Archive for June, 2010

Here’s a scary story for bed-time boys and girls.

According to Brett Arend over at Market Watch, there are three big lies about the economy that most people are believing, or at least most people want you to believe.

We here at www.The2012Warning.com do not know if this is true or not, but we have suspected for a long time that the recession ain’t even close to being over, and that rather, something of a gargantuan size is grasping the nation by the throat.  It seems to us that they have the unemployment rates about right, anyway.  Take a look.

BOSTON (MarketWatch) — The counter-revolution is underway.

The G-20 calls for members to slash their budget deficits. The U.S. Senate ices further aid for the unemployed. The head of the Business Roundtable slams President Obama for undermining American capitalism. Wall Street succeeds in watering down reform.

Depending on your politics, you’ll love this or hate it.

But there’s just one problem.

We’re still living in a fantasyland. Most people have no idea what’s really going on in the economy. They’re living on spin, myths and downright lies. And if we don’t know the facts, how can we make intelligent decisions?

Key updates on the economy this week
Economists worry that jobs, consumer confidence readings won’t support hope for economic recovery, Barrons.com’s Bob O’Brien reports.

Here are the three biggest economic myths — the things everything thinks they know about the economy that just ain’t so.

Myth 1: Unemployment is below 10%

What nonsense that is. The official jobless rate, at 9.7%, is a fiction and should be treated as such. It doesn’t even count lots of unemployed people. The so-called “underemployment” or U-6 rate is an improvement: For example it counts discouraged job seekers, and those forced to work part-time because they can’t get a full-time job.

That rate right now is 16.6%, just below its recent high and twice the level it was a few years ago

And even that may not tell the full story. Many people have simply dropped out of the labor force statistics.

Consider, for example, the situation among men of prime working age. An analysis of data at the U.S. Labor Department shows that there are 79 million men in America between the ages of 25 and 65. And nearly 18 million of them, or 22%, are out of work completely. (The rate in the 1950s was less than 10%.) And that doesn’t even count those who are working part-time because they can’t get full-time work. Add those to the mix and about one in four men of prime working age lacks a full-time job.

Dean Baker, economist at the Center for Economic and Policy Research in Washington, D.C., says the numbers may be even worse than that. His research suggests a growing number of men, especially in deprived, urban and minority neighborhoods, have vanished from the statistical rolls altogether.

Myth 2: The markets are panicking about the deficit

To hear the G-20 tell it, the U.S. and other top countries had better slash those budget deficits before the world comes to an end.

And maybe the markets should be panicking about the deficits.

But they’re not. It’s that simple.

If they were, the interest rate on government bonds would be skyrocketing. That’s what happens with risky debt: Lenders demand higher and higher interest payments to compensate them for the dangers.

But the rates on U.S. bonds have been plummeting recently. The yield on the 30-year Treasury bond down to just 4%. By historic standards that’s chickenfeed. Panicked? The bond markets are practically snoring.

They aren’t seeing inflation either. On the contrary, they’re saying it will average just 2.3% a year over the next three decades. That’s the gap between the interest rates on inflation-protected Treasury bonds and the rates on the regular bonds. By any modern standard the forecast is low. Instead of worrying about inflation, some are starting to worry about something even more dangerous: deflation, or falling prices.

If that takes hold, cutting spending and raising taxes would be a bad move.

It’s certainly possible the lenders buying these bonds are being foolish. And it’s worth noting that the Treasury market is also subject to political distortions, because foreign are among the heavy buyers of bonds. So it’s worth treating its apparent verdicts with some caution. Nonetheless, the burden of proof, as usual, is on those who argue the market is wrong.

Myth 3: The U.S. is sliding into “socialism”

For a system allegedly being strangled in its bed, U.S. capitalism seems to be in astonishingly robust shape.

Numbers published by the Federal Reserve a few weeks ago show that corporate profit margins have just hit record levels. Indeed. Andrew Smithers, the well-regarded financial consultant and author of “Wall Street Revalued,” calculates from the Fed’s latest Flow of Funds report that corporate profit margins rocketed to 36% in the first quarter. Since records began in 1947 they have never been this high. The highest they got under Ronald Reagan was 30%.

The picture is also similar when you exclude financials.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA 9,774, -96.28, -0.98%) is above 10,000. Small company stocks have rallied astonishingly since early last year: The Russell 2000 index is back to levels seen not long before Lehman imploded. Meanwhile Cap Gemini’s latest Wealth Report notes that the North American rich saw an 18% jump in their wealth last year.

Meanwhile, federal spending, about 25% of the economy this year, is expected to fall to about 23% by 2013. In 1983, under Ronald Reagan, it hit 23.5%. In the early 1990s it was around 22%. Some socialism.

These days, three-fifths of the entire budget goes on just three things: Insurance for our old age (through Social Security and Medicare), defense, and debt interest.

Conservatives don’t want to cut the $700 billion-plus we spend on defense. We can’t cut debt interest payments. And while Social Security and Medicare certainly need reform, the main “problems” are simply rising life expectancy and health care demands. If we didn’t provide for the insurance through our taxes we’d have to do it individually.

What about the rest of the budget? It’s jumped from around 7% of GDP a few years ago to about 10% now. Out of control? It’s been in the 6% to 9% range for decades. It’s forecast to fall to about 8% again in a few years.

So much for a revolution. But here comes the counter-revolution just the same.

Is the Deepwater Horizon Oil spill off the gulf coast the punishment, consequence, or fault of O’bama for slighting Israel’s Benjamin Netanyahu in March at the WhiteHouse?  Look at the previous post/challenge/prophecy about “Don’t Touch Mine Anointed” and “Biblical Prophecy about to be Proven Again” and see for yourself.  The President stiffed the Prime Minister in late March, and before 30 days had passed, O’Bama has a nightmare of Katrina proportions to deal with.  One thing is for sure: Don’t touch Israel, mine anointed!

The following article is found in Wikipedia.  The deduction, of course, is up to the reader/thinker.

During March and April 2010, several platform workers and supervisors expressed concerns with well control. At approximately 9:45 p.m. CDTon April 20, 2010, methane gas from the well, under high pressure, shot up and out of the drill column marine riser, expanded onto the platform, and then ignited and exploded.[27][30] Fire then engulfed the platform.[31] Most of the workers were evacuated by lifeboats or were airlifted out by helicopter,[32][33] but eleven workers were never found despite a three-day Coast Guard search operation, and are presumed to have died in the explosion.[30][34] Efforts by multiple ships to douse the flames were unsuccessful. After burning furiously for approximately 36 hours, the Deepwater Horizon sank on the morning of April 22, 2010.[35]

On the afternoon of April 22, a large oil slick began to spread at the former rig site.[36] Two remotely operated underwater vehicles (ROVs) unsuccessfully attempted to cap the well.[37] BP announced that it was deploying a ROV to the site to assess whether oil was flowing from the well.[38] On April 23, a ROV reportedly found no oil leaking from the sunken rig and no oil flowing from the well.[39] Coast Guard Rear AdmiralMary Landry expressed cautious optimism of zero environmental impact, stating that no oil was emanating from either the wellhead or the broken pipes and that oil spilled from the explosion and sinking was being contained.[40][41][42][43] The following day, April 24, Landry announced that a damaged wellhead was indeed leaking oil into the Gulf and described it as “a very serious spill”.[44]

As of June 19, BP has not given a cause for the explosion.[45]


There was a time when 100-point moves in the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) were few and far between. Naturally, the occurrence of such jumps has increased as the DJIA has trekked higher, but it is still striking statistic to point out. According Schaeffer’s Senior Quantitative Analyst Alan “Rocky” White, the Dow moved 100 points or more only 52 times in 1997. These signals peaked in the wake of the Dot Com bust of the mid-2000s, with 118 100-point moves taking place in 2002.

As you can see from the chart below, we have seen a sharp pick up in the number of 100-point Dow swings since 2007. In fact, the 2008 crash elicited 146 such moves. So far this year, the DJIA has logged 44 100-point swings. Extrapolating that data out for the rest of the year, 2010 could well see 100 or more 100-point moves. Given the market returns in 2000, 2002, and 2008, such a development may not be a good thing for the market.

To us here at www.The2012Warning.com, it is becoming increasingly evident that the stock market is not the safe haven it once was for American investors.

There is even an ad this morning on the web claiming that June 6, 2010 will be the beginning of the stock market crash for the year.  Hmmmm.  We will see, shall we not?