Dow & S&P Close At Record Highs As 10Y Approaches 3%

VIX closed at its lowest in a month as stocks pushed on higher to new record-er highs (and Twitter hit $70). The Nasdaq underperformed today (after yesterday's outpeformance) as the Dow, S&P, and Russell all closed around 0.4% higher (and Twitter added 8.2%). Treasury bond yields rose notably all day with the 10Y at its 2nd highest closing yield of the year +5.4bps to 2.98% today (but Twitter is almost a double off its lows in 2 weeks). Commodities drifted higher all day with Gold back over $1200 (and that so-called fat finger in copper leaving it up large still on the day). The USD ended unch with slight weakness in JPY. From the Taper lows, the S&P is up 3.7% (but Twitter is up 30% in that period).

Stocks rose today – as good news seems like good news (if you choose to ignore the massive seasonal adjustments)…

 

In case you missed it…

 

Bonds sold off notably – pressing 10Y up near the high yields of the year…

 

Commodities pushed higher with Copper's fat finger not retracing much…

 

Charts: Bloomberg

Bonus Chart: Spot The Bubble…


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/IV6jAcMKIYg/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Dow & S&P Close At Record Highs As 10Y Approaches 3%

VIX closed at its lowest in a month as stocks pushed on higher to new record-er highs (and Twitter hit $70). The Nasdaq underperformed today (after yesterday's outpeformance) as the Dow, S&P, and Russell all closed around 0.4% higher (and Twitter added 8.2%). Treasury bond yields rose notably all day with the 10Y at its 2nd highest closing yield of the year +5.4bps to 2.98% today (but Twitter is almost a double off its lows in 2 weeks). Commodities drifted higher all day with Gold back over $1200 (and that so-called fat finger in copper leaving it up large still on the day). The USD ended unch with slight weakness in JPY. From the Taper lows, the S&P is up 3.7% (but Twitter is up 30% in that period).

Stocks rose today – as good news seems like good news (if you choose to ignore the massive seasonal adjustments)…

 

In case you missed it…

 

Bonds sold off notably – pressing 10Y up near the high yields of the year…

 

Commodities pushed higher with Copper's fat finger not retracing much…

 

Charts: Bloomberg

Bonus Chart: Spot The Bubble…


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/IV6jAcMKIYg/story01.htm Tyler Durden

McDonald’s Advises its Own Employees to Avoid Fast Food

McDonald’s is simply the gift that keeps on giving. The company’s “McResource” website has made mistake after mistake all year, several of which I have have covered previously, including advice to broke employees to quit complaining, and their publication earlier in the year of budgetary advice that included not using heat and taking on a second job. Well McResource is back, this time essentially telling its employees that the company’s own food is not fit for public consumption.

From CNBC:

McDonald’s employee resources website once again is giving out worker advice that doesn’t seem to fit. This time, it’s about the industry it helped make ubiquitous — fast food.

“Fast foods are quick, reasonably priced, and readily available alternatives to home cooking. While convenient and economical for a busy lifestyle, fast foods are typically high in calories, fat, saturated fat, sugar, and salt and may put people at risk for becoming overweight,” reads one post on the site, which includes a picture of a hamburger and fries, two items that the fast-food giant specializes in selling.

A separate post writes, “it is hard to eat a healthy diet when you eat at fast-food restaurants often,” adding that large portions make it easy to overeat.

The site also advises people to limit how many fries they eat.

Screen Shot 2013-12-24 at 11.03.25 AM

It was the latest in a series of gaffes involving the site.

Last month, the company detailed tipping advice for workers, many of whom make around minimum wage. It listed pricey suggestions for tipping au pairs, personal fitness trainers and pool cleaners from etiquette maven Emily Post — advice it removed after a CNBC inquiry.

McSerfdom.

Full article here.

In Liberty,
Mike

 Follow me on Twitter.

McDonald’s Advises its Own Employees to Avoid Fast Food originally appeared on A Lightning War for Liberty on December 24, 2013.

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from A Lightning War for Liberty http://libertyblitzkrieg.com/2013/12/24/mcdonalds-advises-its-own-employees-to-avoid-fast-food/
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First Colorado Pot Shops Open Next Week

Yesterday the Colorado Department of Revenue

mailed
its first batch of licenses to businesses that plan to
produce, test, and sell marijuana products for general use. The
licensees include 136 retailers, all of which currently operate
medical marijuana centers (the only businesses allowed to apply for
a license at this point); 178 cultivation sites, most of them
linked to pot shops (which initially have to grow at least 70
percent of their inventory); 31 manufacturers of marijuana-infused
products; and three testing facilities. The state
seems
to have approved every application it has received so
far. The stores are allowed to open as soon as January 1 (a week
from tomorrow), provided they have received approval from the local
jurisdictions in which they operate.

The
first pot store
to receive a local license was Annie’s in
Central City, part of the Strainwise chain, so it
will be among the stores authorized to open on New Year’s Day. The
Colorado Springs Gazette reports that
Michael Stetler, owner of Marisol Therapeutics in Pueblo, also
expects to have a local license by then. The Gazette
says “Stetler has big plans for opening week, anticipating a
rush of patrons from nearby counties and cities that have banned
recreational sales, including Colorado Springs [the state’s second
biggest city] and El Paso County.”

Three-fourths of the pot stores that have been granted state
licenses are located in Denver, Colorado’s capital and largest
city, but it is not clear how many will be locally licensed and
ready to open next week. The Denver Post reports
that only eight Denver pot shops “have so far cleared all the
hurdles in the local licensing process.”

Leaders of the campaign for Amendment 64, Colorado’s
legalization initiative, say the first sale by a newly licensed pot
store will happen at 8 a.m. on New Year’s Day at “a Denver
marijuana retail store that includes an on-site marijuana
cultivation facility.” The specific location has not been announced
yet. The first buyer will be Sean Azzariti, “a U.S. Marine Corps
veteran in Denver who can now legally use marijuana to alleviate
the symptoms of post-traumatic disorder,” a condition that was not
covered by Colorado’s medical marijuana law.

Although Azzariti appeared in an ad for Amendment 64, he is
hardly typical of the new marijuana market, which will be driven by
recreational users. As of next week, anyone 21 or older will be
allowed to buy up to an ounce of marijuana at a time (a quarter of
an ounce for visitors, in case you were wondering). But since
cultivation for recreational use won’t be allowed until January 1,
and it takes about five months to grow a new crop, where will the
pot for these new customers come from? Until next spring, it looks
like the only legal source will be repurposed medical
marijuana.

A medical marijuana center is allowed to grow up to six plants
for each patient who names it as his designated provider. But that
does not mean every patient consumes that much marijuana. Wiggle
room was built into this system, since patients do not have to buy
exclusively from their designated providers and dispensaries may
sell as much as 30 percent of their marijuana to other outlets. Any
dispensary interested in the recreational market has had more than
a year since Amendment 64 was approved to maximize production under
the existing quotas.

Will that be enough? Maybe not. Norton Arbelaez, co-owner of
RiverRock Wellness dispensaries in Denver, told the
Post he does not plan to start serving the
recreational market until February. “There are just so many
questions in terms of pricing, is there going to be scarcity, or
some kind of lack of product in January that is going to lead to
the price of the product doubling or tripling?” he said. “There’s a
lot of unknowns.”

Another Denver dispensary owner, Ralph Morgan, told the
Gazette he and his partner, Tim Cullen, plan to open
next week, assuming they have their local license by then. But they
are not planning to make a big deal out of it. “We’re not inviting
media,” Morgan said. “We’re not blasting things out on social
media….A lot of it has to do with our supply chain, because we’re
mandated to grow 70 percent of what we sell…If our business were
to double we would run out. We would have to close midmonth, and
we’re not unique in that. Everyone is in that same boat.”

If the shops run out or the prices prove prohibitive, there is
another option for those who planned ahead or have friends who did.
Since Amendment 64
took effect
in December. Coloradans have been allowed to grow
up six plants at home and share the produce with others, up to an
ounce at a time, as long they do not make any money from the
hobby.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/12/24/first-colorado-pot-shops-open-next-week
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On This Day In History, Gas Prices Have Never Been Higher

It seems not a day goes by when the mainstream media (or your local friendly asset gatherer) proclaims the drop in gas prices from a Middle-East-turmoiling Summer as “great news” and very positive and an implicit tax cut… as they try to juice hopes and dreams of a better-than-expected holiday spending season. The sad truth – something unusual in this new normal – is that regular gas prices (at $3.258) have never been higher on Christmas Eve. It seems context does matter…

 

Yesterday, we inched out 2012’s $3.247 and moved to $3.258 per gallon…

 

This is the first time since March that gas prices have been at seasonally-comparable record highs.

 

Source: Bloomberg


    



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

Fayette's kids celebrate Christmas

There is nothing quite as special as seeing a child’s eyes as the holiday season begins. When the Christmas tree is put up or presents magically appear under the tree, the light in a child’s eyes sparkles throughout the whole room.

In Fayette County this season, children participated in several Christmas events.
This week also marks the 190th anniversary of the classic Christmas poem, “Twas the Night Before Christmas.

According to digitaljournal.com, while the poem is a classic, it also had a big impact on the way Christmas is celebrated.

read more

via The Citizen http://www.thecitizen.com/articles/12-24-2013/fayettes-kids-celebrate-christmas

Fayette’s kids celebrate Christmas

There is nothing quite as special as seeing a child’s eyes as the holiday season begins. When the Christmas tree is put up or presents magically appear under the tree, the light in a child’s eyes sparkles throughout the whole room.

In Fayette County this season, children participated in several Christmas events.
This week also marks the 190th anniversary of the classic Christmas poem, “Twas the Night Before Christmas.

According to digitaljournal.com, while the poem is a classic, it also had a big impact on the way Christmas is celebrated.

read more

via The Citizen http://www.thecitizen.com/articles/12-24-2013/fayettes-kids-celebrate-christmas

McIntosh leads Directors Cup standings

McIntosh leads all AAAAA schools in Georgia in the race for the 2013-14 Directors Cup awarded by the Georgia Athletic Directors Association (GADA).
The GADA uses a point system to rank schools based on their teams’ performance in individual sports, and the schools with the highest point totals for all sports at the end of the year win the awards in each classification.

At the end of the fall season, McIntosh has 376 overall points to lead AAAAA, with Winder-Barrow a distant second at 271.

read more

via The Citizen http://www.thecitizen.com/articles/12-24-2013/mcintosh-leads-directors-cup-standings

Irony abounds

Dave and I have always thought we were the sole lovers of Christmas fruitcake on the planet. Every year, we have become used to seeing stacks of the little ruby-studded fruitcake that made Claxton, Georgia, a household name.

Fruitcake seems perfect for that not-too-pricey last-minute Christmas gift. After all, they keep virtually forever, especially when soaked in rum, and the fact that you can give them away secures their role as the answer to the everlasting question, “What should we give the mailman? Or the kids’ piano teacher? A next door neighbor? A fellow employee?”

read more

via The Citizen http://www.thecitizen.com/blogs/sallie-satterthwaite/12-24-2013/irony-abounds