Wednesday, August 03, 2011

Quick Overview

  • Arctic sea ice is melting at a near- record pace, opening shipping lanes for cargo traffic between Europe and Asia, Russia’s environmental agency said.

  • TEA Republicans have erased $1.07 trillion from American equities in less than two weeks. They are good at this – and hard at work on more.

  • U.S. factory orders dropped 0.8% in June.

  • The number of planned layoffs at U.S. firms rose to a 16-month high in July

Tuesday, August 02, 2011

US: Obstacles to progress
Indeed, the US spends only 2.4 per cent of gross domestic product on infrastructure – less than half the average of 5 per cent that prevails in European countries – and half the level of 1960

Quick Overview

  • (FT) Investors should remember that national accounts must sum to zero. Falling rich world public deficits lead to lower corporate profits, all else being equal. Something Mr. Market seems to know!!

  • Chinas Purchasing Managers’ Index rose from 50.7 in July to 50.9 in June – better than expected.


  • (Reuters) - Macau, the world's largest gambling market, blew past expectations to post a 48.4 percent rise in July gambling revenue, underscoring unflagging demand from China's newly minted millionaires and burgeoning middle class.


  • WXRISK (the weather site) has a category 4-5 hurricane potentially hitting east central China (Corn / Soy)

  • U.S. personal income rose 0.1% in June, while spending fell 0.2% -- on no confidence.


  • The U.S. ISM’s factory index fell to 50.9 last month from 55.3 in June.


  • The PPI remained stable in the EU 17 in June, rising by 0.1%


  • YoY Japan's monetary base rose 15.0 % in July.


  • Brazil’s trade surplus rose 74.4% YoY.


  • South Korea said it will expand the zero- tariff quota for refrigerated pork imports without limit by the end of September. Previously, 130,000 tons of fresh and frozen pork were subject to zero-tariff imports.

  • US corn futures climb the one-day 30c limit on increasing concerns about hot weather reducing output.
  • The Institute of Energy Economics for Japan (IEEJ) reported that alternative energy imports (Coal  ?) would rise significantly if local authorities kept reactors shut after routine maintenance due to safety concerns after Fukushima.
  • The 10 sieverts of radiation detected on Aug. 1 outside reactor buildings was the highest the Geiger counters used were capable of reading, indicating the level could have been higher!
How the Billionaires Broke the System
There are two ways of cutting a deficit: raising taxes or reducing spending. Raising taxes means taking money from the rich. Cutting spending means taking money from the poor. Not in all cases of course: some taxation is regressive; some state spending takes money from ordinary citizens and gives it to banks, arms companies, oil barons and farmers. But in most cases the state transfers wealth from rich to poor, while tax cuts shift it from poor to rich.

Thursday, July 28, 2011

Quick Overview

  • The U.S. Treasury will give priority to making interest payments to holders of government bonds if the clowns don’t reach an agreement.
  • The House canceled a Thursday night vote on Boehner's debt plan.
  • U.S. first time claims for unemployment benefits dropped below 400,000. Claims fell 24,000 during the week to 398,000.
  • U.S. home sales rose 2.4% in June.

  • The economic sentiment indicator (ESI) for the EU 17 fell by 2.2 points to 103.2

  • Bloomberg: “I want to get away from this situation where I’m not even allowed to alert children about radiation exposure,” said Shishido, a 48-year-old Japanese teacher.


  • China announced this week that it is considering a 4 point reduction in its 13% Value Added Tax

  • Japan's jobless rate out at 4.6%, up from May’s 4.5%.
  • YoY Japan’s consumer price index rose 0.4 % in June

  • (MarketWatch) -- Verizon Wireless said late Thrusday its board approved the distribution of $10 billion in dividends to its owners Verizon Communications Inc. and Vodafone Group . The dividend will be paid Jan. 31 in proportion to their ownership stakes. Verizon owns 55% and Vodafone owns 45% in Verizon Wireless.

  • (MarketWatch) -- Starbucks, boosted by rising customer visits to its coffee shops, reported late Thursday profit rose to $279 million, or 36 cents a share, up from $208 million, or 27 cents a share, in the year-ago period. Sales totaled $2.9 billion, up from $2.6 billion, as same-store sales increased 8%. Starbucks topped the consensus analyst targets for a profit of 34 cents and same-store sales of 5.4%, according to FactSet. Starbucks also lifted its fiscal 2011 outlook and laid out plans to accelerate new store openings. Starbucks shares, trading near 52-week highs, closed at $39.98 ahead of the report. The stock is up 60% over the last year.

  • Global population will reach seven billion this year.

Tuesday, July 26, 2011

Quick Overview



  • It beggars belief that the zombies from the GOP_tea are willing to risk national default for the sake of antitax bs! Eric Cantor, Paul Ryan Mitch McConnell all voted for the chief drivers of the debt during the past decade: Wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, the 2001 and 2003 Bush tax cuts and Medicare prescription drug benefits. They also voted for TARP!! etc.etc……………………………………………………………………………
  • The CME is raising collateral required to trade its Treasury futures  as the U.S. debt stupidity promised to intensify market volatility!
  • (Reuters) - The United States will lose its top-notch AAA credit rating from at least one major rating agency, according to a Reuters poll that also found wrangling over the debt ceiling has already damaged the economy.


  • Sales of U.S. new single-family homes fell 1.0% in June to an annual rate of 312,000. The median sales price rose 5.8% to $235,000 last month from $222,400 in May. At the current sales pace, there was a 6.3 months supply of new homes.


  • The S&P/Case-Shiller index of property values in 20 U.S. cities fell 4.5 % YoY


  • U.S Consumer confidence rose to 59.5 in July from a downwardly revised 57.6 in June.


  • (AP) -- The U.S wealth gaps between whites and minorities have grown to their widest levels in a quarter-century. The recession and uneven recovery have erased decades of minority gains, leaving whites on average with 20 times the net worth of blacks and 18 times that of Hispanics, according to an analysis of new Census data.


  • German consumer confidence for August declined to 5.4 from 5.5 in July.


  • Cotton appears to be bouncing at long term support.
  • For contemplation: HealthSpring, (HS): is up over 160% YoY. The Company serves Medicare recipients with a network of hospitals and physicians.
  • More food for thought: WellCare (WCG) is up over 110% YoY. The Company operates health plans in multiple states.
  • The price of crystal sugar in Brazil, the world's largest producer, climbed 20% this month as supplies remain limited, according to Cepea.

Saturday, July 23, 2011

Quick Overview

  • (Bloomberg) “The markets will be under very real pressure at the open because the assumption will be there is really no resolution to this,” Cooper said. “The breakdown in negotiations has crossed the line from the political posturing of the last few weeks to potentially a very real crisis. “The Tea Party is effectively playing Russian roulette with the bond market and they will, with certainty, lose,” Cooper said.

  • Kingsman cut by 35m tonnes to 525m tonnes its forecast for cane output in Brazil's Center South.

  • Private forecaster has corn yield at 153.5 and beans at 41.3.

  • Goldman Sachs said Friday it reduced its estimate of 2011 U.S. corn yield by three bushels to 156 bushels per acre due to soaring temperatures in the Midwest grain belt.
Apocalypse Nigh? The essentials of the long-term crisis are simple. For a generation now, the only essential plank for any Republican candidate is a pledge not to raise taxes and to roll back even the modest sums that the rich and corporations are supposed to send to the US Treasury each year. The second plank is an equally vehement pledge, proclaimed by both parties to keep America strong by throwing money at the Pentagon. Right now the total military/security budget is in the vicinity of $1.1-$1.2 trillion, or 70 -75 per cent of the federal budget deficit.

Friday, July 22, 2011

Barack Obama: The Democrats’ Richard Nixon? Here are a few examples of Obama's effective conservatism:
His stimulus bill was half the size that his advisers thought necessary;
He continued Bush’s war and national security policies without change and even retained Bush’s defense secretary;
He put forward a health plan almost identical to those that had been supported by Republicans such as Mitt Romney in the recent past, pointedly rejecting the single-payer option favored by liberals;
He caved to conservative demands that the Bush tax cuts be extended without getting any quid pro quo whatsoever;
And in the past few weeks he has supported deficit reductions that go far beyond those offered by Republicans.

Further evidence can be found in the writings of outspoken liberals such as New York Times columnist Paul Krugman, who has condemned Obama’s conservatism ever since he took office

Thursday, July 21, 2011

Quick Overview

  • S&P says there's a 50-50 chance of the U.S. credit rating being downgraded.

  • Brazil's raised rates, the 5th consecutive increase, from 12.25 to 12.5%

  • YoY Japans exports fell 1.6 % in June.

  • U.S. homes sales unexpectedly fell 0.8 % in June to a seven-month low.
  • Bloomberg: The U.S. Treasury Department is exploring a plan that could help 1 million or more homeowners avoid foreclosure, according to housing market executives.

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

Quick Overview

  • If the US government defaults it would go into default not because it can't pay its bills – like Greece – but because it won't.


  • U.S. housing starts in June rose nearly 15%.


  • IBM's Q2 revenue rose 12 % to $26.7 billion. That topped $25.4 billion, the average estimate of analysts.


  • (FT) As Riyadh increasingly becomes a hungry oil consumer, supply from the world’s biggest producer will ease.

  • KO reported earnings of $1.17 for Q2, ahead of estimates -- new high on the move.  
  • Romanians recover 64 stolen missile warheads.
  • U of I specialists say a state average corn yield in the mid-to-low 150's might be expected this year, compared to last year's 168.7 yield.
  • Construction output in the euro zone dropped by 1.1 percent in May
  • The IMF urged policy makers to take further actions to contain the sovereign debt crisis in the euro area, warning that a spread to the core euro countries could cause "major global consequence." (Too Obvious)
  • I know of tops, double tops, triple tops, but very very few quadruple tops. Probably taken out.
  • Chinese leading indicator  rose 0.5 % to 155 in May.



Sunday, July 17, 2011

Quick Overview

  • In case you missed it --- Obama eliminates Elisabeth Warren as director of the new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau

  • U.S. consumer sentiment fell to 63.8 in early July, reaching the lowest level since March of 2009, from 71.5 in June.

  • U.S. wholesale prices fall 0.4% in June

  • Unica, Brazils cane industry association, lowered its forecast for sugar output from the key centre-south region from an original estimate of 34.6m tonnes to just 32.4m tonnes now – down 3.3 % YoYr and the first drop in Brazilian production in more than five years.

  • CME will be delisting frozen pork bellies futures and options” effective Monday 7/17/2011.( Rest in peace PB, you’ll be remembered fondly for some excellent trades over the last 40 years).

  • July 2011 Chicago temperatures 13th warmest of past 141 years.

Friday, July 15, 2011

Return of the Gold Standard as world order unravels
Mr Bernanke himself was grilled by Congress this week on the role of gold. Why do people by gold? "As protection against of what we call tail risks: really, really bad outcomes," he replied.

Thursday, July 14, 2011

Quick Overview

  • The Labor Department said that the advance figure for seasonally adjusted initial claims for jobless benefits was 405,000 in the week ending July 9, a decrease of 22,000 from the prior week.

  • As heat wave looms this month, 39% of projected U.S. corn production has received less than an inch of rain.
  • Arlan Suderman: High overnight lows contributed greatly to 2010 low corn yields; If 4casts verify, 2011 will set record high July lows in Des Moines

  • (MarketWatch) -- The U.S. dollar got a slight boost on Thursday after Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke rejected the possibility of immediate action by the central bank to revive the economy.

  • Paul Volcker dismissed the possibility of a return to the gold standard, saying that, among other things, "I don't think there's enough gold in the world."

  • (Spiegel) Germans want to end nuclear power and turn to renewable energy, but they keep buying SUVs. Global carbon emissions and oil consumption have risen sharply over the last two environmentally conscious decades -- and the trends will continue, as long as Westerners keep discovering new "needs."

  • The end of Belarusian dictator Alexander Lukashenko's era appears to be approaching, as thousands take to the streets in Minsk to protest against the country's economic crisis.

  • Indian inflation rose to 9.44 % in June.

  • Chinas fiscal revenue rose 31.2% YoY to 5.69 trillion yuan (875.5 billion U.S. dollars) in the first half of this year.

  • U.S. PPI shows  wholesale prices down 0.4% in June

  • Central banks have bought more gold in the first half of this year than in all of 2010 as a long-anticipated reversal in so-called "official sector" sales gathers pace, the World Gold Council said.

  • Brazil's National Institute for Space Research  (INPE) released satellite images indicating that Amazon deforestation increased from 103 km² in March and April 2010 to 593 km² in the same period of 2011, a sixfold increase from a year ago.

  • S&P warns of downgrade if no debt deal reached

Tuesday, July 12, 2011

Quick Overview

  • Christine Lagarde, the IMF's new boss, announced that "nothing should be taken for granted on Greece”. (Brilliant I tell you BRILLIANT)

  • The Bank of Japan maintained its interest-rate, as widely expected, and is more upbeat in its overall economic assessment.
  • YoY Japan's wholesale prices rose 2.5% in June
  • Japanese consumer confidence improved for a second straight month in June. The index of sentiment among households made up of two or more people, rose to 35.3 in June, from 34.2 in May

  • Today’s USDA report shows new crop stocks to use for corn at only 6.4%...second lowest in history.

  • (Spiegel) The European Commission, estimates that 75 percent of fish stocks in the region are overexploited, and that 30 to 40 percent of Europe's fishing fleet of 80,000 registered vessels will be financially unsustainable in the longer term. The EU has the world's third-largest fisheries sector after Peru and China.

  • Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin criticized the U.S. monetary policy on Monday, calling it "hooliganism".  (He should know!)

  • Chinas FX reserves rose $197bn in Q1, and rose another $153bn in Q2

  •  Moody's cuts Ireland's rating to junk

  • Heat is expanding out of the South into the Midwest and Northeast

  • Temperatures in eastern Japan, including Tokyo, were 3.8 degrees higher than the 30-year average in the last 10 days of June.

  • (FT) Its latest 10-K statement showed that although the corporate tax rate in the US is 35 per cent, News Corp’s effective tax rate last year was 20 per cent. The company earned $2.5bn in profits and still managed to receive a tax benefit.

  • Rice new high this evening!

  • YoY China's crude oil imports fell 11.5 % in June to a eight-month low of 19.70 million tons, or 4.82 million barrels a day (bpd), the latest government data showed.




Sunday, July 10, 2011

Quick Overview

  • The US added just 18,000 jobs in June -- unemployment rose to 9.2%

  • House passed $649 billion defense bill, boosts Pentagon spending by $17 billion.

  • Canada’s jobless rate held steady at 7.4%.

  • (FT) Central banks have pulled 635 tonnes of gold from the Bank for International Settlements in the past year, the largest withdrawal in more than a decade.

  • Global Rubber consumption (Includes both natural and synthetic rubber) is likely to hit 25.7 million tons this year, according to International Rubber Study Group (IRSG).
  • In its World Rubber Industry Outlook, ISRG said natural rubber consumption alone will hit 11.2 million tons in 2011, tracking last year’s rapid recovery and growth.

  • Parts of the Midwest appear to be getting a bit too hot and dry for  corn pollination.
Who owns what? China's murky ownership rules highlight the perils of investing where the law is unclear There are signs, however, that the Chinese government has begun to frown on VIEs.

Thursday, July 07, 2011

Quick Overview

  • A heat dome appears in the forecast 10 days out – supporting corn/beans


  • ECB raises interest rates to 1.5%.


  • US private sector jobs rose by 157,000.


  • Pork prices are at a seven year high in China and are probably stimulating expansion -- need for soy meal and corn?


  • Australia's jobless rate remains at 4.9 % in June for a second month in a row


  • A unit of Goldman Sachs took the biggest, $15 billion, single loan from a Federal Reserve lending program whose details have been secret until now.


  • (Bloomberg) Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. (LEHMQ)’s brokerage borrowed as much as $18 billion in four separate loans from a previously secret program of the U.S. Federal Reserve in June 2008, three months before its parent filed the biggest bankruptcy in U.S. history.


  • Source: IT world — Jun 28, 2011
  • Once upon a time, the United States led the world in science, inventions, research and development, and technology. Here’s how the U.S. went from world leader to world loser, according to IT World writer Carla Schroder:
  • Patents: When you can’t innovate, litigate. Software patents are a drag on progress.
  • Education: The U.S. ranks 14th out of 34 OECD countries for reading skills, 17th for science, and a below-average 25th for mathematics.
  • Obesity: The U.S. holds the world title for most obesity, at 30.6% of the population.
  • Sad “Green” Technology Policies: Our elected persons are doing a fine job at blocking any sort of actual forward movement in modern green tech, and the rest of the world is cleaning our clocks.
  • Investing in Prisons, Domestic Spying, and Bombs: The U.S. has the highest percentage of citizens in prison of any country on the planet.
  • However, the U.S. can compete by increasing R&D funding by private industry and by taking more effective advantage of the Internet for access to information, easy sharing, easy distribution, and distributed projects, she suggests.

  • The World Trade Organization ruled that China's curbs on exports of raw materials are illegal, upholding a complaint lodged by the United States, the European Union and Mexico.

Tuesday, July 05, 2011

Quick Overview

  • The Koch brothers corporate facade group Americans for Prosperity (AFP) filed a lawsuit in New York’s State Supreme Court seeking to reverse a core piece of state action on climate change.

  • I think the USDA will be caught with their pants down on old crop corn stocks later this summer.

  • NASDAQ reports that YoY Macao gambling revenue rose 52% in June

  • (Economist) TEPCO’s liabilities range between Yen 4 trillion and Yen 25 trillion. The firm also owes 7.8 trillion Yen to bondholder and banks. If TEPCO goes bankrupt, banks and bondholders take precedence over those affect by the disaster.

  • London’s first gold dispensing ATM was installed last week.

  • (NYT) The median pay for top executives at 200 big companies last year was $10.8 million. That works out to a 23 percent gain from 2009.

  • Brazil may import 204 mi gallons of ethanol this year, vs 120 last year.

  • (Spiegel) With the reintroduction of border controls, the Danes are calling into question one of the EU's greatest achievements. Unfortunately, there has been little protest in Brussels and other European capitals. There is growing fatigue regarding European integration -- and that is a bitterly disappointing trend.

  • UN's World Economic and Social Survey, says global food production need to jump by 70-100% by 2050 to feed an anticipated 9 billion people.

  • Moody's has cut Portugal's credit rating by four notches to Ba2.