SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Strategies & Market Trends : The Financial Collapse of 2001 Unwinding -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Maurice Winn who wrote (5193)4/7/2020 5:21:19 PM
From: louel  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 13800
 
NZ people like Americans blindly believe left Media ?
You said; " Trump at al did the same = called it a hoax, " Not true






Spencer Platt/Getty

At a rally in South Carolina on Friday night, President Donald Trump said Democrats are trying to use the corona virus to damage him—and called that “their" new hoax. He was not suggesting that the outbreak itself is a hoax but rather claimed the way his critics are “politicizing” the situation to attack him is a hoax.

Trump has a long history of branding things he doesn’t like hoaxes; he’s used the word to blast the Democrat Russia investigation and impeachment. As both of these former things were false and failed. the Virus would now be their new venue for attack. The method how the Democrats were presenting it was also a hoax which would also like the previous, facts denied, spun, omitted or falsified.



To: Maurice Winn who wrote (5193)4/7/2020 6:12:33 PM
From: Elroy Jetson  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 13800
 
Men between the ages of 40 and 64 are most heavily affected by SARS-CoV-2.

SARS-CoV-2 coexists with the elderly quite well, so long as they're not taking ACE inhibitor blood pressure medication or a glitazone for diabetes. Both medications greatly increase the number of Angiotensin-II receptors on cells which act as the cell entry for the virus.

There's a nursing home a mile from here where two men, one 86 and the other 94, who became the first people infected with the CoV-2 virus in my city council district. Both are doing perfectly fine without requiring hospitalization or oxygen, as is the 34 year old woman carer now at home who also became infected looking after them both.

The idea that the SARS-CoV-2 virus primarily kills the elderly and those with suppressed immune systems is nothing more than an often repeated conspiracy theory popular with Trump goons.

Men between 40 and 64 make up the majority of those on respirators in California, South Korea, Taiwan, Germany and most places other Italy. If you're 65 or older you're relatively low-risk like those under the age of 40. Those under the age of 17 are the lowest risk.

The 58 year old director of the City-funded non-profit which partly funds our ceramic studio died after 8 days on a respirator. Like Boris Johnson he was a windbag, hugely impressed with himself, but otherwise in good health.

What's with Italy? The Italian health service still prescribes glitazones rather than gliptins and hasn't replaced ACE inhibitors with 'newer' ARB meds. The 'newer' drugs are already off patent and Italy doesn't even enforce drug patents. So Italy was an anomaly.



To: Maurice Winn who wrote (5193)4/8/2020 9:16:30 AM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 13800
 
New Data Shows U.S. Companies Are Definitely Leaving China

Mexico is the China of the Americas.

Kearney introduced its Near-to-Far Trade Ratio (NTFR) this year. It tracks the movement of U.S. imports toward nearshore production in Mexico. The NTFR is calculated as a ratio of the annual total dollar value of Mexican manufactured goods to the U.S., divided by the dollar value of manufactured imports from the Asian 14, including China.


New Data Shows U.S. Companies Are Definitely Leaving China
Kenneth RapozaSenior Contributor
Markets
I write about business and investing in emerging markets.

U.S. companies are leaving China thanks to the trade war. They’ll leave even more thanks to the pandemic

Sorry, Davos Man. Your China-led globalization is going out of style like bell bottoms.

Global manufacturing consulting firm Kearney released its seventh annual Reshoring Index on Tuesday, showing what it called a “dramatic reversal” of a five-year trend as domestic U.S. manufacturing in 2019 commanded a significantly greater share versus 14 Asian exporters tracked in the study.

Manufacturing imports from China were the hardest hit.

Last year saw companies actively rethinking their supply chain, either convincing their Chinese partners to relocate to southeast Asia to avoid tariffs, or by opting out of sourcing from China altogether.

"Three decades ago, U.S. producers began manufacturing and sourcing in China for one reason: costs. The trade war brought a second dimension more fully into the equation?risk?as tariffs and the threat of disrupted China imports prompted companies to weigh surety of supply more fully alongside costs. COVID-19 brings a third dimension more fully into the mix­, and arguably to the fore: resilience?the ability to foresee and adapt to unforeseen systemic shocks," says Patrick Van den Bossche, Kearney partner and co-author of the 19-page report.

The main beneficiaries of this are the smaller southeast Asian nations, led by Vietnam. And thanks to the passing of the U.S. Mexico Canada Agreement, Mexico, for all its problems with drug cartels, has become a favorite spot for sourcing.

(I told a million of you this last month...)

MORE FROM FORBESCoronavirus Could Be The End Of China As A Global Manufacturing HubBy Kenneth RapozaIn 2020, the trade war seemed to be on pause. Sadly, it gave way to a global pandemic that emanated from the Hubei province in China. The new SARS coronavirus has literally closed the economies of the Western world and created a public relations nightmare for China.

Not only that, companies were unable to get supply online in February and early March due to factory closures there, stalling business in the U.S.

Once China got up and running, the U.S. was hit between the eyes with the deadly COVID-19 disease caused by the rapidly spreading new SARS. Even if China was fully healed, the U.S was stuck in sick bay.

The full extent of the societal and economic trauma the coronavirus pandemic may cause is unknown still, the Kearney report’s authors wrote. But whatever the outcome, a return to status quo China trade pre-pandemic is unlikely.

Kearney predicts companies “will be compelled to go much further in rethinking their sourcing strategies, (and) their entire supply chains.”

Specifically, the Kearney report’s authors wrote that they expect companies will be increasingly inclined to spread their risks, as opposed to relying solely on China as this pandemic has exposed them.

China is the go-to source for ibuprofen, hazmat suits, rubber gloves, surgical masks, ventilators.

Probably toilet paper, for all we know. How this is not a national security issue is something being raised by senators including Josh Hawley (R-MO) and Tom Cotton (R-AK).

The threat going forward of political anger toward China, not to mention future pandemics stemming from China (the first SARS came from there in 2002-03), means that companies will want to hedge their supply chain strategy by spreading their risks.

That doesn’t mean a full abandonment of China. It does mean China’s days as the go-to manufacturing hub for the Western world are over.

The Reshoring Index compares U.S. manufacturing gross output to import data from 14 Asian low-cost countries.

To gauge the U.S. Reshoring Index, Kearney first looks at the import of manufactured goods from China, Taiwan, Malaysia, India, Vietnam, Thailand, Indonesia, Singapore, Philippines, Bangladesh, Pakistan, Hong Kong, Sri Lanka, and Cambodia; and secondly looks at U.S. domestic gross output of manufactured goods.

They then calculate the manufacturing import ratio (MIR) — the result of dividing the first number by the second. The U.S. Reshoring Index is the year-over-year change in the MIR, expressed in basis points (1 percent change = 100 basis points).

The numerator of the MIR is the sum of the value of all manufactured imports from those 14 Asian countries— which decreased from $816 billion in 2018 to $757 billion in 2019, a contraction of 7% at a time of solid American economic growth.

According to Kearney, the contraction is almost exclusively driven by the decline in imports from China, which fell the most at 17% due to tariff costs.

The only way for the U.S. to make itself attractive to corporate investment is to get its costs on par with China. While it cannot compete with China on labor costs, the U.S. can compete on corporate taxes, an abundant and qualified blue collar labor force, and by implementing environmental regulations that don’t force companies to overspend on technologies and consultants that just end up eating into their bottom line.

President Trump likes to say that his tariffs are being paid for by the Chinese. It is U.S. importers, of course, that pay the duties at the ports. But the Chinese partners of the U.S. company suffers because the U.S. importer is now paying more for Made in China. That reduces the cost benefit of using China as an export hub.

The resulting 98-basis-point jump in the Kearney Reshoring Index is by far the biggest annualized change in favor of U.S. companies in five years.

The Kearney China Diversification Index (CDI) tracks the shift in U.S. manufacturing imports away from China and to other Asian countries on the list.

China is still the leader, but she is increasingly losing share in the Trump years.

In 2013, the base year for the CDI, China held 67% of all U.S.-bound Asian-sourced manufactured goods. By the second quarter 2019, its share collapsed 56%, a decrease of more than 1,000 basis points.

Of the $31 billion in U.S. imports that shifted away from China, some 46% was absorbed by Vietnam, sometimes by the same Chinese suppliers who left the mainland. Vietnam exported an additional $14 billion worth of manufactured goods to the U.S. in 2019 versus 2018 as a result of that shift.

Mexico is the China of the Americas.

Kearney introduced its Near-to-Far Trade Ratio (NTFR) this year. It tracks the movement of U.S. imports toward nearshore production in Mexico. The NTFR is calculated as a ratio of the annual total dollar value of Mexican manufactured goods to the U.S., divided by the dollar value of manufactured imports from the Asian 14, including China.


Since 2013, the NTFR has hovered steadily between 36% and 38% —meaning for every dollar of U.S. manufacturing goods from Asia, there were approximately 37 cents worth of manufacturing imports coming from Mexico.

That changed with the USMCA.

Mexico has gone from 38% to 42%. On a dollar-value basis, total manufacturing imports from Mexico to the U.S. increased 10% between 2017 and 2018, from $278 billion to $307 billion, and by another 4% between 2018 and 2019, to a total import value of $320 billion, based on the Kearney report.


"The door for these insurgents was clearly opened by ongoing U.S.–China trade disputes, as their gains were mainly in product categories impacted by tariffs," says Yuri Castano, Kearney manager and co-author of the study. "Apparently, the trade war jolted U.S. companies to start rethinking and reshaping their supply networks."

(Full report:)
Follow me on Twitter or LinkedIn.



Kenneth Rapoza

I've spent 20 years as a reporter for the best in the business, including as a Brazil-based staffer for WSJ. Since 2011, I focus on business and investing in the big…

Read More



To: Maurice Winn who wrote (5193)4/28/2020 6:39:38 AM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 13800
 
Flattening the curve was always a fool’s errand that widened the damage.

This Pandemic Is Over. Let's Stop the Economic Suicide, and Get Back to Work

By George Gilder
April 25, 2020

With the latest reports of plummeting death rates from all causes, this crisis is over. The pandemic of doom erupted as a panic of pols and is now a comedy of Mash-minded med admins and stooges, covering their ifs ands and butts with ever more morbid and distorted statistics.

The crisis now will hit the politicians and political Doctor Faucis who gullibly accepted and trumpeted what statistician William Briggs calls “the most colossal and costly blown forecast of all time.”

An egregious statistical horror story of millions of projected deaths, suffused with incense and lugubrious accents from Imperial College of London to Harvard School of Public Health, prompted the pols to impose a vandalistic lockdown on the economy. It would have been an outrage even if the assumptions were not wildly astronomically wrong.

Flattening the curve was always a fool’s errand that widened the damage.

President Trump had better take notice. He will soon own this gigantic botch of policy and leadership. No one will notice that his opponents urged even more panicky blunders.

The latest figures on overall death rates from all causes show no increase at all. Deaths are lower than in 2019, 2018, 2017 and 2015, slightly higher than in 2016. Any upward bias is imparted by population growth.

Now writing a book on the crisis with bestselling author Jay Richards, Briggs concludes: “Since pneumonia deaths are up, yet all deaths are down, it must mean people are being recorded as dying from other things at smaller rates than usual.” Deaths from other causes are simply being ascribed to the coronavirus.

As usual every year, deaths began trending downward in January. It’s an annual pattern. Look it up. Since the lockdown began in mid-March, the politicians cannot claim that their policies had anything to do with the declining death rate.

A global study published in Israel by Professor Isaac Ben-Israel, chairman of the Israeli Space Agency and Council on Research and Development, shows that “the spread of the coronavirus declines to almost zero after 70 days—no matter where it strikes, and no matter what measures governments impose to try to thwart it.”

In fact, by impeding herd immunity, particularly among students and other non-susceptible young people, the lockdown in the U.S. has prolonged and exacerbated the medical problem. As Briggs concludes, “People need to get out into virus-killing sunshine and germicidal air.”

This flu like all previous viral flues will give way only to herd immunity, whether through natural propagation of an extremely infectious pathogen, or through the success of one of the hundreds of vaccine projects.

No evidence indicates that this flu was exceptionally dangerous. On March 20th, the French published a major controlled study that shows no excess mortality at all from coronavirus compared to other flues. SARS and Mers were both much more lethal and did not occasion what Briggs’ reader “Uncle Dave” described as “taking a hammer and sickle to the economy.”

We now know that the crisis was a comedy of errors. The Chinese let it get going in the raw bat markets of Wuhan. But together with the Koreans, the Chinese dithered and demurred and allowed six weeks of rampant propagation to create herd immunity before they began locking everyone up. Therefore, the Chinese and Koreans were among the first to recover.

The Italians scared everybody with their haphazard health system and smoking fogies. Crammed together in subways and tenements, the New Yorkers registered a brief blip of extreme cases. Intubations and ventilators turned out not to help (80 percent died). This sowed fear and frustration among medical personnel slow to see that the problem was impaired hemogloblin in the blood rather than lung damage.

The New York media piled on with panic, with bogus reports of rising deaths. “Coronavirus deaths” soared by assuming that people dying with the virus were dying from it and then by ascribing to the coronavirus other deaths among people with symptoms of pulmonary distress, even without being tested.

Now jacking up the case rate will be further pointless testing. As Briggs points out, “Fauci is calling for ‘tripling’ of testing, which can only boost these dailies [case totals]. And make it seem like there’s a genuine increase occurring. Oh my! The daily reported cases are up! It must mean the disease is spreading!

“No. It could also mean, and probably does given all the other evidence we now have from sampling, that the disease was already there, and we just now have measured it.”

The death rate rises with further reclassification of pneumonia and other pulmonary deaths. When we reach herd immunity, and nearly everyone has the antigen, nearly all deaths can be chalked up to COVID19. Hey, it will be Quod Erat Demonstrandum for the panic mongers.

In a fascinating open letter to German Prime Minister Angela Merkel, epidemiologist Sucharit Bhakdi concludes that with the French study, corroborated by findings from a Stanford antibody seroprevalence study in Santa Clara county, “the case for extreme measures collapses like a house of cards.” Bhakdi says that since the virus has already spread widely in the general population, efforts to stop further spread are both futile and destructive.

So let’s stop pretending that our policies have been rational and need to be phased out, as if they once had a purpose. They should be reversed summarily and acknowledged to be a mistake, perpetrated by statisticians with erroneous computer models.

Perhaps then we can learn from this experience with the flaws of expertise not to shut down the economy again for the totally bogus “crisis” of climate change.

George Gilder is the author numerous books, including Wealth and Poverty, Knowledge and Power, and Telecosm.



To: Maurice Winn who wrote (5193)5/20/2020 4:14:40 AM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 13800
 
Where is the fabled Chinese pent up demand, MQ?

You were very correct when you kept pointing to TJ that there was no 600-year pent up demand in China.

Covid showed that demand is here in the west. Not in China. Yes, there is a potential demand in China. And that one is not pent up. This potential is not realized because the CCP does not know how to turn the Stalinist-economy into a consumer-led economy.

The Stalinist economy is easy. Throw capital, labor and energy and the economy grows. That source of grow is long gone. It is incredible that it lasted 10 years past its nadir.

But the CCP kept pursuing the only thing they know. Build buildings roads and bridges. See Belt and Road Initiative (BRI, or B&R)

What Xi and his cohorts forgot is that the 30-year old Chinese of today, was born in 1990. The past 15 years of this person life, he lived through the Chinese decade and only knows about the history taught to him in the books.

This girl or guy is no Chinese rural migrant working to replace the Iron Rice Bowl by a salary in an urban factory. This youngster, wants the good life like any young person.

Xi and the CCP were not clever. They thought, simplistically, that it was just a matter of putting into their five-year plan Made in China 2025, and voila? These 30-year olds would be qualified as knowledge worker and a new world of high tech would propel China ahead.

It didn't work amigo.
This is history. And TJ cannot face it.



To: Maurice Winn who wrote (5193)6/26/2020 6:07:47 AM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 13800
 
UK ‘considering turning OneWeb into satellite positioning system’22 June 2020 | Alan Burkitt-Gray

This coming Friday, 26 June, is the deadline for bids for OneWeb, which went into Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection at the end of March – followed by one of its shareholders, Intelsat, which took the same path in mid-May. Meanwhile its original main supporter, SoftBank, is also financially challenged and trying to raise money to save itself.

Unless successful bids are lodged by Friday – with a 10% deposit – then OneWeb’s assets will be auctioned off the following week, on 2 July.

Satellite Intel Report says that Amazon and SpaceX have decided against bidding. A potential joint bid from Eutelsat is seeking support from outside France. The same source says that four Chinese companies are also considering bidding.

But the UK satellite industry has livened up the market over the weekend following a story in the Financial Times (FT) that government ministers are considering a US$1 billion plan to modify OneWeb to offer a global positioning service.

The UK lost its role in the EU-backed Galileo project to build a rival to the US Department of Defense’s Global Positioning System (GPS) following the UK’s departure from the EU in January 2020.

The country considered a £5 billion project to build its own rival, but the FT is saying that the Boris Johnson government is looking a scheme to adapt 80 of the planned 648 satellites for a positioning service. That would allow the UK to cancel its own expensive rival.

OneWeb would also be able to offer commercial or military communications under its existing UK-based licence.

The US state of Florida has subsidised a vast factory close to Cape Canaveral to build most of the satellites.



To: Maurice Winn who wrote (5193)7/2/2020 6:46:39 AM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 13800
 
Meanwhile Hong Kong goes down for the count and exile in South Africa is maybe not all bad.


Yes. True true as the characters in Cloud Atlas film would say.

The good old days most money in HK was western moolah.

Today most money is mainland's and they want to protect that money and the money is owned by the big mailand boys who have a say in the Communist Party of China.

Good that you sensibly never said a bad word about Emperor Pooh Xi or anything else to do with Mainland Mania. Very wise.


Why the change form Jay Chen of the late 90s and earlys 00s?


He knew since since them...



To: Maurice Winn who wrote (5193)7/14/2020 6:42:39 AM
From: elmatador2 Recommendations

Recommended By
Horgad
kidl

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 13800
 
Selling second passports for a discount:


Caribbean nations are so strapped for cash after the pandemic hammered their tourism industries that they have begun dangling deep discounts on the passports they sell to wealthy foreigners.


These countries are selling second passports for a discount: Caribbean nations are so strapped for cash after the pandemic hammered their tourism industries that they have begun dangling deep discounts on the passports they sell to wealthy foreigners

Many of the islands in the region have long offered “citizenship-by-investment” programs as a way of supplementing the hard currency they pull in from tourism.

With their hotels and white-sand beaches now almost entirely empty, this unconventional business has suddenly taken on much greater importance.

St Kitll and Nevis a mountainous twin-island nation of 53,000 people, was among the first to slash prices. It’s offering a special deal through the end of the year: A $150,000 contribution to the country’s “Sustainable Growth Fund” will score passports for a family of four.

That’s a 23% drop from the regular price of $195,000. Other islands in the region, including Dominica and Antinua and Barbuda are offering even cheaper deals.


St. Lucia, Grenada, Antigua and Barbuda, and Dominica have also put changes in place to lure more clients, Khan said. Some offer citizenship for as little as $100,000.


The fallout from Covid has highlighted the value of a second passport, he said, as governments in Europe and elsewhere imposed restrictions on people who can normally travel without a visa, such as US citizens.

lnkd.in