, Gold has fallen against every major currency.

 

Indeed, in the US, the Federal Reserve is now expanding its balance sheet at a pace of nearly $1 trillion per year. The Fed balance sheet is already at $3.8 trillion and will likely surpass $4 trillion in early 2014.

 

Any yet, the price of Gold, denominated in US Dollars is lower today than it was when back in early 2011, when the Fed’s balance sheet was just $2.4 trillion.

 

 

 

 

Does this make sense? Gold falling in value at a time when balance sheets expanded by multiple TRILLION dollars?

 

Make no mistake, gold is not dead. Not by any means. The day is coming when its price will soar again.

 

For a FREE Special Report on a uniquely profitable inflation hedge, swing by….

http://phoenixcapitalmarketing.com/goldmountain.html

 

Best Regards

Graham Summers

 

 

 

 


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/fSbmGSeS4mA/story01.htm Phoenix Capital Research

Muppets Crucified After Goldman Closes One Of Its "Top Trades For 2014" At A 13.5% Loss Less Than A Week Into 2014

That didn’t take long.

On December 2, in its fourth Top Trade recommendation of the year, Goldman urged its clients to go “Long China Stocks, Short Copper.” This is how we decribed the trade: “Goldman is selling China equities (via the HSCWI Index), while buying copper (via Dec 2014 futs), or at least advising its flow clients to do the opposite while admitting that “for the long China equity/short commodity pair trade to “work” best, these two assets, which are usually positively correlated, will have to move in opposite directions.” For that and many other reasons why betting on a divergence of two very closely correlating assets will lead to suffering, read on. Finally – do as Goldman says, or as it does? That is the eternal question, one whose answer is a tad more problematic since the author in this case is not Tom Stolper but Noah Weisberger.” One week into the new year we have the answer.

Yesterday, less than one week into the new year, Goldman closed this “Top Trade for 2014” following a loss of 13.5%. Actually, correction: 13.5% loss to “clients” means a 13.5% profit to Goldman, and all those who followed our advice to trade alongside Goldman, not as a counterparty.

To wit:

Close long HSCEI Index and short Copper Dec 14 LME future, opened at 0.0% (on return basis, corresponding to respective price levels of 11542.1 and 7064.5 in two instruments) on 02 Dec 2013, for a potential loss of -13.5%.

So, as always, losers: Goldman clients. Winners: Goldman’s “flow” desk which took the opposite side of the trades, very much as we expected.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/E3uJqs-ZGMM/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Muppets Crucified After Goldman Closes One Of Its “Top Trades For 2014” At A 13.5% Loss Less Than A Week Into 2014

That didn’t take long.

On December 2, in its fourth Top Trade recommendation of the year, Goldman urged its clients to go “Long China Stocks, Short Copper.” This is how we decribed the trade: “Goldman is selling China equities (via the HSCWI Index), while buying copper (via Dec 2014 futs), or at least advising its flow clients to do the opposite while admitting that “for the long China equity/short commodity pair trade to “work” best, these two assets, which are usually positively correlated, will have to move in opposite directions.” For that and many other reasons why betting on a divergence of two very closely correlating assets will lead to suffering, read on. Finally – do as Goldman says, or as it does? That is the eternal question, one whose answer is a tad more problematic since the author in this case is not Tom Stolper but Noah Weisberger.” One week into the new year we have the answer.

Yesterday, less than one week into the new year, Goldman closed this “Top Trade for 2014” following a loss of 13.5%. Actually, correction: 13.5% loss to “clients” means a 13.5% profit to Goldman, and all those who followed our advice to trade alongside Goldman, not as a counterparty.

To wit:

Close long HSCEI Index and short Copper Dec 14 LME future, opened at 0.0% (on return basis, corresponding to respective price levels of 11542.1 and 7064.5 in two instruments) on 02 Dec 2013, for a potential loss of -13.5%.

So, as always, losers: Goldman clients. Winners: Goldman’s “flow” desk which took the opposite side of the trades, very much as we expected.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/E3uJqs-ZGMM/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Jerry Brown's California High-Speed Rail Is So 20th Century

google carCalifornia’s Governor Jerry Brown (D)
is supposed to be a visonary politician. Yet his support for
wasting $68 billion (the current estimate) to build a high-speed
rail link between Los Angeles and San Francisco harks back to the
age of the adding machine and the slide rule. The rail line is
supposed to be completed by 2029. That’s right, 2029! The whole
world of transportation will have been massively transformed by
then.

Autonomous vehicles will provide the bulk of personal and goods
transport by then. Computer-guided vehicles can be more tightly
packed on roadways and travel much faster than human-guided
vehicles. Gov. Brown’s high speed trains are supposed to travel
between LA and San Francisco in 2 hours and 40 minutes. It’s very
likely that speedy autonomous vehicles by 2029 will be able to make
that trip in about the same amount of time traveling up Interstate
5, and do it door-to-door, rather than delivering passengers to
fixed stations. 

In addition, a significant proportion of Americans will no
longer own vehicles, but will summon and rent them as needed, thus
reducing the total number of vehicles on our roads. All this
implies that our current transporation infrastructure in currently
way overbuilt for our future needs.

California RailToday’s New York Times
details the problems
confronting the project, not the least of
which is that its defenders have no idea from where all the money
to fund it is going to come. According to recent polls, only 43
percent of Californians now support the boondoggle. In the Times,
Rep. Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) notes:

Mr. McCarthy said the governor should not bother trying to
rescue the project, though he added that he understood why Mr.
Brown was standing by it. “They get so invested in it, they just
get blinded,” he said. “That’s why I think this time of year, New
Year’s, is the best time to step back and say: ‘I tried. It won’t
pan out.’ I think the governor would get big applause from
California voters saying that.”

Gov. Brown should save the money that would be spent on building
a 20th century throwback project and instead spend some of it on
making repairs to our current infrastructure. That would be the
visonary thing to do.

For more background, see the Reason Foundation’s recent
report
on the financial follies involved with California’s high
speed rail project.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2014/01/07/jerry-browns-california-high-speed-rail
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Jerry Brown’s California High-Speed Rail Is So 20th Century

google carCalifornia’s Governor Jerry Brown (D)
is supposed to be a visonary politician. Yet his support for
wasting $68 billion (the current estimate) to build a high-speed
rail link between Los Angeles and San Francisco harks back to the
age of the adding machine and the slide rule. The rail line is
supposed to be completed by 2029. That’s right, 2029! The whole
world of transportation will have been massively transformed by
then.

Autonomous vehicles will provide the bulk of personal and goods
transport by then. Computer-guided vehicles can be more tightly
packed on roadways and travel much faster than human-guided
vehicles. Gov. Brown’s high speed trains are supposed to travel
between LA and San Francisco in 2 hours and 40 minutes. It’s very
likely that speedy autonomous vehicles by 2029 will be able to make
that trip in about the same amount of time traveling up Interstate
5, and do it door-to-door, rather than delivering passengers to
fixed stations. 

In addition, a significant proportion of Americans will no
longer own vehicles, but will summon and rent them as needed, thus
reducing the total number of vehicles on our roads. All this
implies that our current transporation infrastructure in currently
way overbuilt for our future needs.

California RailToday’s New York Times
details the problems
confronting the project, not the least of
which is that its defenders have no idea from where all the money
to fund it is going to come. According to recent polls, only 43
percent of Californians now support the boondoggle. In the Times,
Rep. Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) notes:

Mr. McCarthy said the governor should not bother trying to
rescue the project, though he added that he understood why Mr.
Brown was standing by it. “They get so invested in it, they just
get blinded,” he said. “That’s why I think this time of year, New
Year’s, is the best time to step back and say: ‘I tried. It won’t
pan out.’ I think the governor would get big applause from
California voters saying that.”

Gov. Brown should save the money that would be spent on building
a 20th century throwback project and instead spend some of it on
making repairs to our current infrastructure. That would be the
visonary thing to do.

For more background, see the Reason Foundation’s recent
report
on the financial follies involved with California’s high
speed rail project.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2014/01/07/jerry-browns-california-high-speed-rail
via IFTTT

Dozens of Retired NYC Police, Firefighters Charged with Social Security Disability Fraud

Just think of what he can get if he claims he's afraid of horses!There’s probably some sort of
joke or ironic reference to be made about New York City’s
authoritarian police surveillance culture
and breaking news
that dozens of city police and firefighters’ claims of mental
disability have been called into question by images gathered via
the Internet and social media.

The New York Times reports this morning that 80 retired
New York City police officers and firefighters are being charged
with Social Security disability fraud. And they may just be the

tip of the iceberg
:

Eighty retired New York City police officers and firefighters
were charged on Tuesday in one of the largest Social Security
disability frauds ever, a sprawling decades-long scheme in which
false mental disability claims by as many as 1,000 people cost
taxpayers hundreds of millions of dollars, according to court
papers.

Scores of those charged in the case essentially stole in plain
sight, according to a 205-count indictment and a bail letter,
collecting between $30,000 and $50,000 a year based on fabricated
claims that they were completely incapacitated by serious
psychiatric disorders. Many said that their actions in response to
the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks were responsible for their
psychiatric conditions, such as post-traumatic stress disorder,
anxiety or depression.

But their Facebook pages and other websites, according to the
court papers, tell a starkly different story.

The bail letter includes photographs culled from the Internet
that show one riding a jet ski and others working at jobs ranging
from helicopter pilot to martial arts instructor. One is shown
fishing off the coast of Costa Rica and another sitting astride a
motorcycle, while another appeared in a television news story
selling cannoli at the Feast of San Gennaro on Mulberry Street in
Manhattan.

Read the full story
here
.

Who will be the first to claim his or her privacy was violated?
Will they point out that they weren’t doing something suspicious
justifying such snooping, like visiting a mosque or being a
Muslim?

The New York Times notes that 106 people were charged
altogether (so far). Four men have been identified as
masterminds:

Those men – the lawyer, Raymond Lavallee; the pension
consultant, Thomas Hale; the detectives’ union official, John
Minerva; and Joseph Esposito, 64, a retired New York police officer
who recruited many of the other defendants – were charged with
first- and second-degree grand larceny and attempted second-degree
grand larceny.

A pension consultant and a union official, quite a
two-fer.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2014/01/07/dozens-of-retired-nyc-police-firefighter
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This surprise investment has outperformed Google for the past 10-years

plums 150x150 This surprise investment has outperformed Google for the past 10 years

January 7, 2014
Sovereign Valley Farm, Chile

Later this year, Google will celebrate its 10th anniversary as a publicly-traded company. And the conventional wisdom is that GOOG has been one of the best performing investments of the last decade.

If you had invested $85 in the Google IPO back in 2004, your investment would be worth over $1,100 today… a 13x return.

Over the same period, the S&P 500 has returned just 66%. And if you had taken the plunge into US Treasuries back in 2004, you would have been paid 4.15% per annum for the last ten years.

In light of all this, Google’s stock performance has been undoubtedly stellar.

But there’s an entirely different asset class that few people ever consider which has beaten the pants off of Google’s long-term performance. It’s agriculture. IMG 0924 300x199 This surprise investment has outperformed Google for the past 10 years

I thought about this yesterday as I was walking around the orchard here picking fresh, ripe plums off the tree. We’ll be starting our harvest soon, and the workers are getting everything ready.

The average plum tree can easily produce over 100 pounds of fruit, starting a few years after you put a well-developed seedling in the ground.

And even on a standard-sized residential lot, you can plant 20+ fruit trees.

Assuming a long-term average price of just $0.50 per pound and a 2004 plant price of $4, investing $85 in plum trees 10-years ago instead of Google stock would have yielded well over $6,000 so far.

Even if you’re not a Do-it-yourselfer and allow for harvest costs, loss, pruning, water, and other expenses, you’d still be up more than GOOG. Plus you’d still be grossing $1,000 per year… not to mention the increase in your home’s market value.

More importantly, you would be owning (and producing) REAL assets instead of paper assets– something that can be traded, sold, stored, or if need be, eaten.

And best of all, you wouldn’t have had Ben Bernanke and his central banking ilk as your silent partner for the past decade, manipulating stock prices and causing asset bubbles.

The soon-departing Mr. Bernanke may be the all-powerful grand wizard of financial markets, but he has absolutely no bearing on the fruit production of well-maintainined trees in your backyard.

It’s not just plums, either. Or even fruit trees for that matter.
tomatoes 300x199 This surprise investment has outperformed Google for the past 10 years
You could have bought $85 worth of organic tomato seeds in 2004 and grown thousands of dollars worth of organic tomatos over the last decade from your backyard.

Of course, this sort of notion makes most serious investors laugh. They can’t think past their own noses and only know how to follow the investment herd off the proverbial cliff.

And while this missive isn’t intended to convince our astute readers to rush out and plant trees, it’s at least worth pointing out that there are always profitable options far from the mainstream investment mentality.

More to follow on this soon.

from SOVErEIGN MAN http://www.sovereignman.com/trends/this-surprise-investment-has-outperformed-google-for-the-past-10-years-13364/
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India Minister Warns Of "The Return Of The Ugly American"

Authored by Shashi Tharoor (India’s Minister of State for Human Resource Development), originally posted at Project Syndicate,

Nearly a month after American authorities arrested India’s deputy consul general in New York, Devyani Khobragade, outside her children’s school and charged her with paying her Indian domestic worker a salary below the minimum wage, bilateral relations remain tense. India’s government has reacted with fury to the mistreatment of an official enjoying diplomatic immunity, and public indignation has been widespread and nearly unanimous. So, has an era of steadily improving ties between the two countries come to an end?

Judging from Indian leaders’ statements, it would certainly seem so. India’s mild-mannered Prime Minister Manmohan Singh declared that Khobragade’s treatment was “deplorable.” National Security Adviser Shivshankar Menon called her arrest “despicable” and “barbaric,” and Foreign Minister Salman Khurshid refused to take a conciliatory phone call from US Secretary of State John Kerry.

Emotions have run high in India’s Parliament and on television talk shows as well. Writing to her diplomatic colleagues after her arrest, Khobragade, who has denied the charges against her, noted that she “broke down many times,” owing to “the indignities of repeated handcuffing, stripping, and cavity searches, swabbing,” and to being held “with common criminals and drug addicts.” A former Indian foreign minister, Yashwant Sinha, has publicly called for retaliation against gay American diplomats in India, whose sexual orientation and domestic arrangements are now illegal after a recent Supreme Court ruling. The government has not taken him seriously, but his suggestion indicates how inflamed passions have become.

Some retaliation has occurred. The initial American rationale (that foreign consuls in the US enjoy a lower level of immunity than other diplomats) led India’s government to re-examine privileges enjoyed by US consular officials that are unavailable to their Indian counterparts in the US. These privileges – including full-fledged diplomatic ID cards, access to the restricted customs areas of airports, tax-free shipments of items for personal consumption, and no questions asked about the terms of their employment of local domestic staff – were swiftly withdrawn. The cardinal principle of diplomatic relations is reciprocity, and India realized that it had been naïve in extending courtesies to the US that it was not receiving in return.

Likewise, the police have removed bollards and barriers that the US Embassy had unilaterally placed on the street in front of its complex in New Delhi, creating an obstacle to free circulation on a public road that India had tolerated in a spirit of friendship. (The government has, however, reiterated its commitment to the US Embassy’s security, even reinforcing the police presence outside.)

Tempers remain inflamed, with US Ambassador Nancy Powell, in a New Year’s message to Indians, ruefully acknowledging that ties have been “jolted by very different reactions to issues involving one of your consular officers and her domestic worker.” Kerry has also expressed “regret” over the incident. But the US has shown no signs of moving to drop the charges to defuse the crisis.

Indians remain bewildered that the US State Department would so willfully jeopardize a relationship that American officials had been describing as “strategic” over a practice routinely followed by foreign diplomats for decades. Most developing-country diplomats take domestic staff with them on overseas assignments, paying them a good salary by their national standards, plus a cost differential for working aboard. In Khobragade’s case, perquisites included a fully furnished room in a pricey Manhattan apartment, a television set, a mobile phone, medical insurance, and tickets home.

The cash part of the salary may be low by US standards – Khobragade herself, as a mid-ranking Indian diplomat, earns less than what the US considers a fair wage – but, with the other benefits, the compensation is attractive for a domestic helper. More to the point, Khobragade did not find her maid in the US labor market and “exploit” her; she brought her from India to help her in her representational duties, on an official passport, with a US visa given for that purpose. In almost no other country are local labor laws applied in such a manner to a foreign diplomat’s personal staff.

Privately, US diplomats express frustration at their helplessness in the face of theatrical grandstanding by the ambitious federal prosecutor, Preet Bharara, an Indian-American who has launched a series of high-profile cases against Indians in America. For once, however, the zealous Bharara seems to have slipped up, because Khobragade was arrested at a time when she enjoyed full diplomatic (not just consular) immunity as an adviser to India’s United Nations mission during the General Assembly. The State Department’s handling of the matter – which included approval of Khobragade’s arrest – has been, to say the least, inept.

Worse, just before the arrest, the maid’s family was spirited out of India on US visas for victims of human trafficking. The implication that an Indian diplomat in a wage dispute with her maid is guilty of human trafficking understandably riles Indian diplomats as much as the treatment of Khobragade after she was detained. The American habit of imposing its worldview self-righteously on others is deeply unwelcome. To most Indians, common discourtesy cannot be repackaged as moral virtue.

Indian-American relations had been strengthening, owing to both sides’ shared commitment to democracy, common concerns about China, and increasing trade and investment. The Khobragade affair suggests, however, that all of this is not enough: sustaining a strategic partnership requires, above all, mutual respect.

India had handled American diplomats with a generosity of spirit that it felt the bilateral relationship deserved. Now, with the same spirit shown to be lacking from the other side, the friendship has suffered. Until the US displays appropriate deference to the sensitivities, pride, and honor of other peoples and cultures, it will continue to be resented around the world.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/x04wR6J_5FQ/story01.htm Tyler Durden

India Minister Warns Of “The Return Of The Ugly American”

Authored by Shashi Tharoor (India’s Minister of State for Human Resource Development), originally posted at Project Syndicate,

Nearly a month after American authorities arrested India’s deputy consul general in New York, Devyani Khobragade, outside her children’s school and charged her with paying her Indian domestic worker a salary below the minimum wage, bilateral relations remain tense. India’s government has reacted with fury to the mistreatment of an official enjoying diplomatic immunity, and public indignation has been widespread and nearly unanimous. So, has an era of steadily improving ties between the two countries come to an end?

Judging from Indian leaders’ statements, it would certainly seem so. India’s mild-mannered Prime Minister Manmohan Singh declared that Khobragade’s treatment was “deplorable.” National Security Adviser Shivshankar Menon called her arrest “despicable” and “barbaric,” and Foreign Minister Salman Khurshid refused to take a conciliatory phone call from US Secretary of State John Kerry.

Emotions have run high in India’s Parliament and on television talk shows as well. Writing to her diplomatic colleagues after her arrest, Khobragade, who has denied the charges against her, noted that she “broke down many times,” owing to “the indignities of repeated handcuffing, stripping, and cavity searches, swabbing,” and to being held “with common criminals and drug addicts.” A former Indian foreign minister, Yashwant Sinha, has publicly called for retaliation against gay American diplomats in India, whose sexual orientation and domestic arrangements are now illegal after a recent Supreme Court ruling. The government has not taken him seriously, but his suggestion indicates how inflamed passions have become.

Some retaliation has occurred. The initial American rationale (that foreign consuls in the US enjoy a lower level of immunity than other diplomats) led India’s government to re-examine privileges enjoyed by US consular officials that are unavailable to their Indian counterparts in the US. These privileges – including full-fledged diplomatic ID cards, access to the restricted customs areas of airports, tax-free shipments of items for personal consumption, and no questions asked about the terms of their employment of local domestic staff – were swiftly withdrawn. The cardinal principle of diplomatic relations is reciprocity, and India realized that it had been naïve in extending courtesies to the US that it was not receiving in return.

Likewise, the police have removed bollards and barriers that the US Embassy had unilaterally placed on the street in front of its complex in New Delhi, creating an obstacle to free circulation on a public road that India had tolerated in a spirit of friendship. (The government has, however, reiterated its commitment to the US Embassy’s security, even reinforcing the police presence outside.)

Tempers remain inflamed, with US Ambassador Nancy Powell, in a New Year’s message to Indians, ruefully acknowledging that ties have been “jolted by very different reactions to issues involving one of your consular officers and her domestic worker.” Kerry has also expressed “regret” over the incident. But the US has shown no signs of moving to drop the charges to defuse the crisis.

Indians remain bewildered that the US State Department would so willfully jeopardize a relationship that American officials had been describing as “strategic” over a practice routinely followed by foreign diplomats for decades. Most developing-country diplomats take domestic staff with them on overseas assignments, paying them a good salary by their national standards, plus a cost differential for working aboard. In Khobragade’s case, perquisites included a fully furnished room in a pricey Manhattan apartment, a television set, a mobile phone, medical insurance, and tickets home.

The cash part of the salary may be low by US standards – Khobragade herself, as a mid-ranking Indian diplomat, earns less than what the US considers a fair wage – but, with the other benefits, the compensation is attractive for a domestic helper. More to the point, Khobragade did not find her maid in the US labor market and “exploit” her; she brought her from India to help her in her representational duties, on an official passport, with a US visa given for that purpose. In almost no other country are local labor laws applied in such a manner to a foreign diplomat’s personal staff.

Privately, US diplomats express frustration at their helplessness in the face of theatrical grandstanding by the ambitious federal prosecutor, Preet Bharara, an Indian-American who has launched a series of high-profile cases against Indians in America. For once, however, the zealous Bharara seems to have slipped up, because Khobragade was arrested at a time when she enjoyed full diplomatic (not just consular) immunity as an adviser to India’s United Nations mission during the General Assembly. The State Department’s handling of the matter – which included approval of Khobragade’s arrest – has been, to say the least, inept.

Worse, just before the arrest, the maid’s family was spirited out of India on US visas for victims of human trafficking. The implication that an Indian diplomat in a wage dispute with her maid is guilty of human trafficking understandably riles Indian diplomats as much as the treatment of Khobragade after she was detained. The American habit of imposing its worldview self-righteously on others is deeply unwelcome. To most Indians, common discourtesy cannot be repackaged as moral virtue.

Indian-American relations had been strengthening, owing to both sides’ shared commitment to democracy, common concerns about China, and increasing trade and investment. The Khobragade affair suggests, however, that all of this is not enough: sustaining a strategic partnership requires, above all, mutual respect.

India had handled American diplomats with a generosity of spirit that it felt the bilateral relationship deserved. Now, with the same spirit shown to be lacking from the other side, the friendship has suffered. Until the US displays appropriate deference to the sensitivities, pride, and honor of other peoples and cultures, it will continue to be resented around the world.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/x04wR6J_5FQ/story01.htm Tyler Durden