Sunday, November 30, 2008

Housing Update - How Far To The Bottom?

Inquiring minds have been asking for another housing update. My previous update was was on February 15,2008 in Housing Bottom Nowhere in Sight. I did not remember Bernanke's comments at the time but looking back now they sure seem funny.
CNBC is reporting Bernanke Expects Housing Recovery by Year End.

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke told lawmakers Tuesday he expects the downtrodden U.S. housing sector to improve by the end of the year, a senator who participated in the closed-door meeting said.

"He let us believe that the housing situation should begin to ameliorate by the end of the year," said Sen. Pete Domenici, a New Mexico Republican, told reporters.
Using the Japan Nationwide Land Prices model as my guide, here is how I have called things in real time.



click on chart for sharper image

I just added the Winter 2008 arrow. Housing prices are now one notch closer to their final destination. The US Timeline scale is compressed. At the current pace, housing will bottom in about 7 years vs. 14 years in Japan.

Flashback March 26 2005

The initial data point was established in the post It's a Totally New Paradigm on March 26, 2005. Here are some excerpts from that post.
  • Ron Shuffield, president of Esslinger-Wooten-Maxwell Realtors says that "South Florida is working off of a totally new economic model than any of us have ever experienced in the past." He predicts that a limited supply of land coupled with demand from baby boomers and foreigners will prolong the boom indefinitely.

  • "I just don't think we have what it takes to prick the bubble," said Diane C. Swonk, chief economist at Mesirow Financial in Chicago, who was an optimist during the 90's. "I don't think prices are going to fall, and I don't think they're even going to be flat."

  • Gregory J. Heym, the chief economist at Brown Harris Stevens, is not sold on the inevitability of a downturn. He bases his confidence in the market on things like continuing low mortgage rates, high Wall Street bonuses and the tax benefits of home ownership. "It is a new paradigm" he said.
Flashback October 27, 2005

Inquiring minds may wish to review Bernanke: There's No Housing Bubble to Go Bust.
Ben S. Bernanke does not think the national housing boom is a bubble that is about to burst, he indicated to Congress last week, just a few days before President Bush nominated him to become the next chairman of the Federal Reserve.

U.S. house prices have risen by nearly 25 percent over the past two years, noted Bernanke, currently chairman of the president's Council of Economic Advisers, in testimony to Congress's Joint Economic Committee. But these increases, he said, "largely reflect strong economic fundamentals," such as strong growth in jobs, incomes and the number of new households.
What The US Can Learn From Japan

I recently came across an interesting report called The Age of Balance Sheet Recessions: What Post-2008 U.S., Europe and China Can Learn from Japan 1990-2005 by Richard C. Koo
Chief Economist, Nomura Research Institute, Tokyo, October 2008. The report contains some very interesting charts.

Click On Any Chart In The Set For Sharper Image

Exhibit 1. US Housing Price Futures Moving Closer to the Japanese Experience



Note: the line in pink is Tokyo Condo Prices while I am using Japan Land Prices as my model except with a US timeline that looks more like the above.

Thus I see a bottom in US housing in 4-5 years. If I can get a hold of the data that created the above charts I can probably get my friend "TC" to chart it going forward. My latest update from "TC" was Case Shiller and CAR Analysis November 2008 Release.

Exhibit 4. Cumulative Capital Losses on Shares and Land since 1990 Reached $15 Trillion or 3 Years Worth of Japan�s GDP



Exhibit 5. Balance Sheet Problems Forced Japanese Businesses to Pay Down Debt even with Zero Interest Rates



I have extensive comments on balance sheets and paying down debt below.

Exhibit 6. Japan�s GDP Grew even after Massive Loss of Wealth and Private Sector Rushing to Pay Down Debt



The above chart shows in pink the Japan Land Price chart that I have been using since Spring of 2005. It represents the Commercial Land Price Index in six major cities.

Exhibit 23. US Interest Rates Took 30 Years to Return to Their 1920s Level



The above chart should give treasury bears something to think about.

Balance Sheets and Paying Down Debt

There is every reason to believe US banks will face the same experience of paying down debts in a Zero Interest Rate world as opposed to going on a lending spree. Some will challenge this notion because of Obama's pledge to create jobs and rebuild infrastructure.

The counter is that Japan went on a wild spending spree as well, building bridges to nowhere and it did not do Japan any good. Here is an article by James Shaft quoting Richard Koo in A long, shaky bridge to recovery that discusses this very issue.
The lessons of Japan's stumbling path out of deflation and recession suggest that government spending can help stave off an extended recession, but it may take years not months and require an unlikely combination of political will and consensus.

That'll be a lot of bridges to nowhere.

Government spending can break the cycle. Not tax cuts, which will only go to pay down debt or are saved into a banking system that isn't working, but actual bricks and mortar. Think the New Deal's Works Progress Administration supersized or Japan building highways and bridges over seemingly every river, stream and rivulet.

"It was the fiscal stimulus that actually helped end the Great Depression, not the monetary policy," said Richard Koo, Tokyo-based chief economist at Nomura Research Institute and author of The Holy Grail of Macroeconomics: Lessons from Japan's Great Recession.

"I don't think it will be over quickly. I am recommending at least three to five years seamless medium-term fiscal stimulus measures to give enough time for the private sector to repair its balance sheet."

Three to five years is an eternity in political life. It is an absolute sure thing that incoming President Barack Obama will design and implement a pretty chunky fiscal stimulus package even if President Bush does not pass one in his waning days in office. But think about how difficult it will be to maintain both the will and power to maintain a huge borrow and spend programme for several years.

Koo thinks that Japan, which was facing a far more serious destruction of assets, derailed its recovery with premature fiscal reform. "If we had known in advance that this kind of recession will never be over until private balance sheets are repaired and fiscal stimulus is needed to keep the economy growing, we could have done it in seven or eight years perhaps instead of 15," he said.

Near zero interest rates were ineffective in Japan because people and business refused to borrow, continuing to pay down debt to repair balance sheets that had been hurt badly by the fall in the value of assets like stock holdings and real estate.
I disagree with the conclusions of Koo and instead suggest that building bridges to nowhere wasted capital and prolonged Japan's deflation. Simple logic dictates that one cannot spend one's way to prosperity.

In the meantime I am sticking with my model that suggests there is another 3-5 years before housing bottoms in the US. I also expect the UK, Canada, and Australia to follow similar paths, offset only by the start of their respective housing busts.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List

Christmas through my son's eyes

Keep linking to the party here ladies! What fun this is! I am loving seeing what you all are loving right now! I've already found about ten things I HAVE TO HAVE and quite a few projects I'm going to try out too. (Sorry about the mess with Mr. Linky. He's on my crap list right now.)

So as I was thinking of more of my favorites right now, my son came to mind. This season has shown me example one million and one of how my son has changed my life for the better...he sees magic in everything right now. Snowmen are awesome. Snow is magical. And Santa is the BOMB. (Da bomb.)

And for that reason, some of my favorites right now are mine only because they are his...I mentioned the 12 foot Santa for the front yard? No I haven't purchased one (yet.) but I am just itchin' to, just because every time we walk into Lowe's, he is. in. heaven. But I have purchased plenty of other items I never would have before. And I LOVE them! This has translated to me spending WAY too much on cute, fun, magical little things that I know he will love for years.

Like a Santa cookie jar. I've never owned a cookie jar in my life. And now, I just had to have it!:


Cute snowmen towels from Target:


Silicone cupcake molds for a DOLLAR each from Target:



We already tried them out tonight for Hubby's birthday. They came out PERFECT! (Love you Lovey!!)



Stuffed Santa: (consignment shop find, brand new, $7 people.) He doesn't put him down:


My countdowns. (Which I will be finishing up tonight...GAH!)

Of course we needed a The Night Before Christmas book, it's beautiful. And I wanted to get him the Rudolph movie and of COURSE they had a set of the old Christmas movies for $40 and I just had to get it. Help me. My husband begs of you.




And the gingerbread house from Hallmark that lights up and plays music (click play button!):

HA! I just had to do it! Seriously though, our son must play this thing 15 times a day. He tries to carry it everywhere with him...while I follow him around freaking out because I'm thrifty and that thing was $20!!


I can't wait to see more of your favorites! I'll be back this week with more of mine!

Gordon Brown, Alistair Darling, Mervyn King Urge Banks To Lend

Complete silliness reigns in the UK as Prime Minister Brown, Chancellor Darling, and BOE Governor Mervyn King Urge Banks To lend.
U.K. house prices dropped to the lowest level in almost three years in November as banks starved the property market of credit, Hometrack Ltd. said.

The average cost of a home in England and Wales fell 8.1 percent in the past 12 months to 161,400 pounds ($248,000), the lowest since January 2006, the London-based property researcher said in a statement today. Values declined 1.1 percent on the month, compared with a 1.3 percent drop in October.

Prime Minister Gordon Brown urged banks to free up credit last week as political pressure mounts for him to implement measures to force them to lend. The Bank of England will cut the benchmark interest rate this week to 2 percent, the lowest since 1951, as policy makers combat the recession and the housing market slump, economists say.

Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling pledged last week to do �whatever is necessary� to get banks lending again. Bank of England Governor Mervyn King refused to rule out nationalizing financial institutions to revive credit.
With home prices plunging and unemployment rising the last thing banks should do is go on a lending spree. Forcing banks to lend will force them to incur more losses. It is as simple as that. The Chancellor, Prime Minister, and Governor have all lost their minds.

Elsewhere, the Bank of Japan is on the verge of fiscal insanity as well.

Public Broadcaster NKH says Bank of Japan to Hold Emergency Policy Meeting to encourage banks to lend.
The Bank of Japan, the country's central bank, will hold an emergency policy meeting this week, NHK reported, without saying where it obtained the information.

The bank will discuss creating a system to lend money to commercial banks and to encourage them to provide financing to businesses, public broadcaster NHK said.
Banks are in trouble because of excessive lending yet everyone seems to think the cure for excessive risk taking and poor lending practices is excessive risk taking and pool lending practices.

UK 'closer' to adopting the euro

The BBC is reporting UK 'closer' to adopting the euro
The UK is "closer than ever before" to joining the euro, according to the president of the European Commission, Jose Manuel Barroso.

Speaking on a French radio show, he said British politicians were considering the move because of the effects of the global credit crunch.

"I'm not going to break the confidentiality of certain conversations, but some British politicians have already told me, 'If we had the euro, we would have been better off'. "

"I know that the majority in Britain are still opposed, but there is a period of consideration under way and the people who matter in Britain are currently thinking about it", he said.

The value of sterling compared with other currencies has fallen during the credit crunch, and the UK government has had to spend massively in recent months to try to support the economy.
China�s November Manufacturing Contracts by Record

Bloomberg is reporting China�s November Manufacturing Contracts by Record.
China�s manufacturing contracted by the most on record and export orders slumped as a slowdown in the world�s fourth-biggest economy deepened.

The Purchasing Managers� Index fell to a seasonally adjusted 38.8 in November from 44.6 in October, the China Federation of Logistics and Purchasing said today in an e- mailed statement. Export orders, output and new orders all contracted by the most since the survey began in 2005.

China�s export orders declined to 29 in November from 41.4 in October, the survey showed. A reading above 50 reflects an expansion, below 50 a contraction. The output index fell to 35.5 from 44.3, while the index of new orders dropped to 32.3 from 41.7.

Weaker demand for Chinese goods and a slump in construction are undermining growth. China last month announced a $586 billion stimulus package and the biggest interest-rate cut in 11 years to revive the economy and counter the risk of spiraling unemployment and social unrest.
With stimulus running rampant, and monetary mistakes everywhere one looks, those looking for a complete collapse in the US dollar are unlikely to see it.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List

Tell us a few of your favorite things!!


Copy HTML below to add to your blog!


**Edited to add that I've extended this for the giveaway till Saturday at noon. So keep linking till then! And you are still welcome to keep posting after that just for fun!

It's here! It's here! I don't know about you, but this time of year just makes everything more fun. I guess I find I'm more thankful for the little things right now too. I don't know what it is, but weeks ago, while shopping, I thought of this idea after I must have said "OH, how CUTE!" about fifty trillion times while eyeing all the Christmas stuff.

And that's how this fun post came about. So all you have to do is either create a post and link to it here, or link to a past post. It can be ANYTHING!! How about your favorite TV show right now? (Kath and Kim.) Or your favorite food? (Cinnamon Bagelfuls.) Your favorite song? (Darius Rucker, "It won't be like this for long." Dare you not to cry.) Favorite holiday decor? (Magnolias.) Toiletry? (Oil of Olay warming scrub. Ohhhh, love. it.) Home decor? (New flannel sheets from Target. Only $20 for a king size!) Anything! Have fun with it! If it's an item you buy, tell us where you get it. If you made it, tell us how. If you cook it, give us the recipe.

And if you don't have a blog or Web site, don't fret! Just leave a comment (everyone else please comment too!) and let me know by leaving your name or e-mail or something I can identify you with.

And for all this...you'll be entered for my fantabulous giveaway! Well, not fantabulous, just kind of fabulous, or a little fantastic, either way. I've just been grabbing fun stuff for weeks as I've been shopping around. Some is Christmasy, some isn't. All my favorites right now, all fun:




Hot chocolate
Bath salts
Christmas kitchen towels
Pine scented BBW home spray
Christmas scrapbook paper
Holiday scrapbook items
Popcorn (you knew that was coming!)
Dollar bin stuff from Target
Santa matches (Precious!)
Pine cones you can glitter to your heart's content
Santa sign
Fun and easy recipes for entertaining
Reindeer food for the kiddies to sprinkle on the lawn


I'll draw the winner this Friday. So until then, Linky, Linky ladies! (Taken down for the time being because of Explorer issues!)


P.S. The reindeer food and the pine spray aren't in the picture because my frazzled brain can't remember where I put them. I'm thinking of about 32 projects I want to work on right now. It will come to me tonight when I am just about to drift off to sleep...then I'll have to get up and run to get them so I don't forget again. Bear with me.

Some new character sketches and design for Manga Kapow Express.

Some new character sketches and design for Manga Kapow Express.

Some random character study for Kapow Express. Some more additional characters are much needed for many things to come in the comics. These are just really quick doodle, nothing set in stone...just ideas flowing around that push my hand to sketch them out.

Ha!
1) Some dude...donno where to put him yet.
character sketch male, kapow express, manga

2)An old lady from some clan, possibly bad @$$ old fart.
character sketch female, kapow express, manga


New tutorials:
-Drawing Manga woman face, hair, and torso
-Drawing Gypsy dancer female
-Drawing and shading face and head
-Draw quick comics panel using values and composition.
-Drawing haunted tree and castle
-Manga tutorial drawing giant mecha robot
-How to draw face soft shading female.
-Concept Art tutorial, magma river lava environment.

Dragon Creature design tutorial
- (Part 1) Draw and paint Dragon Fire Blaze
- (Part 2) Manga Tutorial Draw Fire Dragon
- (Part 3) Digital Art tutorial, Dragon Creature
- (Part 4) Digital Painting Step by step, dragon
- (Part 5) Drawing and painting Dragon Creature

FEATURE TUTORIAL:
Environmental Concept Sketch Tutorial
Face Constructed: How to draw faces
Character Design Tutorial Download
-Draw and Paint Women Body Tutorial II: Female Manga Fusion II
-Character Design Tutorial: Dark Valkyrie

** If you have any basic questions or specific please looked up Q/A section. Most of the time your questions has already been answered in Q/A.

If you need any help or support you can
-post questions or comment on the post (seems to be the fastest way to get response)
Peace,

19,000 WaMu Employees Will Be Synergized Out Of A Job

Forbes is reporting JPMorgan Plans To Ax The WaMu Suits.
Up to 19,000 employees of Washington Mutual face being laid off this weekend as JPMorgan Chase turns up the synergy on its recent acquisition.

On Friday, JPMorgan Chase (JPM) said it expects to retain the 22,000 employees who work at Washington Mutual branches and 2,000 workers in the mortgage and wealth management divisions in California, spokesman Tom Kelly told Forbes.com. The company has not yet determined the total numbers to be cut in other states, but it planning to inform all former WaMu employees of their job status by Monday.

WaMu had about 43,000 employees as of June, according to a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Combined, Chase and WaMu have about 5,400 branches. The company said it only plans to close about 10.0%.

The bulk of the job cuts will be at the Washington Mutual headquarters in Seattle due to the overlap in operations with the current employees at JPMorgan.
Merger Synergizing

Expect to see more synergizing from all mergers we have seen. Here is a list of synergy discussions now doubt underway.

  • JP Morgan and Washington Mutual
  • Bank of America and Countrywide Financial
  • Bank of America and Merrill Lynch
  • JP Morgan and Bear Stearns
  • Wachovia and Wells Fargo


More Synergizing Coming

Still more synergy will come from hundreds of regional banks that have not yet gone under but will as the FDIC adds 54 more banks to its 'problem list'
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. said Tuesday the list of banks it considers to be in trouble shot up nearly 50 percent to 171 during the third quarter -- yet another sign of escalating problems among the institutions controlling Americans' deposits.

The 171 banks on the FDIC's "problem list" encompass only about 2 percent of the nearly 8,500 FDIC-insured institutions. Still, the increase from 117 in the second quarter is sharp, and the current tally is the highest since late 1995.

Banks that don't make the list can end up collapsing anyway -- the two biggest bank failures over the past year, Washington Mutual Inc. and IndyMac Bancorp, had not been on the FDIC's list of troubled banks. Wachovia Corp., which nearly failed before it got bought by Wells Fargo & Co. in October, had not been on the list, either.

Recently, community banks -- defined as those with assets under $1 billion -- have started to show similar stresses as their larger counterparts, the FDIC said.
Downsizing On Top Of Synergizing

Of course we cannot forget just plain old fashioned downsizing as noted in Citigroup's Town Hall Meeting
In yet another round of massive financial layoffs, Citigroup plans to cut about 50,000 jobs.

Combined with earlier cuts of more than 20,000 positions, the latest job cuts will equal a 20 percent reduction in the bank's workforce from peak levels reached in the fourth quarter of 2007.

In October, fellow blue chip American Express Co. (AXP) announced major layoffs, unveiling plans to slash 7,000 jobs. So far this year, Goldman has said it would cut 3,200 jobs, Whirlpool dropped the ax on 5,000, Yahoo cut 1,000 positions, and Hewlett-Packard shed 24,000 jobs.
Non-Financial Downsizing

After Christmas, expect to see massive job losses in commercial real estate, restaurants, and retail stores. Looking ahead there is no source of jobs anywhere to be found. Unemployment is going to soar.

Many who have not yet embraced frugality are going to have frugality embrace them.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List

Fujifilm Brings Back Polaroid-Style Cameras

Fujifilm Brings Back Polaroid-Style Cameras

More than a year ago, the death knell of the Polaroid camera was widely documented. In February, Polaroid began shutting down its film factories, as the technology faded to black.

But lomographs, take heart. Fujifilm has stepped in with its line of Instax Mini instant-film cameras, which can be purchased for about $100 or so: a bit much for an impulse buy, perhaps, but cheap enough that a true fan can resuscitate some childhood fun without paying an arm and a leg on eBay.

While this isn't your mother's Polaroid camera, at least on paper the experience is the same: you take a picture, the camera ejects the film, and in a few minutes or so you have a color picture. What Fuji has done is to take that basic experience and added a bit more sophistication. ( (It should also be noted that in 2009, Polaroid will release a digital camera with a built-in ZINK printer.)

What you can buy and where you can buy them go hand in hand. Until now, the only place to buy the base Instax Mini 7S was at YesAsia.com, where the camera ships in both pink and chocolate colors, for about $76. A ten-pack of film adds about $10, bringing the total package price to $85.98.

Lomography.com said Tuesday, however, that it has added the Fuji's full line of instant-film cameras to its Web store. I'm not sure why, but the Instax line is also alternatively referred to as the "Cheki" line on the site.

For comparison's sake, Lomography offers the Instax Mini S Chocolate/Fuji Cheki 7 for $100, although the site will throw in a free film package for today only, Nov. 26. (Each film pack contains ten exposures, so it appears that a "twin pack" includes two 10-exposure packs.) The camera weighs 320g, uses a f=60mm lens, focusing from 0.6 m through infinity. basic exposure compensation is included, along with a low-light flash and an electronic shutter. All of the cameras include a nifty little mirror for taking pictures of yourself.

Normally, adding an additional twin film pack costs about $25, with discounts for bulk purchases. All of Fuji's cameras appear to produce prints that are credit card sized: 6.5 cm wide by 4.6 cm high. Special widescreen (6.2cm x 9.9cm) film is only compatible with the Instax 200. All of the Fuji instant film for the Instax/Cheki cameras is ISO 800.

The $135 Instax Mini 25/Fuji Cheki 25 adds an additional shutter button for vertical or horizontal shooting, a rudimentary range finder, two focus modes, a programmed electronic shutter, intelligent flash, and even an LCD counter of the available shots.

The $200 Instax Mini 55i/Fuji Cheki 55i adds a self-timer feature, as well as a two-shot mode, where you can set the camera up to take two quick shots -- a good way to burn through your available supply of film. The camera also includes a "close up lens" for focusing from 35 cm away.

It goes without saying, of course, that shooting and printing digital camera prints are far cheaper than these cameras, whether you choose to print at a retail store or at home. But that's not really the point, is it?

Creative's $200 Vado HD pocket camcorder ready for pre-order

Creative's $200 Vado HD pocket camcorder ready for pre-order



We've seen these Amazon 'leaks' time and again. So while the December 7th date for the Vado HD might be an educated guess, the details including that $200 price tag certainly look real enough. The display still measures 2-inches, but the beefier 3.3 x 7.9 x 6.3-inch solid state camcorder now brings 8GB of storage for up to 2 hours of 720p MPEG-4 recordings -- 8 hours at VGA quality. It also ships with an HDMI cable for instant playback to your like-equipped television. Otherwise, slot the cam into your PC's (XP and Vista, only) USB port to instantly share your works to YouTube and others with the help of the cam's built-in Vado Central Software. With this, the Kodak Zi6, and Flip Mino HD, there certainly won't be any shortage of pocket HD cameras of suspect-tweener quality to choose from this holiday season.



(Via Engadget.)

Creative's $200 Vado HD pocket camcorder ready for pre-order

Creative's $200 Vado HD pocket camcorder ready for pre-order



We've seen these Amazon 'leaks' time and again. So while the December 7th date for the Vado HD might be an educated guess, the details including that $200 price tag certainly look real enough. The display still measures 2-inches, but the beefier 3.3 x 7.9 x 6.3-inch solid state camcorder now brings 8GB of storage for up to 2 hours of 720p MPEG-4 recordings -- 8 hours at VGA quality. It also ships with an HDMI cable for instant playback to your like-equipped television. Otherwise, slot the cam into your PC's (XP and Vista, only) USB port to instantly share your works to YouTube and others with the help of the cam's built-in Vado Central Software. With this, the Kodak Zi6, and Flip Mino HD, there certainly won't be any shortage of pocket HD cameras of suspect-tweener quality to choose from this holiday season.



(Via Engadget.)

Saturday, November 29, 2008

Got a front door?


Then you can do this:





And make the outside of your house as pretty as the inside.

You'll need:

A door. (I'm funny.)
Numerous garlands ($3 or less each)
Numerous light strands
Large or small cup hooks
Step ladder
Measuring tape


Measure the height and width of your front door. Take your garland and figure how many feet you'll need. Most come in nine foot sections. (By the way, you can easily cut these to size with pliers or wire cutters.) Then, depending on how much you have and how full you want it -- twist numerous strands together. Then wrap the strands of lights around the whole thing.

Take your cup hooks, and start putting them around your door. I like to put them opposite ways, so the garland kind of weaves around them:




At the top, put one right in the middle. Then find the middle of your garland:




Keep a hold of that point in the garland, then hang that part on the middle cup hook. Then drape the rest down the sides of the doorway, tucking the garland in the cup hooks as you go. (Make sure the plug for the lights is closest to the outlet!)


If you don't have an outlet, just use a bunch of garland and make a full one to put around the door. Stick ornaments, ribbon, whatever in it! I have a very small porch, so I put up two sets -- one around the door and one around the overhang. I also do this around the garage in the same way.

The cup hooks will leave a very small hole in the trimwork. If you are worried about the hole, use the smaller cup hooks.

The great part is, you'll know exactly where they go every year -- the hole is already there! Greenery makes for a very traditional, sophisticated exterior and I LOVE IT. If you have the 12-foot, blow up Santa, I'm sure it will still work with that. (OH, do you know how close I am to getting one this year?? More about that later.)

To do this:



That's a lighted wreath, hanging in the window, in case you can't tell because you are blinded by the lights because my stupid bleeping expensive camera won't take pictures worth a crap in the dark no matter what setting I use... Breathe.

Anyhoo, take a small wreath (I got mine for about $3 each at Joann's years ago.) Wrap it with a strand of lights. Take fishing wire, floral wire, string, anything, and wrap it through the top. Open your window, pull out the screen, lay the wreath on the screen, figure out where you want it, then pulling the wire and end of the lights through the top, shove the screen back in, cuss a few times, call your husband to help, cuss again cause he's taking too long, slam the screen back in, then close the window.

You may have to push a little harder for the window to lock this time. :) I'm sure it's some kind of minor fire hazard to smash a strand of lights through a window, but I've done it for years and we're OK. (Knock on wood.) Here's a better pic:



Wow, that little guy needs to be fluffed. Garland is like a wet cat, you need to fluff it up to get it looking it's best.

Really, none of this is hard. It just takes time. The first time you do it will be the longest. After that, it takes me well under an hour, start to finish, to hang everything.

More crappy pictures to show you the beauty (I'm really selling this well, aren't I??):



Notice the coach light that's burnt out. Only the best for you folks, I tell ya.


P.S. The posts will probably come fast and furious this month! If I see something, I'm going to post it...like that puuuurdy Christmas tree. Kelly, NO THAT IS NOT IN MY HOUSE!! :)


P.P.S. We're getting our tree tomorrow -- EARLY this year. Yippee kie yay!!!



Weekly Economic Potpourri November 29, 2008

Every week there are a numerous headlines that are worthy of mentioning but I simply run out of time. Here are a few headline news reports of interest from the past week.

Japan�s Factory Output Falls as Turmoil Hurts Exports

Japanese manufacturers reduced production in October and plan further cutbacks as a worsening global financial crisis weakens exports. Factory output fell 3.1 percent from September, when it rose 1.1 percent, the Trade Ministry said today in Tokyo. Economists surveyed by Bloomberg estimated a 2.5 percent drop.

Exports fell last month at the fastest pace in almost seven years and companies are responding to the slump by cutting everything from production to jobs and investment. Sharp Corp. said last week it may have to reduce output of televisions and fire some of the people who work on production lines; Toyota Motor Corp. will get rid of half its temporary employees; and Canon Inc. has postponed construction of a new factory.
Canadian Shoppers Lured To Detroit With Free $20 Gift Cards
Canadian shopping enthusiast Heather Gore described to CTV's Canada AM the long lineups at a Niagara Falls, N.Y., outlet mall where she was shopping at 12:01 a.m. on Friday morning."I have been coming here on Black Friday for the past five or six years," she said. "This year is the busiest I've ever seen it." Gore, a Toronto lawyer and veteran cross-border shopper, said she had seen many Canadians at the malls on Friday morning.

Some U.S. retailers, in fact, appealed directly to Canadian shoppers, in an attempt to bring them across the border for Black Friday. In Detroit, mall owner Taubman Centers Inc., offered a $20 gift card voucher to the first 2,008 vehicles travelling through the Detroit-Windsor tunnel between 5 a.m. and 10 a.m. on Friday.

"For those Canadians who make Black Friday an annual shopping tradition, we would like to be their shopping destination of choice," Taubman spokesperson Karen MacDonald said in a release.
Wal-Mart worker dies in rush; two killed at toy store
Three violent deaths in two stores marred the opening of the Christmas shopping season Friday. In the first, a temporary Wal-Mart employee was trampled to death in a rush of thousands of early morning shoppers as he and other employees attempted to unlock the doors of a Long Island, New York, store at 5 a.m., police said.

Video showed as many as a dozen people knocked to the floor in the stampede of people trying to get into the Wal-Mart store, Fleming said. The employee was "stepped on by hundreds of people" as other workers attempted to fight their way through the crowd, Fleming said. "Several minutes" passed before others were able to clear space around the man and attempt to render aid. Police arrived, and "as they were giving first aid, those police officers were also jostled and pushed," he said.

In the second, unrelated incident, two men were shot dead in a Toys "R" Us in Palm Desert, California, after they argued in the store, police said.
LandAmerica Goes Bankrupt
The nation�s real estate crisis has claimed its first title insurance giant, with Richmond, Va.-based LandAmerica Financial Group saying Wednesday morning that it had filed for bankruptcy protection amid a burgeoning mortgage crisis that, as of yet, shows no sign of slowing down.

The company said it and a subsidiary filed to reorganize under Chapter 11 of the U.S. bankruptcy code, and that it would sell its title underwriting subsidiaries, Lawyers Title Insurance Corporation and Commonwealth Land Title Insurance Company, as well as United Capital Title Insurance Company, to subsidiaries of Fidelity National Financial (FNF).
When the money goes, so does the toxic wife
As the recession worsens, a lot of rich men are finding their gold-digging wives are taking to their heels.

The Toxic Wife is the woman who gives up work as soon as she marries, ostensibly to create a stable home environment for any offspring that might come along, but who then employs large numbers of staff to do all the domestic work she promised to undertake, leaving her with little to do all day except shop, lunch and luxuriate.

Like a frog, the Toxic Wife needs to hop safely on to another lily pad, and a rich one, before leaving her husband. She won't stand on her own two feet. And finding a job is quite beneath her.
Lead Falls to Two-Year Low as Auto Demand Slumps; Copper Drops.
Lead fell to a two-year low in London as reductions in automobile production erode demand for the metal used mostly in car batteries. Copper declined. U.S. vehicle sales at the lowest since 1991 prompted cuts at General Motors Corp. and Ford Motor Co. China�s output of lead concentrate, used to make refined metal, climbed 14 percent in the first 10 months, according to Mainland Marketing Research Co.

Lead for delivery in three months declined $81, or 6.8 percent, to $1,105 a metric ton on the London Metal Exchange, the lowest since July 2006. Prices have dropped 57 percent this year. Inventories in warehouses monitored by the LME rose 250 tons, or 0.6 percent, to 41,200 tons, according to the exchange�s daily report.

Copper fell on concern a slumping U.S. economy will crimp consumption of Chinese imports and demand for industrial metals in the Asian economy. Some economic indicators in China showed a �faster decline� this month, National Development and Reform Commission Chairman Zhang Ping said in Beijing today.

Copper usage in the U.S., the largest buyer after China, fell 9 percent in the first eight months and demand in China rose 13 percent, according to the International Copper Study Group.
Housing is bad enough, but wait � it'll get worse
If you think the housing slump can't get much worse, Martin Feldstein thinks that both home prices and the broader economy can � and very likely will � get a whole lot worse.

"There are now 12 million homes in the United States with a loan-to-value ratio greater than 100 percent. That's one mortgage in four. The aggregate amount of that is some $2 trillion," said Feldstein. "If you look at the median (midpoint) loan-to-value ratio in that 12 million group of underwater mortgages � mortgages with negative equity � the median loan-to-value ratio is 120 percent."

That means about 25 percent of all U.S. mortgages are exceed the value of the homes the mortgages are financing. In the case of half the homes that are underwater, homeowners are paying a mortgage that's now 20 percent higher than the value of the home.

That's bad � but it's likely to get worse.

A recent report by First American Core Logic, a real-estate data firm in Santa Ana, Calif., estimated that as of Sept. 30, 7.5 million mortgages, or 18 percent of all properties with a mortgage, had negative equity. The group thinks there are another 2.1 million mortgages that are within 5 percent of going underwater.

The implications for many homeowners are staggering. Before the recent housing boom of 2000 to 2006, homes increased in value at a historical annual rate of about 2.3 percent when adjusted for inflation.

That means that for homeowners who owe 35 percent more than their homes' value, it would take, at historical averages, about 15 years just to break even on their home investment. They won't build equity. It would be a huge incentive for millions to hand the keys back to the lender and seek cheaper housing.
China downturn deepens, European rate cut sought
Central banks around the globe have slashed interest rates to try to ease the flow of credit and restart stalled economies. Economic sentiment in Europe's single currency zone hit 15-year lows in November and inflation expectations plunged, boosting the case for a big rate cut from the European Central Bank (ECB) next week. "The euro zone is in a deep recession, upping the pressure on the ECB to cut interest rates further," said Christoph Weil, economist at Commerzbank. "We envisage a first move next week on a scale of 75 basis points to 2.5 percent."

The Bank of England is also expected to cut rates by 50 basis points or more on Dec. 4, a Reuters poll showed. Benchmark rates are 3.25 percent in the eurozone and 3.0 percent in Britain, against 1.0 percent in the United States. China's central bank cut interest rates by the biggest margin in 11 years on Wednesday in response to a crisis which is reining in its once runaway growth, bringing worries about social unrest as jobs disappear.
Malls, hotels next victims in new mortgage crisis.
Even as the holiday shopping season begins in full swing, the same events poisoning the housing market are now at work on commercial properties, and the bad news is trickling in. Malls from Michigan to Georgia are entering foreclosure. Hotels in Tucson, Ariz., and Hilton Head, S.C., also are about to default on their mortgages.

That pace is expected to quicken. The number of late payments and defaults will double, if not triple, by the end of next year, according to analysts from Fitch Ratings Ltd., which evaluates companies' credit.

"We're probably in the first inning of the commercial mortgage problem," said Scott Tross, a real estate lawyer with Herrick Feinstein in New Jersey. That's bad news for more than just property owners. When businesses go dark, employees lose jobs. Towns lose tax revenue. School budgets and social services feel the pinch.

Unlike home mortgages, businesses don't pay their loans over 30 years. Commercial mortgages are usually written for five, seven or 10 years with big payments due at the end. About $20 billion will be due next year, covering everything from office and condo complexes to hotels and malls.
Woolworths Near Collapse, Risking 30,000 U.K. Jobs
Woolworths Group Plc was left on the edge of failure and MFI Retail Ltd. collapsed, putting more than 30,000 U.K. jobs at risk, after the economy's slide into a recession caused consumer spending to slump.

As sales crumbled, the retailer was hampered by debt that totaled 295 million pounds when its first half ended on Aug. 2, more than 16 times its current market value. Woolworths had interest costs of 18.6 million pounds in the period, more than today's market capitalization. The stock has plunged by nine- tenths this year after falling 62 percent in 2007.

U.K. home sales are at the lowest level in at least three decades, the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors said Nov. 11. A seizure in credit markets has restricted banks' ability to lend even as the Bank of England cut interest rates to the lowest since 1955.

The spending dropoff claimed victims from Ilva Furniture Ltd. to home wares retailer Rosebys Ltd., which both collapsed in September. Fashion chain MK One came under the control of administrators this month for the second time in 2008.
Shopping malls are running on empty
Life Plaza Center in San Gabriel used to teem with diners heading to Green Village, a Chinese restaurant in the middle of the horseshoe-shaped mall on Valley Boulevard.

But after the eatery closed five months ago, the 7,500- square-foot space remained vacant. With no tenants stepping forward and fewer customers clogging the parking lot, the plaza is quiet, with a curiously dark core.

It's a scene repeated in various forms throughout the region, as the economic crash that started rolling through single-family housing more than a year ago begins to hit shopping centers, turning what had been a residential phenomenon into one that threatens commercial real estate as well.

Business is so bad that an increasing number of retailers are calling it quits -- without waiting to see whether money can be made as the Christmas season gets underway.

For property owners, the loss of tenants means more than a reduction in the revenue that is collected from rents. If one store closes, customers are less attracted to the center overall, and the losses can snowball. Whereas in previous years it was easy to find new tenants, now they are scarce. And as the property owners find themselves getting in trouble, their typical recourses -- to sell the building or refinance it -- are also stymied by the stuck economy.

"We were charging $2.75 a square foot, but if we can get $1.75 for it, we'd be very lucky now," said Art Ko, a leasing agent for STC Management. "It's hard to even grasp what's a fair market price now. Everything is up in the air. We've had many deals where people just walked away the last minute. It's a buyer's market."
Satellite Halts Hedge Fund Withdrawals, Fires 30 After Losses
Satellite Asset Management LP, founded by former employees of billionaire George Soros, stopped client withdrawals from its three largest hedge funds and eliminated more than 30 jobs after losses reduced the firm�s assets to about $4 billion this year.

Satellite Overseas Fund Ltd., Satellite Fund II LP and Satellite Credit Opportunities Ltd. have declined as much as 35 percent in 2008, said a person with knowledge of the funds� performance. Simon Rayler, Satellite�s general counsel, declined to comment and wouldn�t disclose how many people remain at the firm�s New York headquarters or London offices. Satellite oversaw about $7 billion for clients at the end of last year.

More than 75 hedge funds have liquidated or restricted investor redemptions since the start of the year as they cope with fallout from the global financial crisis. Investors pulled $40 billion from hedge funds last month, while market losses cut industry assets by $115 billion to $1.56 trillion, according to data compiled by Hedge Fund Research Inc. in Chicago.
FDIC Lets Firms Without Charters Bid for Bank Assets
Investors including private-equity firms may find it easier to acquire U.S. banks after the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. said it will let groups without charters bid for the deposits and assets of failing lenders.

The FDIC change, announced in a press release today, will help ensure �failing institutions are resolved in a manner that will result in the least cost to the Deposit Insurance Fund� by marketing assets to �known, qualified and interested bidders.�

U.S. regulators this year have seized 22 banks, the most since 1993, amid a credit crunch that fueled more than $968 billion in financial-company losses and writedowns since 2007. The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency on Nov. 21 granted a new type of national bank charter called a �shelf charter,� also designed to find buyers for failed lenders.

�This is the government being flexible,� said William Sweet, a partner in the Washington office of law firm Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP. �They simply are trying to accommodate the interest by investors and the need for capital.�
FDIC adds 54 more banks to its 'problem list'
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. said Tuesday the list of banks it considers to be in trouble shot up nearly 50 percent to 171 during the third quarter -- yet another sign of escalating problems among the institutions controlling Americans' deposits.

The 171 banks on the FDIC's "problem list" encompass only about 2 percent of the nearly 8,500 FDIC-insured institutions. Still, the increase from 117 in the second quarter is sharp, and the current tally is the highest since late 1995.

Banks that don't make the list can end up collapsing anyway -- the two biggest bank failures over the past year, Washington Mutual Inc. and IndyMac Bancorp, had not been on the FDIC's list of troubled banks. Wachovia Corp., which nearly failed before it got bought by Wells Fargo & Co. in October, had not been on the list, either.

Nine banks failed in the third quarter, decreasing the FDIC's deposit insurance fund to $34.6 billion from $45.2 billion in the second quarter. This quarter, the pace appears to be picking up -- nine banks have already failed since Sept. 30, including Downey Savings and Loan Association, based in Newport Beach, Calif.

"To some extent, a bank failure is a regulatory failure," Ely said. Regulators, if they address bank problems early on, can convince a troubled bank to sell off assets, raise capital or find a buyer, he said. "My hope is they're moving faster on these problems."

The FDIC said Tuesday that commercial banks and savings institutions suffered a 94 percent drop in third-quarter profits to $1.7 billion from $27 billion in the same period last year. Except for the fourth quarter of 2007, it was the lowest quarterly profit since the fourth quarter of 1990. Those institutions wrote off $27.9 billion in loans as uncollectible during the quarter.

Recently, community banks -- defined as those with assets under $1 billion -- have started to show similar stresses as their larger counterparts, the FDIC said.
Survey says Texas manufacturing outlook is bleak
A Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas survey released Monday says Texas businesses are reporting sharp drops in most indicators of current activity. And nearly two-thirds of the 101 firms responding to the November Texas Manufacturing Outlook Survey said their evaluation of general business activity had worsened.

Several indexes for future production fell to their lowest levels since the survey started four years ago. The volume of new orders sunk to a record low, with more than half of those surveyed reporting decreases.

Texas produces more than 8 percent of manufactured goods in the U.S., behind only California.
40,000 Swarm Farm To Gather Free Food
A farm couple got a huge surprise when they opened their fields to anyone who wanted to pick up free vegetables left over after the harvest -- 40,000 people showed up.

Joe and Chris Miller's fields were picked so clean Saturday that a second day of gleaning -- the ancient practice of picking up leftover food in farm fields -- was canceled Sunday. " 'Overwhelmed' is putting it mildly," Chris Miller said. "People obviously need food."

She said she expected 5,000 to 10,000 people to show up Saturday to collect free potatoes, carrots and leeks. Instead, an estimated 11,000 vehicles snaked around cornfields and backed up more than two miles. About 30 acres of the 600-acre farm 37 miles north of Denver became a parking lot.
Brazilian Farm Credit Dries Up, Forces Growers to Reduce Crops
Coffee farmer Joao Carlos Terra says his trees will yield about a third less than planned next year because he can�t get a big enough loan to buy fertilizer and pesticide as the global credit crunch bites in Brazil.

Terra received only 10,000 reais ($4,300) of the 35,000- real loan he needed this month, so trees that should yield 250 bags of coffee next season will likely produce just 170, he said. Terra is planning to pick up extra work as a farmhand to support his wife and two sons.

�It�s kind of impossible to keep going like this,� said Terra, 29, who grows arabica coffee on about 10 hectares (25 acres) in Bom Jesus da Penha, a city in the southeastern state of Minas Gerais. �I don�t know what will happen.�
Freddie Portfolio Expands at 44% Rate in October
Freddie Mac�s portfolio of mortgage assets grew at an annualized rate of 44 percent in October after regulators directed the government-run company to ramp up purchases to ease constraints on the U.S. housing market.

The portfolio rose to $763.7 billion for the first full month that Freddie was under federal control, adding $26.8 billion in net new purchases of home loans and mortgage bonds, the McLean, Virginia-based company said in its monthly volume summary today. Freddie had cut its holdings by $61.4 billion in August and September �as it struggled to remain independent,� Jim Vogel, a debt analyst at FTN Financial wrote in a note today.

Freddie and Washington-based Fannie Mae, which slowed their growth to protect against rising delinquencies, were seized by regulators on Sept. 6 and directed to focus on helping struggling homeowners.
Zoo solves mystery of celibate polar bears
Puzzled zookeepers in northern Japan have discovered the reason why their attempts to mate two polar bears kept failing: Both are female.

The municipal zoo in the city of Kushiro in Hokkaido brought in a polar bear cub three years ago. They named it Tsuyoshi, after the popular baseball outfielder Tsuyoshi Shinjo, and waited until it reached reproductive age.

In June, the zoo introduced Tsuyoshi to its resident bear, an 11-year-old female named Kurumi, and waited for sparks to fly. But much to the disappointment of zookeepers, Tsuyoshi never made any amorous advances toward Kurumi. Earlier this month, zookeepers put Tsuyoshi under anesthesia to get to the bottom of the matter. That's when they made their discovery: Tsuyoshi is a female.
New Breakfast Cereal A Smash Hit

Shoppers everywhere are lining up for "Credit Crunch" the cereal.



Image courtesy of Live Leak.

Parents take note that it's fortified with hedge funds, kids love the free helicopter, and everyone loves the sugar coated derivatives. Enjoy a bowl with your kids today.

Something for everyone including weekend animal stories.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List

Nikon D90 digital SLR Review

It's a week short of two years since I reviewed the Nikon D80, at the time Nikon's top consumer digital SLR. I was very impressed by its superb build quality, creative versatility and excellent image quality, giving it 9/10 and a Recommended award. However all good things must come to an end, and the D80 has now been superseded by Nikon's new consumer DSLR, named with mathematical predictability the D90.

The new camera builds upon the D80's outstanding design, with a virtually identical body and control layout. The overall dimensions are exactly the same at 132 x 103 x 77 mm, but the D90 is significantly heavier, weighing 620g body-only against the D80's 585g. Although it has many similarities to its predecessor, the D90 adds a number of new features including some from Nikon's professional DLSRs, and others that are currently unique. The sensor is upgraded to a newly-designed 23.6 x 15.8mm DX format CMOS sensor with a resolution of 12.3 megapixels and built-in sensor cleaning, the LCD monitor is the same incredibly sharp 3.0-inch, 920k unit from the D3 and D300, and it has a new viewfinder with 96 percent frame coverage.

As you're probably aware if you've read this far, the D90's main claim to fame is that it is the world's first digital SLR to feature video shooting capability, in high-definition 1280 x 720 pixel resolution at 24 frames a second with mono audio. However this isn't the D90's only unique feature, beacuse it also has GPS location logging via an optional external satellite receiver which slots onto the flash hot-shoe. I'm hoping to take a look at this gadget when it is launched next week.

The D90 is available in a kit with another new product, the AF-S DX Nikkor 18-105mm F/3.5-5.6G ED zoom lens, and it is this kit that I'm reviewing today. As a kit the camera and lens are currently selling for around �720, or around �585 body only, which makes it quite an expensive camera for most hobby photographers. For comparison, you can get a Sony Alpha A350 in a two-lens kit with an 18-70mm and a 55-200mm for around �540, the Canon EOS 450D with both an 18-55mm and a 55-250mm zoom lens for around �620, the Olympus E-520 with a 14-42mm and 70-300mm lens for around �680, or a Pentax K20D with 18-55mm and 50-200mm lenses for just under �700.

Cliff Smith

more : trustedreviews

Nikon D90 digital SLR Review

It's a week short of two years since I reviewed the Nikon D80, at the time Nikon's top consumer digital SLR. I was very impressed by its superb build quality, creative versatility and excellent image quality, giving it 9/10 and a Recommended award. However all good things must come to an end, and the D80 has now been superseded by Nikon's new consumer DSLR, named with mathematical predictability the D90.

The new camera builds upon the D80's outstanding design, with a virtually identical body and control layout. The overall dimensions are exactly the same at 132 x 103 x 77 mm, but the D90 is significantly heavier, weighing 620g body-only against the D80's 585g. Although it has many similarities to its predecessor, the D90 adds a number of new features including some from Nikon's professional DLSRs, and others that are currently unique. The sensor is upgraded to a newly-designed 23.6 x 15.8mm DX format CMOS sensor with a resolution of 12.3 megapixels and built-in sensor cleaning, the LCD monitor is the same incredibly sharp 3.0-inch, 920k unit from the D3 and D300, and it has a new viewfinder with 96 percent frame coverage.

As you're probably aware if you've read this far, the D90's main claim to fame is that it is the world's first digital SLR to feature video shooting capability, in high-definition 1280 x 720 pixel resolution at 24 frames a second with mono audio. However this isn't the D90's only unique feature, beacuse it also has GPS location logging via an optional external satellite receiver which slots onto the flash hot-shoe. I'm hoping to take a look at this gadget when it is launched next week.

The D90 is available in a kit with another new product, the AF-S DX Nikkor 18-105mm F/3.5-5.6G ED zoom lens, and it is this kit that I'm reviewing today. As a kit the camera and lens are currently selling for around �720, or around �585 body only, which makes it quite an expensive camera for most hobby photographers. For comparison, you can get a Sony Alpha A350 in a two-lens kit with an 18-70mm and a 55-200mm for around �540, the Canon EOS 450D with both an 18-55mm and a 55-250mm zoom lens for around �620, the Olympus E-520 with a 14-42mm and 70-300mm lens for around �680, or a Pentax K20D with 18-55mm and 50-200mm lenses for just under �700.

Cliff Smith

more : trustedreviews

New M8 and M-Lens Promotion

Leica Camera Inc. is offering a $1,500.00 mail-in rebate for the LEICA M8 (excluding special editions) and a $300 mail-in rebate for a new M-Lens*.

The customer will receive the mail-in rebate check after the M8 or M-Lens* is registered. Leica Camera Inc. will take 6 to 8 weeks to process the mail-in rebate check after the M8 or M-Lens* is registered.

Both promotions are only valid for brand new products imported by Leica Camera Inc. and sold by authorized Leica dealers. Both promotions are only valid in the US and Canada and will end on January 1, 2009.

Contact your local authorized Leica dealer for more information.

(*The following lenses are excluded from the promotion: 50mm/f0.95, 21mm/f1.4, 24mm/f1.4 & 24mm/f3.8)

New M8 and M-Lens Promotion

Leica Camera Inc. is offering a $1,500.00 mail-in rebate for the LEICA M8 (excluding special editions) and a $300 mail-in rebate for a new M-Lens*.

The customer will receive the mail-in rebate check after the M8 or M-Lens* is registered. Leica Camera Inc. will take 6 to 8 weeks to process the mail-in rebate check after the M8 or M-Lens* is registered.

Both promotions are only valid for brand new products imported by Leica Camera Inc. and sold by authorized Leica dealers. Both promotions are only valid in the US and Canada and will end on January 1, 2009.

Contact your local authorized Leica dealer for more information.

(*The following lenses are excluded from the promotion: 50mm/f0.95, 21mm/f1.4, 24mm/f1.4 & 24mm/f3.8)

Friday, November 28, 2008

Rubin's Arrogance and Denial is Appalling

Former U.S. Treasury secretary Robert Rubin says he's not to blame for Citi's troubles.
Former U.S. Treasury secretary Robert Rubin said the near-collapse of Citigroup Inc, where he is a senior counselor, was due to the buckling financial system and not his own mistakes, according to an interview published on The Wall Street Journal's website on Friday.

Rubin, who is also a director at Citigroup, acknowledged he was involved in a board decision to ramp up risk-taking in 2004 and 2005, according to the paper, and said if executives had executed the plan properly, the bank's losses would have been less.

The Journal said Rubin has earned $115 million in pay since 1999, excluding stock options. "I bet there's not a single year where I couldn't have gone somewhere else and made more," said Rubin, according to the Journal.
My Comment: And exactly what does that prove other than there is a greater fool somewhere else?
Rubin cited former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan as another example of someone whose reputation has been unfairly damaged by the financial crisis, according to the Journal
My Comment: Latching on to Greenspan as some sort of proof of innocence is like throwing a drowning man an anchor.
The paper reported that Rubin said of the current crisis: "what came together was not only a cyclical undervaluing of risk (but also) a housing bubble and triple-A ratings were misguided," he said. "There was virtually nobody who saw that low-probability event as a possibility."
My Comment: Rubin's statement displays ignorance at best and is a blatant lie at worst. There are plenty of people that saw this coming: Roubini, Shiller, Shostak, Schiff, me, and literally hundreds of bloggers all of which could have run Citigroup better than Citigroup management did.
Rubin told the Journal that the Citigroup board could bear some responsibility and that some things should have been done differently.
My Comment: How quaint. Rubin is saying: "It's not my fault, rather it's the fault of everyone else on the board."

Rubin's arrogance and denial is appalling.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List

Funny Manga online comics Kapow Express update Friday!

Funny Manga online comics Kapow Express update Friday!

Here is an update on you most favorite online Manga comics Kapow Express page 015
Kapow Express, Manga, online, comics, comix, kung fu, anime, assassin, action,
To be continued AGAIN next Friday!

Previously:
-Online Manga Kapow Express page #014
Or For page 1-10 goto Online Manga kapowexpress.com

Now, what will happen next? You can and should feel free to give me some idea or feedback. I usually do implement some of our readers' great ideas, NO LIEs. :)

Drawing Software & Tools I used and recommended:
-Genius MousePen 6x8
-Wacom Intuos3 6X8 Pen Tablet
-Bamboo (Small) Pen Tablet (new from Wacom!)
Economy for everyone.
Softwares:
-Gimp (Free Download)
-Adobe Photoshop CS2 (Professional software)
*You can just use pencil, paper, markers on this one...just practice rendering.

New tutorials:
-Drawing Manga comics female eyes and face sketch
-Drawing Gypsy dancer female
-Drawing and shading face and head
-Draw quick comics panel using values and composition.
-Drawing haunted tree and castle
-Manga tutorial drawing giant mecha robot
-How to draw face soft shading female.
-Concept Art tutorial, magma river lava environment.

Dragon Creature design tutorial
- (Part 1) Draw and paint Dragon Fire Blaze
- (Part 2) Manga Tutorial Draw Fire Dragon
- (Part 3) Digital Art tutorial, Dragon Creature
- (Part 4) Digital Painting Step by step, dragon
- (Part 5) Drawing and painting Dragon Creature

FEATURE TUTORIAL:
Environmental Concept Sketch Tutorial
Face Constructed: How to draw faces
Character Design Tutorial Download
-Draw and Paint Women Body Tutorial II: Female Manga Fusion II
-Character Design Tutorial: Dark Valkyrie

** If you have any basic questions or specific please looked up Q/A section. Most of the time your questions has already been answered in Q/A.

Holiday Shopping Scrooge

Santa Claus may be hard at work as the holidays approach, but he will find many Americans struggling with a troubled economy. A CNN Poll On Holiday Shopping is an indication of what many of us suspect: This will be the worst Christmas shopping season on record. Let's take a look.

CNN Shopping Poll



Slow Sales And Layoffs

Here for the holidays: Slow sales and layoffs
What's going well for small businesses? Not much, according to The National Federation of Independent Business' monthly Small Business Optimism Index, which fell 5.4 points in October and landed at the third-lowest reading in the history of the survey.

"We're mired in a recession," said the NFIB's chief economist, Bill Dunkelberg. "Small business sales will be weak in fourth quarter, which may mean a negative Christmas," said Dunkelberg. "And that may spill over to the first quarter of 2009."

Only 5% of respondents think now is a good time to expand their facilities, the lowest reading since 1982 and the second lowest in the survey's 35-year history. The net percentage of owners reporting higher sales in the past three months fell to the worst reading the survey has ever recorded. Overall, 37% reported sales lower than they had three months ago, and 41% said their earnings have declined.

The employment picture was also grim. The average employment per firm dropped by .41 workers, and almost twice as many businesses reporting cutting employees as hiring them.

"When you hear about the layoffs, small businesses are the big picture," Dunkelberg said. "We hear about mass layoffs, but really the layoff of .41 employees per firm is a very big decline because small businesses employ so many." Small businesses with 500 or fewer workers employ about half of all private-sector workers, according to data gathered by the Small Business Administration.
Fewer gift cards this holiday season

On October 21, speculating about the bankruptcy of Circuit City, I offered these Circuit City Inspired Christmas Shopping Tips.
Shopping Tips

...

A big fancy fruit basket and items from food specialty stores may look practical but they are not. The markup on those things is astronomical. If you want to give someone a fruit basket, make it yourself. You can usually find an inexpensive basket to start from at a place like Hobby Lobby.

Many people are going to lose their jobs in 2009. I suspect those who are about to lose their job as well as those already out of a job will appreciate a gift card at a grocery store far more than a gift card at a knickknack store. Actually I do not like gift cards at all but most do. One advantage of a gift card is ability to take advantage of after Christmas sales.

Regardless of where you shop, my advice is to shop less and save more. Your job may be in jeopardy and you might not even know it. Frugality is the new reality for consumers and businesses alike.

A penny saved is a penny got. That penny is likely to be worth more tomorrow than it is today. It is one of the consequences of the deflationary times we are in.
Fewer gift cards this holiday season

Circuit City did go bankrupt and in its demise, a Retail Tsunami Hit Gift Cards.

The National Retail Federation reports shoppers will give fewer gift certificates this season and head to the sale rack instead.
Gift card sales will fall almost 6% this holiday season to $24.9 billion, down from $26.3 billion last year, according to the National Retail Federation's sixth annual Gift Card Survey, conducted by BIGresearch.

Fewer shoppers plan to purchase gift cards this year - 53.5% compared with 56.6% in 2007. And if they do purchase gift cards, shoppers are going to put less cash on them, according to the survey. The average amount that shoppers plan to spend on gift cards in 2008 fell to $147.33 from $156.24 in 2007.

"Since gift cards never go on sale, some price-conscious shoppers will be passing up gift cards in favor of holiday bargains," said NRF President and CEO Tracy Mullin in a written statement.
More Scrooge Than Santa

CNN is reporting Spending expected to be more Scrooge than Santa this year.

Black-Belt Shopping Strategies

Oprah Winfrey offers 10 Black-Belt Shopping Strategies. In contrast, I offer two.

1) Don't buy what you cannot afford.
2) Don't buy what you can afford.

Let's take a look at a few retailers and see how they are doing. Click on any chart in this set to see a sharper image.

Target (TGT) Weekly Chart



Hott Topic (HOTT) Weekly Chart



Abercrombie & Fitch (ANF) Weekly



Macy's Inc (M) Weekly



Wal-Mart (WMT) Weekly



With the exception of Wal-Mart, the carnage in this sector is almost unbelievable. Competition for customers is more intense than ever, and competing for customers means competing with Wal-Mart. The charts suggest Wal-Mart is winning.

Servicing Debt Is Key To Survival

It is a mistake to look at PE ratios alone to find bargains. Macy's has a lower forward PE than Abercrombie & Fitch. But Macy's also has $9.8 billion in debt vs. $100 million at Abercrombie. The debt to equity ratios are 1.02 vs. .056 respectively.

In an environment of rising unemployment, shrinking demand, and huge overcapacity, stores have no choice other than lower prices. Looking ahead, consumer frugality is going to be the new model. And the key to survival is the ability to service (and roll over) debt. Please keep that in mind when looking for bargains.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
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