Time to care

Winter’s soul-chilling winds have already staked their claim on the calendar, and any balmy respite we may enjoy from now until, oh, say March, will be illusory at best,
Time to load up on crisp red apples from the Georgia hills. Time to finish the wood stacked since last summer, time to move it onto the porch on its dry fibers ready to burst into warmth and brightness on a rain-dark night.

Time to gather family close again, to touch each others’ hands, reminding us of old bonds and new dreams. Time to celebrate life.

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via The Citizen http://www.thecitizen.com/blogs/sallie-satterthwaite/11-26-2013/time-care

Brooks ushers in holiday season

Come out to Brooks and enjoy the sights and sounds of Christmas, beginning with the Tour of Homes Sunday from 2 p.m.-5 p.m., followed by the Town Tree Lighting at 5:30 p.m., and Santa’s arrival at 6 p.m.,  The evening ends with a “Music Alive” concert. Downtown Brooks.

For more info, contact Bebe Moore at 770-719-3194 .

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via The Citizen http://www.thecitizen.com/articles/11-26-2013/brooks-ushers-holiday-season

Sports roundup

High school sports roundup

Swimming
Landmark competed Nov. 19 in North Atlanta in a meet that included Grady, Maynard T. Jackson Booker T. Washington high schools. Both the boys’ and girls’ teams placed third overall, and Ty Janyaem was second in the 100 breaststroke.

Boys basketball

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via The Citizen http://www.thecitizen.com/articles/11-26-2013/sports-roundup

Chart Of The Day: How In Five Short Years Of Breakneck Liquification, China Humiliated The World’s Central Banks

The concept of the “liquidity trap” is well-known to most: it is that freak outlier in an otherwise spotless Keynesian plane, when due to the need for negative interest rates to boost the economy – a structural impossibility according to most economists although an increasingly more probable in Europe – central banks have no choice but to offset a deleveraging private banking sector and directly inject liquidity into the banking sector with the outcome being soaring asset prices, and even more bubbles which will eventually burst only to be replaced with even more failed attempts at reflation. Sadly, very little of this liquidity makes its way to the broad economy as the ongoing recession in the developed world has shown for the 5th year in a row, which in turn makes the liqudity trap even worse, and so on in a closed loop.

Since there is little else in the central bankers’ arsenal that is as effective in boosting the “wealth effect” – which is how they validate their actions to themselves and other economists and politicians – they continue to do ever more QE. And since banks are assured at generating far greater returns on allocated capital in the capital markets, where they can use the excess deposits they obtain courtesy of the Fed’s generous reserve-a-palooza as initial margin for risk-on trades, the liquidity pipelines remain stuck throughout the world, and loan creation – that traditional money creation pathway – is permanently blocked (as is the case in the US).

Everywhere except the one place that has yet to actually engage in conventional quantitative easing: China. At least explicitly, because loan creation by China’s state-controlled entities and otherwise government backstopped banks, is anything but conventional money creation. One can, therefore, claim that China’s loan creation is a form of Quasi-QE whereby banks, constrained from investing in a relatively shallow stock market, and unable to freely transfer the CNY-denominated liquidity abroad, are forced to lend it out. Paradoxically, this “non-QE” is exactly how QE should work in the US and other developed markets.

That’s the long story.

The short story is far simpler.

In order to offset the lack of loan creation by commercial banks, the “Big 4” central banks – Fed, ECB, BOJ and BOE – have had no choice but the open the liquidity spigots to the max. This has resulted in a total developed world “Big 4” central bank balance of just under $10 trillion, of which the bulk of asset additions has taken place since the Lehman collapse.

How does this compare to what China has done? As can be seen on the chart below, in just the past 5 years alone, Chinese bank assets (and by implication liabilities) have grown by an astounding $15 trillion, bringing the total to over $24 trillion, as we showed yesterday. In other words, China has expanded its financial balance sheet by 50% more than the assets of all global central bank combined!

And that is how – in a global centrally-planned regime which is where everyone now is, DM or EM – your flood your economy with liquidity. Perhaps the Fed, ECB or BOJ should hire some PBOC consultants to show them how it’s really done.


    



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

Chart Of The Day: How In Five Short Years Of Breakneck Liquification, China Humiliated The World's Central Banks

The concept of the “liquidity trap” is well-known to most: it is that freak outlier in an otherwise spotless Keynesian plane, when due to the need for negative interest rates to boost the economy – a structural impossibility according to most economists although an increasingly more probable in Europe – central banks have no choice but to offset a deleveraging private banking sector and directly inject liquidity into the banking sector with the outcome being soaring asset prices, and even more bubbles which will eventually burst only to be replaced with even more failed attempts at reflation. Sadly, very little of this liquidity makes its way to the broad economy as the ongoing recession in the developed world has shown for the 5th year in a row, which in turn makes the liqudity trap even worse, and so on in a closed loop.

Since there is little else in the central bankers’ arsenal that is as effective in boosting the “wealth effect” – which is how they validate their actions to themselves and other economists and politicians – they continue to do ever more QE. And since banks are assured at generating far greater returns on allocated capital in the capital markets, where they can use the excess deposits they obtain courtesy of the Fed’s generous reserve-a-palooza as initial margin for risk-on trades, the liquidity pipelines remain stuck throughout the world, and loan creation – that traditional money creation pathway – is permanently blocked (as is the case in the US).

Everywhere except the one place that has yet to actually engage in conventional quantitative easing: China. At least explicitly, because loan creation by China’s state-controlled entities and otherwise government backstopped banks, is anything but conventional money creation. One can, therefore, claim that China’s loan creation is a form of Quasi-QE whereby banks, constrained from investing in a relatively shallow stock market, and unable to freely transfer the CNY-denominated liquidity abroad, are forced to lend it out. Paradoxically, this “non-QE” is exactly how QE should work in the US and other developed markets.

That’s the long story.

The short story is far simpler.

In order to offset the lack of loan creation by commercial banks, the “Big 4” central banks – Fed, ECB, BOJ and BOE – have had no choice but the open the liquidity spigots to the max. This has resulted in a total developed world “Big 4” central bank balance of just under $10 trillion, of which the bulk of asset additions has taken place since the Lehman collapse.

How does this compare to what China has done? As can be seen on the chart below, in just the past 5 years alone, Chinese bank assets (and by implication liabilities) have grown by an astounding $15 trillion, bringing the total to over $24 trillion, as we showed yesterday. In other words, China has expanded its financial balance sheet by 50% more than the assets of all global central bank combined!

And that is how – in a global centrally-planned regime which is where everyone now is, DM or EM – your flood your economy with liquidity. Perhaps the Fed, ECB or BOJ should hire some PBOC consultants to show them how it’s really done.


    



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

Will “Rising” Gas Prices Crush The Holiday Spending Spirit?

As we noted previously (here and here), the exuberance over ‘lower’ gas prices is a little overdone. Perhaps more worrying though, as Bloomberg’s Jo Brusuelas notes, wholesale gasoline futures are pointing to about a 5% rise in gasoline prices during the next few weeks. This would essentially erase the entire decline in gas prices seen since Sept. 1. As Brusuelas warns, because recent gains in inflation-adjusted personal disposable income on a per capita basis can be directly tied to falling gasoline prices, rising prices may come at an inopportune time for many larger retailers.

 

 

Via Bloomberg’s Joseph Brusuelas,

Real per capita disposable income is up 0.9 percent on a year ago basis – weak under any conditions. The reversal of those modest gains due to rising gas prices would not bode well for what is shaping up to be the most challenging holiday spending season since 2009.

Consumer spending and sentiment are notoriously sensitive to price increases at the pump. If gasoline futures are correct, the 5 percent increase in prices may result in as much as a $40 billion hit to consumer wallets just as the traditional holiday spending season hits its stride during the next few weeks.

 

While gasoline prices are down 16 percent since the February peak, the combined effects of the $148 billion increase in tax rates on upper income households and the resetting of the payroll tax effectively offset potential early-year gains in personal disposable income.

For middle income consumers and those further down the income ladder, small changes in disposable income can have a significant effect on discretionary spending. Among this group, 48 million individuals receive food stamps and will already see a net loss of about $16 billion in transfer payments due to cuts in the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program.

Under conditions of weak income growth and modest employment gains, aggressive discounting by retailers has not translated into a sustained acceleration in overall spending.

Demand for services has averaged 1.8 percent during the expansion, well below the 3 percent level seen during the previous two business cycles. On a year-ago basis, overall retail spending peaked in 2010 and has continued to decelerate since.

Meanwhile, November gains in retail outlays were directly tied to transitory events rather than a broader shift in the overall behavior of consumers. Auto purchases in October were pushed forward into November due to the government shutdown. The spillover of the “iPhone effect” into November also temporarily boosted the overall level of spending and probably helped mask underlying weakness in the retail sector.

 

Since the end of the Great Recession, the upper two quintiles of income groups have emerged relatively unscathed while the lower three quintiles continue to bear the disproportionate burden of the adjustment underway in the domestic labor market and broader economy. This suggests the status quo in the economy and overall spending will probably continue to hold; upper-income consumers benefiting from historically low interest rates, home price increases and appreciation in equity markets will contribute the lion’s share of gains in holiday spending this year.


    



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

Will "Rising" Gas Prices Crush The Holiday Spending Spirit?

As we noted previously (here and here), the exuberance over ‘lower’ gas prices is a little overdone. Perhaps more worrying though, as Bloomberg’s Jo Brusuelas notes, wholesale gasoline futures are pointing to about a 5% rise in gasoline prices during the next few weeks. This would essentially erase the entire decline in gas prices seen since Sept. 1. As Brusuelas warns, because recent gains in inflation-adjusted personal disposable income on a per capita basis can be directly tied to falling gasoline prices, rising prices may come at an inopportune time for many larger retailers.

 

 

Via Bloomberg’s Joseph Brusuelas,

Real per capita disposable income is up 0.9 percent on a year ago basis – weak under any conditions. The reversal of those modest gains due to rising gas prices would not bode well for what is shaping up to be the most challenging holiday spending season since 2009.

Consumer spending and sentiment are notoriously sensitive to price increases at the pump. If gasoline futures are correct, the 5 percent increase in prices may result in as much as a $40 billion hit to consumer wallets just as the traditional holiday spending season hits its stride during the next few weeks.

 

While gasoline prices are down 16 percent since the February peak, the combined effects of the $148 billion increase in tax rates on upper income households and the resetting of the payroll tax effectively offset potential early-year gains in personal disposable income.

For middle income consumers and those further down the income ladder, small changes in disposable income can have a significant effect on discretionary spending. Among this group, 48 million individuals receive food stamps and will already see a net loss of about $16 billion in transfer payments due to cuts in the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program.

Under conditions of weak income growth and modest employment gains, aggressive discounting by retailers has not translated into a sustained acceleration in overall spending.

Demand for services has averaged 1.8 percent during the expansion, well below the 3 percent level seen during the previous two business cycles. On a year-ago basis, overall retail spending peaked in 2010 and has continued to decelerate since.

Meanwhile, November gains in retail outlays were directly tied to transitory events rather than a broader shift in the overall behavior of consumers. Auto purchases in October were pushed forward into November due to the government shutdown. The spillover of the “iPhone effect” into November also temporarily boosted the overall level of spending and probably helped mask underlying weakness in the retail sector.

 

Since the end of the Great Recession, the upper two quintiles of income groups have emerged relatively unscathed while the lower three quintiles continue to bear the disproportionate burden of the adjustment underway in the domestic labor market and broader economy. This suggests the status quo in the economy and overall spending will probably continue to hold; upper-income consumers benefiting from historically low interest rates, home price increases and appreciation in equity markets will contribute the lion’s share of gains in holiday spending this year.


    



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

Why Forecasts of a World Without Carbon-Based Fuel Are Delusional Pt 1

Resource pressure is a constant

 

While the US continues to engage in a delusional energy “debate” about whether we will continue to burn coal and whether natural gas is a panacea, China is struggling to acquire and deploy of energy resources to support its economic growth targets.

China has an environment versus growth problem.    Already China is the #1 importer of oil in the world. That‘s right.  China imports more oil than the United States.  

 

The US can hold its energy consumption below GDP growth through increased energy efficiency (technological improvements) and because our economy is more “services based” than China’s.

 

China on the other hand has to continue to consume more energy, particularly oil. The emerging and growing middle class there wants to buy cars, as is typical when annual GDP per capital hits $10,000-20,000 per year.  With 4X the population of the US, if China approaches even 50% of the US’s car ownership rates, it will have  TWICE as many cars in nominal terms.

 

Consider the following data point: China is adding one million new cars to its expanding road and highway network every single month.

This kind of growth will strains China’s energy and water supplies. Whenever the gap between demand and supply is enormous, literal fortunes can be made.

 

For more market insights as well as three FREE hard hitting Special Investment reports showing you how to protect your portfolio, swing by: http://phoenixcapitalmarketing.com/special-reports.html

 

Phoenix Capital Research

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/bOshbbfSv38/story01.htm Phoenix Capital Research

Texas High School Student Tased by School Resource Officer/Sheriff’s Deputy, Now in Medically-Induced Coma

tased by copTasers are meant to be a non-lethal way for
police officers to force targets into compliance, but
more than 500 death
s have been attributed to Tasers since 2001,
largely due to cardiac arrest. At one Texas high school, the use of
a Taser by Randy McMillan, a sheriff’s deputy/school resource
officer, on 17-year-old Noe Niño de Rivera has resulted in the
student being put in a medically induced coma. The family has filed
a lawsuit against McMillan, the school district, and the county,
and alleges Rivera was tased after trying to break up a fight.

Via YNN Austin:

The court document says the teenager began to walk
backwards with his hands up when McMillan shocked him with the
Taser.

Rivera fell to the ground and hit his head on the floor, causing
permanent injury to his brain. He was airlifted to a nearby
hospital where it was determined he had suffered a severe a brain
hemorrhage and was put into a medically-induced coma.

Last week officials with the Bastrop County Sheriff’s Office said
Rivera was acting aggressive before the Taser was used. They say
the two officers ordered the teen to back off, but he ignored their
commands, according to a county spokesman, prompting McMillan to
use the Taser.

Still, the lawsuit says Rivera “posed no imminent threat of death
or serious injury” to McMillan and the deputy was unlawful in his
use of force.

The court document also says McMillan used a Taser on another
student one year ago, and says the school district and the county
sheriff’s office failed to discipline him correctly.

The family is seeking a jury trial. About a hundred students
walked out of class last week to protest Rivera’s tasing. KVUE

reports
the family’s attorney claims to have cellphone video
corroborating the family’s story, but did not share it with the TV
station. The KVUE story also includes one parent voicing support
for McMillan. “I find it hard to believe that an officer of that
standing would ever do anything that he didn’t have to actually do.
If you’re not there you really can’t judge,” she said.

McMillan has been moved from the school to patrol duty for the
time being.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/11/26/texas-high-school-student-tased-by-schoo
via IFTTT

400 Years Of Black Fridays, Explained By A Taiwanese Cartoon

Via Taiwanese Animators,


 

Black Friday is America’s most honest holiday. It is immediately preceded by Thanksgiving, which is when Americans of all races, except the native kind, get together and exchange a mutual wink and a nod that they’re giving thanks for the majestic land that God inexplicably bestowed upon them (but for realz, we really scored with this sweet continent we got here) and then have a turkey dinner. But Black Friday actually embodies the pioneer spirit that carried smallpox riddled settlers from one coast to the other. Like raiders in the night, shoppers drunk on red wine and diabetes crouch before the gates of the enemy’s castle, or Best Buy, waiting to storm through the breach and rape and pillage and ask if this can be returned if it turns out your sister already has one.

America’s founders would have been perfectly at home in such an environment. The only reason the Native Americans ever gave them some food to eat is to stop these insane pale-faced, pantaloon wearing, toothless swamp dwellers, from cannibalizing each other every time the mail boat from England showed up a day late. Guys, for serious, have some corn, and put down that kid’s leg! It doesn’t go in your mouth! Even after the nation had been founded, Black Friday survived every year of the American Civil War, and even the great depression, when there was nothing to fight over but Hoover Bread, and Hoover Pies, and Hoover Beer; all three are just variations of sawdust.

Sadly, Black Friday crusaders of today are on average 5 times the body mass of the founding fathers. They are only able to ransack a big box store with three vertical steps or less. But in the interest of keeping an American tradition alive, they will continue to drive their accessibility scooters toward those sliding glass doors, wallets in one hand and 2nd Amendment protector in the other, in the hope of passing on to the next generation those most American of values: the kind with a spinning blue light on it.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/COZ6xyHpqIo/story01.htm Tyler Durden