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  • Rick Santelli: The Best Five Minutes in CNBC History [View article]
    must be tough for baby boomers in the US. crippling debt. limited job opportunities. uncertainty and fear. i'd like US law to require presenters and commentators on financial programming like CNBC to flash up the amount of their net wealth so viewers can assess their cred. The US has been on an economic downer since 99, but americans too pumped up on their own propaganda to see it. cnbc presenters still dont get it. do the exact opposite to what they recommend. for high income savers, this down turn is a great opportunity. dow will end up bottoming around 5,800 so there is still plenty of pain to come.
    Feb 20 12:29 pm |Rating: +11 -3 |Link to Comment
  • Gold: The Only Remaining Bubble? [View article]
    Gold is not the bubble. The USD is in the bubble. Americans' faith in their paper chits is the bubble. Consumers trading pieces of paper as markers for value. The bubble of US printed paper currency may pop. To guard against that risk, investors buy gold. Once the paper money bubble pops (remember iceland), it is too late.
    Feb 19 11:09 am |Rating: +1 -2 |Link to Comment
  • Is China Pulling an Alan Greenspan? [View article]
    where does the 40% figure come from? how did you calculate that? the number i see quote in fin reports is 12%-15% and see below


    China's GDP depends only for 10 percent on export - Arthur Kroeber

    Arthur Kroeber
    by Fons1 via FlickrUnlike popular believe China's GDP depends only for ten percent on export, not 40 percent, says Arthur Kroeber, manager director of Beijing-based research firm Dragonomics, according to Sify. The limits the country's exposure against failling export considerably.


    China's dependence on exports is not as heavy as may seem at first glance. Officially, exports account for 37 per cent of its revenues and seem to be the driver of the Chinese economy.
    But independent surveys by Dragonomics, an advisory firm specializing in China, put its "true" export share at just under 10 per cent of its GDP.
    It is internal investments, which account for 40 per cent of its GDP, that are the driving force of China's economy. Although part of them is channeled into export-oriented projects, the global financial crunch will not slow China considerably.
    Economics focus

    An old Chinese myth
    Jan 3rd 2008
    From The Economist print edition

    Contrary to popular wisdom, China's rapid growth is not hugely dependent on exports


    MOST people suppose that China's economic success depends on exporting cheap goods to the rich world. If so, its growth would be seriously dented by a stuttering American economy. Headline figures show that China's exports surged from 20% of GDP in 2001 to almost 40% in 2007, which seems to suggest not only that exports are the main driver of growth, but also that China's economy would be hit much harder by an American downturn than it was during the previous recession in 2001. If exports are measured correctly, however, they account for a surprisingly modest share of China's economic growth.

    The headline ratio of exports to GDP is very misleading. It compares apples and oranges: exports are measured as gross revenue while GDP is measured in value-added terms. Jonathan Anderson, an economist at UBS, a bank, has tried to estimate exports in value-added terms by stripping out imported components, and then converting the remaining domestic content into value-added terms by subtracting inputs purchased from other domestic sectors. At first glance, that second step seems odd: surely the materials which exporters buy from the rest of the economy should be included in any assessment of the importance of exports? But if purchases of domestic inputs were left in for exporters, the same thing would need to be done for all other sectors. That would make the denominator for the export ratio much bigger than GDP.

    Once these adjustments are made, Mr Anderson reckons that the "true" export share is just under 10% of GDP. That makes China slightly more exposed to exports than Japan, but nowhere near as export-led as Taiwan or Singapore (which on January 2nd reported an unexpected contraction in GDP in the fourth quarter of 2007, thanks in part to weakness in export markets). Indeed, China's economic performance during the global IT slump in 2001 showed that a collapse in exports is not the end of the world. The annual rate of growth in its exports fell by a massive 35 percentage points from peak to trough during 2000-01, yet China's overall GDP growth slowed by less than one percentage point. Employment figures also confirm that exports' share of the economy is relatively small. Surveys suggest that one-third of manufacturing workers are in export-oriented sectors, which is equivalent to only 6% of the total workforce.

    Even if the true export share of GDP is smaller than generally believed, surely the dramatic increase in China's exports implies that they are contributing a rising share of GDP growth? Mr Anderson's work again counsels caution. Although the headline exports-to-GDP ratio has almost doubled since 2000, the value-added share of exports in GDP has been surprisingly stable over the same period (see left-hand chart). This is explained by China's shift from exports with a high domestic content, such as toys, to new export sectors that use more imported components. Electronic products accounted for 42% of total manufactured exports in 2006, for example, up from 18% in 1995. But the domestic content of electronics is only a third to a half that of traditional light-manufacturing sectors. So in value-added terms exports have risen by far less than gross export revenues have.


    Many of China's foreign critics remain sceptical. They argue that China's massive current-account surplus (estimated at 11% of GDP in 2007) proves that it produces far more than it consumes and relies on foreign demand to buy the excess. In the six years to 2004, net exports (ie, exports minus imports) accounted for only 5% of China's GDP growth; 95% came from domestic demand. But since 2005, net exports have contributed more than 20% of growth (see right-hand chart).

    This is due not to faster export growth, however, but to a sharp slowdown in imports. And even if the contribution from net exports fell to zero, China's GDP growth would still be close to 9% thanks to strong domestic demand. The boost from net exports is in any case unlikely to vanish, even if America does sink into recession, because exports to other emerging economies, where demand is more robust, are bigger than those to America. According to Standard Chartered Bank, Asia and the Middle East accounted for more than 40% of China's export growth in the first ten months of 2007, North America for less than 10%.

    Multiplier effects
    China's economy is driven not by exports but by investment, which accounts for over 40% of GDP. This raises an additional concern: that weaker exports could lead to a sharp drop in investment because exporters would need to add less capacity. But Arthur Kroeber at Dragonomics, a Beijing-based research firm, argues that investment is not as closely tied to exports as is often assumed: over half of all investment is in infrastructure and property. Mr Kroeber estimates that only 7% of total investment is directly linked to export production. Adding in the capital spending of local firms that produce inputs sold to exporters, he reckons that a still-modest 14% of investment is dependent on exports. Total investment is unlikely to collapse while investment in infrastructure and residential construction remains firm.

    An American downturn will cause China's economy to slow. But the likely impact is hugely exaggerated by the headline figures of exports as a share of GDP. Dragonomics forecasts that in 2008 the contribution of net exports to China's growth will shrink by half. If the impact on investment is also included, GDP growth will slow to about 10% from 11.5% in 2007. This is hardly catastrophic. Indeed, given Beijing's worries about the economy overheating, it would be welcome.

    The American government frequently accuses China of relying excessively on exports. But David Carbon, an economist at DBS, a Singaporean bank, suggests that America is starting to look like the pot that called the kettle black. In the year to September, net exports accounted for more than 30% of America's total GDP growth in 2007. Another popular belief looks ripe for reappraisal: it seems that domestic demand is a bigger driver of China's growth than it is of America's.


    <img src="media.economist.com/im...">
    Feb 17 10:32 am |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
  • Nationalizing the U.S. Banking Sector: There's No Choice [View article]
    north korea"s banks are better capitalized than the US major banks
    Feb 13 10:29 am |Rating: +3 -2 |Link to Comment
  • 12 Reasons to Short Gold [View article]
    what makes up the bulk of exchange reserves of US and germany? gold. meanwhile, the donkey consumers get the paper. short away.
    Feb 12 06:54 am |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
  • The U.S. Dollar: Waiting to Tank Gold's Run? [View article]
    what is Soc Gen up to these days? "smartest guys in the room". that is not something we are hearing about too often these days. i am not too concerned about what Soc Gen may or may not think. very pretty little colored charts though.
    Feb 06 08:56 am |Rating: +3 0 |Link to Comment
  • The End of Gold [View article]
    the royal bank of scotland has just been cooked. Bank of america is the walking dead. what ever the FED is selling, i don't want it. thanks, but no thanks. 10%+ in gold production shares and a few kilo of gold as insurance can't hurt. ask an icelander what he would prefer? the remaining i-bankers are preparing to run roadshows for gold mining ipos in the 1st and 2nd quarters so there will be the added fuel of them ramping up interest.
    Jan 26 11:33 am |Rating: +4 -1 |Link to Comment
  • Yellow Gold vs. Crude Black Gold: Who's Ready to Rally? [View article]
    how is reading a chart on past performance going to tell you what happens to gold next? it is like picking the same numbers as yesterday's lotto winners. it is all rear vision mirror.
    Jan 20 06:37 am |Rating: +4 -8 |Link to Comment
  • Treasuries' True Risk [View article]
    The lack of trust in USD means it is either gold or santa cruz red feather money (see below) as a store of weath. a roll of red feather money purchased for US$30 in 1990 now is valued at US$15,000. red feather money has out performed.

    Unique Red Feather Money of Temotu
    BY GINA MAKA'A
    Before introduction of money in Solomon Islands, the currency came in different forms for the nine provinces of the country.
    Of the many examples is the famous red feather money from Santa Cruz Islands of Temotu Province.
    The red feather money is two inch wide and 30 feet long made out of glued fiber feathers, particularly the downy red feathers plucked from the breast, head and back of a tropical forest bird.
    The bird which the money is made out from is a small scarlet colored honey eater, which in scientific term is called the myzomela carnalis of the rain forest.
    In an interview with Solomon Times, Patricia Luilamo who works at the National Museum of Solomon Islands, and from Temotu Province, said that the money is produced by the natives of Santa Cruz and used mainly by their people for bride price, compensation and land.

    She told Solomon Times that in the ancient days, the money is distributed to other islands in Temotu Province like the reef islands.

    "One special thing about the red feather money in the olden days is that once our people in Santa Cruz give the money to neighbouring islands, sometimes the islanders will have to export some of their women to Santa Cruz as concubines, unlike today women go to other islands as wives only."

    Mrs. Luilamo said that today, the red feather money is no longer practiced because changes taking place in the country now.

    "But as a person from Temotu, I am proud to say that our traditional money is unique and has a very special feature unlike other traditional money from other provinces."
    Jan 18 19:51 pm |Rating: +4 0 |Link to Comment
  • Gold's Not the Best Investment in Inflationary Times [View article]
    gold is also a form of portable wealth (unlike london CBD buildings in 1939-45) and universally accepted (unlike iceland"s currency).
    Jan 07 06:42 am |Rating: +1 -1 |Link to Comment
  • Gold: Recycling Threatens Demand-Supply Equation [View article]
    the cash receipts passing across the display counters of the beijing phyiscal gold market from 9.00 am to noon on Jan 1 was RMB 30,000,000 (US$4.4M).
    Jan 05 05:49 am |Rating: +1 0 |Link to Comment
  • Gold: Recycling Threatens Demand-Supply Equation [View article]
    i was at the beijing gold market on January 1. both levels of the building were packed standing room only with people lined 7 deep around counters. The morning turnover was a record and featured on the Beijing TV news. there were many more people buying than jan 1 last year. double according to the lady handling the pama ingot sales.
    Jan 05 05:39 am |Rating: +3 0 |Link to Comment
  • Returning to a Gold Standard Is a Bad Idea [View article]
    it is all very well to talk about what may or may not happen. i have brought a couple of hundred grands worth of shares in gold production companies and phyiscal gold. whatever happens i don't want to be in the soup lines. lets call it insurance.
    Jan 05 05:32 am |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
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