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To: Jim Willie CB who wrote (26051)8/22/2003 9:04:29 AM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 89467
 
Why Focus on recalling Davis in California...?

We need to recall Bush...This Administration is totally out of control.

truthout.org

Message 19233506

Anyone interested in Truth, Honor and Integrity would NOT support this President...He has lied to our country, to our allies and to our troops. He should resign -- yet, I don't think he will. Watch out for more spin from Cheney, Rumsfeld and Rove.

We need someone like General Wesley Clark at the helm of this country. I want A REAL WAR HERO running the United States.



To: Jim Willie CB who wrote (26051)8/22/2003 9:11:46 AM
From: tonka552000  Respond to of 89467
 
I see INTC raised its guidance...why do I have a sense of Déjà vu...will QCOM reach that split adjusted $1000/share...??? In all seriousness, what's your take on the markets Jim...it's apparent they "perceive" a recovery...



To: Jim Willie CB who wrote (26051)8/22/2003 10:04:58 AM
From: T L Comiskey  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 89467
 
2003 Ozone Hole May Be Record Size, Australia Says
Fri Aug 22, 2:57 AM ET Add Science - Reuters to My Yahoo!


By Michael Perry

SYDNEY (Reuters) - The ozone hole over the Antarctic is growing at a rate that suggests it could be headed for a record size this year, Australian scientists said on Friday.

A study by Australian Antarctic bases attributed the development to colder temperatures in the stratosphere where the ozone hole forms.

"The growth at the moment is similar to 2000 when the hole was a record size," Australian Antarctic Division scientist Andrew Klekociuk told Reuters on Friday.

Ozone is a protective layer in the atmosphere that shields the Earth from the sun's rays, in particular ultraviolet-B radiation that can cause skin cancer, cataracts and can harm marine life. In 2000, NASA (news - web sites) said the ozone hole expanded to a record 10.9 million square miles, three times the size of Australia or the United States, excluding Alaska.

"This is in contrast to the situation in 2002 when unusually warm conditions produced the smallest ozone hole since 1988," Klekociuk said.

The ozone hole in 2003 presently covers all of the Antarctic.

Klekociuk said scientists at Australia's Davis Antarctic base saw the first signs of cooling of the lower stratosphere, 15 to 25 km (nine to 15 miles) up, about six weeks earlier than usual.

In a visual sign the ozone hole would grow rapidly this year, scientists at Australia's Mawson base have reported the early appearance of stratospheric clouds, which create a spectacular lightshow by defracting sunlight around sunset.

Chemical reactions in these clouds convert normally inert man-made chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) into ozone destroyers. CFCs are commonly used as propellants in spray cans.

The 1997 Kyoto treaty set in place a global process to reduce greenhouse gases which deplete the ozone layer, but the world's biggest polluter the United States has yet to sign.

Clouds do not usually form in the stratosphere due to its extreme dryness, but during some winters temperatures become low enough to allow their formation.

"In 2000 we didn't see the stratospheric clouds until the beginning of July. This year we saw them about the middle of May which is the earliest we have seen them," Klekociuk said.

The full extent of the 2003 ozone hole will not be known until the end of September, as August and September are the coldest months for the South Pole. Temperatures begin to warm by early October and the ozone layer will then start to recover.



To: Jim Willie CB who wrote (26051)8/24/2003 9:34:42 AM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 89467
 
The inside story of the hunt for Bin Laden

guardian.co.uk



To: Jim Willie CB who wrote (26051)8/26/2003 12:04:13 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 89467
 
Goldman Sachs---GOLD---Strategy Overview

_________________________

Dateline: United States

U.S. Gold: With Record Speculative Longs, May Face Liquidation Pressure Near Term
We remain selective on gold and U.S. gold equities at current levels in the near term. Key reasons for
caution are
• Comex speculative positions at record high poses a liquidation risk. The latest
(Friday) disclosure shows a net 280t long position, up 73t from a week earlier.
• Recent U.S.−dollar relative strength vs. the euro is unhelpful. A weakening U.S. dollar is the key driver
for gold, while U.S.−dollar strength is a key risk.
• The stocks are close to 12−month highs. And valuations appear full at the current spot price of $364
per oz.
However, in our opinion, the macroeconomic environment remains supportive of gold stocks with a
12−month outlook. Our coverage view remains Neutral, and our ratings and estimates remain
unchanged.
In this trading context, the stocks most susceptible to profit taking may be those with whose valuations
are most sensitive to gold. According to our estimates, in order of decreasing sensitivity these are Gold
Fields Ltd. (ADR) (GFI) (U/N, $12.7) , Compania de Minas Buenaventura (ADS) (BVN) (IL/N, $36.81) ,
Newmont Mining Corp. (NEM) (OP/N, $37.54) , Barrick Gold Corp. (ABX) (IL/N, $19.28) , AngloGold
Ltd. (ADR) (AU) (IL/N, $36.5) , Placer Dome Inc. (PDG) (OP/N, $13.07) , and Freeport−McMoRan Copper
& Gold (FCX) (IL/N, $27.28) .



To: Jim Willie CB who wrote (26051)8/28/2003 12:37:35 AM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 89467
 
Citigroup, Goldman Sachs Clash in Forecast for Dollar's Rise Against Euro

(Bloomberg News)
Wednesday, August 27, 2003
bloomberg.com

Citigroup Inc. predicts the dollar will gain to $1.05 against the euro in three months. That's 13 cents stronger than Goldman Sachs Group Inc.'s forecast.

Citigroup, the world's largest financial services company, today raised its three-month forecast from a previous prediction of $1.10 as the U.S. economy accelerates. Goldman repeated its doubts that economic growth will be enough to keep the dollar from resuming the slide that pushed it to a record low in May.

Goldman's three-month target is $1.18. The views, published in reports today, come as the dollar may advance for a seventh day against the euro. The U.S. currency was at $1.0905 per euro at 1:23 p.m. in New York and traded below $1.08 for the first time since April.

"The dollar has risen faster and more aggressively than we imagined,'' Steven Saywell, a currency strategist at Citigroup in London, said in a telephone interview. "The cyclical economic recovery in the U.S. is very dollar positive.''

Saywell and Robert Sinche, his New York-based colleague, first said in July that the dollar may strengthen to $1.08 in the next six months. At that time, the dollar was at $1.13 per euro.

Currency forecasts matter to companies that have to manage swings in exchange rates. Nokia Oyj, L'Oreal SA and BASF AG are among companies whose earnings or sales were reduced by the dollar's slide in the second quarter. It fell as low as $1.1933 on May 27. The Dow Jones Stoxx 50 Index has advanced about 5 percent since the start of June on optimism the dollar's rebound will boost earnings of companies with business in the U.S.

Turning Point

"We have been surprised by the ferocity and speed of the retracement'' in the dollar, said Matt Cobon, who helps oversee about $70 billion in currencies at Deutsche Asset Management in London. ``We are potentially at a turning point.'' He expects the dollar to resume its decline over the ``medium term.''

Demand for dollars has been spurred by signs economic growth is quickening in the U.S. as Germany, Europe's largest economy, struggles to emerge from recession. In the U.S., durable goods orders rose 1 percent in July, the second consecutive gain, and consumer confidence increased in August.

Citigroup is the second-biggest trader after UBS AG in the $1.2 trillion-a-day global foreign exchange market, according to the latest survey by Euromoney magazine. Goldman is fifth behind Deutsche Bank AG and J.P. Morgan Chase & Co.

Government reports last week showed U.S. housing starts surged to a 17-year high, first-time claims for unemployment insurance declined to the lowest in six months and manufacturing in the Philadelphia area expanded the most in five years.

Capital Flows

"We would acknowledge that that recent cyclical indicators in the U.S. have been impressive,'' wrote Jim O'Neill, head of economic research at Goldman. "However, there is little evidence that the May and June capital inflows can be sustained.''

O'Neill wasn't immediately available for an interview.

Citigroup was the ninth most accurate forecaster of second- quarter exchanges rates, according to a Bloomberg News survey of 52 companies. Goldman declined to participate.

The world's largest economy needs to attract about $1.5 billion a day in foreign investment to offset its current account deficit and protect the value of the dollar. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index has gained 2.8 percent since June. Investors moved $720 million abroad from U.S. equities in the week ended Aug. 22, according to an analysis released today by UBS.

The gap in predictions from two of the top five traders in the foreign-exchange market reflects their differing views on the future pace of growth in the U.S. economy.

Economic Growth

Goldman, the third-biggest securities firm by capital, expects the U.S. to grow 3.4 percent next year and for the Federal Reserve to leave its interest rate at 1 percent. Citigroup sees the U.S. economy expanding at 4.3 percent.

Citigroup reported $390 million in revenue from trading currencies in the second quarter, a 25 percent decline from the previous year's second quarter.

Goldman Sachs, which doesn't report separate amounts for currency trading, said revenue from trading currencies, credit products, interest rate swaps and mortgages, rose across almost all of its lines, growing 39 percent to $1.6 billion in the three- month period ending May 31.



To: Jim Willie CB who wrote (26051)8/29/2003 10:11:47 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 89467
 
Two Runaway Bubbles and Global Reflation

_________________________________

Credit Bubble Bulletin
by Doug Noland
August 29, 2003
prudentbear.com

<snip>

There is a strong consensus that the mortgage boom is over and that home prices will now quietly plateau. While convenient, such an outcome would be quite unBubble-like. It is the nature of entrenched speculative Bubbles that they run increasingly out of control - that is until prices eventually reverse and hammer the speculators. Today, the American homeowner has never felt as wealthy or as infatuated with housing as the ultimate investment. It has become a full-fledged mania, with spectacular price gains only reinforcing inflationary psychology. Many key markets are very short of inventory, with virtual buyers’ panic dynamics now in play. Enjoying the fruits of rampant asset inflation and ultra-easy equity extraction, the consumer is borrowing and spending aggressively. Refinancings have slowed markedly. However, the household sector has accumulated enormous liquidity over the past year. Additionally, inflated values have again set the stage for significant equity extraction (increasingly through home equity loans as opposed to refis). There is little in today’s rate or Credit availability environment that would lead me to believe retrenchment is imminent.

As Mr. Greenspan stated today, “A mild calibration of monetary policy to address asset bubbles does not and cannot work.” Well, how about 1% Fed funds with California (and other) home prices rising at an almost 20% clip? Major inflationary psychology (“blow-off”) has taken hold in housing markets from coast-to-coast. As such, Bubble dynamics would lead us to believe that surprises (Credit growth, resulting inflation and spending) will continue to be largely on the upside. Financial fragility remains the prominent wildcard.

China Bubble Watch:

I am also increasingly of the view that “upside surprises” are likely in store for the second historic Bubble now running on full throttle in China. Similar to the mortgage finance Bubble, I don’t believe analysts or policymakers really appreciate what has been developing. Many, in fact, have been quite dismissive of the Chinese economy, a view increasingly difficult to justify. And, again paralleling U.S. mortgage finance, when excesses reach the manic stage things have a way of becoming quite unstable and prone to running completely out of control.

August 26 – Australian Financial Review: “China’s economy appears to have overcome the effects of the severe acute respiratory syndrome crisis. Retail sales, industrial production and foreign direct investment rose sharply in July 2003… China’s demand for industrial raw materials is particularly strong, and analysts expect the country’s imports of such products to continue to rise. There was strong growth in China’s consumption of key commodities such as alumina, copper, zinc, nickel and stainless steel in 2002, as more multinationals elected to use China as a major manufacturing base.”

August 29 – Dow Jones: “During the next 17 years, China plans to build 30 nuclear plants with capacity totaling 32 million-40 million kilowatts, state media reported Friday. Based on China’s gross domestic product target of $4 trillion by 2020, the National Development & Reform Commission forecast China will need power generation capacity of 800 million-850 million KW by that year, compared with the current 350 million kilowatts, reported the government-run newspaper People’s Daily.”

This past weekend The Peoples Bank of China announced that it would raise the bank deposit reserve ratio from 6% to 7%. Bloomberg’s William Pesek wrote a good article with the poor title (I know, “Those who live in glass houses…”), “China’s Central Bank Takes Away Punchbowl.” Another economic commentator averred, “China’s actions…indicate that they will not allow the bubble to build further. This is bad news for global growth.” And another: “This is a smart move by the Chinese authorities, who are going to take a soft economic landing now instead of a hard economic landing later.” Well now, let’s not get all carried away by an inconsequential reserve adjustment. And we definitely cannot disregard Bubble dynamics that, over years, have developed powerful inflationary and speculative momentum. It is worth recalling that Japanese authorities raised the discount rate from 2.50% in mid-1989 to 6% by late 1990. And even with the 1990 equities collapse, the Japanese economy posted 5.9% growth during the first quarter of 1991. It was not until the third quarter of 1993 that GDP posted a 0.1% decline. And here at home, despite a collapsing NASDAQ and Fed funds at 6.50%, the booming economy did not post negative growth until the Q1 2001’s 0.6% decline (with only mild contraction over three quarters).

This week’s move by Chinese authorities will surely have little impact whatsoever on what is increasingly an unwieldy boom. If anything, it is evidence that the Chinese government is nervous, though understandably unwilling to take the risky measures that would be necessary to cool a clearly overheated economy. Contemporary central bankers – operating with global fiat currencies and unmanageable Credit systems - are notoriously soft. “Soft landings,” for the most part, are an urban myth.

The bottom line is that Chinese are in the throes of one heck of a boom, a circumstance that becomes much more significant for a lot of things (global growth, commodity prices, interest rates, financial stability, etc.) as the U.S. Post-boom Boom takes hold. China’s financial institutions are said “to have made loans at the fastest pace since 1996 in July” (Austin American-Statesman). From the People’s Daily: “New bank loans grew by 1.9 trillion yuan ($230 billion) in the first six months, almost equaling the total for the whole of last year, leading banking experts to predict that the loan growth will surpass 30 percent this year.” Money supply is running up almost 21% y-o-y, compared to about 15% one year ago and 14% two years ago. “Overall national fixed income investment hit 1.93 trillion yuan ($233 billion) in the first half of this year, up an annualized 31.1 percent, the highest growth rate in ten years.” “During the first six months of this year, production and investment in steel and iron sectors grew by 21 percent and 130 percent respectively…” “In June, new construction of housing projects increased by 27.9 percent, but sales jumped by 36.4 percent…” Automobile sales are up 30% y-o-y. Think for a moment about the role that the island of Japan came to play in the global economy. Then ponder the size of China and the number of hard-working, enterprising Chinese.

The SARS scare reduced economic growth from the first quarter’s 9.9% rate to 6.7% during the second quarter. But the Chinese economy (and the entire region) is now quickly bouncing back, with inflationary pressures building (as one would expect during the advanced stage of a protracted Credit boom). There are major housing Bubbles in key markets, and consumption is surging. July imports were up 35.3% y-o-y, compared to 28.9% during July 2002 and 7.5% during July 2001. As I have written in the past, the nature of inflationary manifestations changes over the course of a Credit boom. Going forward, I would expect much less talk of China “exporting” global deflation.

This week, Intel announced that it would invest $375 million to build its second manufacturing facility in China, joining scores of companies (large and small) rushing to participate in the boom. Direct foreign investment was up 34% during the first seven months of the year. There are now more than 400,000 foreign-funding companies set up to do business in China. Increasingly, there is an historic “gold rush” dynamic to the China boom that will certainly not be squelched by tinkering with reserve requirements. And demonstrating the self-reinforcing nature inherent to Credit booms, there is an interesting and significant dynamic at play regarding speculative financial flows: The greater the production boom and the larger its trade surpluses, the greater the expectation that the Chinese currency will eventually be revalued higher. This is leading to enormous speculative flows that only exacerbate the boom.

Official reserves are expanding by $10 billion per month and have reached $350 billion. China’s “embarrassment of riches” leaves it with an enormous treasure trove of purchasing power. The Chinese appear increasingly willing to spend. It is worth noting that Japanese July exports were up 5% y-o-y. And while exports to the U.S. were down 6%, exports to other Asian nations were up 13% y-o-y. Leading the pack, sales to China were up 28%. Chinese imports are now stoking Asian exports, fueling impressive regional growth that has real potential to help pull even Japan out of its morass.

It’s been awhile since the world has concurrently experienced Two Runaway Bubbles. And to have these companion booms now simultaneously lurching forward - fueled by unprecedented global monetary accommodation, Credit expansion, and speculative excess - is something truly extraordinary. Since the Japanese bust in the early nineties, recurring booms and busts and resulting global deflationary pressures provided, ironically, a quite auspicious environment for the blossoming U.S. Credit Bubble. Things are different these days: there are Two major unwieldy Bubbles increasingly inflating other economies. Moreover, there is presently a dearth of collapsing Bubbles working to offset inflationary pressures for the global system as a whole. These Changing Times would appear to provide a near ideal environment for gold, commodities, and other “hard” assets. At the same time, it is difficult to envisage how the unfolding global Reflation could be anywhere near as accommodating to U.S. financial assets. It is a backdrop that looks certain to test the mettle of the leveraged and speculation-rife U.S. Credit system.