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   Sunday, July 24, 2005   07:02 A PDT

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Tony's Police State

As we were afraid might be the case, police in London have now confessed that the man shot dead last week on the grounds he was a "terror suspect" turns out to not have been a terrorist at all.  A;; pf which has convinced on reader to observe that Britain is now a police state in everything but name:

Here is the situation: - http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/4071968.stm 

You can be shot in the street as a terrorist if you "look suspicious".- http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/4712061.stm 

We have more surveillance cameras per head of population than any other country - http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/4710239.stm 

You can have your passport taken off you and put under house arrest if they "suspect" you of being a football hooligan - http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/leicestershire/3801317.stm 

You can be arrested and held without legal representation for at least 7 days - http://www.yourrights.org.uk/faqs/terrorism/arrest-under-the-terrorism-laws.shtml 

You cannot even watch TV without obtaining a license

You can be arrested as a terrorist for speaking, if you have deemed to have said something that promotes terrorism

You can have your face plastered all over the media as a suspected terrorist and your life destroyed, even if you are innocent - http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/4688501.stm 

You can be stopped in your car for random breath testing House arrest without trial - http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/4303427.stm 

If you have a screwdriver in your pocket, you can be arrested on the street for "going equiped" to do burglary - http://www.yourrights.org.uk/your-rights/chapters/the-rights-of-suspects/stop-and-search/index.shtml

For this the average person pays 60% of their wages in various taxes

Your emails can be read without court order. Your phone calls can be listened to without court orde r Your mail can be intercepted, opened and examined without court order

The secret services are a law unto themselves, they do what they like, as was evident in Northern Ireland. If you look at Northern Ireland, you will see the model of what they want the UK to become. Road blocks, check points and troops on the streets. I think in five years we may even see internment of "undesirables". Like in the US, there are several concentration style camps mothballed just waiting for their new guests. There's one a few miles from me in the county of Lincolnshire.

George Orwell couldn't have put it better - http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/3388797.stm 

Well done Mr Blair, keep up the good work.

Obviously I'm not going to put my name to this one, as it is likely that GCHQ will flag this email.

We find ourselves in a deep Constitutional funk over terrorism: We appreciate the need to contain the growing terrorist movements, but at the same time we're also mindful that British tyranny is what we cast off 229 years ago and today's trends look like a totalitarian states more every day.

If we had a robust political [arty in opposition, we'd be less afraid, but the Rove Republicans have used old National Socialist "Big Lies" at every step of the way, including the trumped up "reasons" for the Iraq War. While Hillary Clinton and Howard Dean complain, we wonder why NYC police and firemen are still under gag orders not to talk about explosions they heard and how it is that WTC-7 was demolished. How many people have forgotten that at least 4 of the alleged hijackers had surfaced and tried to clear their names?

Although the "reality" of 9/11 has been effectively sold to the American public, the Bush administration continues to grow more concerned about the grand jury which is investigating the Valerie Plame case.  "What's being covered up in the Plame-Rove case seems to revolve around the Bush administration's orchestrated, and perhaps illegal, propaganda campaign to justify its invasion of Iraq. Valerie Plame and her husband, former Ambassador Joseph Wilson—who wrote the op-ed in the New York Times that got this whole thing going—are just the tips of very large icebergs, and one of those icebergs has a name: the White House Iraq Group (WHIG), which we'll examine below"

It's clear from these kinds of reports that the case has the potential to get down to some of the high jinx that led to America invading Iraq, a plan which has gone terribly wrong and the oil stubbornly refused to flow freely.

America is in a dangerously unbalanced state, the Democratic party in ruins, and the Republicans are the ruling corporate party. We see clear evidence of this as Republicans advance the job-wrecking Central America Free Trade Agreement, which is as much about sending the few remaining American manufacturing jobs to places like Costa Rica, as it is a smokescreen for multi-national pharmaceutical companies to steal our rights to non-prescription vitamin and mineral supplements. We find it masterful deceit to package health, farming, and job theft into a single piece of legislation now pending in the House.  A more honest approach by CONgress would be to adhere to the concept single-purpose legislation. The present "tack a rider on it" approach to lawmaking invites the kind of corporate interest abuse that takes the short term view of profits over the long-term goal of a functional democratic republic.

All this while the Mexico border leaks like a sieve and the average family is reduced to wage serfdom conditions that would make the industrial age British factory owner proud of our 12-hour days. But if you don't like it, just refinance your house and buy a new car. Conspicuous consumption, prescription only medications, and your papers always ready to prove you are an American, that's the new paradigm.


Saturday

Not for the Weak of Heart

This weekend, we explore the possibility that the market could be setting up for a blow off peak to new all time highs next spring.  However, playing this potential blow off could be like catching falling knives.  We explore the two competing theories at www.peoplenomics.com and look at implications for real estate and other investments.  Subscription information by clicking here.  This weekend's report looks at the range of "best case" and "worst case" scenarios and offers some insights into how to play it.

 

Plenty Hot

We notice that a bunch of cities, such as Las Vegas, are tying all-time heat records this week, while at the same time, weather behavior around the world is bothersome.  Even olives for that Martini could be impacted by some of the weather in Europe.  More important to American consumers is what the present heat wave and evolving drought will do to food production - something which is starting to percolate up out of the farm belt.

 

Our colleagues over at www.halfpasthuman.com, where the web bot project lives, issued a warning more than a month ago that the heat would be incredible this summer - just as it's turning out to be.  From the June 16 (ALTA905-1 Report):

"Our indications are for a different sort of weather pattern to emerge globally over the course of this summer and fall. We note that the data indicates at the macro level that the 'usual' movement of weather over North America is seen as 'reversing direction of movement' or 'change of moment direction'. The previous 'successful movement' is now seen as being 'blocked' by 'columns' which in turn are seen as supporting a 'roof' of heat. Note that it would be also possible to interpret this last as a 'roof' *over* 'heat'. In either case, the 'columns' are seen as 'resting solid upon the plains/planes/flat areas' such that a 'fence of poles' is created which 'prevents/blocks movement'. The data suggests that this 'fence' will act as a 'mountain' upon 'the spine' of another 'mountain' such that 'no movement passes' and 'clouds/thunder build'. While the timeline of the progressed model indicates that this 'fence of columns' forms in June, or perhaps early July, there are also lunar associations such as 'last quarter phase' and 'light leaves the face' {of the moon}"

They're very modest with the "I told you so's" but we lack their restraint. The current data run is the 1105 series and you can get subscription information here. Whether you see  any changes in the weather where you are located doesn't matter a whit to us.  We simply read the daily records being set - day after day - and notice that a sixth named tropical storm (Franklin) is now meandering about the Atlantic and conclude rather confidently that things are not the same as they used to be.

 

Add to the potential climate nightmare the idea that the Gulf Stream is shutting down because of climate change, and a few snips from the data reads about the Humboldt current and you have the potential for catastrophic climate collapse.  Food doesn't grow once earth temperatures get past 122 degrees or so.

 

We continue to be amazed that the Bush administration has kept its collective head in the sand over air quality and other drivers of change, a malaise shared by many in CONgress who keep their hands out to special interests while the disaster buildings.

 

To say it again, we don't care whether you believe in climate change.  The odds are pretty good that we will enter into a period of more extreme oscillations - both cold and heat.  But the reality of climate change is that when people start to go hungry from it, economic reactions will be severe and perhaps permanent.  You can't eat Federal Reserve (debt) notes.

 

Yuan More Thing

Yes, there are tons of emails coming in about the revaluation this week of the Chinese Yuan.  Here's a typical one:

hi George You may want to read this (contrarian, possibly similar to your) view about the Chinese revaluing their currency. I know you probably get LOTS of emails a day, but this link's worth reading

http://www.forbes.com/newsletter/2005/07/22/china-yuan-revaluation-housing-cz_jr_0722soapbox_inl.html 

Reader Note

Yes, there's a bit of code stuck somewhere in this week's report that makes you need to scroll the browser - if you don't have 1024X768 display going - I will get it stripped out for Monday - sorry about any inconvenience.


Friday

Search, Seize, Shoot

This morning we find ourselves just amazed at how the London Bombings of the 7th have managed to spin into something bigger than life.  Not that 50-odd people losing their lives is anything to trivialize - it is not.  But then again, we have reaction - and still no conclusive proof that it wasn't a false flag operation designed to bring world attention away from the G-8 meeting and refocus it on the permanent war for permanent peace, which is keeping the economy going.  That said, the markets are reported read to open down a tad this morning on word of a bombing suspect being shot in England.

 

While it will be interesting to learn if the man was a suicide bomber on his way to a mission, or whether he was just a lone nutjob, we are concerned, as are our readers, about the sudden increase in police searches here in the US.  As one reader writes:

"Hi George, just a line of thought.....

In the article about NY police conducting random searches in the subway system...Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly had announced the legally obvious—that New Yorkers are free to decline a search and "turn around and leave." http://www.villagevoice.com/news/0530,weblee,66189,5.html 

Soon enough it will be this way for any mass transit system that many depend upon for transportation, especially to and from work.

Eventually you will have to produce ID on demand, then you will have to produce ID as part of standard boarding procedure. Your papers bitte.

Of course you are still free to decline and turn around and leave!

After that it will be expanded so that you will have to produce ID for food, clothing and housing. Your papers bitte.

Of course you are still free to decline and turn around and leave!"

And that's the difficulty of making laws in this environment - on the one hand, the powers that be have an obligation to provide for safety for the general public, but at the same time, in order to get there, issues like mass searches come up. What makes terrorism such a highly leveraged form of warfare is that it forces the target country to lessen its freedoms and thus, becomes more like what its opponents claim in the first place.  It's a conundrum of unimaginable scale.  But no mistake about governmental responses - it's a matter of pile on and push new laws through - such as is the case in Italy today. And, the republican dominated CONgress keeps pushing through Patriot Act restrictions.

 

Leaky Borders

As we have mentioned to you on numerous occasions, the people we elected to represent our interests in Washington have done an abysmal job of closing our leaking border with Mexico.  Although the Homeland Security folks have had some discussions with the Minutemen, who are the real deal patriots in all this, the word out today is that it was just media smoke and mirrors - and the administration has no intention of doing its legally required job of sealing the border. So, if an when we ever end up with a weapon of mass destruction on American soil, I'm asking you in advance NOT to blame the hard working men and women of the US Border Patrol, but take the problem back to the people in Washington who have their hands out to corporate interests pimping cheap illegal labor, and lay the problem where it belongs, there and at the feet of the "borderless" promoters at the Council on Foreign Relations. Who needs treason when we have corporate "special" interests?

 

As if to make the case, we find George Bush out pimping CAFTA as a "jobs program" instead of calling it what it really is: The treasonous theft of American worker's jobs and deflationary pressure on American wages through third world labor practices.  As luck would have it, he will likely be successful because he is not selling the hoax to rational voters who end up unemployed, downsized, or jobjacked:  He's selling the idea to the corporatists who benefit.  Tough sell, huh?

 

In case you have forgotten, I'm a great believer in Free Trade, except that what I'm in favor of involves equal labor rates - not this crap where one worker gets a dollar, and another worker gets 2¢ for the same labor.  That's not free trade  - in my book that's corporate exploitation and I see George Bush hasn't figured that out.

 

Yuan Thing Leads To Another

And that "other" in the view of our fractal fundamentalist, G. Lammert, is an important crossroads for the markets which we see in our less sophisticated chart work as well:

"George, by simple fractal analysis, the major indices are at a very critical juncture. If they break down significantly over the next 1-4 trading days including a nonlinear lower gap, there is paradoxically a reasonable chance of a later 'rotational' blow-off period of 21-42 days. On the other hand, if the major indices maintain their valuations and increase over the next 2-13 days, the run to the March 2000's secondary equity top will likely be completed.

Under the contracting weekly fractal umbrella of 22/54/50 of 44-54 the two predominant alternative daily fractal high probabilities from August 2004 for the equities are covered in a terminal x-2x daily timeframe of 51-52/129-130/x-2x:

First scenario: x-2x = a daily fractal sequence of 12/31/18 of a possible 20-31 days. 1.62 times 12 =20 days rounded. 31 days = 2.5 x. Under this scenario the valuations would continue laterally and higher reaching the range of 20-31 days before beginning the decay cycle fractals. A terminal final trading gap in the major indices may serve as a final exclamation point and hallmark of a concluding growth sequence with the trading pinnacle represented by a macroeconomic saturation gap exhaustion key reversal day. The DAX came close to the character of such a trading day yesterday.

Second scenario: The second scenario involves a sudden drop in the Wilshire by 5 or percent in the next few trading days and a later 21-42 day blow off period during which American real estate properties plateau. The cresting money receipts for the last few musical housing chairs are 'rotated' out of potential flipped speculative investment properties and purchased new undeveloped land into the terminal portion of rapidly growing blow-off equities - much like what has been occurring in Britain during the last two months. The breakdown of this potential fractal sequence is 21/53/21-42 where ten days are shared between the terminal portion of the second 130 day fractal sequence and 21 days of a potential first base of the third and final 103 day fractal. Note the total number of days of this hypothetical final fractal sequence would be 103-104 which matches the third daily fractal sequence of 51-52/130/103-104.

The second sub fractal sequence of the second scenario is 53 days in length (21/53/42). The current breakdown of the potential 53 day second cycle is 9/23/18(July21) x/2.5x/2x of ??23. As cited in the above paragraph, if a breakdown does occur in the next few days, top real estate transacted saturation money received by developers and real estate agents from a plateauing housing market may be diverted to a final blow-off in equities rather than reinvested in land speculation and development.

The trading valuations over the next few days will contain the directional information needed to predict the intermediate pathway to an equity valuation saturation peak. This saturation point will mark the start of the inevitable self correction that will deflate lofty asset overvaluations and align them with the ongoing inflation and after-interest-payment-adjusted diminishing wages. G. Lammert http://www.economicfractalist.com/"

NK Offer

We're pleased to report that North Korea has offered to end its nuclear weapons program if the West will sign a permanent peace agreement to replace the armistice which was signed in 1953.  Unfortunately, as with all such offers in the past, we expect this one will include an unacceptable number of strings attached, but at least the talk is ongoing. 

 

Chavez Still Target

Anyone with a high school education, or better, knows that the US is desperate to get rid of freely elected president Chavez in Venezuela.  The reason?  He is not towing the US line on oil - and as a result Chavez claims US forces are working darkly to sabotage his government through any number of means, including electronically.  His reaction?  he will out the US backed efforts at every turn.  One guy holding out against US corporate interests?  Why the audacity of it!  Our SUV's demand action!

 

Alphabet Storms

If you are keeping track, we're up to "F" as the named tropical storms and hurricanes continue to march across the Atlantic.  Emily, is about blown out.

 

Stories of the Day

Why are we not surprised to learn that Karl Rove and Scooter Libby have a different version of the CIA agent naming case that the reporters involved have reportedly presented to the grand jury?  From what little reliable coverage there is, this is sounding more and more like a "he said, she said" finger pointing exercise.  Now if the Grand Jury would just get down to issuing perjury indictments and get on with it...


Quest for the Perfect Antenna

I received an email back from my ham radio colleague of 40-odd years who has been working with me on antennas since we carried a 40 foot piece of irrigation pipe on our shoulders on a 12-mile hike in order to build the "perfect vertical."  You may recall that earlier this week, I posed a question about right-angle wire arrays...along with a folded loop question and here's the partial answer:

"George, I fired up AO last night for the first time in 5 years and modeled the cross-field antenna you sketched out in your previous e-mail (i.e. full wavelength square loop fed at lower corner, and folded 90 degrees around a diagonal axis). The results weren't too impressive.

The pattern is similar to that of a full-wave delta loop except that it has less directionality. "Forward" gain is on the order of 5 dBi and the 3-D model of the radiation pattern looks like a stubby jelly bean with the length only slightly greater than the diameter. The only unusual thing I noticed was that to hit resonance on 20 meters, I had to increase the length of the antenna to 80 feet rather than the expected 66 feet or so.

I'll take some screen shots of the physical appearance of the wire model and associated radiation pattern this weekend and send them to you. It's possible that my wire model is different than what you had in mind, so the screen shots will allow you to confirm that I got it right. As an aside, folding the loop on its diagonal axis and then figuring out the coordinates of the one point that moves is an interesting exercise in spatial relations and trig after a 13 hour work-day. I actually wound up cutting, folding, & staring at a square of paper so I could figure out how to calculate the point coordinates. I was doing this in the family room which resulted in some very peculiar looks form the wife and daughter units."

The fun of ham radio is to use antenna modeling software to try and beat the laws of physical - which we haven't do to any great extent, but that's one of the delights of the hobby - seeing how far you can push the limits.

Peoplenomics

This week we explore the impact on market stability of multiple layers of dependency-linked financial markets.  Specifically, the addition of ETF's to the modern market stability question is viewed as a nautical design problem.  Specifically, we address whether additional linked vehicles, to use nautical architecture terms, increase initial stability but might at the same time substantially reduce ultimate stabilityClick here if you're a subscriber, or here if you want subscription information.

 

If you you have a chance, drop by our bookstore at www.peoplenomics.com/bookstore.htm.

 

The Pony Express rider got through with some subscriptions this weekend, so I should have those all up by Wednesday or so.  If you haven't gotten your logon by Thursday, send me an email and we'll see what's gone astray.  Usually, the problem is people change their email address and don't update their PayPal account - so if you do ever change emails, make sure to change all your service contact info around.
 

Be sure and wander around our bookstore if you get time. Titles like "For Sale by Owner Coach" and "How to Live on Less than $10,000 a Year" if you're interested.


Thursday

China Revalues Yuan

The Chinese today have revalued the Yuan effective from last night. The effect is a 2.1% increase in the value of the Yuan.  This means goods made in China will cost a bit more in the US and the pricing of US goods sold to China (such as jetliners) will drop. One of the immediate concerns is what this will do to Chinese purchases of US Treasuries.  Because the Yuan is floating against a market basket of currencies instead of being strictly pegged to the dollar, there could be a short term trading impact.  We also see the price of gold is up today. We will be watching Wal-Mart today because they are such big customers of China, but the moves from this should be fairly contained as this has been anticipated by everyone and his cousin for a long time.  (We managed to write it backwards before the coffee kicked in)

 

Employee Discounts

We've been watching Lee Iacocca do is new "employee discount" ads for Chrysler, as both Ford and GM has been benefiting from the so-called "employee discount" advertising blitz.  We mention this because such ad campaigns have a ripple effect. When auto sales take a momentary spike up, as they have with these ads, there is an improvement in the short term auto industry layoff picture, which is reflected in part in today's much improved unemployment numbers.  Stepping back even a bit further, we see continued pressure on the auto makers to follow the ground breaking approach of Saturn in how they compensate sales persons in order to hold down costs.  Time will tell...

 

Future of Crops

The weather here in Southern California has been a tad on the odd side - yesterday, for example, we had 100+ temperatures coupled with massive thunderclouds and scattered sprinkles. Today is looking like more of the same.  If you look at a heat map, you'll find that much of the country is having heat to the degree that crops could be damaged in some areas.

 

Depending on area, the crop outlook is not dire - yet - but the farmers are beginning to voice some concern and soy (and others) enter a critical period.  Even more interesting to us has been the spread of the weather.  While some parts of the Midwest are exceptionally dry, parts of the South, such as Georgia have been suffering from too much rain  Record heat in Colorado, but not much impact of agriculture there.

 

The same kind of picture develops globally, too:  In Eastern Europe and Australia some areas are getting enough rain to damage crops while other areas not too far distant are experiencing drought.

 

Life to Follow TV?

The made for television movie, Oil Storm I think it was, begins with a revolution in Saudi Arabia that sets of an interruption in the world's oil supplies, and from there things just tumble down hill until the US finds itself in a complete energy pickle.  Not that it has followed the TV plot-line so far, but we read with interest when the US issues warnings about problems to come in Saudi Arabia where the maneuvering to succeed King Fahd is gearing up among competing factions of the royal family.

 

Frozen Bird Flu

Not that we eat frozen duck, but if we did, we would sure be looking for a substitute of some kind now that bird flu has been identified in frozen duck meat sold in Japan. 

 

Pakistan Destabilizing

Yes, the prospect of peace talks between India and Pakistan has in the short term lessened the threat of nuclear conflict between the two countries, but not for long.  As you may know from following the headlines, there has been rising violence in Kashmir and now India says if that continues, peace talks could be jeopardized.

 

Speaking of this region, we see a tie-in to the recent London bombings firming up with a British report that one of the bombers was a partisan in the Pakistan conflict who admired Osama bin Laden.  Although when we read such reports, we take them with one or two grains of salt because they almost fit too neatly into the cloth of daily news coverage.

 

Another Silver Nod

A hawk-eyed reader sent in his latest consumer product observation, as we see a growing number of products for consumers that are using silver for various antibacterial functions.  His email:

"Peter Lynch has said that some of the best investments he has ever made have been consumer products that his family has found. L'eggs, for instance.

So, I'm opening a bunch of mail, and I come across an Office Depot "Visit the New Local Store" package. I open it up, and there is a 25% off coupon for "PaperMate FlexGrip Elite" pens with "Anti-Bacterial Pen Protection".

Looking at the company's website, I find the following:

http://www.sanfordcorp.com/sanford/consumer/jhtml/aboutus/sanford_about_us_27.jhtml?archive=L&priority=9048 

"The anti-bacterial additive is EPA registered and designed to protect the pen's surface from harmful bacteria. Microbes on untreated surfaces reproduce and continue reproducing, causing foul odors, discoloration, corrosion and product deterioration."

"This is cool", I think, but my real suspicion (and excitement) are confirmed by the next sentence.

"The silver ions used on the surface of FlexGrip Elite pen inhibit the growth of these product-damaging microbes and protect the pen's surface."

Sounds like another reason to buy silver, but as I constantly remind you, that's not a recommendation, just a report on what E and I actually buy.  Our physical silver holdings are very small (500 oz) but it's a start and we will add to it over time, especially if prices continue in the $7 range for a while.

 


Wednesday

Greenspan

More rate hikes coming?  Sounds like it to us:

Testimony of Chairman Alan Greenspan Federal Reserve Board's semiannual Monetary Policy Report to the Congress Before the Committee on Financial Services, U.S. House of Representatives July 20, 2005

Mr. Chairman and members of the Committee, I am pleased to be here today to present the Federal Reserve's Monetary Policy Report to the Congress.

In mid-February, when I presented our last report to the Congress, the economy, supported by strong underlying fundamentals, appeared to be on a solid growth path, and those circumstances prevailed through March. Accordingly, the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) continued the process of a measured removal of monetary accommodation, which it had begun in June 2004, by raising the federal funds rate 1/4 percentage point at both the February and the March meetings.

The upbeat picture became cloudier this spring, when data on economic activity proved to be weaker than most market participants had anticipated and inflation moved up in response to the jump in world oil prices. By the time of the May FOMC meeting, some evidence suggested that the economy might have been entering a soft patch reminiscent of the middle of last year, perhaps as a result of higher energy costs worldwide. In particular, employment gains had slowed from the strong pace of the end of 2004, consumer sentiment had weakened, and the momentum in household and business spending appeared to have dissipated somewhat.

At the May meeting, the Committee had to weigh the extent to which this weakness was likely to be temporary--perhaps simply the product of the normal ebb and flow of a business expansion--and the extent to which it reflected some influence that might prove more persistent, such as the further run-up in crude oil prices. While the incoming data highlighted some downside risks to the outlook for economic growth, the FOMC judged the balance of information as suggesting that the economy had not weakened fundamentally.

Moreover, core inflation had moved higher again through the first quarter. The rising prices of energy and other commodities continued to place upward pressures on costs, and reports of greater pricing power of firms indicated that they might be more able to pass those higher costs on to their customers. Given these considerations, the Committee continued the process of gradually removing monetary accommodation in May.

The data released over the past two months or so accord with the view that the earlier soft readings on the economy were not presaging a more serious slowdown in the pace of activity. Employment has remained on an upward trend, retail spending has posted appreciable gains, inventory levels are modest, and business investment appears to have firmed. At the same time, low long-term interest rates have continued to provide a lift to housing activity. Although both overall and core consumer price inflation have eased of late, the prices of oil and natural gas have moved up again on balance since May and are likely to place some upward pressure on consumer prices, at least over the near term. Slack in labor and product markets has continued to decline. In light of these developments, the FOMC raised the federal funds rate at its June meeting to further reduce monetary policy accommodation. That action brought the cumulative increase in the funds rate over the past year to 2-1/4 percentage points.

Should the prices of crude oil and natural gas flatten out after their recent run-up--the forecast currently embedded in futures markets--the prospects for aggregate demand appear favorable. Household spending--buoyed by past gains in wealth, ongoing increases in employment and income, and relatively low interest rates--is likely to continue to expand. Business investment in equipment and software seems to be on a solid upward trajectory in response to supportive conditions in financial markets and the ongoing need to replace or upgrade aging high-tech and other equipment. Moreover, some recovery in nonresidential construction appears in the offing, spurred partly by lower vacancy rates and rising prices for commercial properties. However, given the comparatively less buoyant growth of many foreign economies and the recent increase in the foreign exchange value of the dollar, our external sector does not yet seem poised to contribute steadily to U.S. growth.

A flattening out of the prices of crude oil and natural gas, were it to materialize, would also lessen upward pressures on inflation. Overall inflation would probably drop back noticeably from the rates experienced in 2004 and early 2005, and core inflation could hold steady or edge lower. Prices of crude materials and intermediate goods have softened of late, and the slower rise in import prices that should result from the recent strength in the foreign exchange value of the dollar could also relieve some pressure on inflation.

Thus, our baseline outlook for the U.S. economy is one of sustained economic growth and contained inflation pressures. In our view, realizing this outcome will require the Federal Reserve to continue to remove monetary accommodation. This generally favorable outlook, however, is attended by some significant uncertainties that warrant careful scrutiny.

With regard to the outlook for inflation, future price performance will be influenced importantly by the trend in unit labor costs, or its equivalent, the ratio of hourly labor compensation to output per hour. Over most of the past several years, the behavior of unit labor costs has been quite subdued. But those costs have turned up of late, and whether the favorable trends of the past few years will be maintained is unclear. Hourly labor compensation as measured from the national income and product accounts increased sharply near the end of 2004. However, that measure appears to have been boosted significantly by temporary factors. Other broad measures suggest that hourly labor compensation continues to rise at a moderate rate.

The evolution of unit labor costs will also reflect the growth of output per hour. Over the past decade, the U.S. economy has benefited from a remarkable acceleration of productivity: Strong gains in efficiency have buoyed real incomes and restrained inflation. But experience suggests that such rapid advances are unlikely to be maintained in an economy that has reached the cutting edge of technology. Over the past two years, growth in output per hour seems to have moved off the peak that it reached in 2003. However, the cause, extent, and duration of that slowdown are not yet clear. The traditional measure of the growth in output per hour, which is based on output as measured from the product side of the national accounts, has slowed sharply in recent quarters. But a conceptually equivalent measure that uses output measured from the income side has slowed far less. Given the divergence between these two readings, a reasonably accurate determination of the extent of the recent slowing in productivity growth and its parsing into cyclical and secular influences will require the accumulation of more evidence.

Energy prices represent a second major uncertainty in the economic outlook. A further rise could cut materially into private spending and thus damp the rate of economic expansion. In recent weeks, spot prices for crude oil and natural gas have been both high and volatile. Prices for far-future delivery of oil and gas have risen even more markedly than spot prices over the past year. Apparently, market participants now see little prospect of appreciable relief from elevated energy prices for years to come. Global demand for energy apparently is expected to remain strong, and market participants are evidencing increased concerns about the potential for supply disruptions in various oil-producing regions.

To be sure, the capacity to tap and utilize the world's supply of oil continues to expand. Major advances in recovery rates from existing reservoirs have enhanced proved reserves despite ever fewer discoveries of major oil fields. But, going forward, because of the geographic location of proved reserves, the great majority of the investment required to convert reserves into new crude oil productive capacity will need to be made in countries where foreign investment is currently prohibited or restricted or faces considerable political risk. Moreover, the preponderance of oil and gas revenues of the dominant national oil companies is perceived as necessary to meet the domestic needs of growing populations. These factors have the potential to constrain the ability of producers to expand capacity to keep up with the projected growth of world demand, which has been propelled to an unexpected extent by burgeoning demand in emerging Asia.

More favorably, the current and prospective expansion of U.S. capability to import liquefied natural gas will help ease longer-term natural gas stringencies and perhaps bring natural gas prices in the United States down to world levels.

The third major uncertainty in the economic outlook relates to the behavior of long-term interest rates. The yield on ten-year Treasury notes, currently near 4-1/4 percent, is about 50 basis points below its level of late spring 2004. Moreover, even after the recent widening of credit risk spreads, yields for both investment-grade and less-than-investment-grade corporate bonds have declined even more than those on Treasury notes over the same period.

This decline in long-term rates has occurred against the backdrop of generally firm U.S. economic growth, a continued boost to inflation from higher energy prices, and fiscal pressures associated with the fast approaching retirement of the baby-boom generation.1 The drop in long-term rates is especially surprising given the increase in the federal funds rate over the same period. Such a pattern is clearly without precedent in our recent experience.

The unusual behavior of long-term interest rates first became apparent last year. In May and June of 2004, with a tightening of monetary policy by the Federal Reserve widely expected, market participants built large short positions in long-term debt instruments in anticipation of the increase in bond yields that has been historically associated with an initial rise in the federal funds rate. Accordingly, yields on ten-year Treasury notes rose during the spring of last year about 1 percentage point. But by summer, pressures emerged in the marketplace that drove long-term rates back down. In March of this year, long-term rates once again began to rise, but like last year, market forces came into play to make those increases short lived.

Considerable debate remains among analysts as to the nature of those market forces. Whatever those forces are, they are surely global, because the decline in long-term interest rates in the past year is even more pronounced in major foreign financial markets than in the United States.

Two distinct but overlapping developments appear to be at work: a longer-term trend decline in bond yields and an acceleration of that trend of late. Both developments are particularly evident in the interest rate applying to the one-year period ending ten years from today that can be inferred from the U.S. Treasury yield curve. In 1994, that so-called forward rate exceeded 8 percent. By mid-2004, it had declined to about 6-1/2 percent--an easing of about 15 basis points per year on average.2 Over the past year, that drop steepened, and the forward rate fell 130 basis points to less than 5 percent.

Some, but not all, of the decade-long trend decline in that forward yield can be ascribed to expectations of lower inflation, a reduced risk premium resulting from less inflation volatility, and a smaller real term premium that seems due to a moderation of the business cycle over the past few decades.3 This decline in inflation expectations and risk premiums is a signal development. As I noted in my testimony before this Committee in February, the effective productive capacity of the global economy has substantially increased, in part because of the breakup of the Soviet Union and the integration of China and India into the global marketplace. And this increase in capacity, in turn, has doubtless contributed to expectations of lower inflation and lower inflation-risk premiums.

In addition to these factors, the trend reduction worldwide in long-term yields surely reflects an excess of intended saving over intended investment. This configuration is equivalent to an excess of the supply of funds relative to the demand for investment. What is unclear is whether the excess is due to a glut of saving or a shortfall of investment. Because intended capital investment is to some extent driven by forces independent of those governing intended saving, the gap between intended saving and investment can be quite wide and variable. It is real interest rates that bring actual capital investment worldwide and its means of financing, global saving, into equality. We can directly observe only the actual flows, not the saving and investment tendencies. Nonetheless, as best we can judge, both high levels of intended saving and low levels of intended investment have combined to lower real long-term interest rates over the past decade.

Since the mid-1990s, a significant increase in the share of world gross domestic product (GDP) produced by economies with persistently above-average saving--prominently the emerging economies of Asia--has put upward pressure on world saving. These pressures have been supplemented by shifts in income toward the oil-exporting countries, which more recently have built surpluses because of steep increases in oil prices. The changes in shares of world GDP, however, have had little effect on actual world capital investment as a percentage of GDP. The fact that investment as a percentage of GDP apparently changed little when real interest rates were falling, even adjusting for the shift in the shares of world GDP, suggests that, on average, countries' investment propensities had been declining.4

Softness in intended investment is also evident in corporate behavior. Although corporate capital investment in the major industrial countries rose in recent years, it apparently failed to match increases in corporate cash flow.5 In the United States, for example, capital expenditures were below the very substantial level of corporate cash flow in 2003, the first shortfall since the severe recession of 1975. That development was likely a result of the business caution that was apparent in the wake of the stock market decline and the corporate scandals early this decade. (Capital investment in the United States has only recently shown signs of shedding at least some of that caution.) Japanese investment exhibited prolonged restraint following the bursting of their speculative bubble in the early 1990s. And investment in emerging Asia excluding China fell appreciably after the Asian financial crisis in the late 1990s. Moreover, only a modest part of the large revenue surpluses of oil-producing nations has been reinvested in physical assets. In fact, capital investment in the Middle East in 2004, at 25 percent of the region's GDP, was the same as in 1998. National saving, however, rose from 21 percent to 32 percent of GDP. The unused saving of this region was invested in world markets.

Whether the excess of global intended saving over intended investment has been caused by weak investment or excessive saving--that is, by weak consumption--or, more likely, a combination of both does not much affect the intermediate-term outlook for world GDP or, for that matter, U.S. monetary policy. What have mattered in recent years are the sign and the size of the gap of intentions and the implications for interest rates, not whether the gap results from a saving glut or an investment shortfall. That said, saving and investment propensities do matter over the longer run. Higher levels of investment relative to consumption build up the capital stock and thus add to the productive potential of an economy.

The economic forces driving the global saving-investment balance have been unfolding over the course of the past decade, so the steepness of the recent decline in long-term dollar yields and the associated distant forward rates suggests that something more may have been at work over the past year.6 Inflation premiums in forward rates ten years ahead have apparently continued to decline, but real yields have also fallen markedly over the past year. It is possible that the factors that have tended to depress real yields over the past decade have accelerated recently, though that notion seems implausible.

According to estimates prepared by the Federal Reserve Board staff, a significant portion of the sharp decline in the ten-year forward one-year rate over the past year appears to have resulted from a fall in term premiums. Such estimates are subject to considerable uncertainty. Nevertheless, they suggest that risk takers have been encouraged by a perceived increase in economic stability to reach out to more distant time horizons. These actions have been accompanied by significant declines in measures of expected volatility in equity and credit markets inferred from prices of stock and bond options and narrow credit risk premiums. History cautions that long periods of relative stability often engender unrealistic expectations of its permanence and, at times, may lead to financial excess and economic stress.

Such perceptions, many observers believe, are contributing to the boom in home prices and creating some associated risks. And, certainly, the exceptionally low interest rates on ten-year Treasury notes, and hence on home mortgages, have been a major factor in the recent surge of homebuilding, home turnover, and particularly in the steep climb in home prices. Whether home prices on average for the nation as a whole are overvalued relative to underlying determinants is difficult to ascertain, but there do appear to be, at a minimum, signs of froth in some local markets where home prices seem to have risen to unsustainable levels. Among other indicators, the significant rise in purchases of homes for investment since 2001 seems to have charged some regional markets with speculative fervor.

The apparent froth in housing markets appears to have interacted with evolving practices in mortgage markets. The increase in the prevalence of interest-only loans and the introduction of more-exotic forms of adjustable-rate mortgages are developments of particular concern. To be sure, these financing vehicles have their appropriate uses. But some households may be employing these instruments to purchase homes that would otherwise be unaffordable, and consequently their use could be adding to pressures in the housing market. Moreover, these contracts may leave some mortgagors vulnerable to adverse events. It is important that lenders fully appreciate the risk that some households may have trouble meeting monthly payments as interest rates and the macroeconomic climate change.

The U.S. economy has weathered such episodes before without experiencing significant declines in the national average level of home prices. Nevertheless, we certainly cannot rule out declines in home prices, especially in some local markets. If declines were to occur, they likely would be accompanied by some economic stress, though the macroeconomic implications need not be substantial. Nationwide banking and widespread securitization of mortgages make financial intermediation less likely to be impaired than it was in some previous episodes of regional house-price correction. Moreover, a decline in the national housing price level would need to be substantial to trigger a significant rise in foreclosures, because the vast majority of homeowners have built up substantial equity in their homes despite large mortgage-market-financed withdrawals of home equity in recent years.

Historically, it has been rising real long-term interest rates that have restrained the pace of residential building and have suppressed existing home sales, high levels of which have been the major contributor to the home equity extraction that arguably has financed a noticeable share of personal consumption expenditures and home modernization outlays.

The trend of mortgage rates, or long-term interest rates more generally, is likely to be influenced importantly by the worldwide evolution of intended saving and intended investment. We at the Federal Reserve will be closely monitoring the path of this global development few, if any, have previously experienced. As I indicated earlier, the capital investment climate in the United States appears to be improving following significant headwinds since late 2000, as is that in Japan. Capital investment in Europe, however, remains tepid. A broad worldwide expansion of capital investment not offset by a rising worldwide propensity to save would presumably move real long-term interest rates higher. Moreover, with term premiums at historical lows, further downward pressure on long-term rates from this source is unlikely.

* * *

We collectively confront many risks beyond those that I have just mentioned. As was tragically evidenced again by the bombings in London earlier this month, terrorism and geopolitical risk have become enduring features of the global landscape. Another prominent concern is the growing evidence of anti-globalization sentiment and protectionist initiatives, which, if implemented, would significantly threaten the flexibility and resilience of many economies. This situation is especially troubling for the United States, where openness and flexibility have allowed us to absorb a succession of large shocks in recent years with only minimal economic disruption. That flexibility is, in large measure, a testament to the industry and resourcefulness of our workers and businesses. But our success in this dimension has also been aided importantly by more than two and a half decades of bipartisan effort aimed at reducing unnecessary regulation and promoting the openness of our market economy. Going forward, policymakers will need to be vigilant to preserve this flexibility, which has contributed so constructively to our economic performance in recent years.

In conclusion, Mr. Chairman, despite the challenges that I have highlighted and the many I have not, the U.S. economy has remained on a firm footing, and inflation continues to be well contained. Moreover, the prospects are favorable for a continuation of those trends. Accordingly, the Federal Open Market Committee in its June meeting reaffirmed that it

". . . believes that policy accommodation can be removed at a pace that is likely to be measured. Nonetheless, the Committee will respond to changes in economic prospects as needed to fulfill its obligation to maintain price stability."

Why Count Iraqis?

We notice this morning that someone has finally gotten around to estimating the number of civilian dead from Bush's war in Iraq.  The number?  About 25,000. Other reports had put the number closer to 100,000 dead, but the war promoters disputed that.  So now, a "non government" group has this one to promote. Not that it matters as the administration clearly has no exit plan and every time Don Rumsfeld fields the question of an American departure he goes into a kind of mumblespeak that numbs the mind, which we assume is intentional. 

 

Supreme Court

The president's appointee to the Supreme Court was unveiled last night - John G. Roberts from the DC federal court.  Reaction?  It's confusing to a lot of the professional spectators. Obviously, this is not what women's groups wanted, but on the other hand, if this candidate can say he would have voted against eminent domain, maybe he is our guy... time will tell as the hearings ramp up.

 

Westmoreland Dead

At age 91.  Regardless of your opinions about his involvement in the Vietnam conflict, he was an unswerving patriot who served his country with distinction and deserves our profound thanks.

 

Another Big Layof

We're only a few days ahead of the government's release of the latest mass layoff report, but at the rate the past couple of days, things are turning around and heading down for working people again.  Yesterday we mentioned a layoff of 14,500 to you.  This morning, we're sad to report that Kodak will be laying off and additional 10,000

 

This continues to be the effect of "productivity" in the workplace I guess.  And in economic terms, it goes something like this: If sales are flat and the number of total product units consumed is flat and productivity goes up then the number of persons employed must go down.  However, it's not a pretty thing when it happens and the national media, with a few exceptions hasn't got the brains God gave chickens to ask questions like "So, what is the optimum increase in productivity that will slow the rate of layoffs?"  It's just too much common sense to be asked at a news conference of talking heads.

 

The Not Well Hidden Agenda

We continue to be amazed, that with the exceptions like Lou Dobbs, Phyllis Schlafly and John Crudele, that majority of journalists at the national level are selling out their country (or their editors are behind their backs) by ignoring stories like the government/big business pressure groups such as the Council on Foreign Relations which is pushing ahead with its agenda to tear down the borders that once surrounded America.  In particular, the report "Building a North American Community" smacks of  corporatist wet dreams for a set of "open borders" that will allow unrestricted imperialism of poverty into America's Heartland. 

 

When I read "open borders" I read unfair job competition, downward wage pressure on American tradespersons, corporatists playing the wage differentials for their phony version of "profits" which will include lots of drugs, illegal immigration, and discourage the single language melting pot that has made America great and capable of assimilating other cultures in the past.  Yeah, this is crap, in our book.  But when people with money take on the Constitution, it's not a fair match up anymore, it is?  Just look at what corporate interests just did to us on eminent domain, if you please.

 

In Washington, there is talk about a "guest worker" bill, but the ones we are reading about now, such as the Kyl bill, read like another dream and sound tough to implement and enforce.

 

China's Money

Although China's national oil company had made a big noise about trying to buy Unocal for $18.5 billion, the Unocal Board is going with a lesser $17 billion bid from Condi Rice's cohorts over at Chevron Texaco.  We don't expect this will be the last of the discussion, though.  We look for China to come back with more money, after all, we're the source of it, us US consumers.  China effectively has all the money in the world to spend if they wish to and we're printing it up for them.

 

While this is going on, China is also firming up her military with a report today of how military hardware is being added at a faster than ever clip.  Again, this is no surprise and shouldn't worry American policy makers.  After all, if Bill Clinton OK'd their purchases of super computers, and we just keep getting more dependent on Chinese goods, this must be a good thing, right? 

 

The key learning point of US trade relations with China is that a country can take on the US and get just about anything they want if they just put enough dollar signs in front of corporatist leaders. The corporation folks - as evident in the CFR report linked above - clearly don't care about equal wages or equal rights or equal anything.  The only reason that "fair trade" works as a mantra is that fair trade isn't "fair." 

 

The machinist in Singapore does not make what the machinist in Wisconsin makes.  Yet ignoring the purchasing power parity  reality of the world is precisely what has given Globalism/corporatism such a strong policy hold.  It's the Big Lie, repeated often enough that it is accepted blindly except for a few thinking people and some anarchists at WTO meetings, who are right on policy but wrong on action.

 

Earth Changes

We have been watching the current round of Southland heat from our 90 degree offices in North Hollywood because the company I work for is saving $900 by not fixing the A/C in a building which were supposed to be moved out of by now.  So when we read stories about heat related health problems in nearby Arizona and up in the California agriculture areas (Bakersfield, etc) we identify with the problem.
 

We are also back into one of the "summer shakes" earthquake windows today (really opens up tomorrow) so if you are in a place with exposure to quake risks, top off the gas tank, the water, and figure out your operating plan ahead of time - just in case.  The most interesting quakes in the past day have included a 3.2 in the Mount St. Helens area - just a bit too much to be a normal rumble.

 

More important, as we watch the Pacific Tectonic Plate uncoupling from the earth's surface, is the depth of some of the recent quakes - more than 500 km deep - which one could argue are the "strings or columns that hold plates in place" breaking loose.  That's quite worrisome to us especially when coupled with the relatively high energy levels hitting the earth from space.

 


Tuesday

Ethanol: Energy Sink

The most important story of today is not one that involves earth change, the wars of oil, the tensions with China/Korea, or the latest storm damage.  These are things we can get over.  Instead, I would draw your attention to the AP Piece which appears to throw cold water on the notion that all we need is to make more ethanol and our gas problems are over.  Not by a long shot.  The problem, which is spelled out in the article, is that even with ethanol, it takes more energy to grow the corn, transport the grain, manufacture (distill) the ethanol, get it to a refinery, mix it with oil-base product and redistribute it, than the actual system-wide net energy gain.  In other words, says this report, ethanol is an energy sink.  Our reason for pointing this out to ou is that whenever you see a new "magic bullet" arrive on the scene (such as a plant for processing turkey offal, for example) carefully put on your engineer's hat and run through all of the relationship.  How much electricity does the plant use?  What is the cost of heating/cooking the basic product to drive it into something which can be separated into long-chain molecules and all the rest.  Thus our emphasis on you reading at "getting" the concept of energy sinks.

 

This study is bound to be unpopular with a group with call "corpmentalists" - corporations which have wrapped themselves in the swaddling clothes of the energy conscious environmentalists, but at the core for money, not to really aid the planet.  I know it's wet blanketish of me to hold such a view, but if you really want to save energy, simply legislate the end of high energy component incandescent lights (replace them with LED and fluorescent everywhere) and make R-20 sidewall and R=32 ceilings mandatory globally.  But hey, what fun would it be putting all those people to work in the construction industry? The report is no surprise to us, but now you can be on the same page with energy sink thinking.

 

South Texas Next

As hurricane Emily left her path of destruction through the Cancun area, she's now lining up on South Texas where she is expected to make here next landfall.  That area plus the northeast Mexico coast are expected to see some damage, and as a preventative, oil and gas drilling in the sector has been shut down. If you're a "sun-earth" weather connection fan, as Jim McCanney has proposed, then this morning's Presto Alert about the sun may be of interest: "The influence of a recurrent coronal hole is expected for tomorrow, July 20, onwards. Last time this coronal hole passed the solar disk (June 23 onwards), active to minor magnetic storm conditions were triggered for 24 hours by a stream of solar high wind speeds that reached up to 650 km/s on June 25." The implication of the warning if the "link" is valid is that the hurricane could strengthen according to the solar storm/wind influences.

 

HP to Axe 14.5K

Here's another sign of job automation and jobjacking for you - HP is planning to layoff 14,5000 people in the near future. IT, HR, and some business units should be watching for "pink slip grenades" about to go off. The Bureau of Labor Statistics should have the June Mass Layoff Report out in a few days, which we are itching to see as we expect the gently downward trend of the past six months or so is about to be reversed.

 

Roving Reporters

...are still wondering how long Karl Rove will be able to hang onto his job now that another report is out saying that Rove was the one who named Valerie Plame as a CIA asset.  Time will tell if the grand jury will return an indictment against Rove, or whether "Rove" will become a brand of cookware - slicker than Teflon, don'tcha know?

 

Ham Radio Special Interest Note

If you are into ham radio, you may be interested in the latest question I have asked a good friend of mine to work on.  Essentially, I keep looking at scalar wave theory (after Bearden, et al) and wonder if there may be something to the concept of  antennas that operation is more than one line or plane.  Here's how I summed it up in an email to my friend and colleague:

"Now let me engage the electrical engineer in you. have you done any work on scalar antennas? A bunch of references have popped up in Col. Tom Bearden's work at places like http://angelslove.net/scalar_antennas.htm

The general idea is that there is more to Maxwell than meets the eye and the concept is that when properly built, such antennas radiate in a manner that “sneaks around” the limitations of the inverse square law.

In other words, when the e & m fields are at the proper phase relationship, (orthogonal to one another) strange things begin to happen of a scalar nature. The reason most “normal science” hasn’t gone down this path is that the usual source of Maxwellian equations is based on the “Heavyside interpretation” http://66.102.7.104/search?q=cache:n1nbFkUiA3QJ:www.tcd.ie/Physics/Magnetism/Guide/electrorev.php+heavyside+%2Bmaxwell&hl=en  "  There are other completions of Maxwell available, but Heavyside is a simplification of the theory that yields useful results.

Now throw this into the mix: Crossed Field antenna work: http://www.antennex.com/preview/cfa/cfa.htm  which supposedly make it possible to develop physically smaller antennas that can achieve similar results to normal Hertzian fractional wavelength wires.

Now comes the question for you – because I know you will have this off the top of your head:

Is there any antenna modeling software out there which will model performance of a class of antennas which I’ve penciled in as “complex geometry loop antennas”?

As shown in the quick sketch below, we all know that a ¼ wave  four sided loop will radiate perpendicular to the main axis of the loop (at 1λ & >). But what happens when the geometry of the antenna is tweaked such that it becomes a series of triangles (after Fuller, who was all hung up on such)?

Moreover, what are the effects as additional 90 degree twists are added and the phase relationships change? E.G.

3 legs at one wavelength should give basic look performance (single plane)

4 can give conventional pattern or whatever this half twist model would yield (bisecting planes)

5 sections of ¼ el each gives what?

6 gives?

7 gives?

How does the directivity/gain change as twists are added along with ¼ wl nodes?

Just something that’s been bothering me because I seem to recall that some antennas with 90 degree angles give gain (e.g. Sterba curtain) so is there some limit to the gain implied by 90 degree bends?

Let mw know if anything occurs to you on this.

------

(I'm pleased to report my friend has taken the bait today!)

 

"With regard to your antenna project, I'm always a little skeptical of devices that claim to violate the laws of physics. Having said that, it's been so long since I did any rigorous analysis of antennas that I'd be hard pressed to come up with a rational argument as to why your antenna should or shouldn't work. One thing I can do is bundle up and send all the directories for my copy of Brian Beezley's AO application. It's basically a PC implementation of NEC which I used for my master's thesis at the Naval Postgraduate School. AO does an excellent job provided that the antenna isn't real close to the ground. As I recall, it makes some simplifying assumptions about ground characteristics that kind of fall apart when the antenna is in close proximity to earth (e.g. dipole at a 1' elevation)."

The open question is how it handles the implementation of Maxwell in complex model space and whether it follows Heavyside or goes the whole distance. If we come up with anything, we'll pass it along to our fellow ham radio types... my colleague is pretty well known in the software/ham radio arena. Just as one can imply "gain" in a synthetic aperture antenna )at least in terms of higher resolution compared with a stationary antenna) from the addition of a third dimension (developed by moving the antenna), might there be something there when an additional dimension is physically added?  I know Sterba Curtains and Windoms work intuitively "better than they should".  -AC7X

 


Monday

Emily Hits Messico

Yucky in the Yucatan is about it. On the other side of the world, the headline is "Typhoon terrorizes Taiwan."  We won't bother pointing out that last week at the G-8, the London bombings keep public attention distracted from the fact that the US is the only industrialized country with its head still in the sand on the global climate collapse.  Chip manufacturing should be watched along with Mexico oil production.  Rome, fiddle, burn, sound familiar?

 

On the other hand, we suspect that Karl Rove might be burning the midnight oil trying to come up with a(nother) headline stealing Reichstag-type event to keep himself in power as the grand jury probe and the reporter comments close in around him.  The majority of readers I have heard from so far indicate that any more terrorist events with "coincidences" and they'll know it is all manipulative.  Not sure how it will manifest, but there's a smoldering resentment out there and the web bot outlook for a growing sense of "militancy" would lead us to expect state militias to start making headlines again in coming weeks..  We see the tip of the trend in Appalachia where everyday folks are banding together to do what their elected government is incapable of doing, specifically enforcing all the laws that are already on the books!

 

Venezuela Under Fire

For those who are skeptical of the US backing of religious leaders to try and overthrow governments, we offer the latest from Venezuela where the Church has somehow become wrapped up in the US oil agenda - which includes bouncing president Chavez.

 

British Housing Peaked?

Maybe - maybe not.  Just read the figures - a 1% drop in their latest reporting period.  House price deflation is cancerous, albeit long overdue.

 

Hawaii Vote

We notice that Hawaiian Home Rule may be coming up for a vote shortly.  In case you haven't been following this, the first peoples want their rights back which the U.S. absconded with.  On the other hand, a lot of mainland native gambling money is in the ;pbby mix too, meaning if native rights come to the islands, we expect casinos won't be far behind.  Within months, we expect. But then again, casinos have probably done as well as Wall Street since 2000...and arguably the odds are more clearly stated.

 

Up, Down, or Sideways?

As I mentioned in the piece over the weekend, I have been doing a lot of thinking about "fours" since the anomalous arrival of "fours" en masse on our Friday walk. Whether it means anything, I don't know, but with the "summer shakes" series in the web bot runs, and the seismic window for So. Cal now open, if we work up on Tuesday to a 8.1 shaker in L.A. (or any other place in CONUS) I would sure not be surprised.  A check of the quakes at http://neic.usgs.gov/neis/bulletin/ while more active isn't terribly worrisome, but the sun popped off with an ejection over the weekend which if it had been earth-directed could have caused major issues. One alert reader catching it with "WEB BOT direct hit SOHO confirms extreme SUN far side expulsion. What would have happened if this hit was earth directed? 10 GRB in last week portends big EQ imminent."  Sort of our worry, too. And even without the bots stopping to sniff, the discussion boards are filling up with "Hawaii quakes as an Omen" content. 

 

We're happy to admit that 9 times out of 10, such worries are pointless. On that 10th time though, a section of the I-880 freeway pancakes on you and you stop paying further taxes. Given the choice, I want to be around to pay taxes. So we keep a weather-eye on such things.  Just like checking the weather before going sailing, flying or why fire departments do building inspections and pre-fire exercises.

 

In my own head, since my Friday bout of "fours" I've been thinking, " Maybe it's a count down...Saturday could three, Sunday two, Monday one, and  tomorrow zero. Tuesday - well, Tuesday could be whatever."  Not that we are excessively paranoid but we are back to both packing ham radios with the local emergency powered repeaters in memory and a full tank of gas, extra water, and so on.  Why, the preparation alone should keep anything dangerous at bay. 

 

Still, I received an email about the string of coincidences about notable Hawaiian earthquakes and

 

This Week: Inflection Point

An inflection point is a sort of "line in the sand" place for the market.  As we noted in our charts for subscribers this weekend, the Global index and US indices have a ways to go before a breakout would be confirmed, but they are getting north of traditional Fibonacci bounce limits which brings the question of more upside action to play.  Our contributing fractalist, G. Lammert, offers this:

George, prototypical of top fractal portions in saturated markets on the daily, weekly, monthly, or yearly unit level is the 'exhaustion gap', which serves as a high probability marker for a turning point. This near apex gap can be seen in individual stocks, local housing price linear valuation curves and in major summation equity indices.

Money wise the greatest of all world summation indices is the Wilshire 5000 (TMWX).

On July 11, 2005 an exhaustion gap on a minutely basis occurred in the Wilshire taking it to a four and one-half year high. With respect to its predominant, thus far 'perfect', x/2.5x/2x terminal daily growth fractal pattern beginning in August 2004, July 11 fell on day 50 or 51 of a 51-52/129-130/50 or 51 of 102 day pattern - for ideal fractal growth completion.

The Wilshire's daily fractal growth pattern is growing in the shadow of a completed or nearly completed weekly fractal pattern of 22/54/49 of 44-54. In the grand US saturation macroeconomic picture, these daily and weekly fractal patterns are nested in a 70/147 year pattern whose second 147 year growth fractal is decrepit and creaking with old age, excessive bad debt, and consumer asset saturation. Poignantly and pointing the way the equity market valuation of the world's new manufacturing powerhouse, China, is near a 6 year low - in spite of its remarkable GDP growth.

July 2005 witnesses extreme optimism in the United States consumer and equity trader. Recent governmental inflation figures which exclude long term housing cost are nicely contained. Tax revenues based on a predominant service and growing manufacturing-less non capital investment debt-driven economy are projected to grow. Car shoppers are congratulating themselves on their recent deals of a lifetime in forward consumption of their new fire sale GM cars. They are spending the money they saved on the vehicles at Wal-Mart boosting its retail sales. In July 2005 as saturation macroeconomics approaches its endpoint asymptote, Optimism rules America.

Coincidentally in July 2005 the current treasury market fractal pattern represented by IRX curiously matches the identical monthly treasury yield growth pattern that started in October 1998. In 1998 the monthly pattern to the top was 7/14/7 which is a replica of the current 7/14/7 monthly growth pattern starting in June 2003. In 1998 IRX yields increased from a low of 35 to a high of 60 for an absolute increase of 25 or a 2.5 percent yield increase. The identical monthly pattern starting in June 2003 has taken IRX from a low of 8 to nearly 32 on 15 July 2005 for a gain of ... 25. While IRX is Fed driven rather than market driven it is interesting that a 2.5 absolute percent increase in treasury yield was associated with the beginning of the dotcom implosion in 2000/2001. Maybe the Fed will be able to raise the yield a few more months, before the housing market becomes saturated and depletes the pool of possible first time buyers and second house buyers. Maybe the saturation and depletion timing will match the completion of the ideal 102 day terminal Wilshire equity growth fractal. But then again - maybe not. Under the longer fractal umbrella, expect the unexpected. G. Lammert http://www.economicfractalist.com/

In addition to G. Lammert's remarks, I want to publicly bring to your attention one of the gems of savvy investment thinking at my friend Trader Jim Goulding posted for our free discussion group last week (links are up on the left menu).  Check this out from a hip Chicago-style trader:

The hardest thing I've had to do in the last year is to learn to get out of the way of my own opinion when it comes to short-term predictions on the market.

Everything over the last 4 years, as far as econ-data, has pointed to a DOW average of 3k, yet, here we are.

I've worked on trying to pay attention to what the 'Street' is saying/thinking. That appears to have helped a great deal. The street is not the people who are getting screwed, day in and day out, as far as the economy goes.

The street is not Joe Average. Joe Average is getting screwed, hence, much of the talk on the net from Joe Average is doom and gloom. Understandable. I'm Joe Average and I'm getting screwed. But that part of me must get out of the way and think as the elite think. Then, and only then, can I predict.

Also, if you look at the data over the last 20/30/40 years, to try and predict the future stock prices or the economy, then you are looking at the wrong data. This isn't the 1940s, 50s, 60s etc..this is a new era yet we have been through this cycle before. We are repeating the 20s at the moment.

That's exactly were I got my data to predict CBOT seat prices. http://www.jamesgoulding.com/CBOT_Seat_Analysis_1.html 

That's exactly were I got my data to predict DOW 35k. The seat prices came to fruition, next, the DOW.

Currently we are out of balance concerning the investment world. Everyone is piled into the market I trade, Fixed Income. They're not in the Stock Market. Everything seems to be pointing to 11k by the end of July, but, who knows? Maybe it'll happen in August. One indicator I've built shows that we will be quite volatile from July 19th-24th. Maybe we break out of the range then?

Once we get over 11k, the imbalance will become evident and traders will be forced to get out of the bond market and into the better performer, stocks.

Everything points to DOW 3k and the economy going into a nose dive. But, not yet. In fact, we shouldn't ever see 3k again. It looks like 35k in 2009, then a dive to 17k within 6-18 months. From 2010-2014 we should work our way back under 10k for the last time, bottoming in the low 9ks. From 2014-2023 we begin a slow recovery and head back up to the 20s.

An important side note on Oil. The question that keeps popping up is "why isn't the current price of oil tanking the economy?" The answer is, that we need to get to $74 bbl or $3.03 a gallon in gas. That will equal our dollar adjusted 1981 prices.

Gotta run. Take care, jim goulding

Me?  I expect the big decline will settle in easy like now and will crescendo in mid November.  But would I play the short?  Nope - for the reasons I pointed out to subscribers this week - the market has a lot of "initial stability" right now and finding where ultimate stability is overwhelms can be a more spendy than you want to try kind of exercise.  And for reasons Jim has expressed - not to mention the fact that the market is too big to fail.  It gives birth to the concept of a "prosperous depression" if you mix equal portions of Weimar Germany inflation with 1929 deflation in the US...which seems like about the track we continue bouncing down.  At the end of it, half of the jobs are gone, life is run by the government, and oh yeah, the rich got richer while the middle income earners disappeared. Oh yeah, and a nuclear terrorist event would change everything.

Operation Follow-up

I'd like to share one of the better "get well cards" that came in during my health crisis induced lazy spell last week.  This from our correspondent the "Wandering Texan" who we suspise runs security for a couple of domestic oil E&P outfits, but we'd never directly ask what he does in places like Afghanistan and Iraq:

George:

News gets to us a little slow these days. Sorry to hear about your recent bout with that old demon appendix. Its unfortunate that you didn't stay in Texas longer. That would have caused you to cowboy-up more, and you would have taken care of that old appendix yourself. Hell George, when my appendix went south some years back. I just went out to the work shop in the barn. Propped a full length mirror against the bench, leaned back against a tractor tire and with two spoons, an ace bandage, and my electric fish scaling knife I popped that sucker right out. Used an old piece of rubber gas line for a drain, and closed with some fishin line. The whole thing cost me $2.86. Now I realize that was in 1992 dollars. But if you had done the same--------$11.85 TOPS.

WANDERING TEXAN PARIS FRANCE

That'd be better than what I am braced for - even when I kick the bill back to be billed at rates the Blue Cross rate rather than rack rate, and ask th4e company to kick in,  it's bound to be a couple of round-the-world tickets worth..  Stitches out this afternoon.  And yes, while my typing is still decent, the old body doesn't recover as fast even given CoQ-10's and small portions of great food.  Damn!  I didn't want to grow up, let alone age!

 


Over the weekend:

Off Economics

Usually on the weekends I spend a few hours writing Peoplenomics and maybe post a few items on the free side of the web site if there are particularly interesting or potentially important developments.  But this weekend, a couple of observations from the adventure of the burst appendix which you might find interesting:

 

Fatal Halitosis

In polite and politically correct society, people don't usually talk about bad breath.  I mention this because for about two years before the removal of my burst appendix at this time last week, my wife Elaine has persistently commented on my bad breath.  Not that I didn't take it seriously, mind you.  I brushed morning and night, used the tooth picks, the floss, and tried everything from peroxide rinses to the breath saver pills.  Nothing seemed to help.

 

Get this:  As soon as the rotten (literally) appendix came out last weekend, the bad breath disappeared.  It didn't just wander off - E figures it was just like a light switch - gone, poof!  Immediately I noticed changes in everything related to taste, too:  I suddenly found everything much saltier than before, one egg and toast was a fine breakfast where before a three egg omelet and extra toast was the appetite, and most curious of all, any desire for a martini before dinner just upped and disappeared.

 

There had been some other "symptoms" of this going on for two (or more) years.  I had experienced occasional slight pains on the upper right side of my stomach and an increase in use of antacid pills. The right side pain I had chalked off to endless hours before the mouse.  The week before the appendix burst I think I must have consumed half a bottle of Mylantin.

 

I'm sharing all these quite personal details with you for a very simple reason:  In today's busy world it's easy to ignore the simple signs of an approaching medical problem.  Something as simple as your wife mentioning a case of bad breath can really be the precursor to something much more sinister.  Do with it what you will. 

 

Yes, I know dogs can smell cancer, too.  I'm impressed to learning that my wife can apparently "smell diseased appendix!" Hell of an interesting discovery.

 

Synchronicity of Fours

I was finally feeling better enough Friday afternoon to go for a good walk.  The doctor had advised me to avoid being a couch potato and get out and move around.  So E and I decided to walk to the pharmacy where I had prescriptions to pick up.  As long as we were on the walk (4-blocks worth each way) I figured it would be good to pick up a few items at other stores along the route.

 

I walked in to a plumbing store to get a hose washer because our removable shower head was leaking.  "How much for a hose washer?" I asked the clerk.  "It's 4-cents, but tell you what.  It's not even worth ringing up the sale 'cause they're only 4¢.  Just go ahead and take it - on us."  I was impressed - so much so that I gave the fellow a dollar with the advice "at least let me give you a downpayment on your next beer."

 

The next store we went into was a music store.  We had seen John Mayer on public television earlier in the week and decided to indulge in a couple of CD's (Well worth it!).  When I went to the counter and paid, my change was: 4¢   "Huh, kind of curious," I remember thinking.

 

Then we went to the pharmacy, picked up the prescription, some additional Band-Aids and some other miscellaneous household consumables.  Again, my change was guess what?  4¢!

 

Not being a complete dolt, I began to try and sort out what to do.  I went to the grocery store and bought four, $4 lottery tickets (just in case) and when we left there, my change included another 4¢ although this time were was a quarter and a dime with it.

 

I don't know what the odds of this are, but it was one of those Jungian "golden scarab" moments of synchronicity come calling.  If the three's or five's show up en masse, I drop you a note.

 

Now, back to our regularly scheduled weekend....

 


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George Ure, The People's Economist

 

 

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