Guest guest Posted September 1, 2007 Report Share Posted September 1, 2007 At 08:22 AM 9/1/07, you wrote: >US/MEX: Failed System & Failed State (worth reading) Mark Graffis >View All Topics | Create New Topic Message >1. US/MEX: Failed System & Failed State (worth reading) >Posted by: " Mark Graffis " mgraffis mgraffis >Fri Aug 31, 2007 6:23 pm (PST) > >http://www.321gold.com/editorials/willie/willie083007.html > >US/MEX: Failed System & Failed State >Jim Willie CB >Jim Willie CB is the editor of the " Hat Trick Letter " >Aug 30, 2007 > >Use the above link to to the paid research reports, which >include coverage of several smallcap companies positioned to rise during >the ongoing panicky attempt to sustain an unsustainable system burdened by >numerous imbalances aggravated by global village forces. An historically >unprecedented mess has been created by compromised central bankers and >inept economic advisors, whose interference has irreversibly altered and >damaged the world financial system. Analysis features Gold, Crude Oil, >USDollar, Treasury bonds, and inter-market dynamics with the US Economy >and US Federal Reserve monetary policy. > >TRIBUTE TO KURT RICHEBÄCHER. [who died this week] He was a valued >colleague and an inspiration to my newsletter. Our week together in Cannes >will forever be etched in my memory. > >Amusement is my response when other writers call me or my work 'extremist' >as Claude Cormier recently has. He is a topnotch analyst out of Quebec, >whose work is respected and admired. He himself cites extreme events, like >comparisons between the United States and Argentina, in the decimation of >the middle class amidst prolific inflation and financial sector foul play. >Labels are not kind, but my job is to analyze the extreme situation on a >host of fronts. To be honest, the label is taken here as an extreme >compliment, since it means my perceptions are squarely on target. >Additional extreme observations can be detailed, which points to systemic >breakdown. The US financial system shows signs of failure, the USEconomy >suffering deeply in association. If one were to list the extreme events >and factors in the last few years, reaching a climax nowadays, the >recitation would flow over into several dozen pages. > >As an important US holiday approaches (Labor Day), a reflection is in >order of the extremely dangerous footing we find our nation in, and the >predicament that a nation of laborers finds itself in. Workers find their >situation extremely tenuous, especially in light of the corporate sell-out >of the American worker in favor of Asians, aided by USGovt incentives and >Wall Street cheers. Our workers became accustomed to the betrayal during >the 1980 decade with the Pacific Rim powered by the Asian Tigers. Why >cannot economists see that a decade of Vietnam War inflation, a >Johnson-Kennedy Guns & Butter agenda, and USDollar benefit from high >Volcker interest rates (leading to Plaza Accord to bring down the US$), >resulted in a colossal cost to the US Middle Class and workers??? They >took more blows with the 1990 NAFTA betrayal, as Mexican assembly plants >cropped up across the border. The current Chinese and Indian outsource >movement is yet another betrayal to the American worker. Outsource the >job, enjoy the lower cost to the corporate profit margin, and send the US >employees into the street, especially if they are near retirement with >pensions. > >Let us all celebrate Labor Day, marred by a skein of betrayals. What is >needed is a national program to put Americans to work. Instead, we fight >an endless winless war abroad, in support of private syndicates who profit >heavily. How about a national mandate and high priority initiative to >rebuild the US bridges, access roads to major cities, tunnels, railroads, >sewer pipes, water pipes, natural gas pipes, crude oil pipes, airports, >and port facilities? And yes, forbid Halliburton and other connected >crooks to participate in any and all bidding? FDRoosevelt initiated >numerous plans. Why not now? High speed trains are common in France, >Germany, and Japan, soon to China. The US lags badly. > >In fact, one can conclude that the US is morphing into a bizarre Third >World nation with a powerful military and a banking system well equipped >to abuse the power extended from printing unbacked money marked as the >world reserve currency. Reflection at holiday time brings front and center >thoughts of how insistence on placing the Iron Triangle (Pentagon, Defense >firms, Lobby firms) in the catbird seat has contributed mightily to the >weakening of the USEconomy, the undermine of the American worker, and slow >bleed of the US Middle Class. That portion of the federal budget receives >almost no debate, no accountability, no prosecution for fraud. > >WAGES & PENSION DESTRUCTION >In the last 30 years, the inflation adjusted wage per adult has fallen by >30% to 35%, inflicting great hardship on the family structure. A household >needs to enjoin three wage earners, but such is impractical since most >offspring are reckless spenders, not effective workers, and since Uncle >Charlie (as in the television show My Three Sons) do not fit the mold >anymore. It is next to impossible to put one's savings to work without >engaging in high jinks gambling. Entire pension funds were killed in the >2000 stock bust. Outside of TIAA-CREF, where academic and many >institutional pensions are managed, some hefty losses were inflicted. The >advent of 1% official Treasury yields enticed many pension managers to >take risks which are biting deeply into future retirement income. This all >seems wicked and extreme. In fact, the details of the entire national >financial and economic landscape seem like out of a futuristic science >fiction novel with little basis in sanity. The incredible part of the >story seems to be that few smart folks cite the extreme nature of it all. >The US financial system, the USEconomy, the global economy, the US$-based >banking system, they are all on the brink. Asset-backed bonds have nuked >the banking industry. The housing decline puts the USEconomy at grave >risk. The global economy leaves Asians and Persian Gulf nations owning >enough US$-based debt so as to jeopardize US sovereignty. Call me an >extremist. If others do not see the extreme precariousness of the >situation, they are compromised, unaware, sleepy, or corrupted. > >FRAUDULENT STATISTICS AS BASE >The 2000 tech telecom stock bust provided an earthquake across both the >financial sector and the general economy. An official recession was >admitted and acknowledged, late. That means Gross Domestic Product growth >fell below minus 5%, since the USGovt gimmicks build in exaggeration by >over 4% at least. That fact alone sounds extreme, especially in view of >additional distortions, like the Consumer Price Index claimed at 3% when >it runs closer to 11%. Extreme gimmicks remove rising components. And then >the unemployment rate is claimed at 4% to 5%, when in reality it is more >like 9% when those without jobs are counted, using data released by the >same spin doctors at the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Productivity would be >negative if not for the same gimmicks on hedonic adjustments which assist >the GDP. They got caught with bogus statistics last summer, on the >relationship between productivity and import prices. You cannot import >productivity! Distortions in the compass readings are skewed to the >extreme, to such a degree that monetary and economic policy cannot >remotely be adequate in response to current conditions. The gulf between >official statistics and reality seem extreme. > >UNFIXABLE UPSIDE DOWN ECONOMY >In the wake of the great 2000 stock bust came another even greater >extreme. In bizarre yet desperate fashion (hidden), the Greenspan Fed >encouraged a housing bubble in order to save its own reputation. The >USEconomy could not afford a recession, with all the inherent debt >liquidation. So a myth of an Asset Driven Economy was promoted. That seems >extreme for any central bank. Imagine proclaiming as healthy, valid, and >with firm foundation an economic dependence on assets (housing & stocks) >pushed higher by inflation!!! A strong economy would rely upon business >investment, production, income growth, and sensible spending, not the >lunatic retail mania that we find the USEconomy dependent upon. Almost 30% >of all new jobs created since 2002 have been tied to the housing >construction bubble. Some call it a boom, but in my view just another >absurd bubble. Imagine instilling a dependence for economic growth on a >non-producing asset like a house, instead of a manufacturing plant where >value can be added with intellectual capital and jobs created. That is a >cockeyed extreme. Imagine the extreme structural imbalance of having 70% >of the USEconomy derived from consumption, led by retail. Here a graph >displays the extreme clutter of retail chains within the US landscape. >This 7-fold greater retail footprint of the US consumption over European >footprints is absurd. This is a ridiculous extreme. > >INDICATORS & PRIORITIES >Then we saw a stock market reach new nominal highs, set records, as an >economic boom is heralded. All pure extreme nonsense, since the USDollar >fell by roughly the same 15% to 20% as the stock market indexes rose. >Hence, purchasing power of one Dow share or one S & P500 share has been >preserved. That is a wash, not a boom. One might even ask why the S & P >stock index is part of the US-based Leading Economic Indicators, when over >30% of profit from such firms is derived from outside the USEconomy. The >recent Cisco Systems quarterly report highlighted this effect, strong >business abroad, weak at home. The US Federal Reserve in the meantime has >made official statements incessantly referring to their fears of price >inflation, when what they really mean is the USDollar might fall to such >low levels that imported price inflation would threaten the entire >USEconomy. They fear a backlash from exported inflation, soon importing >it! So the USFed cannot talk about the US$ currency exchange rate >directly, yet its policy can easily cause a rout on the USDollar with all >its price inflation consequences. That puts the USFed in an extreme box. > >MUSICAL CHAIRS & HOT POTATOES >The aftermaths of extremely incompetent economic guidance and planning, >combined with irresponsible heretical banking policy, have led to an >utterly unfixable housing crisis and mortgage finance debacle. This mess >has years for dust to clear! The entire non-government bond market has >fallen into a situation difficult to adequately describe. How about >comparisons to a human body suffering from seizures from bubbles in its >arteries (from inflation of assets, then deflation) but also beset by >constipation from fraudulent asset-backed bonds (like mortgages and >associated leveraged CDO bond derivatives)? Sounds about right, but again, >quite an extreme situation. With the threat to money market funds, whether >insured or not, the entire banking system seems to be at risk of proper >function. Musical chairs come to mind, which demand players to find a seat >when the music (credit flow) stops. Hot potato comes to mind, much like >the Drexel Burnham plight, which demands players not to hold the acidic >worthless bonds. My claim is that all subprime mortgage bonds are worth >under 25 cents of par value, and ALL Collateralized Debt Obligations with >dominant subprime mortgage bonds are totally worthless (as in 100% loss). >Actually, the CDO bond losses are much greater than 100%, sure to bite >deeply into the value of other assets of good value, like gold and crude >oil contracts. To me, the banking situation is on the ropes, an extremely >dire picture. > >WALL STREET JUNK >With most Wall Street firms facing junk bond status downgrades according >to Credit Default Swaps on their corporate debt, yet enjoying wonderful >investment grade debt ratings, we have more extreme corruption in the >banker brokerage system. Conversations with foreign analysts strongly >indicate a global perception of institutionalized fraud and dishonesty in >the US financial sector. In my view it spans almost its entire spectrum. >No, not all corporations engage in fraud. But every suite in the US >financial sector house contains prevalent fraud. This is utterly extreme, >but not surprisingly, as a consequence to the Green Light given to deceit >and swindle with the USDollar no longer backed by gold. The end of a fiat >currency game is replete with extremes. Gigantic bailouts are part and >parcel of the extreme resolutions. > >GIANT VEILED BAILOUT >The size of the mess, from housing and mortgage bond bubbles, is an order >of magnitude larger than the lunatic LongTerm Capital Mgmt mess in 1999. >Expect a larger bailout, especially since it is denied vigorously. Worse >this time though, since confusion will abound. Questions remain >unanswered. Did the USFed accept mortgage bonds offered only by Wall >Street firms? Or only major banks? Major banks seem listed as big >beneficiaries so far. Was the injection of $30 odd billion of funny money, >otherwise called counterfeit funds in private sectors, a secret Wall >Street bond bailout disguised poorly? Methinks yes. This seems extreme. > >GLOBALIZATION BACKFIRE >The global economy seems like a rubber band stretched far past its >specifications for usage. Labor arbitrage sends jobs to Asia. In return >they own vast tracts of US$-based debt securities. The US workers lose >their jobs in droves. A giant step backward has taken place on product >safety and quality. The end game seems to be trade sanctions, scuffles >over currency manipulation, blame game, market ambushes, and lost >sovereignty. Globalization sounds good, but in practice it results in >dislocation, conflict, and chaos, more extremes. > >RAMPANT DENIALS OF REALITY >Denials have been so broadly uttered by banking and economic and financial >market leaders, that your heads should spin. It becomes easier to make >sense if you conclude that every denial is wrong, and the louder the >denial, the more serious the effect. Now Premier Bank in the Kansas City >area is on the ropes, a Fed Reserve Bank. Like with a drunk, why ask if >Uncle Jack is a drunk, if his behavior and life does not scream of >alcoholism? Contagion of subprime mortgages to other debt securities is >evident. Spillover to the real economy is evident, but not total, yet. >Borrowing for consumption is impossible anymore. The housing recovery is a >mirage. Housing sales and prices are nowhere near the bottom, as July >existing home inventory shot up to 9.6 months supply! The denials form an >Orwellian backdrop where the system intends to deceive, to lie, and to >misguide, so as to retain power and to keep the Middle Class >impoverishment process intact. What is missing is the recognition that >past denials of important concepts have almost all been incorrect. No >learning seems to result in Wall Street, just ongoing compromise and deception. > >MERGER OF STATE & CORPORATION >The diabolic yet accepted merger of state and corporate interests is >preached as something beneficial, a movement to keep America strong, to >meet foreign competition and even aggression. Nonsense! The merger invites >fraud and extreme profiteering, if not roll the carpet to a totalitarian >state. What extreme drivel. My experiment has resulted in one person out >of 30 adequately citing what fascism is!!! The merger, called the >Mussolini Fascist Business Model, is the penultimate in inefficiency and >the ultimate framework for colossal theft with near zero prosecution. The >Goldman Sachs reduction from 9% to 2% in the gasoline weight of the GSCI >commodity index serves as best understandable evidence of such fraud. Did >GoldSax short the gasoline futures before the decision to cut the weight >by 7%? Of course, since if not, people would lose their jobs for a missed >opportunity to profit. > >LATEST DENIALS ON RECESSION >The permitted aristocratic fleecing inside financial markets is >unspeakable, and surely extreme. The latest denials have been reformulated >into key questions. IS THE USECONOMY HEADING INTO RECESSION ??? IS THE US >FEDERAL RESERVE GROSSLY OUT OF TOUCH ??? The answers in my opinion are YES >and YES. The USEconomy is furiously addicted to easy credit, which has >been curtailed. The home equity easy access wellspring has run dry. What >an easy call recession is! Look for more extreme statistical distortion to >prevent an official admission of recession. New infusions of liquidity >will in all likelihood assist the friends of the powerful groups, not the >rank & file, not the run of the mill banks. Recent USFed injections went >to the major banks, almost without exception. The US Federal Reserve is >led by a university professor who has never run a business, never managed >a financial account, never even worked in either, let alone worked in the >private sector, but did serve as an apprentice on the Fed Board itself. >Such does not instill confidence or adequately prepare for the job of >leading the US Politburo of central planner look-alikes. Fortunately, his >endless drivel about 'inflation expectations' has ended. Reality will pull >him at his leg, maybe the short arm. > >NATIONALISM & FEAR >Then we have a mania of fear and political fixation on terrorism. In my >estimation, the USGovt, the USMilitary, and the shadowy groups who bear >alphabet soup on unmarked lapels instill 1000 times as much fear in my >life as any Moslem lunatic in a faraway land. When a youngster with a >relatively undeveloped brain, it was an easy call for me to conclude the >Warren Commission was a whitewash in the wake of the JFKennedy >assassination. One can learn of unnatural deaths, with some investigation, >for all who stood on the Dallas Grassy Knoll. A similar whitewash is my >conclusion for the 911 Commission in the wake of the World Trade Center >attack. A scad of 30-year Treasury Bonds issued before the 1971 departure >from gold-backed USDollars were stored in the WTC vaults. And a scad of >financial records pertaining to the JPMorgan & Enron case were stored in >the third building. A scad of engineering professors have challenged the >official reports, citing mere laws of physics. Are such engineers enemies >of the state? The Nazis developed what was called Reich Physics back in >their day, so that science would salute the fascist regime. Other >scientific disciplines followed suit. Even Robert Fisk casts much doubt on >the truth beyond the 911 events in The UK Independent editorial dated 25 >August 2007. He is their Middle East correspondent. He outlines numerous >questionable facts and seeming contradictions. My view is simpler. A >syndicate took control of the White House since 1982, marred by a certain >event, which pursues a secret agenda and a clandestine business. Enough. > >When Habeas Corpus is suspended, when internment camps are completed on US >soil, when torture is debated as justified, when pre-emptive attack is >debated as justified, when confiscation of personal assets can be ordered >in response to obstruction of a war whose cause was mostly faked, when >unchecked executive decrees flow like a river, my fears are mainly >directed within the 50 states and their federal commandants. This is an >extreme situation leading potentially to a veiled military dictatorship. >All precedent points to the Fascist Business Model leading in parallel to >a fascist government regime. A lot of effort is going into this >unpublicized plan, probably not an idle exercise. It seems extreme. > >INSTITUTIONAL DISTRUST >The degree of public trust in US institutions is at rock bottom. The level >of foreign distrust has never been greater, which likely will result in >continued vengeance taken against both the USDollar and its traded vehicle >the USTreasury Bond. That retribution could turn extreme. Over 70% of >Americans do not trust their own Congress, the representatives who sit in >their stead. They seem grotesquely compromised, bought and paid. The 2006 >midterm election mandate by the people has been ignored. The war >commission report and its recommendations have been ignored. Over 70% of >Americans do not trust their own Military to accurately and honestly >report the status of the Iraqi War. Probably a higher proportion of >Americans regard Wall Street as liars, parasites, con men, and fraud >artists. The entire nation appears at extreme crossroads. As though the >Untied States were not in enough trouble with systemic tremors, take a >look south of the border for an even bigger nightmare unfolding. It is >sure to spill over into the US back yard. > >RISING DISTRESS SOUTH OF THE BORDER >South of the border is Mexico, whose fiscal wagon is quietly and >dangerously careening down a hill, most assuredly over a precipice. This >would constitute another extreme development. The decline of their giant >oil field Cantarell, combined with the mismanagement of their PEMEX >national oil industry, hampered by their corrupt powerful labor union, >stymied by their compromised Parliament, these guarantee a monstrous >fiscal problem in Mexico. The reduction in their FOREX trade surplus >accelerates from greater gasoline import, a whiplash factor. This story >has so far eluded the sleepy lapdog press, but not the oil industry. This >story was covered in the August Hat Trick Letter in greater depth. My >forecast is for Mexico to disintegrate into a failed state within two >years, owing to its lost FOREX trade surplus and utter breakdown of law >and order. Mexico City soon will be forced to turn to desperate measures. > >The Mexican Peso tumbled in July, and has continued lower in August. The >financial conditions behind their FOREX revenues from their energy account >are being revealed. The MexPeso has fallen from 9.25 to the 9.0 level, >well below its 50-day moving average, without recovery. As the USDollar >falters against the euro currency, the MexPeso does also. So the MexPeso >has faltered even worse relative to world currencies. European exports >rise in price to Mexicans. Currency markets sense trouble. The Mexican >economy suffers from a significant decline in cash transfers (remittances) >from workers in the US sending money home to families. This was addressed >in my work as evidence of lost home construction jobs. The volume of money >involved in remittances exceeds the total foreign direct investment in >Mexico, an alarming data point, so not a small sum. This cramps consumer >spending and small business investment, and leads to wider poverty. Count >that as another contagion from the US housing crisis, of course denied. > >The situation in Mexico continues to deteriorate. As their nation falls >further into outright chaos, three key questions arise: 1) What happens to >the reliable supply of crude oil to the United States, even as Cantarell >sees further decline? 2) What happens to the plans for implementation of >the North American Alliance, the economic merger of the US, Canada, and >Mexico? 3) What happens to foreign mining rights to Mexican properties, >under possible threat of confiscation or hiked royalty demands? These are >central questions addressed in the August Hat Trick Letter report. > >Violence has spread widely across Mexico, including murders of police >officials in the northern regions. Even judges and foreign press reporters >have been threatened. A splinter group from the Peoples Revolutionary Army >claimed responsibility for the July 10th oil pipeline explosions in >Guanajuato and Queretaro states. Other pipelines have been threatened. >Armed battles in small city streets have erupted, without report in the >debilitated compromised US media networks. Rival drug lords are engaged in >three-way battles with the Mex Govt. > >A failed nation state is the likely outcome south of the US border. Such a >failure has numerous criteria. Energy network attacks, growing poverty and >inequality, inadequate government services, growing power of organized >crime, corruption & desertion of police forces, assassination of judges >and officials without consequences, and growing farmer bankruptcy are >contributing to a failed system in Mexico. Needs of people, upheld laws, >tax structures, allegiance to authority, and sense of urgency all seem to >be in breakdown mode. The division between rich and poor is stark, and >growing worse. Their tycoon Carlos Slim has accumulated three times the >wealth that Rockefeller did a century ago, relative to respective national >economy size. The failed state of Mexico will be evident from the top >down, with origin the financial deterioration of its federal government. >Gigantic federal deficits will be the next major story coming from Mexico, >with associated disruption and chaos. > >UGLY DETAILS ON MEXICAN OIL INDUSTRY >The supply of crude oil to the United States is substantial from Mexico, >behind only Saudi Arabia and Canada. The Mexican energy picture is >deteriorating. The elephant oil field Cantarell is in an established 15% >annual decline, offset by inadequate expansion elsewhere. Some details are >provided by the Mexico City business journal El Financiero. Current oil >output is at 3.624 million barrels per day. Gasoline production follows >the trend of oil production, with output down 56.4% at PEMEX refineries to >463.2 thousand bbl/day. The shocking data point here is that their >gasoline imports rose by 92.1% in June, versus last June 2006. No new >gasoline refinery has been built in Mexico in over 20 years, not as bad as >in the US, where no new refinery has been built in 35 years. The net >financial impact is that Mexico earned $34.7 billion in FOREX reserves in >2006 from oil export, but of that, $10 billion was spent on gasoline >import, or 29% of the gain. The great boon from oil discovery in the 1970 >decade is coming to an end. Their oil exports in the first half of 2007 >stood at 1.718 million bbl/day. That compares to 1.907 mb/day in 1H2006, >or 10% less. The decline is amplified by greater gasoline imports. The >saving grace is the 40% reduction in natural gas imports. The Mexican >trade surplus from energy is vanishing. Analysts expect it to be gone by >2011. My forecast is sooner, due to disruption and a breakdown of order. >The effect on their national politics will be severe, causing a failure of >state, with a broad internal breakdown of order. > >THE IMBALANCED ALLIANCE >The North American Alliance is intended (without debate, analysis, or >vote) to share US bank sector might, broad technology expertise, >pharmaceutical depth, augmented by military prowess WITH Canadian energy >supply and mineral wealth WITH Mexican cheap labor, energy supply and >mineral wealth, and a bonus of new port facilities. The hidden component >is the supply of Mexican soldiers to fight in the US war machine. See >data. The Alliance increasingly looks like having one horse (Canadian >Dollar) pulling the FOREX stagecoach, with two lame horses from the United >States and Mexico. Perhaps the US horse will be an image from a printing >press that nobody will notice! The prospects for mining rights and >constant royalties remain in debate, an uncertainty. Some conjecture and >speculation is given in my August report. > >Back to top Reply to sender ****** Kraig and Shirley Carroll ... in the woods of SE Kentucky http://www.thehavens.com/ thehavens 606-376-3363 --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.859 / Virus Database: 585 - Release 2/14/05 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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