Macroeconomia Crisi finanziaria e sviluppi

il pil decolla, le entrate calano :eek::lol:

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Suppressing the Cognitive Dissonance of a Bogus Recovery


by Charles Hugh Smith
Despite a 24/7 campaign of carefully managed "good news," 76% of Americans do not believe the U.S. "recovery." Hmm, I wonder why?A massive outbreak of economic cognitive dissonance is being suppressed with wave after wave of manufactured "good news." Every visibly negative bit of data is run through a media and Central State assembly line to refashion it as "good news" and "evidence" that the "nascent recovery is taking hold." Whatever cannot be rejiggered is simply buried or suppressed.
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The fact that five corporations control the the vast majority of the U.S. mainstream media certainly aids that manufacturing process.
Let's run through a few of the most blatant examples of suppressed dissonance:
1. If the economy is recovering so strongly ( +3% GDP growth in the first quarter!) then why are tax revenues down? Federal budget deficit hits April record: The April deficit soared to $82.7 billion. Total revenues for April were down 7.9 percent from a year ago. In the seven months of this year, corporate tax receipts are up 8.9% to $77.1 billion. The same cannot be said of individual income tax revenue, which is down 11.6% in the first seven months to $500.8 billion.
Through the first seven months of the current budget year, which began on Oct. 1, the deficit totals nearly $800 billion. That is down only slightly from last year's deficit during the same period of $802 billion. Revenues total $1.2 trillion in those seven months, down 4.5 percent from the same period last year.
How can tax revenues be falling when the economy is "growing strongly"? As for those corporate profits: corporate profits register biggest year-over-year gain in 25 years.
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As this chart from the Federal Reserve shows, non-financial corporate profits were almost 14% of GDP before the global meltdown. In a $13 trillion economy, that's $1.8 trillion.
But much of the "good news" in Corporate America is not quite as rosy as presented.
2. Rising corporate profits mask falling sales. Consider Walmart's last report, which caused the financial media to quiver in ecstasy because the retailer logged a 10% increase in profits. But behind the hype, (profits rose $0.3 billion on $99 billion in sales, whoopie), Walmart same-store sales drop; gross margins decline.
You have to read to the very last line to get to the sobering reality: same-store sales dropped in the U.S. and gross margins declined. Both are bad news, yet you'd never know it from the lead paragraphs and talking heads.
3. Corporate profits are boosted with special charges and other accounting trickery. It takes a forensic accounting analysis of corporate filings to discern what's real and what's been juiced to boost quarterly "earnings."
Meanwhile, corporations are loading up on debt again: Junk bonds-- essentially risky bets on future corporate earnings--made up the biggest share of corporate debt sales on record last year. That hardly suggests prudence on the part of the companies loading up on tens of billions of dollars of high-interest debt. Load the company with debt, goose profits, cash out the big bonuses and then let the balance sheet implode.
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4. Much of global corporate America's earnings resulted from the weak dollar. Now that boost to the bottom line has largely vanished in the collapse of the euro.
Many of America's premiere global companies earn most of their revenue overseas. Equipment maker Eaton, for instance, gets 55% of its sales from outside the U.S. Global companies such as Coca-Cola not only reap most of their sales overseas-- they also depend on international growth to boost their profits.
As the U.S. dollar has risen 25% against the euro, the U.S. multinationals' plump profits (in dollars) will take a huge hit. Indeed, American multinationals such as Caterpiller have already seen their stocks pummeled as traders realize the dollar's rise will slice their profits.
Here's how the weak dollar boosted U.S. corporate profits. In mid-2008, when a U.S. company booked 100 euros in profit made overseas, that translated into $160 in profits when calculated in U.S. dollars. Now that same 100 euros in profit translates into $122—a huge reduction.
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If that wasn't bad enough, our major trading partners are heading into epic slowdowns. As the wheels fall off the credit/housing bubble in China--the global engine for commodities and manufacturing--and the credit storm takes down Europe--the world's largest trading bloc--U.S. corporate sales and profits will suffer.
5. Income inequality has risen to 1929 levels. If times are indeed good, they're only good for the top 5% of households. The bottom 80% have seen their net worth and incomes decline. So much for "trickle-down" prosperity.
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6. U.S. households remain mired in debt. U.S. households took on too much debt and the consequences are still unfolding: 14% of mortgages delinquent or in foreclosure. This is only the above-water part of the iceberg; banks are holding tens of thousands of loans out of foreclosure lest their insolvency become too obvious. Tens of thousands of homes are being hidden in the "shadow inventory" of homes which are in default but which are not listed for sale.
Resetting the mortgage payments down a few dollars will do nothing to change the massive over-indebtedness: Home-Loan Aid Proves Little Help For Those With Other Big Bills to Pay.
7. Another wave of mortgage resets has yet to hit--housing's bogus "recovery" will dissolve like a sand castle in a tsunami.
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8. The U.S. banking system is still rotten to the core. The list of ills in the U.S. banking industry is long indeed, but perhaps one fact reveals how little has been changed in the past few years of turmoil: U.S. commercial banks (not investment banks) generated a record $22.6 billion in derivatives trading revenues in 2009--the same year that the Federal Reserve spent trillions of dollars to prop up the U.S. mortgage market and the banking sector.
While massive Federal intervention staved off systemic insolvency last year, many U.S. banks remain effectively insolvent.
9. The U.S. trade imbalance is growing again. Though imports fell in the recession, imports rose 18% from the second quarter of 2009 to the fourth quarter.
Ultimately, the trade deficit adds to the nation's indebtedness. Though the trade deficit has dropped from the 2006 peak at $800 billion, it is still on track to reach $500 billion in 2010.
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10. Economic "intelligence" is essentially propaganda.Despite the daily flood of financial and economic data, pundits, government agencies and forecasters were caught off-guard by the subprime mortgage crisis, the resulting banking crisis and now once again by the European banking storm and sovereign debt crisis.
Many official economic-intelligence reports are of questionable forecasting value. As I reported previously, Federal budget projections are consistently overly rosy and the nation's GDP was recently "adjusted" down 37% in one fell swoop.
This is a recurring pattern: "good news numbers" are released with much "nascent recovery" fanfare, and then quietly revised down to statistical noise a few weeks later.
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Earlier this year, the Labor Department revised the nation's employment for December 2009 down by a staggering 1.39 million, bringing the total number of jobs lost since the start of the recession to 8.4 million. The culprit was the department's "birth-death model," which creates phantom jobs every month based on the idea that thousands of small businesses are being "born" and hiring workers, despite little to no evidence for this hiring in the real world.
With "economic intelligence" like this, no wonder 76 percent of Americans believe that the US economy remains in recession.
That must be sobering for the Central State propaganda complex and the mainstream corporate media: all their efforts to persuade the average American that they are doing better financially have failed to suppress the evidence for economic decay which is so abundant in the real world.
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NEW YORK - La riforma di Wall Street compie un passo decisivo: il Senato americano ha dato il via libera al progetto che ora dovrà essere riconciliato con quello varato dalla Camera in dicembre, prima di approdare sul tavolo del presidente Barack Obama per la firma e l'entrata in vigore. Le norme approvate rappresentano la più ampia revisione delle regole della finanza dalla Grande Depressione e puntano a evitare il ripetersi di crisi come quella del 2008.
La riforma é stata approvata con 59 voti a favore, di cui quattro repubblicani, e 39 voti contrari, di cui due democratici, convinti che le norme non fossero ancora sufficientemente stringenti. Il processo di conciliazione della versione uscita dalla Camera e di quella del Senato richiederà probabilmente alcune settimane e sarà ultimato dopo il Memorial Day, che cade il 31 maggio. Tra le differenze maggiori da superare fra i due testi figura il fondo da 150 miliardi di dollari, finanziato attraverso commissioni che verseranno le banche, e che servirà per far fronte ai costi di liquidazione delle società in fallimento.
"Siamo più vicini che mai a una riforma della finanza significativa - afferma il segretario al Tesoro Timothy Geithner - di cui beneficerà ogni famiglia e impresa; migliorerà la competitività dei nostri mercati finanziari e rafforzerà la sicurezza e la solidità del nostro sistema finanziario".
Prima del voto definitivo in Senato, Obama aveva già dichiarato vittoria sull'industria finanziaria per l'esito del voto procedurale, che ha sancito la fine del dibattito e spianato la strada al voto finale. "Durante lo scorso anno l'industria finanziaria ha tentato ripetutamente di uccidere la riforma con le lobby e milioni di dollari in pubblicità. Ritengo che oggi sia giusto dire che questi sforzi sono falliti", ha detto . "La riforma proteggerà i consumatori, la nostra economia e renderà Wall Street responsabile": "Il nostro obiettivo non è quello di punire le banche ma quello di proteggere l'economia e gli americani dal tipo di turbolenze che abbiamo osservato negli ultimi anni", ha aggiunto, sottolineando che la riforma farà sì che ai contribuenti "non verrà più chiesto di intervenire per gli errori di Wall Street. Il tempo dei salvataggi con fondi pubblici è finito". E inoltre - ha constatato Obama - dal momento dell'entrata in vigore delle nuove norme in poi "gli azionisti potranno dire la loro sui compensi degli amministratori delegati e di altri manager". Ma la riforma non segna "la sconfitta di Wall Street e la vittoria di Main Street. Come abbiamo imparato siamo tutti connessi: quando l'economia prospera tutti vinciamo. Quando il sistema finanziario opera sotto regole solide che assicurano la stabilita', tutti vinciamo".
La proposta approvata dal Senato crea un'autorità per la tutela dei consumatori all'interno della Fed e cerca di assicurare che qualsiasi società, a dispetto della dimensione e della complessità, possa venire liquidata. Per coordinare gli sforzi nell'individuare rischi per il sistema finanziario viene creato un comitato di supervisione per la stabilità finanziaria. La riforma tocca virtualmente ogni aspetto dell'industria finanziaria: agli hedge fund e alle società di private equity verrà richiesto di registrarsi presso la Sec. Inoltre con limitate eccezioni, i derivati verranno scambiati su piattaforme pubbliche: a chi compra e vende contratti derivati, anche esistenti, sarà richiesto di disporre di collaterali come protezione per eventuali default. Ad alcune delle maggiori banche verrà inoltre richiesto di separare i loro desk di swap, facendoli confluire in società controllate, altrimenti non potranno avere accesso ai prestiti di emergenza della Fed.


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Tremonti a Schauble, avanti insieme

Ministro italiano a Bruxelles, cita un poeta tedesco


(ANSA) - BRUXELLES, 21 MAG - Per rafforzare la governance economica e uscire dalla crisi bisogna procedere insieme: cosi' Tremonti al collega tedesco, Schauble. Tremonti si e' rivolto al ministro al termine della prima riunione della task force Ue per il patto di stabilita'. 'La riunione e' andata bene - ha detto Tremonti - una buona discussione e buone idee. Al termine ho parlato con Schauble e gli ho citato un poeta tedesco: 'il primo passo e' libero ma il secondo e' obbligatorio' e dobbiamo farlo insieme'.
 
1,5 milioni di lavoratori temporanei per il censimento


"Two Scoop Special": Double-Dip Recession Guaranteed



by Charles Hugh Smith
Whether you believe the U.S. economy ever exited recession or not, a further decline is already baked in by numerous macro factors.A "double-dip recession" makes no sense to the 76 percent of Americans who believe that the US economy remains in recession. And indeed, I argued inSuppressing the Cognitive Dissonance of a Bogus Recovery that the "growth" touted by the mainstream media and the Cnetral State propaganda machine is a mirage.
To the 24% of the populace who believes the U.S. exited recession in fine fettle, I offer a "Two Scoop Special": a Double-Dip recession is guaranteed for the following reasons:
1. The Eurozone is heading into deep recession, taking U.S. corporate profits with it. Three things are certain in the Eurozone: Austerity, higher taxes and more of each nation's budget will be carved off to pay interest on their ballooning debt. All three mean less money in consumers' pockets, and in local government pockets.
Please see Why the Eurozone Is Doomed for more on the Eurozone's structural problems.
2. China's unprecedented bubble in credit and real estate will implode, taking down China's economy. Warning signs already abound: please see If China Stocks Lead U.S. Market, Look Out Below and China's Towers and U.S. McMansions: When Things Fall Apart (Literally) for more.
China's imploding debt/real estate bubble will cut its already meager imports from the U.S. and dismantle the illusion of "growth" (note to economists: building 100,000 empty highrises is not "growth") that has enabled the commodity countries such as Canada and Australia to inflate new property bubbles at home.
3. Once China goes down, so do the housing bubbles in Canada and Australia, and the Asian economies which depend on sales to China for their own growth.
As those nations' tumble into a bottomless pit of bubble-popping recession, their taste for American goods and services will plummet as well. Good-bye, inflated Corporate-America profits.
China's bubble deflating will be felt in Japan and the Southeast Asian "Tiger" economies, all of which will see their exports to China crater. Since they are all merchantilist to the core, this drop in exports will push them into recession as well.
The highly popular fantasy that "emerging economies" will continue growing at insane rates forever will drop heavily into the dustbin of history.
If you have any doubt about this scenario, call up a chart of copper, which is generally considered a bellwether for commodities and the global economy. Copper has crashed.
4. Local government in the U.S. will have to shed tens of thousands of jobs. As Mishhas repeatedly pointed out, public unions could avoid massive layoffs by slashing the pay of all public employees and trimming their pension plans and other (in comparison to private-sector workers) gold-plated benefits. But the public unions seem bent on turning back the clock to 2006: they are rejecting any meaningful cuts in pay or bennies, and they also want limited/zero job cuts.
That isn't possible. Any politico so beholden to the State fiefdoms that he/she votes in taxes high enough to fund the public union fiefdoms will lose power this November. States with 20% unemployment cannot survive massive tax increases, on top of all the junk fees and hidden taxes which have already been imposed on a burdened public.
This realization is slowly going mainstream, for instance: The Bankrupting of America: We have a ruinous collaboration of elected officials and unionized public workers.
The loss of hundreds of thousands of jobs (and don't forget those 1.5 million Census jobs are temporary) will deplete the amount of income and borrowing power needed to sustain "consumer spending."
5. Bank reform will force layoffs and consolidation in the financial sector. It's been a tough year for the banks; after all, U.S. commercial banks generated a record $22.6 billion in derivatives trading revenues in 2009--that's commercial banks, not investment banks.
Aw, poor babies.
Reforms will eventually shutter many trading desks and curtail various high-labor gaming within the financial sector, triggering another round of layoffs. More "jump, you f**kers" signs will appear on Wall Street.
6. Housing's bogus government-induced "rally" will implode. Just scan patrick.netfor dozens of stories outlining the implosion: mortgage applications are plummeting, building permits are plummeting, sales are plummeting, etc. The Federal government essentially nationalized the entire U.S. mortgage market to save housing, and now that the Fed has announced an end (or so they claim) to their $1.2 trillion buying spree of toxic mortgages, then the Mortgage Emperor is revealed to have no clothing. There is no private mortgage market in the U.S. anymore; there are only the rotting carcasses of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, still soaking up tens of billions of dollars in tax money to sop up soon-to-default mortgages.
For an on-the-ground report from once-hot San Diego, check out the San Diego Housing Forecast: the values of pricey homes is still falling, and buyers are now scarce.
7. The massive Federal bailouts accomplished nothing but propping up a rotten status quo for a year. No new jobs were created; what was "saved" by squandering trillions of dollars? The counterparties to AIG's bad derivatives bets; Goldman Sach's ability to skim profits day after day, month after month, a housing market doomed to slide much further, destroying the trillions dumped in to prop it up, and and a handful of pork-barrel projects at the state and local levels.
Now the "stimulus" and bailouts are drying up, and we have nothing to show for it. The bloated status quo cannot maintain its payrolls without the trillions in Federal largesse, and so payrolls and spending will fall throughout the status quo.
8. The vaunted "recession-proof" sickcare industry will start shedding jobs as Medicare and other funding sources implode. Texas doctors opting out of Medicare at alarming rate:
“This new data shows the Medicare system is beginning to implode,” said Dr. Susan Bailey, president of the Texas Medical Association. “If Congress doesn't fix Medicare soon, there'll be more and more doctors dropping out and Congress' promise to provide medical care to seniors will be broken.”More than 300 doctors have dropped the program in the last two years, including 50 in the first three months of 2010, according to data compiled by the Houston Chronicle. Texas Medical Association officials, who conducted the 2008 survey, said the numbers far exceeded their assumptions.
The largest number of doctors opting out comes from primary care, a field already short of practitioners nationally and especially in Texas. Psychiatrists also make up a large share of the pie, causing one Texas leader to say, “God forbid that a senior has dementia.
Once again, this shouldn't be news to oftwominds.com readers, as we addressed this trend back on April 10, 2010: The Politically Inconvenient Medical Realities of Opting Out. Simply put, there isn't enough money in the known Universe to fund U.S. sickcare, and now the reality is bursting through the walls of denial and complacency. The "recession-proof" sickcare (a.k.a. healthcare) system will start shedding jobs, not adding them, as the money dries up--not just Federal money, but private insurance funding as well, as employers cut headcount and laid-off employees find they cannot afford COLA coverage or sky-high private insurance rates.
For more on the general trends at work beneath the fast-spreading oil-slick of propaganda, please see Why the "Nascent Recovery" Won't Last (April 27, 2010) and How We Get Ahead Now: Gaming the System (April 20, 2010).












Roubini prevede -20% ...

Mr Doom Roubini prevede ancora un 20% di calo - Il Sole 24 ORE

 
zerohedge intriga per il mistero che lo circonda ... chi cavolo scrive su quel blog ? tyler durden è un personaggio del film fight club interpretato da Brad Pitt (l'immagine di fianco al nome è indicativa) .... anche marla singer :D ... oggi l'intera prima pagina sono post di 'Tyler' :D ... c'è chi ci studia sopra DANIEL IVANDJIISKI, WHO WAS BANNED FROM SECURITIES INDUSTRY, MAY RUN ZEROHEDGE.COM - NYPOST.com ... prima si pensava fosse tale Ivandjiiski ... ma o è un grafomane o non può essere uno solo ad usare quello pseudonimo :D
anche The Rising Power of Financial Blog Zero Hedge - Money 2009 -- New York Magazine

oh .... se lo scoprite me lo dite ? :D
 
di sicuro non lo è / non lo sono :)
il giro quotidiano da quelle parti per me è bene farlo
 

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