Friday, May 7, 2010

How China Holds the American Economy by the Balls:


By Scott Thill / AlterNet
May 3, 2010

http://www.alternet.org/story/146702/how_china_holds_the_american_economy_by_the_balls/?page=entire

America stays afloat selling billions of American dollars and Treasuries to our Chinese sugar daddy to keep our faltering consumer economy alive.

On May 1, China popped the cork on Expo 2010 in Shanghai, a months-long international celebration signifying the ascension of the city, and thereby its parent nation, as a global economic and cultural powerhouse. Meanwhile, in the United States, China's economic and cultural power has come under mounting fire.

Short-happy hedge funder Jim Chanos, who prophesied the fall of Enron, argued in April that the country's heated property market was on a "treadmill to hell." Foreign Policy followed suit by more or less blaming China's alleged currency manipulation, rather than America's own corporate and economic malfeasance, for exporting unemployment to the United States. Even our President Barack Obama jumped on the dogpile, expressing concern that China has not moved its currency to a "more market-oriented exchange rate," during an April meeting with Chinese President Hu Jintao in Washington. His administration stopped short, however, of releasing an April 15 report to Congress expressing this disapproval in concrete terms, choosing instead to trot out the disgraced deregulationist Larry Summers to soothe the Chinese that such matters will be taken up at future gatherings.

For its part, China has responded to the finger-pointing by the United States with its own middle digit.

"We oppose the practice of finger-pointing among countries or strong-arm measures to force other countries to appreciate currencies," Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao said in March, before restating his well-publicized 2009 worries that U.S. Treasuries are in trouble. "In the press conference last year, I said I was a bit concerned about it. This year, I make the same remark. I am still concerned. I hope the U.S. will take concrete measures to assure its investors."

Good luck with that, China. From resilient wage and unemployment stagnation to revelations of investment banks like Goldman Sachs selling "shitty" bundles of toxic mortgages to national and international suckers with one hand while clandestinely shorting them with the other, the United States is in no position to assure investors of anything. Which is why they've taken lately to crowing about China, rather than settling their own business at home. That business includes, of course, selling billions of American dollars and Treasuries to our Chinese sugar daddy to keep our faltering consumer economy alive.

"China holds about $820 billion U.S. dollars, and about $480 billion is in U.S. Treasuries," Stefan Halper, senior fellow at the Cambridge Centre of International Studies and author of the new book The Beijing Consensus, told AlterNet by phone. "China would not take steps to decrease the value of the dollar, because that would decrease the value of its own holdings. China doesn't want to bring the dollar down or the U.S. economy down, but it is benefiting from American consumers, who buy its exports. which represents about 60 percent of its economy per year."

Halper is firmly in the camp of those who are tagging China as a currency manipulator. In The Beijing Consensus, he argues that the rising 21st century superpower is suppressing the yuan, exporting unemployment and even standing in the way of America's lagging recovery from the global recession. In the process, Halper writes, China is also exporting its overall philosophy of economics and governance at the expense, pardon the pun, of our own.

"Beyond everything else that China sells to the world, it functions as the world's largest billboard for the new alternative of 'going capitalist and staying autocratic,'" Halper explains in The Beijing Consensus. "Beijing has provided the world's most compelling, high-speed demonstration of how to liberalize economically without surrendering to liberal politics."

Of course, he admitted, China couldn't have done it alone. America was more than happy, drunk on deregulation and war, to dig its own grave.

"The disastrous involvement in Iraq and Afghanistan have just depreciated the American story and the American example," Halper told AlterNet. "You can look at the Pew data: There has been rising disapproval of the U.S. since Bush put us into those two wars. Plus, the Washington Consensus proved not to be a good form of Third World development, which opened the door to Chinese offers of low-interest loans and non-interference. So yeah, we've done things poorly. We've had a recession, and an inability to regulate our markets. We're certainly not perfect."

That's probably the understatement of the new millennium. Viewed through that prism, the argument that our preeminent funder is somehow partially responsible for our own extensive economic troubles is disingenuous, even if esteemed economists like Paul Krugman have been sipping the blame-China Kool-Aid. What's gets lost in the financial wonkery -- or wankery, if you will -- is the fact that, through our own corruption and greed, we have willingly pushed nations into the arms of China rather than earn their trust. Through the misguided Washington Consensus, we and others tried and succeeded at establishing a rapacious list of interventionist measures -- concretized as "stabilize, privatize, and liberalize" by Harvard professor of international political economy Dani Rodrik -- since the 1990s that has ultimately culminated in our current lunacy. To argue at this late stage of the game that China is partially to blame for this is playing the kind of crappy defense that loses championships in pro sports. It shows, above all, that we have no game.

"China will make decisions in its own interests, just as the U.S. does," Rachel Ziemba, senior analyst for China and oil-exploring countries at Roubini Global Economics, told AlterNet. "It's actually in China's interest in the mid-term to have a more flexible exchange rate as it increases their monetary policy autonomy and could boost domestic purchasing power, helping domestic consumption. It also could help control domestic inflation. But domestic dictates, not U.S. pressure, will determine Chinese policy moves in this area. Chinese authorities are balancing different economic pressures, and an appreciation of the currency would increase the price of Chinese exports."

Like Halper, Krugman and more, Ziemba thinks that China is indeed a currency manipulator. "The pace of foreign-exchange reserve accumulation implies that the Chinese central bank is intervening heavily in the foreign-exchange market, implying that, yes, it is manipulating its currency."

In that, it's not very different than anyone else playing the currency game, including the United States. Except that it's deftly playing the pegging game -- to the dollar, then to a managed float in 2005, then back again to the dollar during the crisis -- for the benefit of its nation, rather than a select few banks, funds and other entities. It's in it to win it. For everyone, depending on who you ask.

"The bulk of China's foreign exchange reserves are recycled into dollar-based assets, which helps fund the massive U.S. savings shortfall," Morgan Stanley Asia's Stephen Roach wrote in a Council on Foreign Relations roundup called "Is China a Currency Manipulator?" "Who might deficit-prone Washington turn to if it shuts off the Chinese funding spigot? At a minimum, reduced buying by America's largest foreign lender would spell sharp downward pressures on the dollar and/or higher long-term U.S. interest rates -- developments that could well trigger the dreaded double dip in the U.S. economy."

In other words, China is keeping its eye on the prize -- its own economic and political survival -- while the rest of the world, from the United States to the European Union treads water. And why not? A modest accounting argues that China's economy expanded at over 10 percent in the first quarter of 2010. Meanwhile, U.S. real gross domestic product probably grew around 3 percent in the same period.

"We believe consumer spending is being buoyed by a variety factors that will not be maintained over the long term," Ethan Harris, chief North American economist for Merrill Lynch, told MarketWatch in late April. "Even with the recovery in net worth, households have essentially lost 15 years of saving."

"Many countries have imbalanced economic systems," Ziemba told AlterNet. "China's economy has low external debt, which is a big plus, but the contingent liabilities of the government have increased as bank loans have increased. Yet with deposits having climbed as much as loans, China's banking system is well capitalized."

In the final analysis, complaints about China's financial practices should be properly contextualized, especially when those lodging the complaints have done more to disrupt global financial practices than anyone else. Perhaps when those complainers have settled their own accounts -- with vampire squids like Goldman Sachs and JP Morgan Chase, or the print-happy Federal Reserve Bank, or the Supreme Court that recently ruled that corporations possess the same rights as people -- then their whining about China's currency manipulation should be taken a bit more seriously. But not sooner.

"To the question of American excess and inability to regulate our financial markets, you're right," agreed Halper. "We have fallen down on that, and the Chinese have taken the opportunity to extol their model. But you've got compare China over time. What you see is two things: A rising middle class with a strong commercial material culture, and a highly repressive iron hand on the part of the central government. And that really is the most fascinating thing we see today. It's not classical communism. It's in business to perpetuate its own power, and we have to come to grips with it."

Sure, no problem. But only after we come to grips with the business of perpetuating our own power first. Change begins, after all, at home.

Wednesday, May 5, 2010

America at the Crossroads - and the War on Gold:


Darryl Robert Schoon
Posted May 4, 2010

http://www.321gold.com/editorials/schoon/schoon050410.html

Every so often a philosophical dilemma becomes real. So it is today. For two thousand years, the message of Christ Jesus influenced and informed the West, if not in deed, then in word. Today, that is no longer so. Today, godless capitalism is threatening to supplant the two millennia reign of Christ's message of brotherly love - if not in word, then, certainly, in deed.

In times of great change, art reflects social and philosophical undercurrents. The movie, Avatar, is an example of this phenomenon as was the movie, Wall Street, in 1987. Gordon Gekko, Oliver Stone's protagonist in Wall Street probably didn't read much; but, if he did, a book such as A Utopia of Greed: Ayn Rand's Moral Defense of Capitalism could have been on his reading list.

One of Gordon Gekko's more memorable lines is Greed, for want of a better word, is good. Greed is good is also one of Ayn Rand's fundamental beliefs; and, if Karl Marx is the father of godless communism, Ayn Rand, America's premier doyenne of selfishness, is the patron saint of its antagonist, godless capitalism.

Alisa Rosenbaum was born in Russia in 1905 where she would later change her name to Ayn Rand. In her youth, she would become an atheist, a belief she would hold for the rest of her life. No other self-proclaimed atheist would achieve such a large following - except perhaps Karl Marx; additionally, no other writer would be as responsible for giving philosophical cover to the selfishness and greed that would later characterize American-style "laissez-faire" capitalism.

Ayn Rand saw selfishness and greed as virtues; and, to their later disgrace, so, too, did many others.



Ba'al: the Golden Calf of Capitalism Grows Up:

When Ayn Rand died in 1982, a six foot floral wreath in the shape of a US dollar was laid by her casket; a symbol that was to be ironically appropriate as Ayn Rand's death would precede the demise of the US dollar by only a few short decades.

Nothing exemplified the effect that Ayn Rand's philosophy would have on America as much as the movie, Wall Street. Released in 1987, it reflected the values that would be responsible for America's moral decline over the next 30 years. This 45 second clip from Wall Street is chillingly revelatory:



In September 2010, Oliver Stone's sequel to Wall Street, Money Never Sleeps, is scheduled for release with an older but still unrepentant Gordon Gekko. After the 1980s, greed did not go away in America - it flourished.

AYN RAND, GOLDMAN SACHS & GOD:

Nowhere was Ayn Rand's influence felt more than on Wall Street. The selfishness and greed that Ayn Rand exalted found a natural home among Wall Street banks, especially Goldman Sachs where Senior Partner Gus Levy succinctly summed up Goldman's strategy as long term greed. It was a mission statement Ayn Rand could be proud of.

It is incorrect, however, to attribute Wall Street's greed solely to Ayn Rand. Greed and selfishness existed long before she posited the two vices as virtues, just as free markets existed long before capitalism was illegitimately birthed in a manger of paper money at the Bank of England in 1694.

Ayn Rand's writings are nonetheless responsible for giving greed and selfishness the sheen of respectability they previously lacked, especially among the bespoke jackals that serve our currencies back to us in the form of loans.

In defense of today's bankers, Goldman Sachs CEO Lloyd Blankfein recently stated, We are doing God's work; and, so, they are, if capitalism's culling of the trusting, vulnerable and less fortunate is included in Blankfein's novel definition of God's calling.

[I] managed to sell a few [worthless] abacusbonds to widows and orphans that I ran into at the airport.. not feeling too guilty about this, the real purpose of my job is to make capital markets more efficient. email, 6/13/2007, Fabrice Tourre, vice-president Goldman Sachs

If it is God for whom Blankfein toils - at enormous compensation, i.e. $68 million in 2007 - it is not the God of the New Testament where Christ Jesus admonishes us to be our brother's keeper. It is the Hindu God, Shiva, the destroyer and transformer for whom Blankfein puts in overtime; and in that capacity he has done yeoman's work for which he is to be congratulated.

Goldman Sachs, more than any other bank, under Blankfein's leadership has played a central role in destroying capitalism, i.e. economies based on bankers' debt-basedcapital, a parasitoidal system bankers designed to indebt productivity and commerce for profit until society collapses.

PAPER MONEY - GOLD = PAPER
SHIVA'S DANCE OF CAPITAL DESTRUCTION:


While Lloyd Blankfein's contribution to capitalism's demise should not be minimized, capitalism's current problems actually began in 1971 when gold, one of the four essential ingredients in the bankers' brew of debt-based money, was eliminated from the classic formula that had served bankers and governments so well for so long.



Capitalism's recipe insures government's infinite growth as government access to central bank credit is unlimited and bankers will profit from loaning paper money into perpetuity.

When gold was removed from paper money in 1971, this simple yet powerful recipe for capitalism's success was fundamentally altered and so, too, would be capitalism. It would only be a matter of time until capitalism sans gold would falter.

Lloyd Blankfein, Robert Rubin, Lawrence Summers and Alan Greenspan et. al., individually and collectively, would only hasten the process. Lord Shiva's dance of capital destruction was already underway; because without gold, the illusion of paper money as money is only an illusion. Without gold, paper currencies are only coupons with expiration dates written in invisible ink.

To call capitalism a monetary system is a misnomer. It's a financial shakedown, a scheme whereby bankers profit by inserting debt into every aspect of human activity. Eventually, everyone becomes indebted beyond their capacity to repay and the system collapses.

The bankers' indebting of others eventually will end in their own demise, with governments, businesses, and consumers drowning in debt and banks insolvent. Capitalism is an economic parasitoid, a parasitic system where parasite and host both expire.

A parasitoid is an organism that spends a significant portion of its life history attached to or within a single host organism, which it ultimately kills (and often consumes) in the process. Thus they are similar to typical parasites except in the certain fate of the host.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parasitoid

As with all life-forms, parasitoids will do everything to insure their survival while blind to the fact it is their actions that will destroy them. Until its self-inflicted end, capitalism will struggle to survive and expand - and a part of that struggle is the bankers' war on gold.

THE WAR ON GOLD:

The IMF.. explicitly states in its Articles of Agreement that member countries are prohibited from tying their currencies to gold.

Gold Wars, Ferdinand Lips, The Foundation for the Advancement of Monetary Education, New York

In 2001, Ferdinand Lips published Gold Wars, his book that describes the bankers' ongoing war on gold. That Lips, a Swiss banker, would write such a book is to our benefit as the Swiss have a unique, historical, and deep respect for the monetary metal.

Curiously, Lips had earlier been an agent for the infamous Rothschild banking family. In 1968 he was co-founder and Managing Director of Rothschild Bank AG Zurich. As such, Lips had an insight into the world of gold that few had and some believe it would later cost him his life.

One story in Gold Wars is of particular interest as it involves John Exter, the extraordinary central banker (formerly vice-president in charge of international banking and gold and silver operations at the New York Federal Reserve), and Paul Volcker, later Fed chairman and erroneously believed by many to be a hero.

Exter's story shows Volcker in entirely different light, not as a hero but as the one responsible for the removal of gold from the monetary system. Volcker, according to Exter, played a central role in the decision to do so.

In Gold Wars (pp.76-77) John Exter tells Ferdinand Lips how the decision to demonetize gold was made: On August 10, 1971, a group of bankers, economists and monetary experts held an informal meeting... to discuss the monetary crisis. Around 3 o'clock in the afternoon, a big car rolled up with Paul Volcker in it. He was then Under-secretary of the Treasury for Monetary Affairs.

We discussed various possible solutions. As you would expect, I was for tight money - raising interest rates - but that was overwhelmingly rejected... As for raising the gold price, as I suggested, Volcker said it made sense, but he didn't think he could get it through Congress.

At one point, Volcker turned to me and asked what I would do. I told him that since he wouldn't raise interest rates and wouldn't raise the price of gold, he only had one option... he'd have to close the Gold Window... Five days later Nixon closed the Gold Window.

The final link between the dollar and gold was broken. The dollar became nothing more than a fiat currency and the Fed [and especially the banks] were then free to continue monetary expansion at will. The result... was a massive explosion of debt.

Paul Volcker, then, is the one who eliminated gold from capitalism's 300 year-old recipe for power and wealth. Karl Marx was right when he predicted that capitalism would destroy itself. We just didn't know it would be Paul Volcker who would pull the plug.

THE SLEDGEHAMMER THAT BROKE THE CAMEL'S BACK:

The explosion of debt allowed by Volcker's removal of gold in 1971 has now reached extraordinary levels. In 1971, US debt was $436 billion. Today, US government obligations exceed one hundred trillion dollars. Tethering the dollar to gold was the one constraint on US spending. Volcker eliminated that constraint thus enabling the US to indebt itself ad infinitum - and it did.

Debt, the inevitable effluvia of credit, is Shiva's final shiv in capitalism's back. But it is not the indebtedness of those the bankers indebted that are now causing capitalism's final paroxysms. It's the debts of the banker's themselves.

When US banking and financial interests repealed the Glass-Steagall Act, it reopened the doors to another depression, doors that had been sealed since the 1930s. Prior to its repeal in 1999, Congressman John Dingall (D-Mich) whose father helped write Glass-Steagall in 1933 warned:

What we are creating now is a group of institutions which are too big to fail... Taxpayers are going to be called upon to cure the failures we are creating tonight, and it is going to cost a lot of money, and it is coming.

Congressman Dingall's warnings were ignored by both republicans and democrats. The republican-sponsored bill to repeal Glass-Steagall was passed overwhelmingly in the House by both parties (362-57) and in the Senate (90-8) effectively enslaving America's future generations, gratis of a $300 million lobbying effort by banks and insurance companies.

The beauty of paper money is that it buys real power

Once again, both republicans and democrats sold out the nation's future and allowed banks to bet the savings of America, this time with obscene leverage of 40:1 and more. Not surprisingly when the banks bet the house and lost, the house collapsed.

Politicians can't be bought. They can only be leased.

When bankers couldn't cover their losses, governments came to their rescue and indemnified them with taxpayer money. But the trillions of dollars spent to rescue banks and restart capitalism's broken engine is not being levied on the banks. It's being levied on those who saved them. The current upsurge in sovereign debt is the cost of the bankers' crisis subsumed into national ledgers.

Recently, President Barack Obama went to Wall Street to ask for help in reforming the financial system. Asking Wall Street's help with financial reform is akin to Neville Chamberlain asking Hitler to assist in redrawing Europe's borders. The current effort is designed not to fix the system, but to continue it.

Avarice is never appeased. Greed is never satisfied and the fires that Ayn Rand inflamed will not subside until the house that fanned them and gave them shelter burns to the ground. The bankers have come too far to go back. There is only the road ahead - and it's a cliff.

SHIVA'S COMING MAKEOVER:

I end my articles with the words: buy gold, buy silver, have faith. Of the three, I believe faith to be the most important, the most valuable and the least understood. A strong and unwavering belief in an intellectual construct is not faith, though many believe it to be.

Faith is a knowing that we are one with our Source, despite all appearances to the contrary. Finding faith in a tautological matrix that creates its own reflection is not easy. Faith exists despite the world of appearances; despite maya; despite - and not because of - human ignorance.

In March 2007, I delivered my paper predicting a severe economic collapse to Marshall Thurber's Positive Deviant Network (the PDN) and the reaction was disbelief and anger except for the very few already invested in gold.

In 2008, one year later, after $6 trillion of worth had been stripped from global markets, the Positive Deviant Network was more predisposed to hear what I had to say. That February, I gave a talk to the PDN on what I believed to be the real reasons for the crisis. My talk, America at the Crossroads, can now be viewed on YouTube in four parts: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4xjKnATlxMY

At its birth, America embodied the highest hopes of mankind but is now a tragic caricature of those great ideals. As it enters the 21st century, America finds itself bankrupt morally as well as financially. Its ideals stood the test of time but America did not.

Two hundred years ago, Thomas Jefferson warned America about the dangers of private bankers and standing, i.e. permanent, armies. Fifty years ago, President Eisenhower warned America about the dangers posed by the emerging military-industrial complex; and ten years ago, Congressman Dingall warned America about the danger of repealing Glass-Steagall.

America was warned and America didn't listen. Now, the price must be paid. Shiva's dance of destruction and transformation is underway. The destruction comes first, the transformation comes next - but only if America first changes its ways.

It's coming to America first,
the cradle of the best and of the worst.
It's here they got the range
and the machinery for change
and it's here they got the spiritual thirst.
It's here the family's broken
and it's here the lonely say
that the heart has got to open
in a fundamental way
Democracy is coming... to the USA

--Leonard Cohen, 1984

Leonard Cohen's simply-stated truth - that the heart has got to open in a fundamental way - is the crucial prerequisite for America's transformation. During America's drive for self-aggrandizement, world dominion, corporate profits and billion-dollar bonuses, America lost its way - and lost touch with its heart in the process.

America is at a crossroads. It has already chosen. It'd best do so again.

What's the difference between a pendulum and a wrecking ball?
Sometimes nothing.

Buy gold, buy silver, have faith...

Sunday, May 2, 2010

VIDEO - Fundamental & Technical Analysis of the S&P 500's Daily & Weekly Charts:


Here is the end of the week Technical Analysis of the S&P 500's daily and weekly charts, plus a look at the important Economic and Earnings Reports due out next week...

Happy Trading...
zigzagman



Saturday, May 1, 2010

VIDEO - POZN Gets FDA Approval For Pain Drug Vimovo:


Friday was a great day for Pozen Inc.

The FDA gave full approval to their drug Vimovo. It can now be sold all across America...



Friday, April 30, 2010

$POZN Gets FDA Approval for Pozen Inc.'s Pain Drug - Vimovo !...


POZN - US FDA OK's AstraZeneca, Pozen Inc.'s Pain Drug:

Fri Apr 30, 2010 5:19pm EDT

* Agency clears drug for U.S. market

* Vimovo includes naproxen and Nexium ingredient

* Pozen shares up more than 21 percent after-hours

WASHINGTON, April 30 (Reuters) - The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has approved AstraZeneca Plc (AZN.L) and Pozen Inc's (POZN.O) pain drug Vimovo, an agency spokeswoman told Reuters on Friday.

Vimovo is a fixed-dose combination of the anti-inflammatory drug naproxen and an immediate release version of esomeprazole, the active ingredient in AstraZeneca's acid reflux treatment Nexium.

Shares of Pozen were up more than 21 percent, or about $2.30, in after-hours trading on Friday, trading at $13.15, after earlier closing at $10.85. (Reporting by Susan Heavey; additional reporting by Ben Hirschler in London and Vidya Loganathan in Bangalore; editing by Carol Bishopric)

http://www.reuters.com/article/idCNN3015546220100430?rpc=44

POZN is currently halted...Per the Nasdaq.com website:

http://www.nasdaqtrader.com/Trader.aspx?id=TradeHalts

No time is given for resumption of trading...

There was a huge Bear Raid at 12:37 this afternoon, as the MM's took out all of the stop-loss limit orders people had in place:



POZN After-Hours Chart shows it closed at $13.15 when it was halted for "news pending":



Thursday, April 29, 2010

$DNDN - Dendreon Gets FDA Approval For Provenge To Treat Prostate Cancer!:


FDA Approves a Cellular Immunotherapy for Men with Advanced Prostate Cancer:

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration today approved Provenge (sipuleucel-T), a new therapy for certain men with advanced prostate cancer that uses their own immune system to fight the disease.

Provenge is indicated for the treatment of asymptomatic or minimally symptomatic prostate cancer that has spread to other parts of the body and is resistant to standard hormone treatment.

Prostate cancer is the second most common type of cancer among men in the United States, behind skin cancer, and usually occurs in older men. In 2009, an estimated 192,000 new cases of prostate cancer were diagnosed and about 27,000 men died from the disease, according to the National Cancer Institute.

“The availability of Provenge provides a new treatment option for men with advanced prostate cancer, who currently have limited effective therapies available,” said Karen Midthun, M.D., acting director of the FDA’s Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research.

Provenge is an autologous cellular immunotherapy, designed to stimulate a patient’s own immune system to respond against the cancer. Each dose of Provenge is manufactured by obtaining a patient’s immune cells from the blood, using a machine in a process known as leukapheresis. To enhance their response against the cancer, the immune cells are then exposed to a protein that is found in most prostate cancers, linked to an immune stimulating substance. After this process, the patient’s own cells are returned to the patient to treat the prostate cancer. Provenge is administered intravenously in a three-dose schedule given at about two-week intervals.

The effectiveness of Provenge was studied in 512 patients with metastatic hormone treatment refractory prostate cancer in a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, multicenter trial, which showed an increase in overall survival of 4.1 months. The median survival for patients receiving Provenge treatments was 25.8 months, as compared to 21.7 months for those who did not receive the treatment.

Almost all of the patients who received Provenge had some type of adverse reaction. Common adverse reactions reported included chills, fatigue, fever, back pain, nausea, joint ache and headache. The majority of adverse reactions were mild or moderate in severity. Serious adverse reactions, reported in approximately one quarter of the patients receiving Provenge, included some acute infusion reactions and stroke. Cerebrovascular events, including hemorrhagic and ischemic strokes, were observed in 3.5 percent of patients in the Provenge group compared with 2.6 percent of patients in the control group.

Provenge is manufactured by Seattle-based Dendreon Corp.

http://www.fda.gov/NewsEvents/Newsroom/PressAnnouncements/ucm210174.htm

DNDN was halted at 12:34 pm ET, and remains halted at 2:10 pm...Just before the halt, it jumped up almost 15% and up over $7.00 in three minutes from $40. to $47.





Wednesday, April 28, 2010

$PWRM - The International Congress of Alzheimer's Disease Accepts Four Scientific Presentations by Power3:


Power3 Presents NuroPro® to ICAD for the 2nd Year in a Row:

http://finance.yahoo.com/news/The-International-Congress-of-bw-3938801446.html?x=0&.v=1

Press Release Source: Power3 Medical Products, Inc. On Wednesday April 28, 2010, 1:06 pm EDT



HOUSTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Power3 Medical Products, Inc. (OTCBB: PWRM – News) announced that four abstracts were accepted for presentation to the annual meeting of the International Congress of Alzheimer’s Disease on July 12, 2010 in Honolulu, Hawaii. The presentations will cover results from protein biomarker discovery, drug response, test development, and ongoing clinical validation trials of the NuroPro® AD biomarkers and blood test for Alzheimer’s disease. The four studies to be presented involve a total of 154 Alzheimer’s disease patients and 91 Parkinson’s disease patients, as well as 210 age-matched normal control individuals and 173 disease control individuals.

The NuroPro® AD biomarkers and blood test are intended to help clinicians distinguish patients with Alzheimer’s disease from “normal” individuals, i.e., patients with similar, non-Alzheimer’s neurological disorders. They are also intended to solve the critical challenge facing physicians, clinicians, patients and drug developers, who all need tests for early stage accurate and specific diagnosis of this debilitating disease, as well as more guidance for drug therapy, patient selection for drug clinical trials, and better tools to monitor drug treatment response.

The abstracts report the use of combined results from ongoing clinical validation trials of NuroPro® AD. The trials are being conducted by the Power3 scientific team, led by scientific advisory board member Lourdes R. Bosquez, MD and Chief Scientific Officer, Ira L. Goldknopf, Ph.D. in collaboration with Marwan Sabbagh, MD, director of the Banner Sun Health Research Institute. The team is also utilizing previous studies Power3 conducted with Stanley H. Appel, MD during his tenure as Chairman of Neurology at the Baylor College of Medicine and, currently, as Co-Director of the Methodist Neurological Research Institute. Dr. Appel continues to be chairman of the scientific advisory board of Power3.

“These 4 posters represent the culmination of 7 years of hard scientific effort which we have been blessed to pursue with our distinguished collaborators,” said Dr. Goldknopf. “There will be some surprises for our colleagues at ICAD that we are particularly excited about because they have the potential to guide us towards improvements in treatment for this awful illness.” Dr. Goldknopf will present two of the posters at ICAD, one on NuroPro® AD biomarkers for Alzheimer’s specific diagnosis and the other on NuroPro® AD diagnostic clinical validation trials. Dr. Sabbagh will present a third poster on prospective clinical validation of the use of protein biomarkers from newly drawn patient sera for diagnosis of Alzheimer’s disease, and Dr. Bosquez will present a fourth poster on NuroPro® AD protein biomarkers and drug response.

“We are proud that Dr. Goldknopf will be joined this year by two members of our scientific advisory board, Dr. Sabbagh and Dr. Bosquez, in presenting to ICAD 2010,” said Helen R. Park, MS, Chief Executive Officer of Power3. “For us to present four posters at the same time at such a prestigious forum speaks to the depth of our science and our commitment to improving the outcomes for patients with Alzheimer’s disease. This work, in conjunction with the recent filing of our joint patent application with StemTroniX, bodes well for the upcoming acquisition of StemTroniX by Power3.”

Power3 Medical Products:

Power3 Medical Products, Inc. is a leader in bio-medical research and the commercialization of biomarkers, tests, and mechanisms of disease. Power3's patent-pending technologies are being used to develop screening and diagnostic tests for the early detection and prognosis of disease, and to identify protein biomarkers and drug targets, to fulfill critical unmet needs in areas including neurodegenerative disease (NuroPro®) and breast cancer (BC-SeraPro™). Power3 operates a state-of-the-art CLIA certified laboratory in The Woodlands (Houston), Texas and continues to evolve and enhance its IP portfolio, employing sensitive and specific combinations of biomarkers blood-based tests for ALS, Alzheimer's, and Parkinson's diseases, breast cancer, and drug resistance.

For more information, please visit: http://www.power3medical.com

StemTroniX:

StemTroniX, Inc. is a stem cell biotechnology holding and acquisition company that is committed to improving the lives of individuals by using autologous adult stem cell technology to repair tissue damage in patients. Autologous adult stem cell therapy is the process of using an individual's own stem cells for the purpose of repairing and regenerating damaged tissue. StemTroniX also provides a patented system to augment this process in a non-invasive method for in-body monitoring of the stem cells at the site of injury as they are being introduced into the patients.

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Tuesday, April 27, 2010

The $SPX Daily Chart had a Major breakdown today...


Today's selloff of the overall market was pretty severe...Today's bad news was about Portugal and Greece getting their credit ratings slashed by Standard and Poors...Plus a GS executive is being grilled by a Senate subcommittee...He's denying all wrong doing...

The $SPX closed below the middle BBand today and took out the previous level of support it had two Fridays ago when the news the SEC was accusing GS of fraud...I see the $SPX heading to the lower BBand at 1168 now...Closing below the intraday low set on the 19th is a breakdown of a double-top chart pattern...

Today it closed below the 15MA for the first time in since mid-February...That's very Bearish IMO...The CCI dropped below zero today, and STO is dropping hard and may blast down thru 50 if we see two more down days in a row...The MACD looks Bearish...Volume was very high on the selloff today...

Tomorrow should be another down day according to the shape of today's candlestick...The $SPX closed only two points above the intraday low...The canldestick is very tall and solid red...Expect a smaller red candle tomorrow, a smaller one the next day, maybe a hammer or a doji the following day...

If this was a stock, that's how it would usually go...Since it is an Index, it's a bit harder to predict what it will do over the next few days because of the massive amount of news it gets every week...There's lots of Earnings and Economic Reports to come out this week...

Overall, this chart just turned very Bearish in only one day...See what bad news can do?...



Monday, April 26, 2010

US HOT STOCKS: Hertz, Thomas Weisel, Whirlpool, Goldman, Citi:


U.S. stocks were mixed Monday, as the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 24 points to 11228, but the Standard & Poor's 500 index fell 1.3 points to 1216 and the Nasdaq Composite Index declined 2.1 points to 2528. Among the companies whose shares are actively trading in the session are Hertz Global Holdings Inc. (HTZ), Thomas Weisel Partners Group Inc. (TWPG) and Whirlpool Corp. (WHR).

Car-rental company Hertz ($15.13, +$2.25, +17.43%) plans to acquire rival Dollar Thrifty Automotive Group Inc. (DTG, $42.32, +$3.47, +8.93%) for $1.27 billion in cash and stock, giving Hertz a larger foothold in the leisure-rental market when its core business-travel operation remains in the doldrums. Avis Budget Group Inc. (CAR, $16.62, +$1.95, +13.29%) also traded higher.

Stifel Financial Corp. (SF, $53.28, -$2.46, -4.41%) and Thomas Weisel ($7.18, +$2.82, +64.68%) agreed to merge. Each Thomas Weisel share will be exchanged for 0.1364 shares of Stifel stock in a deal valued at over $300 million.

Whirlpool's ($117.64, +$15.42, +15.09%) first-quarter earnings more than doubled, smashing analysts' estimates, as revenue surged and margins increased amid an improving global economy. The appliance maker also raised its 2010 earnings outlook.

Financial stocks slid Monday as proposed regulation from Senate Democrats about sweeping new rules for the derivatives market would likely hurt revenue at most big banks, though many investors think there is little chance of the measure passing in such a stringent form. Goldman Sachs Group Inc. (GS, $152.52, -$4.88, -3.10%), Morgan Stanley (MS, $31.14, -$0.80, -2.50%), J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. (JPM, $43.99, -$0.95, -2.11%) and Bank of America Corp. (BAC, $18.29, -$0.14, -0.76%) all fell.

The Treasury Department said Monday it would sell up to 1.5 billion Citigroup Inc. (C, $4.69, -$0.18, -3.60%) shares, the first round of a plan to divest its entire 7.7 billion share stake in the bank holding company.

Caterpillar Inc. (CAT, $72.21, +$3.43, +4.99%) swung to a sharply higher-than-expected profit in the first quarter following prior-year restructuring charges, though sales fell and taxes rose. The heavy machinery maker also raised its 2010 forecast. Other machinery stocks also rose, with Deere & Co. (DE, $62.95, +$1.16, +1.88%), Terex Corp. (TEX, $28.44, +$0.70, +2.53%), Joy Global Inc. (JOYG, $63.88, +$2.43, +3.95%), Manitowoc Co. (MTW, $16.28, +$0.65, +4.16%) and Bucyrus International Inc. (BUCY, $70.94, +$2.57, +3.76%) all gaining.

Switch & Data Facilities Co. (SDXC, $19.61, +$1.91, +10.79%) said federal regulators raised no antitrust concerns about Equinix Inc.'s (EQIX, $102.12, +$6.38, +6.66%) purchase of the company. The two data-center providers expect the deal to close next Friday.

Digirad Corp. (DRAD, $2.62, +$0.56, +27.18%), which makes medical-imaging products, said it got clearance from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to market and distribute its ergo large field-of-view, general-purpose portable imaging system.

Mortgage insurer PMI Group Inc.'s (PMI, $6.27, -$0.36, -5.43%) first-quarter loss widened and was worse than analysts expected. In addition, its main mortgage insurance unit may have fallen below a minimum capital threshold. As a result, the unit may be required to stop selling new business in some states, the company said in a regulatory filing Monday.

[b]Other Stocks In Focus:[/b]

Biotechnology company AspenBio Pharma Inc. (APPY, $4.27, +$0.53, +14.17%) shares hit their highest level since January 2009 amid chatter that a partnership or takeover is in the works. AspenBio has been gaining lately as data from a pivotal trial on its blood-based diagnostic test for appendicitis is expected this quarter. ThinkEquity didn't dismiss the chatter, but said a partnership/takeover is more likely after the company gets further down the regulatory pathway. Based on its recent naming of a CEO with sales and marketing experience, it looks like APPY wants to be the one to commercialize the test, ThinkEquity said.

While medical-products company Baxter International Inc.'s (BAX, $47.81, -$1.51, -3.07%) shares have fallen 16% since its 2010 guidance cut last Thursday, JPMorgan thinks they'll be "range-bound" around this level because of lasting uncertainty about the plasma market. The firm lowered Baxter's rating to neutral from overweight. JPMorgan said management lowered the bar enough for 2010, but that isn't the concern. "The underlying issue is the lack of visibility on 2011, an absence of catalysts, and the likelihood that we won't have visibility until December at the earliest or more likely 1Q next year," it said.

BioSante Pharmaceuticals Inc. (BPAX, $2.19, +$0.05, +2.34%) said it entered into a deal which carries an option for "a major pharmaceutical company" to get a non-exclusive license to use BioSante's antibody technology.

BlackRock Inc.'s (BLK, $193.50, -$17.52, -8.30%) first-quarter earnings quintupled as the money-management firm continues its integration of Barclays Global Investors, which it bought late last year. However, the results missed analysts' estimates as the company has run into some trouble with the deal.

Jefferies International lowered British Sky Broadcasting (BSY, $38.07, -$0.92, -2.36%) to hold from buy ahead of the company's fiscal third quarter results, due Thursday, saying it expects "uninspiring" results with net adds below last year. At 18 times calenderized 2010 per-share earnings, the stock is up with events and fully valued, the firm said, adding it thinks the stock is likely to be influenced by the court decision expected imminently relating to a stay of execution on channel wholesale regulation. News Corp. (NWS, $18.64, +$0.14, +0.76%) which owns Dow Jones & Co., publisher of this newswire, has a roughly 39% stake in BSkyB.

Pharmaceutical-research Charles River Laboratories International Inc. (CRL, $34.30, -$5.47, -13.75%) and Chinese drug-research contractor WuXi PharmaTech (Cayman) (WX, $19.44, +$2.87, +17.32%) will merge in a $1.6 billion deal. Charles River also announced first-quarter earnings that slightly missed expectations, while revenue came in ahead of views.

CKE Restaurants Inc. (CKR, $12.37, -$0.48, -3.74%) said Saturday it has agreed to be sold to Apollo Management Group for $694 million, or $12.55 a share, after private-equity firm Thomas H. Lee Partners declined to match Apollo's higher offer for the operator of the Carl's Jr. and Hardee's fast-food chains. CKE shareholders will get $12.55 a share, but shares slipped Monday as it appeared there would be no bidding war.

Dendreon Corp. (DNDN, $41.99, +$1.89, +4.71%) gained after Brean Murray Carret raised its target price on the stock to $50 from $40. Analyst Jonathan Aschoff said the boost emphasizes his confidence Dendreon will get U.S. Food and Drug Administration approval for Provenge, the drug company's prostate cancer candidate. Some of Brean Murray's peers are backing out of the stock at what Aschoff believes is "exactly the wrong time," he wrote.

Eagle Materials Inc.'s (EXP, $34.18, +$1.73, +5.33%) fiscal fourth-quarter profit declined 73% as sales fell and extended plant shutdowns increased operating costs. But results at the maker of concrete, cement and gypsum wallboard for buildings and infrastructure beat analysts' estimates.

BMO Capital Markets adjusted its ratings on several real-estate investment trusts ahead of first-quarter earnings reports. The firm said it believes "management teams are on the verge of becoming collectively more optimistic about the future, and we think this improvement in operating expectations could happen as soon as this coming earnings season." The firm boosted its ratings on Equity Residential (EQR, $45.26, +$0.66, +1.48%) and Mid-America Apartment Communities Inc. (MAA, $54.78, +$0.95, +1.76%) to outperform from market perform and Essex Property Trust Inc. (ESS, $105.98, +$1.99, +1.91%) to market perform from underperform, but it cut its ratings on Apartment Investment & Management Co. (AIV, $22.19, +$0.08, +0.36%) and Colonial Properties Trust (CL, $83.76, +$0.49, +0.59%) to underperform from market perform.

Oppenheimer downgraded regional bank First Midwest Bancorp (FMBI, $16.36, -$1.55, -8.63%) to perform from outperform, saying the stock was strong last week on much better-than-expected results. First Midwest also had an FDIC-assisted transaction last week in which it acquired the assets of a failed bank, and the firm said it is concerned investors might be disappointed with that news, as two other banks had multiple, larger deals.

Guess? Inc. (GES, $50.63, +$1.01, +2.04%) shares have more than doubled in the past year, but they may well rise another 25%, Barron's said. Sales could grow in the double digits this year, and profit margins are strikingly high. The apparel retailer is finding a new edge, updating its trademark jeans and peddling in-the-moment items like jeggings (jeans/leggings) for young women and embroidered, distressed t-shirts for men.

Credit Suisse turned indecisive, downgrading ITT Educational Services Inc. (ESI, $109.51, -$2.28, -2.04%) and DeVry Inc. (DV, $64.69, -$4.77, -6.87%) just two weeks after upgrading them as it says government draft policy on "gainful employment" regulation may not be so generous after all. Other for-profit education companies trading lower included Apollo Group Inc. (APOL, $62.59, -$0.94, -1.48%) and Corinthian Colleges Inc. (COCO, $17.27, -$0.62, -3.47%).

Lorillard Inc.'s (LO, $80.50, +$0.93, +1.17%) first-quarter profit jumped 26% as shipments at the tobacco company increased following prior-year disruptions.

Caris & Co. boosted its price target on Netflix Inc. (NFLX, $107.08, +$7.35, +7.37%) by 25% to $120, saying that the online video-rental company continues to post strong growth and has surpassed its price target for the fourth time this year. The firm said consensus expectations are moving up, but fiscal 2011 numbers still look too low.

Bernstein cut its rating on Nokia Corp. (NOK, $12.44, -$0.32, -2.51%) to market perform from outperform, saying the fate of the world's largest maker of mobile phones is now too dependent on the success of Symbian 3, the delayed revamp of its "smartphone" operating system. The broker also told clients that the first-quarter results showed that the improvement in gross margins witnessed since the second quarter of 2009 has been halted and said Nokia's guidance cut for the second quarter of 2010 shows that "this isn't a temporary weakness but a trend that will stop only with the next product portfolio refresh."

Shares of Office Depot Inc. (ODP, $9.01, +$0.56, +6.63%) traded sharply higher Monday after Credit Suisse upgraded its stock-investment rating on the office supplier, with the positive sentiment also boosting shares of OfficeMax Inc. (OMX, $17.48, +$0.85, +5.11%). Credit Suisse said in a note Monday that channel checks point to a modest but slow improvement in the first quarter at Office Depot. "This sector has not yet seen the pickup other retail sectors have shown," the firm said as it raised its rating on Office Depot to neutral from underperform.

Quaker Chemical Corp. (KWR, $35.53, +$2.26, +6.79%) continued on its bullish April, rising to a new all-time high after gaining by a third this month. Shares have nearly doubled over the past three months and the specialty chemicals maker will report its first-quarter results after the close Tuesday.

Global Hunter Securities cut its stock-investment rating on Perry Ellis International Inc. (PERY, $25.31, -$1.44, -5.38%) to neutral from buy based on valuation. The firm said that while it expects to see strong execution from operations due to gross margin expansion and cost controls, the apparel company's shares have exceeded its price target.

PrivateBancorp Inc. (PVTB, $15.04, -$2.03, -11.89%) swung to a first-quarter loss that was wider than analysts' estimates as provisions for loan losses quadrupled.

Private equity firm GTCR LLC said Monday it is acquiring security systems firm Protection One Inc. (PONE, $15.40, +$1.64, +11.92%) from a group including Quadrangle Group LLC and Monarch Capital Partners.

SPX Corp. (SPW, $69.97, +$3.07, +4.59%) was boosted to buy from neutral by Bank of America Merrill Lynch analysts who said the diversified industrial company should see improvements to its businesses, particularly its flow and test measurement segments, while the industrial and thermal markets remain muted.

Thoratec Corp. (THOR, $35.07, +$0.72, +2.10%) agreed to sell its International Technidyne division, which makes a wide range of equipment for hemostasis management and point-of-care testing, to manufacturing company Danaher Corp. (DHR, $84.80, -$0.61, -0.71%) for at least $110 million.

Titan International Inc.'s (TWI, $12.05, +$0.58, +5.06%) first-quarter profit fell by 70% but at 6 cents a share was still twice the Street's consensus as revenue also slightly topped views as well. The maker of wheels and tires used for off-highway machinery, such as tractors, which said agriculture demand should remain strong in the second quarter. It also said mining looks bright and added it was increasing prices.

Travelzoo Inc. (TZOO, $19.00, +$2.50, +15.17%) reported first-quarter results better than the one analyst covering the stock expected. The company, which is paid by travel companies to advertise their offers, said the number of subscribers to its newsletter in North America and Europe jumped 25% from the previous year.

Keefe, Bruyette & Woods cut bank holding company Trustmark Corp. (TRMK, $26.06, -$0.77, -2.87%) to market perform from outperform on valuation, saying the shares have been strong since its exit from TARP in December, and there's limited upside left to its 12-month target price. "We continue to like TRMK's strong core profitability," the firm said.

Tuesday Morning Corp. (TUES, $7.56, -$1.03, -11.99%) shares fell after the home decoration close-out retailer posted third-quarter earnings just shy of expectations. The shortfall comes two weeks after the company raised its full-year earnings guidance to reflect a bump-up in sales on improved traffic.

-By Dow Jones Newswires; write to hotstocks@dowjones.com

http://online.wsj.com/article/BT-CO-20100426-711600.html?mod=WSJ_Banking_middleHeadlines

Sunday, April 25, 2010

The Sickening Abuse Of Power At The Heart of Wall Street:


Written by Simon Johnson
April 24, 2010 at 3:02 pm

http://baselinescenario.com/2010/04/24/the-sickening-abuse-of-power-at-the-heart-of-wall-street/

Here’s where we stand with regard to democratic discourse on the future our financial system: leading bankers will not come out to debate the issues in the open (despite being approached by reputable intermediaries after our polite challenge was issued) – sending instead their “astro turf” proxies to spread KGB-type disinformation.

Even Larry Summers, who has shifted publicly onto the side the angels (surprising and rather late, but welcome anyway), cannot – for whatever reason – bring himself to recognize the dangers inherent in our unstable and too-big-to-manage banks. Or perhaps he is just generating excuses that will justify not bringing the Brown-Kaufman amendment to the floor of Senate?

So let’s take it up a notch.

I strongly recommend that the responsible congressional committees request and require all assistant secretaries at the US Treasury (and other relevant political appointees over whom they have jurisdiction) to appear before them early next week.

The question will be simple: Please share your calendar of meetings this weekend, and provide us with a complete accounting of people with whom you met and conversed formally and informally.

The finance ministers and central bank governors of the world are in Washington this weekend for the spring meetings of the International Monetary Fund. As is usual, the world’s megabanks are also in town in force, organizing big meetings and small dinners.

Through these meetings dutifully troop US treasury officials, providing in-depth and off-the-record briefings to investors.

Banks such as JP Morgan Chase and the other top tier financial players thus peddle influence, leverage their access, and generally show off. They accumulate information from a host of official contacts and discern which way policymakers – their “good friends” – are leaning.

And what is the megabank whisper mill working on? Ignore the “economic research” papers these banks put out; that is pure pantomime for clients-to-be-duped-later. I’m talking about what they are telling the market – communicated in specific, personal conversations this weekend.

They are telling people that, based on their inside knowledge, Greece and potentially other eurozone countries will default on their debt. Perhaps they are telling the truth and perhaps they are lying. Most likely they are – as always – talking their book.

But the question is not the substance of their whisper campaign this weekend, it is the flow of information. Have they received material non-public information from US government officials? Show me the calendar of the top 10 treasury people involved, and then we can talk about whom to summon from the private sector to testify – under oath – about what they were told or not told.

There is no question that the megabanks derive great power and enormous profit from their web of official contacts. We should reflect carefully on whether such private flows of information between governments and “too big to fail” banks are entirely suitable in today’s unstable financial world.

Large global banks make money, in part, through nontransparent manipulation of information – this is the heart of the SEC charges against Goldman Sachs. But the problem is much broader: the Wall Street-Washington corridor is alive and well on its way to another crisis that will empower, enrich, and embolden insiders (public and private) while impoverishing the rest of us.

The big players on Wall Street are powerful like never before – and they use this power to press for information and favors from sympathetic (or scared) government officials. The big banks also appear hell-bent on abusing that power. One consequence will be further destabilizing global financial markets – watch carefully what happens to Greece, Portugal, Ireland, and Spain at the beginning of next week.

It is time for Congress to step in with a full investigation of the exact flow of information and advice between our major megabanks and key treasury officials. Start by asking tough questions about exactly who exchanged what kind of specific, material, market-moving information with whom this weekend in Washington.

Thursday, April 22, 2010

More News Relating To Goldman Sachs:


Here are a number of articles related to the SEC fraud charges against Goldman Sachs:

Goldman Loses German Bank's Business—Are Bonds Next?

http://www.cnbc.com/id/36694793

Along with SEC, other investigators and suits may target Goldman Sachs:

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/04/21/AR2010042105394.html

AIG Considering Potential Claims Against Goldman Sachs:

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704671904575195010771947900.html?mod=WSJ_hpp_MIDDLETopStories

Meet The New Goldman Derivatives Business:

http://www.marketwatch.com/story/meet-the-new-goldman-derivatives-business-2010-04-22

Michael Lewis: Must Read Today by Karl Denninger:

http://market-ticker.org/archives/2230-Michael-Lewis-Must-Read-Today.html

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Goldman Suit Exposes Big Banks to Firestorm:


http://news.goldseek.com/RickAckerman/1271829600.php

By: Rick Ackerman
Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Now we learn that the SEC split 3-2 over whether to go after Goldman Sachs in court. Supposedly, the regulatory agency prefers unanimous votes when bringing enforcement actions against the firms it regulates. Why the exception this time? The Wall Street Journal made it sound like it was simply partisan politics that carried the day – i.e., the SEC’s two Republicans voted against suing Goldman for civil fraud, but the three Democrats prevailed. That is superficially what happened, and it is as much of the story as the SEC is willing to divulge right now. But it’s bound to leave many observers, particularly Obama-ites in Congress who are out to pillory the bankers, with the impression that the two Republicans were merely looking out for their fat-cat buddies on Wall Street. This thought occurred to us as well, so we’d have to concede it is at least possible.

But might there have been another reason why the Republicans backed away from bringing formal charges against Goldman? We think there is and that it goes to the heart of the corruption in which the world’s largest banks have inextricably trapped themselves. For if you assert in a of court law that Goldman defrauded its customers, you have implicated every bank in the big leagues. Enabled by their respective central banks, they all – even the ones run by otherwise spotless Swiss Burghers -- play the same Ponzi game. Moreover, regardless of whether the charges brought against Goldman are civil or criminal, they will open the door to an endless flood of litigation with the potential to bring down the entire banking system. From this point forward, Goldman will be fair game for every aggrieved city, county, state, sovereign fund and class of investor they have done business with for the last decade. The same goes for Bank of America, J.P. Morgan, Morgan Stanley, Deutsche Bank et al.

Lynch Mob:

So it’s just possible the Republicans put politics aside when they voted, in effect, to quietly sanction Goldman behind the scenes. It must also have occurred to them that it would ultimately be impossible to mask the overwhelming stench of Goldman’s actions. The firm, after all, did sell an investment to the public that had secretly been created by someone betting on the portfolio to fail. There is no way Goldman can talk its way out of this, although that hasn’t stopped CEO Lloyd Blankfein from trying. With Goldman reporting a spectacular $3.4 billion quarter yesterday, he might as well be trying to explain to a lynch mob that he has never, ever kicked his cat and that he always helps little old ladies cross the street.

Some see the charge of civil, as opposed to criminal, fraud as reflecting a compromise engineered by Mr. Obama to help expedite his takeover of the financial sector. “He stirs up the masses with yet another example of Wall Street greed and fraud,” wrote one contributor to the Rick’s Picks forum, “but offers nothing more than what amounts to a fine to his friends at Goldman. We all know how deep their pockets are. They are quietly happy that this is the extent of the fallout.” While this seems plausible, it doesn’t reckon with the fact that just one civil suit could conceivably put the world’s largest banks in mortal jeopardy for years to come. Indeed, if they should somehow dodge the bullet, it would be evidence that the corruption that permeates the banking system has engulfed our judicial and political systems as well.

Sunday, April 18, 2010

VIDEO - Fundamental & Technical Analysis of the S&P 500's Daily & Weekly Charts:


Here is the end of the week analysis of the S&P 500's daily and weekly charts, with comments on important reports due out next week.

Happy Trading this week,
zigzagman



Wednesday, April 14, 2010

US Bank Accounting 'Masks True Debt Levels’:


http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/newsbysector/banksandfinance/7572887/US-bank-accounting-masks-true-debt-levels.html

US bank accounting 'masks true debt levels’

By James Quinn, US Business Editor
Published: 6:00AM BST 10 Apr 2010

Major Wall Street banks are using accounting techniques similar to those utilised by Lehman Brothers in its final days to mask the size of their balance sheets at the end of reporting periods.

The banks – which include Goldman Sachs – use complex but perfectly legitimate transactions in order to present investors and the wider market with a brighter assessment of their financial health.

Data analysed by the Wall Street Journal found that 18 major banks were, on average, able to reduce debt levels used to fund securities tradesby 42pc over the last five quarters using repurchase agreements, also known as “repo” trades. Under certain circumstances, some repurchase trades can be booked as “sales” and used to reduce debt.

The assessment, based on data from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, highlights the extent to which advanced accounting is still in use, even in the wake of the crippling financial crisis.

In Lehman’s case, the court-appointed investigator’s report into the bank’s September 2008 downfall found that the bank had used “Repo 105” – the name given to the technique within the bank – to significantly mask its borrowing, so decreasing its apparent risk profile.

According to the report, the ruse allowed Lehman to claim its liabilities were $50bn (£33bn) lower than they actually were by May 2008, just months before the bank collapsed.

The US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) is now looking into how widespread the use of such techniques actually is.

At the end of March, the US financial regulator dispatched letters giving America’s24 largest banking and insurance firms two weeks to hand over detailed information on how the repurchase agreements are used, as well as how such agreements are accounted for and disclosed to investors.

It is not known what the SEC intends to do with the data once it has received it, or indeed whether it will ever be made public.

Whatever the outcome, the latest revelations about the extent of the use of repo-financing should worry investors in the financial sector, as it suggests that banks are continuing to take pre-crisis level risks in spite of the events of the last two years.

A Goldman Sachs spokesman said: “Normal fluctuations in the size of our balance sheet… as well as fluctuations in specific line items, are fully disclosed in our quarterly and annual SEC filings.”

Monday, April 12, 2010

"Employment Will Come Back In America, It's Just Pay That Won't"


http://www.businessinsider.com/robert-reich-the-future-of-american-jobs-2010-4

Robert Reich | Apr. 12, 2010, 11:18 AM

Many of my students at Berkeley who will be graduating in June are worried about the job market. I understand their worries. But they and other new college grads have less cause for concern than most American workers. Let me explain.

Since the start of the Great Recession in December 2007, the U.S. economy has shed 8.4 million jobs and failed to create another 2.7 million required by an ever-larger pool of potential workers. That leaves us more than 11 million jobs behind. (The number is worse if you include everyone working part-time who’d rather it be full-time, those working full-time at fewer hours, and people who are overqualified for the jobs they’re in.)

This means even if we enjoy a vigorous recovery that produces, say, 300,000 net new jobs a month, we could be looking at five to eight years before catching up to where we were before the recession began.

Given how many Americans are unemployed or underemployed, it’s hard to see where we get sufficient demand to support a vigorous recovery. Outlays from the federal stimulus have already passed their peak, and the Federal Reserve won’t keep interest rates near zero for very long. Although consumers are beginning to come out of their holes, it will be many years before they can return to their pre-recession levels of spending. Most households rely on two wage earners, of whom at least one is now likely to be unemployed, underemployed or in danger of losing a job. And even households whose incomes have returned are likely to be residing in houses whose values haven’t—which means they can’t turn their homes into cash machines as they did before the recession.

While consumers have been shedding their debts like mad—often simply by defaulting on loans—their remaining burdens are still heavy. At the end of last year, debt averaged $43,874 per American, or about 122% of annual disposable income. Most analysts believe a sustainable debt load is around 100% of disposable income, assuming a normal level of employment and normal access to credit—neither of which we are likely to have for some time.

Some economic cheerleaders say rising stock prices are making consumers feel wealthier and therefore readier to spend. But most Americans’ biggest asset is their homes. The “wealth effect” is felt mainly by the richest 10%, whose net worth is largely stocks and bonds. The top 10% accounted for about half of total national income in 2007. But they were only about 40% of total spending. A vigorous jobs recovery can’t be based on 40% of what was spent before the economy collapsed.

What’s likely to slow the jobs recovery most, however, is the indubitable reality that many of the jobs that have been lost will never return.

The Great Recession has accelerated a structural shift in the economy that had been slowly building for years. Companies have used the downturn to aggressively trim payrolls, making cuts they’ve been reluctant to make before. Outsourcing abroad has increased dramatically. Companies have discovered that new software and computer technologies have made many workers in Asia and Latin America almost as productive as Americans, and that the Internet allows far more work to be efficiently moved to another country without loss of control.

Companies have also cut costs by substituting more computerized equipment for labor. They’ve made greater use of numerically controlled machine tools, robotics and a wide range of office software.

These cost-cutting moves have allowed many companies to show profits notwithstanding relatively poor sales. Alcoa, for example, had $1.5 billion in cash at the end of last year, double what it had on hand at the end of 2008. It managed this largely by cutting 28,000 jobs, 32% of its work force. But for workers, there’s no return. Those who have lost their jobs to foreign outsourcing or labor-replacing technologies are unlikely ever to get them back. And they have little hope of finding new jobs that pay as well. More than 40% of today’s unemployed have been without work for over six months, a higher proportion than at any time in 60 years.

The only way many of today’s jobless are likely to retain their jobs or get new ones is by settling for much lower wages and benefits. The official unemployment numbers hide the extent to which American workers are already on this downward path. But if you look at income data you’ll see the drop.

Among those with jobs, more and more have accepted lower pay and benefits as a condition for keeping them. Or they have lost higher-paying jobs and are now in new ones that pay less. Or new hires are paid far lower wages than the old. (In January, Ford Motor Co. announced that it would add 1,200 jobs at its Chicago assembly plant but didn’t trumpet that the new workers will be paid half of what current workers were paid when they began.) Or they have become consultants or temporary workers whose pay is unsteady and benefits nonexistent.

This shift also helps explain why the unemployment rate for Americans with college degrees is now only 5%, while it is 10.5% for those with only a high-school degree, and 15.6% for Americans with less than a high-school diploma. The jobs of well-educated Americans, although hardly immune to foreign outsourcing and technological displacement, have been less vulnerable to these trends than the jobs of Americans with fewer years of education.

The likelihood, therefore, is that as the economy struggles to recover and today’s jobless begin to find work, the median wage will continue to fall—as it did between 2001 and 2007, during the last so-called recovery.

More Americans will be working, but for pay they consider inadequate. The approaching recovery will be tepid because so many people will lack the money needed to buy all the goods and services the economy can produce.

Americans will once again be employed, but they will also be back on the downward escalator of declining pay they rode before the Great Recession.

Friday, April 9, 2010

VLNC - Valence Technology Brings Intelligent Batteries to "Smart Grid Community of the Future":


http://finance.yahoo.com/news/Valence-Technology-Brings-bw-2494091485.html?x=0&.v=1

$13.5 Million DOE Grant to Help Fund a $27.4 Million Regional Demonstration Project: “Technology Solutions for Wind Integration in the Electric Reliability Council of Texas”

Press Release Source: Valence Technology, Inc.
Thursday April 8, 2010, 9:03 am EDT

AUSTIN, Texas--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Valence Technology (NASDAQ: VLNC) today announced it has been selected as the preferred residential/community battery technology provider for the “Smart Grid Community of the Future,” the first smart grid solar powered residential development in Texas, the Houston-area master planned community of Discovery at Spring Trails. Utilizing its lithium phosphate battery design, including intelligent Command & Control logic, Valence Technology will supply dynamic energy systems for the individual smart grid residences containing electric vehicle charging stations and smart appliances. Valence Technology’s energy solutions will be used to support a smart-energy practice known as “peak shaving,” whereby smart appliances like dishwashers and washing machines are efficiently utilized during peak demand hours.

This smart grid project will demonstrate how community battery systems can enhance grid stability and decrease overall electricity costs by practicing “peak shaving.” Homeowners can avoid higher peak power costs during evening hours when multiple appliances are typically running after Valence Technology dynamic energy systems kick-in to power the smart appliances.

“Valence Technology is proud to be involved with a project as pioneering as the Discovery at Spring Trails smart grid community,” said Robert L. Kanode, president and CEO, Valence Technology. “By significantly reducing homeowners' energy costs through peak shaving, community storage applications will gain acceptance in the marketplace. Valence Technology is well-positioned to provide proven, field-tested dynamic energy systems that will enable greener, smarter and more efficient energy use.”

As part of the regional demonstration project entitled “Technology Solutions for Wind Integration in the Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT),” the “Smart Grid Community of the Future” will serve as a test model for the development of future distributed energy-generation communities utilizing clean technologies. The project includes improved technologies to monitor the ERCOT electric grid and expanded smart portal capability to support demand response in the new development, Discovery at Spring Trails. With $13.5 million in funding from the U.S. Department of Energy, the $27.4 million project is scheduled to break ground this year.

The team for this “Smart Grid” project includes CCET, Valence Technology, Southwest Research Institute, Electric Power Group, EcoEdge, CenterPoint Energy, Oncor, American Electric Power, Sharyland Utilities, Land Tejas Developers, Montgomery County Municipal Utility District 119, Xtreme Power/Energy Xtreme, General Electric, GridPoint, Direct Energy, Drummond Group and Frontier Associates.

Valence Technology stationary energy storage systems are designed for use in frequency regulation, community energy storage, telecommunications back-up power, auxiliary power units and uninterruptible power supply projects around the globe.

About Valence Technology, Inc.

Valence Technology is an international leader in the development of safe, long-life lithium iron magnesium phosphate energy storage solutions and provides the enabling technology behind some of the world’s most innovative and environmentally friendly applications. Founded in 1989, Valence today offers a proven technology and manufacturing infrastructure that delivers ISO-certified products and processes that are protected by an extensive global patent portfolio. Headquartered in Austin, Texas, Valence Technology is strategically aligned by five business segments: Motive, Marine, Stationary, Industrial and Military. In addition to the corporate headquarters in Texas, Valence Technology has its Research & Development Center in Nevada, its Europe/Asia Pacific Sales office in Northern Ireland and global fulfillment centers in North America and Europe. Valence Technology is traded on the NASDAQ Capital Market under the ticker symbol VLNC. For more information, visit www.valence.com.

About CCET

The Center for the Commercialization of Electric Technologies (CCET) recently received the $13.5 million grant from U.S. Department of Energy aimed at better integrating the vast Texas wind energy resources into the state’s electric transmission, distribution and metering system. The project represents a multi-faceted synergistic approach to managing fluctuations in wind power in the large Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT) transmission grid through better system monitoring capabilities, enhanced operator visualization and improved load management. CCET is leading a coalition of Texas electricity market participants, including Valence Technology, in carrying out the demonstration project. For more information, visit:

http://www.electrictechnologycenter.com



Thursday, April 8, 2010

A Shout Out for Scruffy...


GATA Bill Murphy's Lemetropole Cafe market letter...

http://agoracom.com/ir/ECU/forums/discussion/topics/412960-a-shout-out-for-scruffy/messages/1360171#message

Good morning Bill. As I read through the morning (non-mainstream) news I see a huge pervasive rot threatening all aspects of our financial lives.

Here is a short list of what we are up against:

1 A network of elitists bankers who have a get out of jail free card, who contribute to both sides of political campaigns, who migrate employees to key positions in the administration and in the regulatory agencies that are supposed to assure fair market practices.

2 A history of million dollar fines (if any) for billion dollar crimes and no jail time for the biggest crooks.

3 Total control of mainstream media to the point of effective propaganda. Has anyone read or heard anything re the recent CFTC bombshells on MSNBC?

4 Regulations that destroy any transparency in our markets. The big bankers are protected by the regulators that are commissioned to protect us against them.

5 Naked shorting by the elite insiders to the detriment of all of us investors. Every naked short sale recorded and is identifiable, yet I have never heard of a single person, or clearing house, or brokerage receiving as much as a fine let alone jail time.

6 Evidence repeatedly provided to regulators and compliance agencies of the US that is NEVER acted on. Not one of the exposures leads to cleaning up of the markets, to firing of the idiots in charge, to jail time for those obviously complicit graft enablers, nor intervening in the crimes in progress.

7 A strong $ policy based on propaganda and manipulation. Does anyone with one eye and two brain cells believe the inflation #s? ... the unemployment numbers? ..that we have "turned the corner" or have begun the recovery? ..that the ObamaCare will cut the deficit? .. that the treasury is not the biggest buyer of treasuries via buy-backs?

8 Gambling casinos (crimex/nymex/lbma) that set the prices on physical commodities.

9 "Physical Markets" that have no physical.

10 Bribes offered to keep options holders from demanding physical delivery.

11 ETF’s that can’t be audited. Anyone who has read the prospectus and thinks that he/she is investing in physical should not be allowed to wield a check book.

12 Rules that allow options to be settled with (fraudulent) ETF shares.

13 A Fed that can keep its books hidden from the public. I was going to say from congress, but congress is part of the problem and we cannot count on them to act responsibly.

14 A government backed stock market manager (PPT) to get people to continue to "invest" in a stock market balloon while savings returns are miniscule to nonexistent.

15 A steady move to shun new purchases of US treasuries by the rest of the world.

16 Most moves up recently in the US $ have not been because of anything that indicates the $ is healthy, but because the currencies of the rest of the world are down graded by US based rating agencies. This while ALL currencies are pushed around by markets dominated by US and UK bankers.

17 Assassination attempts on whistle blowers.

18 And not the last, not the least, but one of the most egregious, a congress and administration that panders to special interests and totally disrespects, ignores, and denigrates the citizens, as it shoves this nation down the socialistic toilet.

And once again, as has often been repeated throughout history, gold and silver are the last shelter and protection one can have against corrupt public and financial institutions.

Thanks Bill and all the GATA organization. Many people are now in a better position to see what is going on and to protect themselves.

Scruffy

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

AIG Gets Away With It:


http://jessescrossroadscafe.blogspot.com/2010/04/aig-gets-away-with-it.html

Posted by Jesse at 10:09 AM
06 April 2010

Do you think the paper shredders and 'delete keys' were working overtime?

Do you think the Justice Department was highly motivated to nail the guy who could probably implicate the biggest of the TBTF banks and their enablers in the government?

Do you think the American President was just playing you when he said, "I did not run for office to be helping out a bunch of fat cat bankers on Wall Street."

Do you think Joe knows where a lot of the bodies are buried - on Wall Street and in London and Washington?

Do you think it pays to be a 'Friend of Lloyd' and a feeder source of campaign contributions to most of the Congress?

Do you think the people are just itching to vote out every incumbent in November?

Do you think the spineless lack of serious investigation and reform is setting the US up again for another, even bigger, fianncial scandal and crisis?

You might be right.

******************************************

No Criminal Charges Likely in AIG Collapse

By Armen Keteyian
CBS News
April 2, 2010 6:43 PM

CBS NEWS has learned that former AIG executive Joseph Cassano - the prime focus of the investigation into its collapse - will meet with Department of Justice attorneys next week in what will likely be an end to the two year criminal investigation into the company.

Sources tell CBS News that the criminal case against Cassano - once called "the Man who Crashed the World" - has "hit a brick wall" - meaning that it is likely no one will be held criminally liable for the downfall of the company that triggered a $182 billion dollar federal bailout.

Sources tell CBS News federal investigators have been unable to uncover any evidence that Cassano lied to his bosses or shareholders about financial problems at AIG.

In recent months, Cassano's lawyers - citing internal documents - argued that he never broke the law. Instead, he simply got caught up in a financial tsunami that engulfed Wall Street.

http://tiny.cc/ynryn

Posted by Jesse April 6, 2010
http://jessescrossroadscafe.blogspot.com/2010/04/aig-gets-away-with-it.html