Brian Pretti: The World’s Capital Is Now Dangerously Boxed In

Submitted by Adam Taggart via Peak Prosperity,

If you would have told me that we would be in this set of circumstances today ten years ago, I would have told you you were out of your mind.

~ Brian Pretti

This week Chris speaks with Brian Pretti, managing editor of ContraryInvestor.com, a financial commentary site published by institutional buy-side portfolio managers. In their discussion, they focus on the global movement of capital since quantitative easing (QE) became the policy of the world's major central banks.

The ensuing excellent discussion is wide ranging, but the key takeaway is that capital is being herded into fewer and fewer asset classes. With such huge volumes of money at play, very crowded trades in assets like stocks and housing have resulted — bringing us back to familiar bubble territory in record time.

The key for the individual, Pretti emphasizes, is risk management. The safety many investors believe they are buying in today's markets is not real.

The Housing Market Is a One-Sided Investment Cycle

I think what we have got going on here in housing is we have got an investment cycle, not an economically-driven housing cycle, from the standpoint that really, never before have 40 to 50% of all residential real estate transactions been for cash. We have never seen that in prior cycles, absolutely not. You know, what is driving that? Well, in one sense – and it is not a point of blame, but more a look at the unintended consequences of what the actions of QE are – when you lower these interest rates and you take away safe rate of return in alternative assets. Five years ago you could have got 5% in a CD, a Treasury bond, even a money market fund. Well, for a lot of those people who had been savers and investors in safe assets, they do not have rate of return any more. What do they do? They take their $300-$400 thousand nest egg out of the bank, and they turn around and buy a rental property where they can theoretical get the 6%, 7% cash on cash rate of return. And all of a sudden that becomes their rate of return.

 

So, I think we are clearly seeing this, where assets are being lifted out of other investments – whether it is Treasurys or CDs or bank accounts – and being used to buy residential real estate. Of course, the issue becomes one of risk, meaning a Treasury bond never really needs a replacement roof, and the water heater does not break, and there are no vacancies. So, we are increasing risk in these asset class choices and investment choices, but it is a forced choice, because there is no other rate of return. And for people who need that to live, that is why I think we are seeing the big cash transaction levels that we have never really seen before.

 

Second part of the equation, foreign money is absolutely on the move. I mean, we are talking on the first business day of the new year, and one of the things that is in the news this morning and being talked about is, Is there going to be some type of an IMF-driven 10% deposit tax in the Euro banking system? Well, this has been being talked about now for probably two, three, four months. The trial balloons go up in the air. The Euro banking crowd has also talked about potentially negative interest rates. So may be a very simple question, Chris. If you are a Euro citizen and your net worth is caught up in euros and/or you have assets in the Euro banking system, what do you do? You get them out before something like this happens.

 

And really, maybe we can draw the parallels, too, with Japan, where we have seen monetary debasement and true currency debasement in very violent form over the last year since Abe’s been elected. If you are a Japanese citizen and your net worth is caught up in yen, you have lost 20% of your global purchasing power. What do you do? Capital begins to move globally.

 

And I think part of what we are seeing – well, maybe one last piece here, too, is, the current leadership in China is cracking down on corruption. So, I know you know full well, moving capital out of China is illegal. There is only one way to get it out. You have got to have serious capital. So, what is it doing? It is hiding in alternative assets globally. It is coming to what it perceives, for now, the perception of safety that maybe includes the U. S. dollar, and if you are coming to the U. S. dollar, what do you do? Well, you can buy bonds, you can buy stocks, you can buy a business, you can buy real estate, and because safe rate of return has been basically taken away, real estate and perhaps stocks, too, are a repository for that foreign capital.

 

And then, maybe lastly more than not, that global capital being on the move is concentrating in some of these geographic areas that we are seeing. I mean, prices in the New Yorks, prices in the Londons, prices in the San Francisco Bay Areas are just really off the charts here. So this is very much unlike prior cycles where we saw – and I know this sounds a little simplistic and Pollyannaish – but we see younger families getting jobs, making a little bit more money. All of a sudden, they can afford a home; they take on a mortgage purchase application. Maybe they buy your or my house and the food chain moves up. That is not happening this time. So, this is really an investment cycle, as opposed to a true economically-driven housing cycle.

 

And I just ask myself, is the lynch pin in all of this the dividing line of alternative rates of return, meaning interest rates? And as we saw rates pick up really since May of last year, we saw things like mortgage purchase apps and refi apps just drop like a rock. So as we move forward, these big metrics that are the interest rates that are Treasury rates are very, very meaningful. And will they be the catalyst of change, ultimately, in the housing cycle, as opposed to the economy being that catalyst? We are just seeing something very different this time.

The Box Global Capital Is Now In

The minute the Fed started talking about tapering – I mean, if we roll the clock back to 2009 when the Fed started their QE extravaganza, that money absolutely got into U.S. equities and got into U. S. bonds. But as the money kept being printed, it rolled across Planet Earth. It got into the emerging markets, it got into their bonds, their currencies, their equities. It got into global real estate, it got into gold, it got into commodities. The minute the 'taper' keyword was starting to be used by the Fed, all of a sudden, global investors were anticipating the recission of that tidal wave of liquidity. And all of a sudden, these asset classes started to contract to the point where it is really U.S. equities, the very large blue-chip global equities here that continue to perform well. They offer yields higher than safe bonds, for now, and are also the only place we are seeing rate of return.

 

But within this, we are herding capital into a very, very small sector of asset classes. And then lastly, fortunately or unfortunately, when we have the global central bankers and the global politicians doing what they are doing – Europe, we may take 10% of your assets in the European banking system. Europe, we may invoke negative interest rates; you bring a dollar into a bank, we will give you back 99 ½ cents. You cause capital to move, potentially, and to me this is a big issue. I think 2013 was driven as much by momentum, and there is no place else to go, and all those other wonderful things, as it was driven by the weight and movement of global capital. Global capital coming out of China, because it was scared of – if we are going to crack down on corruption and you have got corrupt capital, you get it out right away. Japan, the drop in the yen, you have got to move some of your capital to an alternative venue in an alternative currency. Europe, the threat of confiscation, and maybe just the basic question of, What the heck is the euro going to look like in three years? I know if my net worth was caught up in euros, I sure as heck would not be 100% vested in the euro.

 

So, a lot of this, I think, too, is global capital is hiding in an asset class that it considers to be relatively safe, because all these other asset classes have proven to be unsafe. And for right or for wrong, in U.S. and really large blue-chip globals, they have been very, very good stewards of capital over time. Their balance sheets are relatively clean, and if you are looking for safety, then this is just a very simple question. Would you rather lever your family’s balance sheet to one of the global governments, or would you rather lever it to Johnson & Johnson? Which one do you trust more? Which one is going to take better care of your capital over time?

 

So I think there are so many different factors that have been forcing capital into these narrow asset classes that basically are equities and real estate. The key issue to me, going forward, is risk management. For people who sat this one out, for people who have said, Hey, wait a minute; I am looking at the Bob Shiller CAPE ratio here, and we are at levels that we have only seen four times in the last 100 years.You have got to be kidding me. I am not getting into this thing. The only way to participate in these markets, in my mind, is to make sure that you have a plan for managing risk, period. This is not throw your money into the equity market and hope for a great 2014, because every year that the market was up like it was last year was followed by a year that blah, blah, blah. It does not matter. It is about making sure that we manage risk. And we need to draw hard lines underneath certain levels of capital.

 

Very easy to say, but for your listeners, too, I think this comes down to individual families and making an assessment of how much risk they can afford to take. Below that line, they do not allow it to happen. I know it may sound trite:You have every day of your life to get back into the market, but sometimes you do not have a second chance to get out. 

Click the play button below to listen to Chris' interview with Brian Pretti (101m:31s):

Click here to read the full transcript


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/_bL7yKXfbhc/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Is New York's New Mayor, Bill de Blasio, Shoveling More Manure Than Snow?

Gotham’s new mayor,
Bill de Blasio, has a “boldly progressive” agenda for the city, but
his first agenda item is perplexing, to say the least. Upon taking
office, he pledged to immediately shut down horse-carriage rides.
Writes Nick Gillespie:

New York is thriving like it hasn’t in decades, but the Big
Apple is still riddled with wormy issues and is always only a few
bad years from the fate of Detroit, Buffalo, and Cleveland. As the
Times noted in its endorsement of de Blasio, 46 percent of New
Yorkers “live in or near poverty” and another 50,000 live in
homeless shelters. Pew Research points
out
 that the city has funded just 70 percent of its
pension obligations and a miniscule 4 percent of its retiree health
benefits for public-sector workers. De Blasio’s plans for public
schools are still stuck at the rough-draft stage (although
all signs
 suggest a  commitment to screwing over
charter schools that are wildly popular with low-income parents but
the bane of teachers unions and the educational establishment).

And yet here’s de Blasio, hell-bent on becoming the Simon
Bolivar of the Mr. Ed crowd. In fact, he’s not just going to free
our four-legged friends. He’s even pledged to “provide a humane
retirement of all New York City carriage horses,” thus loading even
more pension and health-care liabilities on his preferred beasts of
burden, the city’s taxpayers.

View this article.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2014/01/05/is-new-yorks-new-mayor-bill-de-blasio-sh
via IFTTT

Is New York’s New Mayor, Bill de Blasio, Shoveling More Manure Than Snow?

Gotham’s new mayor,
Bill de Blasio, has a “boldly progressive” agenda for the city, but
his first agenda item is perplexing, to say the least. Upon taking
office, he pledged to immediately shut down horse-carriage rides.
Writes Nick Gillespie:

New York is thriving like it hasn’t in decades, but the Big
Apple is still riddled with wormy issues and is always only a few
bad years from the fate of Detroit, Buffalo, and Cleveland. As the
Times noted in its endorsement of de Blasio, 46 percent of New
Yorkers “live in or near poverty” and another 50,000 live in
homeless shelters. Pew Research points
out
 that the city has funded just 70 percent of its
pension obligations and a miniscule 4 percent of its retiree health
benefits for public-sector workers. De Blasio’s plans for public
schools are still stuck at the rough-draft stage (although
all signs
 suggest a  commitment to screwing over
charter schools that are wildly popular with low-income parents but
the bane of teachers unions and the educational establishment).

And yet here’s de Blasio, hell-bent on becoming the Simon
Bolivar of the Mr. Ed crowd. In fact, he’s not just going to free
our four-legged friends. He’s even pledged to “provide a humane
retirement of all New York City carriage horses,” thus loading even
more pension and health-care liabilities on his preferred beasts of
burden, the city’s taxpayers.

View this article.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2014/01/05/is-new-yorks-new-mayor-bill-de-blasio-sh
via IFTTT

Precious Metals In 2014

Submitted by Alasdair Macleod via GoldMoney.com,

It's that time of year again; when we must turn our thoughts to the dangers and opportunities of the coming year. They are considerable and multi-faceted, but instead of being drawn into the futility of making forecasts I will only offer readers the barest of basics and focus on the corruption of currencies. My conclusion is the overwhelming danger is of currency destruction and that gold is central to their downfall.

As we enter 2014 mainstream economists relying on inaccurate statistics, many of which are not even relevant to a true understanding of our economic condition, seem convinced that the crises of recent years are now laid to rest. They swallow the line that unemployment is dropping to six or seven per cent, and that price inflation is subdued; but a deeper examination, unsubtly exposed by the work of John Williams of Shadowstats.com, shows these statistics to be false.

If we objectively assess the state of the labour markets in most welfare-driven economies the truth conforms to a continuing slump; and if we take a realistic view of price increases, including capital assets, price inflation may even be in double figures. The corruption of price inflation statistics in turn makes a mockery of GDP numbers, which realistically adjusted for price inflation are contracting.

This gloomy conclusion should come as no surprise to thoughtful souls in any era. These conditions are the logical outcome of the corruption of currencies. I have no doubt that if in 1920-23 the Weimar Republic used today's statistical methodology government economists would be peddling the same conclusions as those of today. The error is to believe that expansion of money quantities is a cure-all for economic ills, and ignore the fact that it is actually a tax on the vast majority of people reducing both their earnings and savings.

This is the effect of unsound money, and with this in mind I devised a new monetary statistic in 2013 to quantify the drift away from sound money towards an increasing possibility of monetary collapse. The Fiat Money Quantity (FMQ) is constructed by taking account of all the steps by which gold, as proxy for sound money, has been absorbed over the last 170 years from private ownership by commercial banks and then subsequently by central banks, all rights of gold ownership being replaced by currency notes and deposits. The result for the US dollar, which as the world's reserve currency is today's gold's substitute, is shown in Chart 1.

Chart1FMQ 311213

The graphic similarities with expansions of currency quantities in the past that have ultimately resulted in monetary and financial destruction are striking. Since the Lehman crisis the US authorities have embarked on their monetary cure-all to an extraordinary degree. We are being encouraged to think that the Fed saved the world in 2008 by quantitative easing, when the crisis has only been concealed by currency hyper-inflation.

Are we likely to collectively recognise this error and reverse it before it is too late? So long as the primary function of central banks is to preserve the current financial system the answer has to be no. An attempt to reduce the growth rate in the FMQ by minimal tapering has already raised bond market yields considerably, threatening to derail monetary policy objectives. The effect of rising bond yields and term interest rates on the enormous sums of government and private sector debt is bound to increase the risk of bankruptcies at lower rates compared with past credit cycles, starting in the countries where the debt problem is most acute.

With banks naturally reluctant to take on more lending-risk in this environment, rising interest rates and bond yields can be expected to lead to contracting bank credit. Does the Fed stand aside and let nature take its course? Again the answer has to be no. It must accelerate its injections of raw money and grow deposits on its own balance sheet to compensate. The underlying condition that is not generally understood is actually as follows:

The assumption that the Fed is feeding excess money into the economy to stimulate it is incorrect.
Individuals, businesses and banks require increasing quantities of money just to stand still and to avoid a second debt crisis.

I have laid down the theoretical reasons why this is so by showing that welfare-driven economies, fully encumbered by debt, through false employment and price-inflation statistics are concealing a depressive slump. An unbiased and informed analysis of nearly all currency collapses shows that far from being the product of deliberate government policy, they are the result of loss of control over events, or currency inflation beyond their control. I expect this to become more obvious to markets in the coming months.

Gold's important role

Gold has become undervalued relative to fiat currencies such as the US dollar, as shown in the chart below, which rebases gold at 100 adjusted for both the increase in above-ground gold stocks and US dollar FMQ since the month before the Lehman Crisis.

gold adjusted 311213

Given the continuation of the statistically-concealed economic slump, plus the increased quantity of dollar-denominated debt, and therefore since the Lehman Crisis a growing probability of a currency collapse, there is a growing case to suggest that gold should be significantly higher in corrected terms today. Instead it stands at a discount of 36%.

This undervaluation is likely to lead to two important consequences.

Firstly, when the tide for gold turns it should do so very strongly, with potentially catastrophic results for uncovered paper markets. The last time this happened to my knowledge was in September 1999, when central banks led by the Bank of England and the Fed rescued the London gold market, presumably by making bullion available to distressed banks. The scale of gold's current undervaluation and the degree to which available monetary gold has been depleted suggests that a similar rescue of the gold market cannot be mounted today.

The second consequence is to my knowledge not yet being considered at all. The speed with which fiat currencies could lose their purchasing power might be considerably more rapid than, say, the collapse of the German mark in 1920-23. The reason this may be so is that once the slide in confidence commences, there is little to slow its pace.

In his treatise "Stabilisation of the Monetary Unit – From the Viewpoint of Monetary Theory" written in January 1923, Ludwig von Mises made clear that "speculators actually provide the strongest support for the position of notes (marks) as money". He argued that considerable quantities of marks were acquired abroad in the post-war years "precisely because a future rally in the mark's exchange rate was expected. If these sums had not been attracted abroad they would have necessarily led to an even steeper rise in prices on the domestic market".

At that time other currencies, particularly the US dollar, were freely exchangeable with gold, so foreign speculators were effectively selling gold to buy marks they believed to be undervalued. Today the situation is radically different, because Western speculators have sold nearly all the gold they own, and if you include the liquidation of gold paper unbacked by physical metal, in a crisis they will be net buyers of gold and sellers of currencies. Therefore it stands to reason that gold is central to a future currency crisis and that when it happens it is likely to be considerably more rapid than the Weimar experience.

I therefore come to two conclusions for 2014: that we are heading towards a second and unexpected financial and currency crisis which can happen at any time, and that the lack of gold ownership in welfare-driven economies is set to accelerate the rate at which a collapse in purchasing power may occur.

 


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/AE-j9fAKWqA/story01.htm Tyler Durden

The Gold Bull Market is Not Dead…

Many analysts today claim that Gold is dead as an investment due to its having fallen from a record high of $1900 per ounce to roughly $1200 per ounce today (a 36% drop).

 

However, this price movement, while dramatic, is quite inline with how commodities trade. Gold has already posted one drop of 28% (in 2008) during its bull market, before more than doubling in price. This latest drop is not much larger.

 

Moreover, a 36% drop in prices is nothing in comparison to what happened during that last great bull market in Gold back in the 1970s. At that time, Gold staged a collapse of nearly 50%. But after this collapse, it began its next leg up, exploding 750% higher from August ’76 to January 1980.

 

With that in mind, I believe the next leg up in Gold could very well be the BIG one. Indeed, based on the US Federal Reserve’s money printing alone Gold should be at $1800 per ounce today.

 

Since the Crash hit in 2008, the price of Gold has been very closely correlated to the Fed’s balance sheet expansion. Put another way, the more money the Fed printed, the higher the price of Gold went.

 

Gold did become overextended relative to the Fed’s balance sheet in 2011 when it entered a bubble with Silver.  However, with the Fed now printing some $85 billion per month, the precious metal is now significantly undervalued relative to the Fed’s balance sheet.

 

Indeed, for Gold to even realign based on the Fed’s actions, it would need to be north of $1,800. That’s a full 30% higher than where it trades today (see below).

 

 

 

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/I7mvbfbjyX8/story01.htm Phoenix Capital Research

BofAML: Bond Bears And USDJPY Bulls Beware

Treasury bears are at risk, is the ominous warning from BofAML's Technical Strategist MacNeil Curry, as bonds are on the verge of turning the near-term, and potentially medium-term, trend from bearish to bullish. USDJPY bulls should also take note as with the 3-month uptrend increasingly showing its age, a reversal in US rates could prove to be the catalyst for a USDJPY reversal lower.

 

Via BofAML,

10yr yields stall at support 

 

US 10yr Treasury yields are topping out against 3.000%/3.012% support. A daily close below 2.970%/2.965% resistance would complete a Head and Shoulders Top and confirm a near term turn in trend for 2.88% and potentially below. While the implications for the US $ in general are likely to be limited, $/¥ bulls should pay close attention.

The $/¥ uptrend is growing vulnerable to a reversal

The 3m $/¥ uptrend is increasingly vulnerable to a top and bearish reversal. The bearish daily momentum divergences and completing 5 wave advance from both Feb'12 and Oct'13 says that additional strength is limited before a top and turn. Given the strong correlation between $/¥ and US 10yr yields; a break down in yields could be the catalyst for such a reversal. See chart for key $/¥ levels.

US $ Index breakout

While a bullish turn in US Treasury yields could be seen as US $ bearish, it is unlikely to be the case this time. Friday's closing break of the 100d avg (now 80.65) says that the US $ Index has resumed its medium term uptrend after 2 months of range trading. Upside targets are seen to 82.15/82.55

Seasonals are also supportive for the US $ Index

In addition to the bullish breakout, seasonals are also very positive for the US $ Index. Since 1971 it has averaged a return of 1.02% (excluding carry) and risen 65% of the time. Given Friday's breakout and strong gains since the start of the year, this January should be no exception to the historical norm.

Summing it up…

  • US 10yr yields are at risk of a top & bullish reversal. A break of 2.970%/2.965% confirms, opening 2.88% & potentially below
  • $/JPY bulls beware. A US Treasury yield reversal could be the catalyst for a top and turn lower in $/JPY.
  • The US$ Index should remain unharmed from a Treasury turn. The bullish breakout & positive seasons point to higher prices


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/duTG6sxBmy4/story01.htm Tyler Durden

ReasonTV Replay: Is Santa Ana Choosing Foliage Over a Karate Legend's Dojo?

“The Real Miyagi’s Dojo Threatened: Santa Ana Favors
Foliage over Small Businesses,” produced by Tracy Oppenheimer.
About 5:30 minutes. 

Here is the original text from the Jan 2, 2014 video:

Karate legend Fumio
Demura
 has shaped much of the karate culture we are
familiar with today. He’s trained iconic martial arts stars like
Bruce Lee, Chuck Norris, Steven Seagal, and Pat Morita, and has
also acted in popular martial arts films.

Demura’s credits include working as Mr. Miyagi’s stunt double
in The Karate Kid franchise,Mortal
Combat,
 Rising Sun, and The Island of
Dr. Moreau
The Real
Miyagi
 is a soon-to-be-released feature documenting
Demura’s life. Demura credits his “dojo,” or studio, in Santa Ana,
California for much of his success.

“A dojo is not just a studio, not just for fighting. It’s the
development of better human beings,” says Demura.

Yet Demura’s dojo may not be around for much longer. The City of
Santa Ana is planning to acquire his property as well as eight
other small businesses as part of the Bristol
Street Widening Project
. The project has been around since the
early 90’s, and is just now reaching the phase that threatens these
businesses.

“It’s just a very slow process,” says Santa Ana Mayor Miguel
Pulido. “You have to deal with every single homeowner, every single
business owner.”

Mayor Pulido says that this section of Bristol Street is
especially important because it’s a major gateway into Santa Ana,
and thus requires more lanes in order to ease traffic congestion.
However, the businesses believe that the city can indeed widen the
streets without acquiring their properties.

The city’s current plan allots 30 ft. for landscaping, and those
30 ft. are crucial for the businesses to be able to remain
untouched. Christina Rush represents the Bristol Street businesses,
and says they can take care of the landscaping themselves.

“We can give you that in our plan, through our landscaping,
through architectural elements, outdoor seating,” says Rush. “We
can achieve what the city wants, that park-like look, while still
allowing the businesses to retain their properties.”

Rush has met multiple times with city representatives, and
expects a resolution or at least more debate at the city council
meeting on Jan. 6. She says the businesses have no intention of
giving up their properties without a fight.

“I’d like to stay as much as I can, because this is an old
house. We fixed it. So hard we were working,” says Demura.

About 5:30 minutes.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2014/01/05/is-santa-ana-choosing-foliage-over-a-kar
via IFTTT

ReasonTV Replay: Is Santa Ana Choosing Foliage Over a Karate Legend’s Dojo?

“The Real Miyagi’s Dojo Threatened: Santa Ana Favors
Foliage over Small Businesses,” produced by Tracy Oppenheimer.
About 5:30 minutes. 

Here is the original text from the Jan 2, 2014 video:

Karate legend Fumio
Demura
 has shaped much of the karate culture we are
familiar with today. He’s trained iconic martial arts stars like
Bruce Lee, Chuck Norris, Steven Seagal, and Pat Morita, and has
also acted in popular martial arts films.

Demura’s credits include working as Mr. Miyagi’s stunt double
in The Karate Kid franchise,Mortal
Combat,
 Rising Sun, and The Island of
Dr. Moreau
The Real
Miyagi
 is a soon-to-be-released feature documenting
Demura’s life. Demura credits his “dojo,” or studio, in Santa Ana,
California for much of his success.

“A dojo is not just a studio, not just for fighting. It’s the
development of better human beings,” says Demura.

Yet Demura’s dojo may not be around for much longer. The City of
Santa Ana is planning to acquire his property as well as eight
other small businesses as part of the Bristol
Street Widening Project
. The project has been around since the
early 90’s, and is just now reaching the phase that threatens these
businesses.

“It’s just a very slow process,” says Santa Ana Mayor Miguel
Pulido. “You have to deal with every single homeowner, every single
business owner.”

Mayor Pulido says that this section of Bristol Street is
especially important because it’s a major gateway into Santa Ana,
and thus requires more lanes in order to ease traffic congestion.
However, the businesses believe that the city can indeed widen the
streets without acquiring their properties.

The city’s current plan allots 30 ft. for landscaping, and those
30 ft. are crucial for the businesses to be able to remain
untouched. Christina Rush represents the Bristol Street businesses,
and says they can take care of the landscaping themselves.

“We can give you that in our plan, through our landscaping,
through architectural elements, outdoor seating,” says Rush. “We
can achieve what the city wants, that park-like look, while still
allowing the businesses to retain their properties.”

Rush has met multiple times with city representatives, and
expects a resolution or at least more debate at the city council
meeting on Jan. 6. She says the businesses have no intention of
giving up their properties without a fight.

“I’d like to stay as much as I can, because this is an old
house. We fixed it. So hard we were working,” says Demura.

About 5:30 minutes.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2014/01/05/is-santa-ana-choosing-foliage-over-a-kar
via IFTTT