PTC honoring Vietnam veterans

This Saturday, Nov. 9, veterans of the Vietnam War will be recognized at Peachtree City’s 2013 Veterans Day Observance hosted by the Commemorative Air Force (CAF) Dixie Wing. The program will be held during the flying museum’s third annual Veterans Day Open House from 9 a.m.-noon. The open house and program is free to the public.

 The open house begins at 9 a.m. with tours of the CAF Dixie Wing Historical Airpower Facility museum and workshop where aircraft are restored and maintained.

Volunteers will be on hand to answer questions regarding current projects and education exhibits.

read more

via The Citizen http://www.thecitizen.com/articles/11-08-2013/ptc-honoring-vietnam-veterans

10 Days in Jail for Ex-Prosecutor Who Sent Innocent Man to Prison for 25 Years

Not everything's bigger in TexasJustice is served. A former
Texas prosecutor accused of withholding important evidence in a
murder trial, which resulted in an innocent man serving 25 years in
prison, will go to jail. For 10 days. And he’ll pay a $500 fine and
serve 500 hours of community service. The Associated Press
reports
:

A former Texas prosecutor who won a conviction that sent an
innocent man to prison for nearly 25 years agreed Friday to serve
10 days in jail and complete 500 hours of community service.

Ken Anderson also agreed to be disbarred and was fined $500 as
part of a sweeping deal that was expected to end all criminal and
civil cases against the embattled ex-district attorney, who
presided over a tough-on-crime Texas county for 30 years.

Anderson faced up to 10 years in prison if convicted of
tampering with evidence in the 1987 murder trial of Michael Morton,
who wrongly spent nearly 25 years in prison.

Ten years becomes 10 days. Wonder if anybody who Anderson
prosecuted or who appeared before Anderson when he became a judge
got such a sweet deal.

Jacob Sullum wrote about the
case and the details
in 2011. Back then experts were skeptical
there’d be any sort of punishment at all. They were close, but they
didn’t think disbarment was likely, which means this lopsided
punishment is still more severe than what people thought would
happen.

(Hat tip to Reason commenter The Rt. Hon. Serious Man, Visc)

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/11/08/10-days-in-jail-for-ex-prosecutor-who-se
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5(+1) Things To Ponder This Weekend

Submitted by Lance Roberts of STA Wealth Management,

This past week saw the initial public offering of the single most anticipated IPO of 2013 – Twitter.   If you tweeted about it then you are not alone as the news dominated the media headlines and the market.  With Twitter already sporting a 11x price-to-sales ratio, and no earnings, what could possibly go wrong?  However, it is that growing complacency among investors that should be the most concerning as the general sentiment has become that nothing can stop the markets as long as the Fed is in the game.  This week's issue of things to ponder over the weekend provides some thoughts in this regard.

1) Are We Heading Towards A Cliff?  

Andy Xie – Caixin Online

"The odds are that the world is experiencing a bigger bubble than the one that unleashed the 2008 Global Financial Crisis. The United States' household net wealth is much higher than at the peak in the last bubble. China's property rental yields are similar to what Japan experienced at the peak of its property bubble.

 

The biggest part of today's bubble is in government bonds valued at about 100 percent of global GDP. Such a vast amount of assets is priced at a negative real yield. Its low yield also benefits other borrowers. My guesstimate is that this bubble subsidizes debtors to the tune of 10 percent of GDP or US$ 7 trillion dollars per annum. The transfer of income from savers to debtors has never happened on such a vast scale, not even close. This is the reason that so many bubbles are forming around the world, because speculation is viewed as an escape route for savers.

 

The property market in emerging economies is the second-largest bubble. It is probably 100 percent overvalued. My guesstimate is that it is US$ 50 trillion overvalued.

 

Stocks, especially in the United States, are significantly overvalued too. The overvaluation could be one-third or about US$ 20 trillion.

 

There are other bubbles too. Credit risk, for example, is underpriced. The art market is bubbly again. These bubbles are not significant compared to the big three above.

 

When the Fed does normalize its policy, i.e., the real interest rate becomes positive again, this vast bubble will burst. Given its size, its bursting will likely bring another global recession worse than the one after the 2008 crisis."

2) Three Potential Headwinds For US Housing

A while back I wrote an article about the real underpinnings of the housing market which pointed out that, despite media headlines to the contrary, home ownership was at the lowest levels since the 1980's and was showing no real signs of recovery.  I stated then:

"As I stated previously the optimism over the housing recovery has gotten well ahead of the underlying fundamentals.  While the belief was that the Government, and Fed's, interventions would ignite the housing market creating a self-perpetuating recovery in the economy – it did not turn out that way.  Instead, it led to a speculative rush into buying rental properties creating a temporary, and artificial, inventory suppression.  The risks to the housing story remain high due to the impact of higher taxes, stagnant wage growth, re-defaults of the 6-million modifications and workouts and a slowdown of speculative investment due to reduced profit margins.  While there are many hopes pinned on the housing recovery as a 'driver' of economic growth in 2013 and beyond – the data suggests that it might be quite a bit of wishful thinking."

That statement of "wishful thinking" was confirmed this past week by Trulia chief economist Jed Kolko: (via ZeroHedge)

  • Census 3Q homeownership, vacancy survey shows household formation “alarmingly slow,” vacancies “remain stubbornly high,” 
  • "Slow household formation number is one of the most alarming housing indicators to come out this year"
  • Share of millennials living with their parents rose to 31.6% vs 31.4% y/y
  • Household formation 380k in yr leading up to 3Q vs L-T “normal” increase of 1.1m
  • No increase over past yr in young adults moving out of parents homes or getting jobs is “most worrying”
  • Vacant homes still pose “problem” for recovery
  • 53% of vacant homes were held off mkt in 3Q, highest share since before bubble
  • 10.2% of all housing units are vacant, unchanged y/y, higher than pre-bubble level of 8.9% in 3Q 2001

 Furthermore, Sober Look also noted:

"While the US housing market remains relatively robust, it is likely to face a couple of headwinds going forward. One is the lower affordability index, which is declining due to higher prices and higher mortgage rates (see discussion). On a year-over-year basis the declines have been quite steep."

Housing-Affordability-110813

The Federal Reserve has consistently been noting the strength of the housing recovery as evidence of a recovering economy.  Those hopes are likely to fade in the months ahead as household formation lags, millennials remain on parent's couches and affordability declines.

3) Seeds Are Sown For The Next Financial Crisis

Represent Us Blog

After the crash in 2008, Congress leapt into action to pass legislation, which has yet to be fully written, to make sure the financial shenanigans of Wall Street were never repeated.  Unfortunately, that was then, and this is now. 

"A new law written by Citigroup lobbyists (we couldn’t make this stuff up if we tried) exempts derivatives trading from regulation, and was passed this week by the House of Representatives with broad bipartisan support.

 

It sounds bad… but don’t worry, it gets much, much worse:

 

The New York Times reports that 70 of the 85 lines in the new House bill were literally written by Citigroup lobbyists (Citigroup was one of the mega-banks that brought our economy to its knees in 2008 and received billions in taxpayer money.)

 

The same report also revealed “two crucial paragraphs…were copied nearly word for word.” You can even view the original documents and see how Citigroup’s lobbyists redrafted the House Bill, striking out ideas they didn’t like and replacing them with ones they did.

 

The bills are sponsored by Randy Hultgren (R – IL), and co-sponsored by Rep. Jim Himes (D-CT) and others. Himes is a former Goldman Sachs executive, and chief fundraiser for the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee.

 

Maplight reports that the financial industry is the top source of campaign funding for 6 of the bills’ 8 cosponsors.

 

Maplight’s data shows that members of the House received $22,425,740 million from interest groups that support the bill — that’s 5.8 times more than it received from interest groups opposed.

 

“House aides, when asked why Democrats would vote for this proposal even though the Obama administration opposes it, offered a political explanation. Republicans have enough votes to pass it themselves, so vulnerable House Democrats might as well join them, and collect industry money for their campaigns.” — New York Times

4) Valuations And Future Returns

by Mebane Faber

I have discussed the importance of valuations on future returns many times in the past, however, Mebane Faber did an excellent job recently noting that if you are still heavy U.S. equities it may be a good time to reevaluate.

Mebane-Faber-Valuations-110813-3

5) Budget Deficit Reduction Only Temporary

In my post on Q3-2013 GDP, I pointed out that the reduction in the budget deficit was due to a temporary anomaly in tax receipts.  I stated:

"The reality is that the surge in tax revenues was a direct result of the "fiscal cliff" at the end of 2012 as companies rushed to pay out special dividends and bonuses ahead of what was perceived to a fiscal disaster.  The large surge in incomes was primarily generated at the upper end of the income brackets where individuals were impacted by higher tax rates.  Those taxes were then paid in April and October of 2013 and accounted for the bulk of the surge in tax revenue to date.  Also, it is important to remember that payroll taxes also increased due to the expiration of the payroll tax cut from 2010."

However, the Rockefeller Institute recently wrote a research report entitled "Temporary 'Bubble' in Income Tax Receipts" which points out a secondary anomaly created by just one state:

"Personal income tax collections had the strongest growth among the major taxes, at 20.3 percent.

 

However, the strong growth is attributable not only to the acceleration of income into calendar year 2012 and the 2012 stock market, but also to strong growth in a single state, California, where income tax collections grew by nearly $7.1 billion, or 40.7 percent, in the second quarter of 2013. The large growth in income tax collections in California reflects the acceleration, as well as recent increases in income tax rates that were only partially reflected in withholding. On November 6, 2012, California voters adopted Proposition 30, which increased the personal income tax rate on taxpayers making over $500,000 for a seven-year period that is retroactive to January 1, 2012, through December 31, 2018. If we exclude California, income tax collections in the remainder of the nation grew 14.9 percent in the second quarter of 2013…"

Plus 1)  The Boy Who Cried "Wolf"

Lakshman Achuthan, from the Economic Cycle Research Institute, has been chastised in the press over the last couple of years for calling for an economic recession that didn't occur.  However, he remains adamant that the U.S. has actually been in a recession for the last year and remains so accordingly to the underlying economic data.  Once again, he has been summarily dismissed by the media for his statements because with the stock market near all-time highs that surely means the economy is recovering, right?  Well, as he states, if that was indeed the case then "you wouldn't have four years of zero-interest rate policy and quantitative easing."

He also has a take on something that I have be
en questioning myself with regards to the ISM and PMI data which has come completely detached from the underlying fundamental data.

There is one important point to remember about the "boy who cried wolf;" eventually the wolf did come.

 

Have a great weekend.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/YS73nR-mtgQ/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Gartman Does It Again: “The Game Changed Utterly In The Capital Markets Yesterday”

The “commodity king” author of the “world renowned” Gartman momentum chasing and perpetual contrarian fade newsletter, if not so much of an ETF under the same name anymore, does it again. From this morning.

Now with the S&P forging a massive reversal to the downside, we not only must abandon being bullish we must become bearish… and very so…. Our bearish friends, having been wrong for so long, are now right; it is time to be bearish of stocks, while the time for having been bullish is now past… We trust we are clear. The game’s changed and when the game changes, we change…. We had heretofore consistently erred bullishly of simple things… of coal; of steel; of railroads; of ships and shipping… but we are not now.


 

The Game Changed Utterly In The Capital Markets Yesterday

And… wrong again. Or said otherwise, short of subscribers in breaking even terms.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/Csv3urXPhx4/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Gartman Does It Again: "The Game Changed Utterly In The Capital Markets Yesterday"

The “commodity king” author of the “world renowned” Gartman momentum chasing and perpetual contrarian fade newsletter, if not so much of an ETF under the same name anymore, does it again. From this morning.

Now with the S&P forging a massive reversal to the downside, we not only must abandon being bullish we must become bearish… and very so…. Our bearish friends, having been wrong for so long, are now right; it is time to be bearish of stocks, while the time for having been bullish is now past… We trust we are clear. The game’s changed and when the game changes, we change…. We had heretofore consistently erred bullishly of simple things… of coal; of steel; of railroads; of ships and shipping… but we are not now.


 

The Game Changed Utterly In The Capital Markets Yesterday

And… wrong again. Or said otherwise, short of subscribers in breaking even terms.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/Csv3urXPhx4/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Report: Marijuana Market One Of The Country’s Fastest Growing, Hindered By Federal Raids

As observers of the industry have probably noticed, the legal
marijuana market is exploding. As observers have likely also
noticed, its spectacular growth has been seriously hindered by the
federal government’s enforcement of prohibitionist policies in
states where medical marijuana is legal. A recent study by ArcView
Research, a “leading national network of investors looking to
capitalize on the legalization of marijuana,” details predictions
for just how much the market will continue to expand, which states
will legalize it next, and the specific ways in which the federal
government is stomping out growth.

The group’s researchers
surveyed hundreds of medical marijuana dispensaries, ancillary
business operators, and independent cultivators, in addition to
analyzing publicly available data. According to the Executive
Summary of the report
, which was made available for download
earlier this week, the marijuana market looks promising to
investors, but still faces some significant challenges from the
Feds.

Legal Marijuana Market is Huge and Growing
Fast

Currently, the U.S. national legal marijuana market value is
assessed at $1.44 billion. It’s projected to grow by 64% to reach
$2.34 billion in 2014. By comparison, the smartphone market
grew 46.5% from 2012 to 2013.

According to the
Huffington Post
:

“Cannabis is one of the fastest-growing industries,” said Steve
Berg… editor of the report. “Domestically, we weren’t able to find
any market that is growing as quickly.”

While it’s important to note that smartphones surged in
popularity long before medical marijuana became a viable industry,
and global sales numbers for 2012-2013 don’t offer a direct
comparison to 2013-2014 domestic estimates, Berg said his goal was
to illustrate just how rapidly the cannabis market is expanding by
offering familiar data points. 

The report also claims that the five-year national market has
the potential to balloon to $10.2 billion—a more than 700% increase
above the current value. This growth will come from both increased
demand in existing state markets and new venues in the 14 states
that are expected to have legalized recreational marijuana sales by
then. Specifically, the report predicts that within five years
Alaska, Oregon, Rhode Island, New Hampshire, Vermont, Maryland,
Hawaii, Maine, Missouri, Massachusetts, Nevada, Arizona, California
and Delaware will have legalized marijuana for adults.

Federal Policies Are Curbing Growth

According to the report, “around $500 million was shifted back
to the illicit market from legal channels following federal
enforcement actions against certain operators in legal marijuana
states in 2011 and 2012.” In California alone, the Feds have helped
to shut down at least 150 dispensaries since 2010.

The report is optimistic though—based on the DOJ’s
recent memo
and expert testimony—that the Obama administration
will scale down or even cease federal raids on legal marijuana
businesses in states with tight regulatory systems.

Additionally, the report lists business risks stemming from lack
of access to banking services (due to
a federal law
that prohibits banks from doing business with
controlled substances distributors) and tax accounting
restrictions.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/11/08/report-marijuana-market-one-of-the-count
via IFTTT

Report: Marijuana Market One Of The Country's Fastest Growing, Hindered By Federal Raids

As observers of the industry have probably noticed, the legal
marijuana market is exploding. As observers have likely also
noticed, its spectacular growth has been seriously hindered by the
federal government’s enforcement of prohibitionist policies in
states where medical marijuana is legal. A recent study by ArcView
Research, a “leading national network of investors looking to
capitalize on the legalization of marijuana,” details predictions
for just how much the market will continue to expand, which states
will legalize it next, and the specific ways in which the federal
government is stomping out growth.

The group’s researchers
surveyed hundreds of medical marijuana dispensaries, ancillary
business operators, and independent cultivators, in addition to
analyzing publicly available data. According to the Executive
Summary of the report
, which was made available for download
earlier this week, the marijuana market looks promising to
investors, but still faces some significant challenges from the
Feds.

Legal Marijuana Market is Huge and Growing
Fast

Currently, the U.S. national legal marijuana market value is
assessed at $1.44 billion. It’s projected to grow by 64% to reach
$2.34 billion in 2014. By comparison, the smartphone market
grew 46.5% from 2012 to 2013.

According to the
Huffington Post
:

“Cannabis is one of the fastest-growing industries,” said Steve
Berg… editor of the report. “Domestically, we weren’t able to find
any market that is growing as quickly.”

While it’s important to note that smartphones surged in
popularity long before medical marijuana became a viable industry,
and global sales numbers for 2012-2013 don’t offer a direct
comparison to 2013-2014 domestic estimates, Berg said his goal was
to illustrate just how rapidly the cannabis market is expanding by
offering familiar data points. 

The report also claims that the five-year national market has
the potential to balloon to $10.2 billion—a more than 700% increase
above the current value. This growth will come from both increased
demand in existing state markets and new venues in the 14 states
that are expected to have legalized recreational marijuana sales by
then. Specifically, the report predicts that within five years
Alaska, Oregon, Rhode Island, New Hampshire, Vermont, Maryland,
Hawaii, Maine, Missouri, Massachusetts, Nevada, Arizona, California
and Delaware will have legalized marijuana for adults.

Federal Policies Are Curbing Growth

According to the report, “around $500 million was shifted back
to the illicit market from legal channels following federal
enforcement actions against certain operators in legal marijuana
states in 2011 and 2012.” In California alone, the Feds have helped
to shut down at least 150 dispensaries since 2010.

The report is optimistic though—based on the DOJ’s
recent memo
and expert testimony—that the Obama administration
will scale down or even cease federal raids on legal marijuana
businesses in states with tight regulatory systems.

Additionally, the report lists business risks stemming from lack
of access to banking services (due to
a federal law
that prohibits banks from doing business with
controlled substances distributors) and tax accounting
restrictions.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/11/08/report-marijuana-market-one-of-the-count
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CBS Apologizes For 60 Minutes Benghazi Report as Primary Source’s Forthcoming Book “Suspended”

backsiesCBS
News’ Lara Logan
apologized today
for a 60 Minutes report on the September 11,
2012 attack on the US mission in Benghazi. The report’s primary
source, a security contractor going by the pseudonym Morgan Jones
and revealed to be named Dylan Davies, claimed he was at the US
mission the night of the attack, that in fact he scaled a wall and
fought one of the attackers, who told him they were there
“to kill Americans.”
CBS News’ retraction comes after
reports
that the Davies’ statement to the FBI (that he wasn’t
there that night) did not match what he told CBS, and wrote in a
book about the experience. According to The New York
Times’
Julie
Bosman
, Simon & Schuster is now suspending publication of
the book.

The story would suggest that the US government could have
responded more quickly to the ongoing incident in Benghazi than it
had, as some critics of the administration have argued. The attack
in Benghazi involved two separate assaults over a seven hour
period, at the US mission, and then at the CIA annex in Benghazi.
 According to
some sources
, the White House and State Department never
authorized military assets to cross over into Libya even as they
were being mobilized.

Leon Panetta, then the defense secretary,
admitted to Congress
he had only had one conversation about the
attack on Benghazi with President Obama the night it happened, and
that the president did not ask for specifics on the kind of
response that would be possible. General Martin Dempsey added at
the time that the standard protocol was to keep White House aides
informed, not necessarily the president himself. Nevertheless, that
story is at odds with the president’s claims he’s “more
deeply involved
” in intelligence operations than any president
before him. Not on September 11 he wasn’t.

A military response may have been impossible in any case—former
Bush and Obama defense secretary Robert Gates
told
CBS’ Face the Nation in May that the idea that a response
was possible was based on a “cartoonish” view of the US military.
Cartoonish it may have been, with a price tag for US defense at
nearly $2 billion a day, it may not have been such a far-fetched
expectation.

None of this, of course, diminishes the bigger scandals in
Benghazi; in the immediate aftermath, administration officials and
their supporters sought
to blame
an otherwise obscure YouTube clip on a “spontaneous
demonstration” that actually appeared, again
almost immediately
, as a coordinated terrorist attack, putting
the First Amendment in the spotlight instead of the attackers. The
Obama Administration has also continued to avoid holding anyone
substantively accountable or providing any kind of real
transparency on the issue, going so far as to call it a “sideshow”
and asking
what difference at this point the details even make
.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/11/08/cbs-apologizes-for-60-minutes-benghazi-r
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Ghost Riders in the Ground

Friday fun link: “The
Lost Cow Tunnels of New York City
,” in which Gizmodo
explores a forgotten chapter in the history of American
infrastructure, markets, and food. Here’s the opening:

THEY EMERGED FROM THE EARTH! COWS! COWS! COWS!

Like every other major metropolis, New York City has
tunnels for people, tunnels for cars, and lots of tunnels for
trains. But it also has something rather more unique: tunnels for
cows. Or does it? This is the story of New York’s lost, forgotten,
or perhaps just mythical subterranean meat
infrastructure.

Read the rest
here
.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/11/08/ghost-riders-in-the-ground
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Feds Don’t Have Solution for Health Plan Cancellations, Obama Says He Is Paying Attention to Intel, Issa Not Letting Go of IRS Scandal: P.M. Links

  • HHS hard at work fixing Obamacare.Health and Human Services
    Secretary Kathleen Sebelius said the government wants to help folks
    who have had their plans cancelled, but they have
    no actual options
    right now.
  • Pakistan’s Taliban is warning of
    revenge killings
    in response to the death of their former chief
    in a U.S. drone strike.
  • President Barack Obama promises he’s
    heavily involved in intelligence operations
    , despite reports
    that he didn’t know that the United States was engaging in direct
    surveillance of foreign leaders.
  • The U.S. is trying to get
    Syrian rebels
    to come to the table to talk peace, but it’s all
    just a great big mess.
  • A British group wants to
    test people at the workplace
    to see if they’re
    boozehounds.
  • GOP Rep. Darrell Issa has not forgotten about the IRS targeting
    tea party nonprofits and has
    issued a new subpoena
    for his investigation.

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from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/11/08/feds-dont-have-solution-for-health-plan
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