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To: bond_bubble who wrote (67286)8/2/2006 2:26:12 PM
From: shades  Respond to of 110194
 
Shades, do you think housing will rise 100+%,

Unclebigs once said the fed has the power - I said what about yen liquidity. If oil guys get lots of dollars - then invest those dollars here and fed zooms up the printing presses - where does all the money go Bond Bubble? Where does princess put the helicopter money? Used to be diamonds were a girls best friend - but now:

slashdot.org

Tech Replaces Diamonds As Girl's Best Friend
Posted by ScuttleMonkey on Wednesday August 02, @03:34AM
from the dog-still-man's-best-friend dept.
Ant writes to tell us that 'diamonds are no longer a girls best friend', at least according to a recent study commissioned by the Oxygen Network. From the article:
"The survey, commissioned by U.S. cable television's Oxygen Network that is owned and operated by women, found the technology gender gap has virtually closed with the majority of women snapping up new technology and using it easily. Women were found on average to own 6.6 technology devices while men own 6.9, and four out of every five women felt comfortable using technology with 46 percent doing their own computer trouble-shooting."

stocks, bonds rise 80+% going forward? i.e CPI will be higher than 100% so that these asset rise will be negative in real terms?

Well water utilities and proctor and gamble passing rising prices onto consumer - but mish did just post about farmers who cannot afford the feed to grow cattle - not making enough profit I suppose.

Watts Water Up: Price Hikes Help Boost 2Q Profit >WTS

.
By Alex Davidson
Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES


NEW YORK (Dow Jones)--Shares of Watts Water Technologies Inc. (WTS) gained as much as 23% Wednesday after the maker of water control products posted a strong second quarter, helped by price increases that limited the effect of higher copper costs.

The company also said recent acquisitions and internal growth helped its second-quarter profit jump 61% to $22.4 million, or 68 cents a share, from $13.9 million, or 42 cents a share.

"We've done an outstanding job in terms of covering, with price increases and cost reductions, the additional costs of raw materials throughout the year," said Pat O'Keefe, president and chief executive of Watts Water, during the company's conference call. "I think this is something we continue to do and we're dedicated to continuing into the future."

David Smith, analyst at Citigroup, said the price concerns about copper and they could have hindered Watts Water's second-quarter results were overdone.

"Profitability concerns around copper pricing remain a valid risk, but the upside in the second-quarter 2006 earnings showed that pricing increases across all markets in the first and second quarter resulted in recouping this potential headwind amidst very favorable end-market conditions," Smith said in a note.

Shares of Watts Water recently traded at $34, up $5.31, or 18.5%, on volume of 1.5 million shares, nearly four times its average daily volume of 368,352 shares.


CEO O'Keefe, speaking further during the company's conference call, cited the performance of recent acquisitions like Core Industries, Dormont Manufacturing and ATS Expansion Group that helped its second-quarter results.

He said sales in the company's North American wholesale market increased 7% compared to the year-earlier quarter, primarily because of price increases.

Brean Murray analyst Michael Gaugler said in a research note that "the 'bear case' of copper prices destroying margins now appears to be history."

He said the company's ability to pass through the higher copper prices is "an indication that the company is firing on all cylinders across all reporting segments."

But Robert W. Baird analyst Michael Schneider said in a research note that he remains concerned about Watt's ability to shake off the slower housing market and continue offsetting raw material costs.

"We suspect, however, that the price increases in the retail channel are likely still falling short of actual costs," he said. "This warrants attention as retail volumes could suffer from the aggressive pricing needed to maintain margins."

Or do you think assets will fall in price in REAL terms going forward?

Don't know - seems housing is falling.

Do you realize that utilities are aggressively building power plants in US to support the increase in housing, malls and buildings in general - at an elevated cost today - and these utilities are going to soon find that these buildings become ghost town

I don't know Jay - lots of people having babies - lots of mexicans and africans coming to america - remember Japan hates immigrants - not the melting pot like America is. As the world gets into more fighting and WAR - where will refugees flee? USA eh? And we will have all this housing to put them up in eh?

- and the idle power plants have to charge the surviving customers for the idle plants' debt as well!! Is that excess capacity of power plants and buildings and assets -deflation or inflation or stagflation?

I think I see population numbers growing, immigration growing, more and more refugees gonna flee here and the PIGMEN gonna encourage it at the cost of j5p - I see prices going down in housing in some markets - but I don't foresee large population declines - why leave the USA - why go back to your shittly little third world dirt hole after you have shopped macy's and drank starbucks - no Jay - I see poor third world princess come here and live the good life and she would DIE before she goes back to slumville back home.

Chromatic Dispersion is working his hands to death digging fiber cables in washington so princess can virtual shop - CNBC just had a report how big jewelry companies selling 200K jewelry on EBAY - I saw broke ass russian princess starving and hair falling out (and appreciative and respectful at that time) come to the USA and go online and become rude unapprecitive shopping machine bitch and pulled every trick you never thought of to not go back home - the stories I could tell. One involved a false case of rape so she could stay here and send the poor dumb croation that spent the night with her packing back to the warzone - hehe. BOOHOO save me mr. police man - boo hoo!



To: bond_bubble who wrote (67286)8/2/2006 2:30:02 PM
From: shades  Respond to of 110194
 
India Bans Employing Children As Servants, Hotel Workers

(guess medical tourism costs about to go up eh Jay - more CPI to da moon when you can't get cheap labor - we used to work our kids here - taught them good lessons I think - more than playing MARIO on nintendo all day and watching sponge bob square pants - pathetic)

NEW DELHI (AP)--India's government is banning the employment of children under age 14 as domestic servants or workers in hotels, restaurants and small teashops in a bid to protect young people from poor families.

The order issued Tuesday also prohibits employing children in spas, motels, tourist resorts or other recreational centers, the Labor Ministry said in a statement.

The ban takes effect Oct. 10, but its effectiveness remains to be seen. India already bars child labor in hazardous industries, but the rules are widely ignored and tens of thousands of children continue making matches, incense sticks and firecrackers and weaving carpets.

According to government figures, nearly 13 million children work in India. Many Indians feel a person able to work is no longer a child, and small-town society rarely frowns on poor youngsters helping their families earn money even if it means they don't attend school.

Social activists say merely tightening the laws will not eliminate child labor. They say efforts should be made to reduce the abject poverty that drives people to push their children into hazardous jobs or other work.

A Labor Ministry committee that reported on child labor said it recommended the latest ban because children were often subjected to physical violence, mental trauma and sexual abuse.

"Invariably such incidents go unnoticed and unreported," the report said. The committee said that "children employed in roadside eateries and highway restaurants were the most vulnerable lot and were easy prey to sex and drug abuse as they came in contact with all kinds of people."

Violators could face up to two years imprisonment and a fine up to $425.

The government had earlier banned government officials from employing children to work as domestic servants.


(END) Dow Jones Newswires

August 02, 2006 14:17 ET (18:17 GMT)



To: bond_bubble who wrote (67286)8/2/2006 2:44:50 PM
From: shades  Respond to of 110194
 
US Heat Wave Tests Utility Capacity, Helps Mall Retailers

(go go shopping machine)

By Richard Gibson
Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES


DES MOINES, Iowa (Dow Jones)--A record-setting heat wave baked much of the U.S. again Wednesday, testing power-utility capacities and sending throngs of people to shopping malls, theaters and other air-conditioned oases.

Power suppliers were expecting to face their biggest demand day, but predicted they could meet electrical needs with few interruptions, said Stan Johnson, a spokesman for the North American Electric Reliability Council, a Princeton, N.J., industry group.

Even so, calls for conserving energy were widespread and some big employers augmented their needs with on-premises power sources, and juggled work schedules, to accommodate the heat.

New York City's two biggest banks - Citigroup Inc. (C) and JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM) - are cutting their power use at the handful of buildings they own and operate. Both companies are shifting to backup generators, trying to reduce elevator use and turning up the thermostat anywhere from 2 to 10 degrees, spokespeople said.

Also, at three Citigroup buildings - on Wall Street, in Manhattan's Tribeca neighborhood and in Long Island City in Queens - hot water heaters were turned off.

"People are washing their hands with cold water," a spokeswoman said.

Verizon Communications Inc. (VZ) said some of its telephone switching centers have been running on generators. One office in Long Island has been relying on fuel cells to stay open, a spokesperson said.

Altria Group Inc. (MO), parent of Philip Morris USA and Kraft Foods Inc. (KFT), took steps to reduce power consumption at its New York headquarters, including using generators to reduce demand on the city's utility grid.

But spokeswoman Dawn Schneider said that despite the sweaty weather Altria wasn't seeing any increase in employee absenteeism.

Sales of home air-conditioners and fans have been predictably brisk in much of the heat-oppressed country. Home-improvement retailer Lowe's Cos. (LOW) said customers also are snapping up portable generators.

But others opted to take advantage of someone else's cool environment - a fact that may be a mini-boon to retailers.

Scott Mumphrey, executive vice president of the country's largest mall owner, Simon Property Group Inc. (SPG), said many of his mall's managers are noticing an increase in traffic as shoppers take refuge from the heat.

"We're seeing good crowds," he said. "People are getting out more often and spending more time while they're there."

In anticipation of such days, Simon Property Group has undertaken an energy-efficiency program, replacing lighting fixtures and air-conditioning units with units that are less costly to operate. Even so, Mumphrey said that during peak heat waves, the company will turn up mall thermostats a bit, to help keep A/C costs down.

The National Weather Service Web site has heat advisories posted for a large swath of the U.S., from southern Maine to Oklahoma for Wednesday.

But the Upper Midwest, which had sweltered under record temperatures over the weekend, got a big break overnight. People in Minneapolis-St. Paul, who had suffered 100-degree-plus heat just three days ago, woke up to cool weather Wednesday.

At 10 a.m. it was 67 degrees, a spokesman at Xcel Energy Co. (XEL), the Upper Midwest's largest utility, reported.

Even so, the weekend temperatures will result in higher utility bills for many of its customers come September. They will reflect increased fuel costs that Xcel paid, for coal, natural gas and nuclear power, as well as purchases made on the spot market to meet peak-load demand.

"We buy a lot of power from the outside," said Phil Zins, manager of pricing and planning at the Minneapolis-based utility.

Power of another sort - the battery in one's car - has become a concern as well. "We're seeing more battery sales and an increase in garage work," said Joe Spann, owner of the Schaller & Son Phillips 66 service station in Des Moines.

"We're also hearing from people who'd put off fixing their air-conditioning in their vehicles," he said.

-By Richard Gibson, Dow Jones Newswires; 515-282-6830; dick.gibson@dowjones.com

(Dow Jones Newswires reporters Janet Morrissey, Christina Cheddar-Berk, James Deweese, Roger Cheng, David Enrich, Curt Thacker and Joe Poncer contributed to this report.)


(END) Dow Jones Newswires

August 02, 2006 12:54 ET (16:54 GMT)



To: bond_bubble who wrote (67286)8/2/2006 2:48:17 PM
From: shades  Respond to of 110194
 
Chile Escondida Copper Mine Offers Workers 3% Wage Hike

(wage inflation - its gone global - hehe)

SANTIAGO (Dow Jones)--Chilean copper miner Escondida offered its unionized workers a 3% real wage increase and a 8.1-million-Chilean-peso ($14,960) bonus as well as several health, education and housing benefits, the company said Wednesday.

Union leaders couldn't be reached for comment.

"Minera Escondida is convinced the basis of this (three-year) agreement broadly exceeds the industry's conditions, ensures the stability of the business and represents benefits that will increase the quality of life for our workers and their families," the company said in a statement.

Last week, the workers voted 1,991 to one in favor of a strike to protest the company's initial contract offer.

An immediate strike was averted, however, after the mining company sought a government-mediated, five-day goodwill negotiation period, which began Monday.

If talks during the goodwill period fail, a strike would begin at the start of the first shift on Aug. 7, both the union and the company have said.

Amid a demand-driven surge in world copper prices, accidents and labor unrest have played a key role in price spikes.

Citing soaring copper prices, the miners demanded a minimum 13% wage increase, a hardship-zone wage increase and a CLP16 million net bonus. The total wage increase being sought is nearly 20%.

The company originally offered a 1.5% wage increase and a CLP4.5 million net bonus. The mining company says Escondida workers receive the highest salaries among Chilean miners.

Escondida, the world's largest privately held copper mine, produced 1.27 million metric tons of copper last year, as well as 182,000 ounces of gold.

BHP Billiton PLC (BHP) controls the operation with a 57.5% stake, while Rio Tinto PLC (RTP) holds 30%, a Mitsubishi Corp. (8058.TO)-led Japanese consortium 10% and International Finance Corp. 2.5%.


Company Web site: escondida.cl


-By Carolina Pica, Dow Jones Newswires; 56-2-460-8544; carolina.pica@dowjones.com


(END) Dow Jones Newswires



To: bond_bubble who wrote (67286)8/2/2006 3:16:26 PM
From: shades  Respond to of 110194
 
Speaking of utility companies:

CNBC just had a guy on saying to buy foreign utilities - he recommended these three - all have good growth prospects and pay a dividend:

hnp

eni

kep