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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: pezz who wrote (26706)12/21/2007 6:58:23 AM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217541
 
Hello Pezz, Today's Report:

(1) Held consulting office lunch (Japanese food) party, passed out year-end bonus packets, bought some gold coins as presents for extended family, so as to buy gifts but not consume capital, attended a private party in the afternoon, and pretty chilled out;

(2) Planned coal trading office lunch (Shanghainese food) party for Monday;

(3) Called broker to spend most of uncommitted USD on 3-months T-bills, just so that my name is on a bunch of sovereign debt paper, so that should broker go belly-up, I will get my paper turned over to me, as opposed to receive a notice that says "Player One, you are dead, and all co-mingled funds have gone to money heaven";

(4) Still concerned about unsecured CAD, SGD and HKD cash - cannot try same approach with those jurisdictions' treasury paper, for either taxed (CAD) or non-existent (no budget deficits) - buying currency ETFs may be a way to go, but then they may blow up as well; and

(5) The bad news is beginning to hit money rock Hong Kong ... and I am getting excited

QUOTE
Flash news on CIFH 183 HK....
CITIC Int'l Financial (183 HK) confirmed in a trading update that wholly owned CITIC Ka Wah Bank's SIV investments have fallen by 43% in value.

This results in the bank booking a HK$1.3bn loss, and almost certainly will result in a full year loss for the bank side of the listco, according to all of the analysts surveyed by the press this morning.

This marked the first time a Hong Kong local bank has had a loss since 1999.

UNQUOTE

and this just in in-tray ... lots of mention of 'excreta' ... and hinting at hong kong real estate on fire ... infrastructure boom in good old usa ... and taking for granted that you will be blessed with clinton rule

QUOTE

· The gob-smacking provision of US$500bn of liquidity by the ECB this week is proof that a large part of the festering structured excreta lies in Europe. Central banks still seem to be acting as if this was a liquidity problem as opposed to a solvency problem. Yet the extension of such a vast amount of money strongly suggests this is a solvency issue.

· This is then a case of massive financial constipation. The big dump will come one day. But it has not happened yet. And when it does occur it is likely to be in the context of lower government bond yields globally. In the meantime, these simmering credit problems are going to discourage healthy new lending.

· The Hong Kong residential property market is on fire. This time, the upside action will not be in the luxury property market but rather in long-suppressed upgrading in the mass residential market. Next year could see a full-scale buying panic in Hong Kong if locals suddenly become concerned that the market will leave them behind.

· The key fundamental point is the dramatic improvement in housing affordability in Hong Kong. With local inflation rising and the Fed likely to keep cutting, there is the potential for Hong Kong to move into an extreme negative-interest-rate environment in 2008. Hong Kong residential property remains GREED & fear's favourite high-beta play in 2008 in Asia ex-Japan.

· The bullish view also extends to the office-property market in Hong Kong where the word is that the majority of supply due to come on stream in 2008 is so far being relatively easily absorbed. Hong Kong has always been a much more efficient and productive place to run a business than Singapore.

· Singapore has a clear niche on which it has sensibly decided to focus. That is private banking. Still, the "wealth management" story is going to take a few hits in the coming quarters since GREED & fear suspects that Singapore-based private bankers have sold their clients a lot of structured excreta.

· Political excitement has returned to Korea this week. The landslide victory of right-wing GNP candidate Lee Myung-bak should serve as a catalyst for the pursuit of a pro-growth pro-chaebol policy. There will certainly be a move away from the socialistic redistribution policies, including the ideologically motivated policies targeting speculation in residential property.

· The potential positive for the Korean stockmarket is a politically driven stimulus for the domestic economy. But the problem is that the Korean economy is not without structural constraints. Outstanding consumer debt is high while the loan-deposit ratio of the banking system is by far the highest in Asia.

· Dedicated Asian investors need to keep moving their Korean portfolios into domestic names and away from the cyclical stocks, such as shipbuilding companies and steel companies. The heavy concentration of ownership by local fund management companies in these cyclical names also remains a major market risk.

· The Korean president-elect is likely to stop groveling to North Korea. This provides some glimmer of hope for what GREED & fear has always viewed as the most bullish macro catalyst for the Korean stock market. That is a collapse of the North Korean regime.

· GREED & fear expects the dollar to continue to rally as evidence mounts of slowing global growth. This should also coincide with growing weakness in commodities led by the industrial commodities. The most obviously vulnerable currencies remain the euro, sterling and the classic commodity currencies such as the Australian dollar and the New Zealand dollar.

· GREED & fear's view is that partisan politics in America in a presidential election year will prevent a meaningful federal government response to the housing crisis until after the inauguration of a new president on 20 January 2009. That means there is more than a year of continuing pain before Hillary Clinton can take interventionist action, be it banning foreclosures or launching aggressive fiscal stimulus most likely in the form of infrastructure spending.

· India's weighting in the relative-return portfolio will be increased by 2ppts to an overweight, with the money taken by increasing the underweight in Singapore. The investment in MUFG in the Japan thematic portfolio will be removed with the 4ppts raised added evenly to Fukuoka Financial, Suzuki Motor, Noritsu Koki and Nintendo.

UNQUOTE



To: pezz who wrote (26706)12/21/2007 7:19:41 AM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 217541
 
Hello Pezz, more stuff from in-tray

QUOTE
this is from SMH.....if this is factual (I think SMH is a reasonably good quality paper) then Gold will see higher highs in 2008 than most anticipate :

news.smh.com.au

UNQUOTE



To: pezz who wrote (26706)12/21/2007 6:37:48 PM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 217541
 
Hello Pezz, Today’s Report (longish, on shorts, top secret, and for your eyes only, because it is a truthful intelligence briefing, unlike the warm bull excreta we have been coldly fed over the past 7+ calculating years):

(1) There have been quite a few economic reports crossing the screen, about this shopping season and that employment market, or some confidence measures, and GDP growth, generally generated in Chicago, New York and Washington DC; all nonsense to be faded, because they are all ignorant, or moronic, or lying, or respectively. I leave the categorization to the authors themselves, for I believe in the freedom of choice.

In local currency terms, Zimbabwe has the highest GDP growth on the planet and the strongest stock market in the galaxy.

Do not believe any and all things THEY say.

(2) The Super SIV idea, a parlor trick when conceived to saved the bacon and bonus of systemically rotten bankers, and now simply a badly conceived fraud exposed for all to see, is either DoA or KIA, and each crony capitalist financial institution is left to fend for self, with promised “as long as necessary” marketwatch.com help by the FED. It will not make any difference, for either the system will collapse by a combination of bad debt, imploded derivatives, exploded counter-parties, terminated credit lines, pinched off jugular, poisoned liquidity, and/or failed lines of credit, now, or later.

Resistance is futile.

(3) A lot of deals have been announced by strategically competing international entities (call them the New Sovereigns) to buy into the cracked financial gear works of the Empire, in exchange for fiat cash to be debauched by the same Empire, before J6P citizens of the Empire gets a chance to fend themselves against institution of capital controls in the name of national emergency and/or gold confiscation under the ruse of anti-terror, and before J6P is forced to buy the stock market so as to try to offset officialdom printing for and by the people, courtesy of the blessed Hilary or Obama or another interfering but freely elected spendthrift idiot. The Chinese and Arabs are joining the Jews and Anglos and Italians and whomever else in New York, getting ready to party hardy, Edgar A Poe style. The New Sovereigns are genetically weaving themselves into the chromo-lattice of the Empire, and in such ways (energy and goods and credit for same) so that any forced separation will be fatal to the host, courtesy of the Japanese of the land of cheap savings pool.

The Empire is selling itself CHEAP, continuously, for cheaply extracted oil and cheaply manufactured goods.

(4) Chrysler fessed up, early, before mass confession by the residual industry of the Empire, “We are operationally bankrupt” money.cnn.com , signaling to the New Sovereigns, “SOB (save our bacon), buy us and ship the equipment back to your own country where workers are diligent and thrifty, family values strong, money more rather than less real, and true economic growth results in genuine wage increase, even in face of more honestly reported and high inflation, and we will hire some lying Washington PR firm to market the looting as good for the environment of the Empire and in the best interest of J6P”.

Chrysler got here because it chose to bail General Motors out of that bankrupting company’s GMAC position. Chrysler is now endangering its master, the fund named Cerberus, and should it do so biblically, then it will in effect bring close to fatal harm to the entire monetary system, either before or after the FED bailout, of the whole galaxy. May the Force be with Chrysler, or may it find a new home in Nanjing, physically, and Shanghai Stock Exchange, financially.

The END-GAME is in sight.

(5) I am drinking Starbucks Frappucino again, iced, as before, to help the Empire to balance its terms of trade in manufactured goods, and I am speculating on the long side of the Empire’s currency, to bet against the nations of Italy, Spain, Greece, Japan and such not as strong economies. So, be cheered that I have an interest in your currency’s wellbeing, at least at this juncture in competitive devaluation.

Competitive devaluation, per script of 1929 and all times before and since, is not a sound strategy, but a national imperative.

(6) The credit default insurers will certainly blow up, either possibly before or surely after the inevitable bail out by the FED, and when they do, all that they have certainly insured but have truly failed to (i) price correctly, and (ii) reserve properly, will inexorably implode, setting off either an avalanche of counter-party disappearances or a perfect storm of financial crisis, monetary dire happenings, and officialdom muck ups.

Focus mind on possibility of Financial Katrina centered on spendthrift New York City and mismanaged by the same worthless lot in bankrupt Washington DC. The fix will be higher taxes, lower spending, higher inflation, lower asset worth, as in each and every time.

(7) Yes, the home mortgages will totally explode, because the homes are not worth half of what they transacted for, adjusted for wage growth, and accounting for property tax load, and keeping in perspective of demographic cliff, and relative to genuine savings of the liquid sort.

Yes, corporate debt will absolutely implode, because the corporations are not useful.

Yes, municipal bonds will default, because the home owners and the corporations within their jurisdictions are less than good for their words.

Yes, the states will go begging to Washington, because they had been counting on wealth that is false, puffed up, or else not actually there.

Yes, the FED will have to bail everyone out, until it cannot bail anymore, when its supposedly secret but laughably naïve weapon, the printing press (invented by Chinese), can no longer take in the ink (a consumable patented by Chinese), to print (a process discovered by Chinese) on paper (another clever good by the Chinese civilization) money (a schema not coincidentally and again innovated by the inscrutable Chinese) anymore; that is to say when the bailing effort degenerate into the Zimbabwe Solution and is nearing the Argentine Outcome, a processed that had taken place in China countless times. For this is why the good Madam WU Yi can lecture the disingenuous Mr. Paulson on the global economic ill brought on by the spendthrift and bankrupting Empire.

To quote someone or other, “Gold is for optimist; buy canned food”.

(8) Now, onward to the trades:

Following on to my earlier wager that ought to be in alignment with the Empire’s wellbeing Message 24042769 and within its confines Message 24058216 and in tune with its game script Message 24063065 and in alignment with the Force Message 24096776 , in preparation for the endgame Message 24153064 , I …

(i) Shorted SKF April Call strike 110 finance.yahoo.com at 10.40 average price, a derivative;

(ii) Shorted SKF April Put strike 90 finance.yahoo.com at 7.90, another derivative;

(iii) Fully realizing that SKF finance.yahoo.com is itself yet another derivative on the Empire’s wellbeing, being a negative wager against the health and continued survival by the financial institutions so very important to the uninterrupted operation of the war machine, on the inverse side, and so a Call and a Put, when shorted, is for less or more happiness, respectively, or some such convolution, or the other way around, I think :0)

(iv) Do not have confirmation yet, but believe I purchased some Sugar on the London Exchange etfsecurities.com at USD 15.55, because drinking Starbucks ice coffee reminded me of its ingredients that are all rising in price when not adjusted for food and energy input in any hedonistic manner or chained dollar way, and because the spendthrift, ignorant, and bankrupting Congress, comprised of small town ex-bankers and third-generation used car dealers and small time lawyers and elected by your people for your people figured wrongly that the way to energy salvation is through jacking up the price of sugar so that it can be burned as a fuel - what next? burn houses and T-bills and brand new tires off of piled high and deep car inventories?

You do like sugar, do you not?

I am just going with the awful flow, to generate some undeserved gain, off of financial innovations, derivative mess, and global monetary friction, 24/7/365, enabled by my geewhizbang liquid-cooled ohwhoawee one terabyte assisted gollygee twin mother board, ohmygod duel graphics card pushed computer, to pay for expected holiday expenses.

(9) Recommendation: BUYGOLD because it keeps better than canned food, and is for optimists.

Chugs, TJ

P.S. 2007 YTD gain is at 28.49%, which is almost but not quite 30%, which is not too shabby. I will have to work out the game plan for 2008 soon, and it will be tough, as usual, else would be easy, which would be too easy.

The premise underlying any game plan will have to account for the embedded leverage, since when this institution cubes the derivatives that had been ready squared, after having been leveraged earlier still at either and or 5, 10, 12, 26 times equity, it would be leverage that must be accounted for.

Suggestion: we have not been here before, and we are not really equipped to survive the navigation.



To: pezz who wrote (26706)12/25/2007 2:34:58 AM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 217541
 
Hello Pezz,

BTW, here is an excerpt of my 2007 eop briefing to family members whose interest I look out for:

December 23rd, 2007

Subject: 2008 Note

Preamble

... As of December 23rd 2007 the Fund (edit by TJ: defined as everything excluding rental real estate) is up 28+% Year-to-Date.

We have collectively done well in 2007, and aim to do better in 2008.

I believe we are well positioned to navigate the obviously dire financial storm:

Cash @ 65% (1/7 in CAD cash, rest in USD 3-mths T-bills, with a bit in SGD, and a wallop in HKD, which, while a proxy of USD to which it is pegged, is better than USD, given the regime's small and non-interfering nature and genuine freedom practiced)

Gold & silver @ 23%
Equities @ 12%

Review of 2007

For 2007, the stock investors could have realized a paltry gain had they been unable to beat the main USA share indices, which by definition must be true, and would have suffered a genuine purchasing power loss, as measured by pre-Clinton era inflation tracking method (4-8%), as opposed to the black magic applied to inflation ‘half’ measure by the officialdom today (2-3%).

The DOW industrial average index finance.yahoo.com has gone nowhere (8%), especially when accounting for the loss of purchasing value of US$.

The NASDAQ finance.yahoo.com has done not enough (13%).

The S&P500 finance.yahoo.com has done pitifully (7%).

Whereas oil proxy finance.yahoo.com has done great, meaning inflation and global growth, in combination, are strong (44%).

Gold finance.yahoo.com has done fantastic, meaning fear level has healthily increased (28%).

Food proxy finance.yahoo.com has also gone ballistic, meaning everything we need has gone up in price (36%).

We started 2007 primarily high in cash, mostly non-US$, and secondarily high in various energy, commodity, resources, and various gold mining shares.

We held on to the initially losing foreign exchange positions until the USD did what we felt was the inevitable, dropping against the other currencies.

In the past three weeks, we have exited all except CAD foreign exchange positions.

We have also as well as sold much of our stock positions except five notable plus some other positions (Petrobank Energy, Vemilion, Uranium One, SKF Proshare Ultra Short Financial, OilSands Quest, plus Baytex, Bunge, Cameco, Canadian Oil Sands, Cresud, Impala Platinum, Yamana Gold).

The five notable positions are:

(i) PetroBank Energy petrobank.com

We have held PetroBank since first purchasing the stock in May of 2006. PetroBank is a Canada-based oil sand company, and it has been progressing to perfect its now commercial Toe-to-Heel Air Injection (“THAI”) technology, whereby controlled underground fires are started to substantially increase yield of oil recovered from oil sand resources over conventional oil sands mining methods. The advantages of the patented process are (i) substantially increased recovery of oil, (ii) materially decreased use of natural gas and water to recover the oil.

During 2007 the company had signed the first of what it hopes to be many licensing agreements so that other oil sands companies can use PetroBank patented technology. Should PetroBank be successful in signing more such licensing agreement, the company will earn substantially more profit without incurring more cost of operation and without having to commit more capital to buy oil sands reserves.

(ii) Vermilion Energy vermilionenergy.com

We have held Vermilion Energy since the middle of 2004 and had added to our position in the middle of 2005. The company extracts oil and gas from a well diversified reserve base in Canada, Australia and Europe, and explores for oil in Libya. The company pays a monthly dividend that amounts to 10% per annum. We believe the company will continue to do well, especially as Russia continues to play games with natural gas supplied to Europe. Any oil discovery in Libya will be a bonus. And in the meantime, Canadian and Australia operations will continue to distribute cash.

(iii) Uranium One uranium1.com

The company extracts uranium and platinum and gold in South Africa and Canada. How wonderful is that? We have held the shares since February of 2005. We believe that the world will continue to use more of both uranium and platinum even as these two particular minerals are concentrated in only a few countries and by a few companies.

(iv) ProShare Ultra Short Financial finance.yahoo.com

This holding a wager that the financial sector of the USA will continue to be dire, generally heading down, and in the meantime we do generate income from trading Call and Put options due to the inherently volatile process of heading down.

(v) OilSands Quest oilsandsquest.com

We entered into this position during the fourth quarter of 2007. We believe that the Canadian oil sands resources do not stop at the border of Alberta province, and that Oilsands Quest’s concessions in Saskatchwan will yield substantial value. The company is also in a cooperation relation with PetroBank Energy to use the patented THAI process to extract oil from oil sands. May the Force be with OilSands Quest.

Issues and Concerns

I am concerned about the possibilities inherent in the eventual and unavoidable process of financial leverage unwinding in a world very high on debt, both on and off balance sheets, and very high on unfunded obligations (social security, and pension). I have six (6) particular concerns:

(i) The USA housing pricing, supply and debt bubbles are in process of blowing up. The USA housing debt bust is guestimated to cause US$ 450 billion of losses, enough of the losses will be from bank capital, where such capital in USA in sum total amounts to US$ 900 billion. Worse, if and when such a 50% loss of capital materialize and is actually recognized, lending by banks may have to reduce by 10 fold as much, or US$ 4.5 trillion dollars, or about 1/3 the size of USA annual GDP. The mathematically mandated deleveraging process involving this magnitude of sums cannot be benign.

Together with the above effect of banking losses, the USA housing value is expected to go down by north of US$ 1 trillion, and given that a lot of borrowing is leveraged against housing value, the resultant borrowing decrease from the real economy should be shock and awe inspiring.

(ii) The financial derivatives trade must unwind at some juncture, and probably at a less rather than more convenient time. The magnitude of the financial derivatives en.wikipedia.org trade has grown substantially direr since the end of 2006, has tracked an exponential growth curve, and is now measured in the hundreds of trillions of dollars. There are at least two dangers, (i) while losses by one party is a gain by another, the losing party may perish, setting off a chain reaction of disappearing counter-parties around the planet, and (ii) the magnitude of derivative contracts dwarf the real economy by several fold, represents leverage that may not be supported or supportable by the real economy, and the unwinding will likely cause panic the world had never experienced.

For example, there are US$ 45 trillion credit-deriv.com of corporate default derivatives economist.com . These derivatives are essentially two party insurance contracts where the insurer guarantees the face value of bonds issued by some borrowing company that are purchased by another investor / speculator. There are essentially no effective reserves seriously set aside for the potential losses that can be experienced due to bankruptcies during any normal economic recession (never mind a depression). A 5% loss on the US$ 45 trillion of contracts will call for payouts of US$ 2.25 trillion of cash by one set of parties to another set. Do we know of any set of companies with US$ 2.25 trillion of cash handy?

(iii) The one-sided bet of ‘carry trade’ by the financial economy is a bomb that will go off sooner or later. One feature of the globalized financial economy is that of “carry trade” whereby financial institutions and individual borrow from low interest rate nations (Japan, USA, and Switzerland) to invest in higher yielding countries (Europe, Britain, Australia, New Zealand). The idea behind such capital flow is mathematically sound, but for the scale, breadth and depth applied. The exit door is simply not that wide and any exit from the trade based on changing conditions will not likely be orderly, catch enough short and causing panic. The eventually of exit is certain, and when so, ought to make the 1997 Asian Financial Crisis exit seem trivial and unexciting.

(iv) Competitive currency devaluation must be a constant concern because the phenomenon is a given must. Between inherent weakness of the US$ and the impetus of the carry trade, some currencies has rose quite a bit, and perhaps too much, against the US$. Europe is already complaining loudly about the strength of the Euro.

We must remember that the Euro is backed by a collection of socialist and spendthrift nations, mostly all substantially weaker in discipline and stamina than Germany.

The weaker Euro states, say Italy, Greece, Spain, and may be even France will have to sacrifice currency purchasing power in favor of domestic socio-econo-political (employment, social spending, trade friction) imperatives, and when so, when announced on the front page of the Financial Times, will see the start of a disorderly trading day.

(v) Demographic sell-down will become more real. The front edge of baby boomers everywhere is entering retirement era, and they in aggregate need to sell, sell again, sell once more, and sell still more to fund their living, especially if the assets they have to sell is trending down. This selling headwind will be a constant in our face and wear at our portfolio, even as the emerging markets rise in income, consumption, and drive the daily necessities ever higher in pricing.

The makings of a perfect financial storm is in the making if not already baked into the cake, as the simultaneous equations of ever decrease in worth of what we might have spirals down to greet the ever surging cost of everything we need. Not a good calculation.

(vi) Given the above noted big issues and concerns, the electorates and their sponsored politicians will try the apparently easy ways to salvation, namely ever more fiat currency printing (as FED chairman Bernanke had promised many times, that deflation of asset value will not happen, for the USA officialdom has a secret weapon called the printing press that can churn out money at a marginal cost of zero), competitive devaluation, legalized and no-fault default, trade wars, and real wars.

So, having thus stipulated the big worries and main concerns, what do we do to navigate the mess, even as the mess gravitates towards its appointment with the Dark Interregnum of eventual triple waterfall planet-wide downward re-pricing and galactic monetary reset?

I do not know. I cannot know. We have never been in such a situation before. We are in no-man’s land.

Forward, We Must Go

I am concerned, but not paralyzed. I believe we must be:

(i) High agility, be observant, ready to move in large and rapid steps, and to admit mistakes;

(ii) High cash, but in official treasury bills, in case financial intermediary institutions holding our assets go bankrupt or is otherwise not bailed out cleanly. We will at least get back paper with our name on it, even if after a painful time delay. Be ready to ease out of the USD again, into other asset classes, and this time may be for good long time;

(iii) High gold, for gold has performed rather consistently over the past 7 years, and past 6,000 years. However, we must keep in mind that the price of gold had suffered 50% loss in the lead up to its inexorable rise to then all-time high back in 1981;

(iv) High hard and soft commodities, meaning everything useful, like metals and foods, but perhaps wait for a wash out unwinding of currently and uniformly high prices underpinned by possibly unsustainable debt. When and if the speculators are forced to sell, they must sell everything, not just what they want and wish to sell, but also what they prefer holding on to;

(v) High energy, but be cognizant that when the recession (never mind depression) hits, energy will be hit as well;

(vi) High China, but very slowly and carefully, and only after the inevitable bloodletting; and

(vii) High Hong Kong real estate, gradually, over time, and to generate current income while standing a reasonable chance for capital gains.



To: pezz who wrote (26706)12/27/2007 10:21:24 PM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 217541
 
Hello Pezz, Today's Report

Folowing on to this take of the state of is Message 24160139

I bought a lot of paper certificate gold at HKD 7707 per tael (7.8 HK$ : 1.0 USD, and 1.2 oz = 1 tael)

and further locked-in price of quite a bit of physical panda 2008 bullion for pickup at 2:00pm this afternoon by making the requisite transfers.

Chugs, TJ



To: pezz who wrote (26706)12/28/2007 5:23:27 AM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 217541
 
hello pezz, today's follow-up report:

i lunched (prawn and grape fruit salad, lamb leg, cheese cake) with two buddies.

we also joyously proceeded as a troop to the official panda gold bullion distributor, and acquired precious gold in exchange for ever worth-less paper money, at spot plus usd 30/oz.

i picked up the coconut's (off-balance sheet) 2008 allotment of 2008 mintage of panda coins; my special gold purchasing shoulder satchel came in weighty.

after task completion, we were notified by a big commodity investor that he had cut in front of us today and bought as much as he could conveniently carry.

at this rate, 2008 editions may never make it to june.

in the mean time, good news ... as 2007 inexorably closes out, the panda 2007 edition goes to its usual and certainly appreciated premium of USD 100 / ounce over spot pandaamerica.com

in the mean time the 1982 edition remain solidly at 3,250 pandaamerica.com

and 1992 version pandaamerica.com is indicated at 1,152 and 2002 pandaamerica.com ask at 985

now we wait for time and professor ben helicopter burnandkaput bernanke to do the necessary work and increase the worth of the panda 2008 monetary parachutes

chugs, tj



To: pezz who wrote (26706)12/31/2007 7:52:36 PM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 217541
 
Hello Pezz, Today's Report:

Watched the movie linked here, and

Recommendation for 2008: BUYGOLD, and take delivery

One script for the many processes of collapse is the 1929 progression hyperhistory.com
… that includes this piece of forgotten history, which by the way is well progressed by the offspring of Prescott Bush, the direct relation of the Bush who stated that “the Constitution is just a god damned piece of paper”en.wikipedia.org

"The Business Plot, the Plot Against FDR, or the White House Putsch, was a conspiracy involving several wealthy businessmen to overthrow the presidency of Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1933.

… A BBC documentary claims Prescott Bush, father and grandfather to the 41st and 43rd US Presidents respectively, was also connected.[3] ..."


Suggestion: the Aaron Russo movie everybody should see at least once, as time permits video.google.com

May the Force be with you.

Chugs, TJ



To: pezz who wrote (26706)1/4/2008 1:46:05 AM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217541
 
Hello Pezz, Today's Report:

(a) Japan stockpiling food, and China just cut off Hong Kong's grains;

What's next - Arabia jacking up oil price to compensate for monetary inflation, and round and round the poison goes?

(2) Great Wall Coin called me early AM, informing that its parent Bank of China branch at 71 Des Veoux Rd had found a stash of 2007 gold Pandas at the back of its vault and asked if I would like to have them.

As gold is well under-priced relative to iron, nickel, zinc, and the various grains, I did the deal of exchange and took in the whole stash, passing to them my worth-less paper.

Interesting that even in a non-gold standard monetary regime, highly inflationary via money expansion and credit enlargement, capital is still best hoarded, consumption suppressed, so that bargains, relative to eventually recognized gold value can be exploited at a later date.

One note of concern, given the hour of the call, I mus have been the first one they called, and if so, perhaps I have bought too much from them relative to others, and so maybe I have more than my fair share of the preciousness.

(3) Gold, recognized or not as a standard, is in fact the standard, and the price of much is and will shrivel against it, and the GDP depression, when priced in ounces, is full on.

(4) I do note that, after picking up my new stash, the sun seems brighter, air warmer,girls prettier, look at me more, longingly, and I generally feel more robusto.

Strange thing, this gold, metal of faith, mineral of tradition, and element of strange attraction.

(5) Now that I am better hedged against land shortage in HK, paper money disasters around the globe, and energy shortages on planet earth, I will turn attention to the issue of grains and sugar and such breakfast essentials.

Chugs, TJ



To: pezz who wrote (26706)1/4/2008 4:02:27 AM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 217541
 
Hello Pezz, Today's Second Report:

As agricultural prices have risen quite a bit, I need to hold off on purchasing enough of the grains to hedge my family's exposure at the supermarket counter.

I have picked out two laggards to hoard, and so

(i) Purchased a tranche of sugar, so that my grand daughters and sons can have them at today's low low price USD 15.91/share etf.stock-encyclopedia.com . This is an addition to earlier sugar fix at 15.55 Message 24155325

(ii) Purchased a tranche of cotton, so that Coconut and her kids will not have to do without towels and sheets and such at prices higher than today's bargain at USD 2.54/share etf.stock-encyclopedia.com

The program is clear, and straightforward, the best kind, and that is to lock in today's prices, more or less, for the rest of the breakfast essentials etf.stock-encyclopedia.com over the next so many weeks, for the next few generations, thus enable me to turn the dire newspaper cover stories of hyperinflation over, and better to concentrate on the comic pages.

Who says investing is difficult? See danger? Hedge it away.

See obstacle? Go around.

See monster? Retreat.

See core inflation rate? Ignore.

See lucre? Loot.

Chugs, TJ



To: pezz who wrote (26706)1/8/2008 2:04:09 AM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 217541
 
hello pezz, today's report:

i just exited my off-balance sheet trade of gold (yeah, had some of that ;0)

one nice thing about off-balance sheet trades is that the profit, when realized, has 'no cost', and even better, the cash can be deflected to any purpose, to either fund more such trades or for madness or for food speculation

on balance sheet paper gold trade remain firmed in position, ready to repel the attackers - unless i get scared out of that to high too fast position as well

so, another good feature of the off balance sheet trade is that it serves as first line of defense against the urge to trade the on-balance wager :0)

a good attribute of the physical holding is that it is like the japanese, in position to fight to the death

chugs, tj



To: pezz who wrote (26706)1/9/2008 5:43:47 PM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217541
 
Hello Pezz, Today’s Report:
I snuck out of bed at 3:00am this morning, tiptoed to the kitchen and grabbed a trade deficit balancing Starbucks Frappucino ice coffee, and then ensconced myself in my play room.

I quickly went through the usual system initiation routine comprised of turning on lights, Bloomberg TV with sound muted, liquid-cooled PC, phone system and off with the Frappucino bottle cap, and gazed into the soul of the market arena in your time zone, and saw nothing but a wish by the investoriates to commit financial suicide and monetary hari kari.

I decided to steal a march on the masses and did so:

(1) Bought a lot of gas finance.yahoo.com at 39.16 – 39.20, to go with my earlier purchases Message 24181399 of sugar and cotton, in effort to secure some basic necessities for my family so that we can navigate the eventual dark interregnum with a few less worries.

I noted that China has instituted never-to-work price controls on certain basic necessities, signaling a soon-to-be breakdown in supply-demand equation across the planet that can only be reset when prices go higher, much higher.

I also note that Men’s Warehouse in your part seems to have sold fewer threads, according to the screen on the wall, and I figure it cannot be a good sign when Joe6Pack cannot afford as many cheap threads made by Wang3Cups as before.

(2) Added some Vermilion finance.yahoo.com at CAD 35.12 to make my holdings in same a nice round number, for decoration, and for sense of movement, to stay in practice. Oh, yes, and for their gas and oil and distributions as well.

I note that events in the Middle East is not exactly going well for the Empire and so perhaps secure carbon energy supply is worth something more than … Google, RIM, Apple, and such. We will see if the poorly trained and basically unlearned presidential candidates can make sense of the enveloping situation and extract anything remotely positive out of the expensive experience.

(3) Added some Cresud finance.yahoo.com at 18.29, again to round up a number that is displayed each and every time I open my MS Money program, and for its productive farm land.

(4) Shorted a bunch of GDX March Put strike 50 finance.yahoo.com at 3.10, because the investoriates north of me seem to have their long suppressed and so dormant but apparently still robust Gold Gene switched on BUYGOLD mode, having evidently bid gold up by news.xinhuanet.com healthy premium to indicated global price. I am guessing that when China turns to a buyer of gold, as it did some time ago of pork, coal, beans, etc, China price becomes the global price. Similarly, when China starts selling/exporting something, as it did some time ago of cotton, DVD players and such, prices collapse, and the China price also becomes the global price.

Recommendation: BUYGOLD

(5) I am making plans to renovate the little building we bought last April that is positioned a few doors down from the Hong Kong Gold and Silver Exchange, inside and out, to help the gentrification of the area along. We will be chucking out the tenants of the two upstairs apartments that now seems to house one-woman brothels (legal in HK) so as to clear the space for maybe (dare I dream it) some mainland Big Gold Swinging Dick who wishes to have an office and apartment near the only Exchange that might matter over the next few years. Other upstairs tenants will be chucked out as well to make way for higher rental revenue payers befitting a gentrifying area. The little restaurant on street level will remain as is, as we had severely jacked up the rent to extract the goodness from that operation, and to leave it to serve the clients and johns visiting the building and wandering around the area.

And now, I retire again to the quiet of bedroom, to catch a few Zzzzzs, before going to a breakfast meeting where some of us will plot some schema that may be advantageous to somebody.

Chugs, TJ