Wednesday, September 30, 2009

Rosenberg: �We are certainly in a deflationary state�

Fueled by overcapacity, shrinking credit, reduced corporate spending and falling consumer demand, Deflation is taking root in global economies.
Consumer prices fell at their fastest clip ever last month in Japan, which has been fighting a losing war against deflation for much of the past two decades. Germany, Europe's biggest economy, has now suffered through four consecutive months of sliding prices, and the rest of the region that uses the euro is not faring much better.

That deflation should be such a threat may run counter to market fears that inflation will quickly follow the massive, and costly, global effort to fight the financial crisis. But many observers see deflation as the greater threat.

�We are certainly in a deflationary state,� said David Rosenberg, chief economist and strategist with Gluskin Sheff and Associates in Toronto. �Of that, there's no doubt. I think people still have no clue as to just how weak the economy is,� Mr. Rosenberg said.

Remove the �impressive medication� administered by governments, and most economies are at a virtual standstill.

The U.S. economy faces a decade of stagnation, he said. �That's a perfectly plausible scenario.�

If and when it does hit, �deflation will last until we see the next secular trend of expanding household balance sheets, and that is some time away,� Mr. Rosenberg said.
I concur with Rosenberg except on his apparent definition of deflation. He seems focused on prices which is only one of many symptoms of deflation.

One confusing aspect in the article is that on one hand he says �We are certainly in a deflationary state� on the other he says If and when it does hit...

There is no if.

The odds that deflation hits are 100% given that we are in deflation now and have been for some time. Moreover, a "decade of stagnation" with the US hopping in and out of recession/deflation is not just a possibility but rather a likelihood.

From a practical standpoint, the debate about deflation should be over. On December 11, 2008 in Humpty Dumpty On Inflation I listed a perfect scorecard of 16 items one would expect to see in deflation and all were happening.

The only debate comes from those using impractical measures of inflation and deflation. As a prime example, please consider Daniel Amerman vs. Mish: Reflections on the Great Inflation/Deflation Debate.

Moreover, it should have been clear we were in deflation as early as March 17, 2008. Three factors made it clear: a collapse in treasury yields, a collapse in asset prices, a collapse in credit marked to market. See Now Presenting: Deflation! for additional details.

Yesterday inquiring minds were reading Bill Gross Bets On Deflation. However, when it comes to Bill Gross, a reasonable person must always be concerned how much he is talking his book, hoping to unload it.

Some Learn Nothing From History

Some people never learn a thing from history. One such person is Arthur Heinmaa, managing partner with Toron Capital Markets in Toronto, who told the Globe "To prevent a deflationary outcome, policy makers have to stop worrying about how they'll rein in future deficits and start persuading the public that they'll do whatever it takes to keep the pumps primed and cash savings nearly worthless."

Stop the insanity please! The lesson of Japan is that Japan went from being a creditor nation to a government with debt 150% of GDP by foolishly attempting to defeat deflation.

Here's a clue for everyone. Making cash worthless is insane. It will do nothing but exacerbate the problems of the unemployed and those on fixed incomes.

Rosenberg further discusses deflation in Wednesday's Breakfast with Dave.
The bond bulls can only hang their hat today on the knowledge that the world is still awash with deflationary pressures � as Euroland reported that the region�s CPI deflated 0.3% YoY in September from -0.2% in August and the fourth month now in negative terrain. So, we have Euroland at -0.3%, the U.S.A. at -1.5%, Canada at -0.8%, Japan at -2.3%, and even China at -1.2% � even in the face of this year�s commodity price rebound. That tells you something. Imagine where these deflation figures line up when economic activity begins to slow down next year. This puts fixed-income product in a very positive light, we might add, because real yields in most jurisdictions, whether in the government or corporate sector, appear very attractive.

Does This Make Any Sense?

Since June 10, the yield on the U.S. 10-year Treasury note has plunged 70 basis points and at the same time the S&P 500 has rallied 14%. The bond market is telling us that we still live in a deflationary world, yet the equity market is at this juncture pricing in over $80 of operating earnings, which would be double from the current four-quarter pace.

The real question is, if we in fact do have this sustained reflation trade going on, which is actually necessary to justify the earnings expectations embedded in equity valuation, why it is that the yield on the 10-year Treasury note isn't north of 5.0% already? Instead, it is 3.3%. And history shows that when bonds and stocks do diverge, as was the case in the summer of 1987, the fall of 1994, the summer of 1998, the winter of 2000 and the summer of 2007, it is the former that proved to be prescient.

Bank Credit Still Contracting

The monetary base has surged at a 51% annual rate over the past thirteen weeks, and that has churned out less than 3.0% growth in M1 and -4.0% in M2 over that period. This is classic �pushing on a string� monetary policy. The Fed hasn't really fixed anything per se � the Fed, along with the FHA and other government agencies, have basically supplanted the banking system with taxpayer-funded credit. Bank lending to the private sector plunged some $40 billion in the week ending September 16 and to put this in a certain context, the decline over the past three months has exceeded 16% at an annual rate, which is unprecedented. And, the contraction in credit is very broad based � down 5.3% for consumer loans; -9.4% for real estate credit; and -20.4% for business (C+I) loans.

The banks are still sitting on over $1 trillion in cash assets, and they are putting the proceeds to work in the government bond market, snapping up over $20 billion of Treasuries and Agencies so far this month � 22% at an annual rate over the past thirteen weeks. This may be one reason � from a flow-of-funds basis � as to why the yield curve is flattening right now. This and the nagging notion among some very important bond investors, such as Pimco, who see the U.S. economy as we do � deflationary.
Pied Pipers of Debt

Rolfe Winkler is writing about Krugman and the pied pipers of debt.
Investors are celebrating an incipient �recovery,� but the interventions that were responsible for it are sowing the seeds of a more violent contraction down the road. The problem, quite simply, is debt. We�ve accumulated record amounts, yet many economists tell us we need more.

Leading the charge is Paul Krugman. He exhorts us to borrow our way back to prosperity, but he doesn�t acknowledge that his brand of Keynesian economics ignores the consequences of debt.

Krugman dismisses deficit �hysteria,� arguing that we can grow our way out of debt. �We did it during the Clinton administration,� he told me when he visited Reuters last week.

But we didn�t. While Clinton balanced the federal budget, Americans plowed through their savings. We kept growing because, in the aggregate, we were still accumulating debt.

Today, private debt is a suffocating 300 percent of GDP, making more public debt that much harder to pay down.

As Krugman warned in 2003: �My prediction is that politicians will eventually be tempted to resolve the (fiscal) crisis the way irresponsible governments usually do: by printing money, both to pay current bills and to inflate away debt. And as that temptation becomes obvious, interest rates will soar.�
Still More Paul Krugman, Then and How

Please consider Paul Krugman: "Deficits Saved The World"
Dateline August 27, 2009
Paul Krugman: "Deficits Saved The World"

Dateline November 3, 2004
Paul Krugman: "[The Budget Deficit] is comparable to the worst we've ever seen in this country. It's bigge[r] than Argentina in 2001."
Whether or not budget deficits are irresponsible seems to depend on whether a Democrat or a Republican is in the White House. Such is the "Conscience of a Liberal".

Meanwhile, the treasury market and bank lending are both flashing huge warning signals. Are you paying attention?

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

Let the Halloween crafting commence!

**I'm answering your questions about painting ceilings to my FAQ post -- you can find it on the right sidebar from now on!**

Can you even believe tomorrow is October 1st?? I can't. I wanted fall to get here so badly, and here it is -- temps in the 60's, a trip to the pumpkin patch scheduled for this weekend, planning Christmas decorations...errr, um, Halloween decorations. Uh huh.

I can't get enough of the fun Halloween scrapbook papers and sparkly stickers I see everywhere. I grab them up more often than I should, with the plan to make something with all of 'em. Adorable.

Tonight I did a quick project that turned out pretty cauuute and wanted to share it with you in honor of the start of the bewitching month. ;) I started with a scrap piece of wood from the garage and some fun paper. I used my spray adhesive to glue the paper to the wood, then cut around it with the x-acto knife:
I cut out some solid paper with my $1.99 scalloped scissors from Hob Lob and glued it on too:
(Sorry for the awful picture!) Ha! You can see the shadow of my hands taking the picture! Looks like a ghost. :)

Then the fun starts...I used a circle puncher to make a "moon," then added some of my cutey sparkly bats:
Then added some foam letters:
And used my new Martha Stewart glitter/glue to glam them up:
Can I tell you something? I'm not loving the Martha glitter. I thought I would love it -- I should because I spent a pretty penny on it! It just doesn't hold as well as my regular, cheapy glitter. I'm actually going to have to go over these again because the glitter just didn't stay on. Bummer!!

I added a few more foamy/sticker stuff and hung it with an orange ribbon:
For now it hangs in the laundry room, but I added felt pads to the back and may just hang it from a door knob somewhere.
It is so dang cute I just can't even stand it. :) More to come!

How to draw comics: Supergirl, woman female comics character in fore-shortening pose step by step and videp tutorial for comics, manga, cartoon.

Learn drawing and sketching Supergirl, woman female comics character in fore-shortening pose demo lesson tutorial for manga, cartoon and comics.

Learn from basic sketching to finish drawing quick concept to finish rendering of Supergirl for comics cartoon illustration, manga, anime. Drawing and sketching step by step, learn how to draw and sketch super hero from basic sketching out construction lines to finish drawing and rendering gray scale value, quick concept for comics cartoon illustration, manga, anime. The video demonstrates how to quickly create an efficient concept design from concept idea into visual presentation.

***Update Nov 5, 2009
This post was a really old post, but since I did a tutorial on Super girl before...might as well post them together.
Here is another sketch and video tutorial of supergirl I did. :)
Supergirl is a fictional comic book Superhero that is depicted as a female counterpart to the DC Comics iconic superhero Superman. Created by Otto Binder and Al Plastino in 1959 and appearing in Action Comics. The character first appeared in comic books and later appeared children's cartoon animation, film, and television.

As Supergirl, the Kara Zor-El character plays a supporting role in various DC Comics publications, including Action Comics, Superman, and several other comic book series unrelated to Superman. In 1969 Supergirl became lead feature in Adventure Comics and later starred in an eponymous comic book series which debuted in 1972 and ran until 1974, followed by a second monthly comic book series titled The Daring New Adventures of Supergirl, which ran from 1982 to 1984.

More superheroes drawing video tutorials go How to draw Fantastic 4 Susan Storm (basic comics style drawing with pose). If you are looking for more intermediate sketch go watch How to draw girl Emma Frost. For male superheroes, you can watch How to draw comics superhero spiderman, and my How to draw comics character Hulk, it also has coloring or paint over tutorial. Also the new arrival video tutorial, How to draw Captain America. And an older video tut, How to draw Batman or Darknight. More drawing tutorials are coming up...stay tune! :)

Here is a final quick sketch of supergirl:

Here are step by step process sketch and draw supergirl:
How to draw supergirl
drawing supergirl
Download big image here: SuperGirl

Here is a close up with a little tweak on facial expression ;)
"Surprise"
drawing facial expression
"Sneaky?"
drawing facial expression emotion

Watch the video tutorial: How to draw supergirl:


Here is a previous version I did long time ago...I think it was May 2008.
Here are step by step process:
1)
2)3)
4)

Here is a final sketch: SuperGirl

Watch the video process tutorial: Drawing SuperGirl


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Thanks for all overwhelming support and e-mails guys!!! Due to the high volume of e-mails and questions, I apologized that I cannot usually reply to you within a day or two. I will try my best to answer them all personally and get all the questions answer either by Videos or Post.

** If you have any basic questions or specific please looked up Q/A section (under the blog menu on the right side). Most of the time your questions has already been answered in Q/A.

Great Day, Peace!!!

How To draw x-men, Jean Grey, Phoenix Manga comics style.

How To draw x-men, Jean Grey, Phoenix Manga comics style step by step and video tutorial.
I just saw Marvel production trailer of X-men spin off, "Wolverine." It looks really promising, I really hope it will be as good as the trailer because I like the first two x-men movies, but not the third one.

***Update Nov 06, 2009 (New info)
How to draw Woman Comics #005 Marvelgirl, Jean Grey, x-men phoenix Part 1 of 2. Draw and Sketch comics character, woman girl female Marvel girl, x-men Jean Grey illustration sketch. Learn from Step by step and video tutorial. This one is focusing on portrait of female character design for comics, video game, and Manga. The process shows drawing and sketching video series of comic book characters that (hopefully) will help you gain knowledge of anatomy and dynamics in the positioning of the figure and the details.

In this tutorial, I will be adding some dynamic foreshortening in the sketch in part 2. In part 1, I'm focusing pretty much on the facial structure and the pose itself. Then I change my mind on the position of her hand and arm so I change it up and make another video for part 2.

A bit about X-men character, Jean Grey: Jean Grey is a fictional comic book superheroine appearing in books published by Marvel Comics. She has been known under the aliases Marvel Girl and later, Phoenix and Dark Phoenix, and is best known as one of five original members of the X-Men, for her relationship with husband Cyclops, and for her central role and transformation in the classic X-Men storyline, the "Dark Phoenix Saga."

Jean Grey is a mutant born with telepathic and telekinetic powers. Her powers first manifested when she saw her childhood friend being hit by a car. She is a caring, nurturing figure, but she also must deal with being an Omega-level mutant and the physical manifestation of the cosmic Phoenix Force. She faces death several times in the history of the series, first in the classic "Dark Phoenix Saga" but due to her connection with the Phoenix Force, she, as her namesake implies, rises from death.

More superhero tutorials here, How to draw comics Supergirl woman drawing tutorial is the most recent one. Then comes How to draw Fantastic 4 Susan Storm (basic figure line drawing with comics pose). This one is a little more intermediate sketch How to draw girl Emma Frost. For male superheroes, How to draw comics superhero spiderman, and my How to draw comics character Hulk, it demonstrate how to paint over and color. Who can resist to draw Captain, it has two video in How to draw Captain America. This one is an older drawing video demo, How to draw Batman or Darknight. Tutorials will be uploaded constantly, see you soon.

Here is a quick sketch of X-men Jean Grey, Phoenix or Marvel Girl:


Here are step by step, How to draw X-men Jean Grey
how to draw x-men jean grey
drawing jean grey, marvel girl, phoenix
Download bigger image here: Jean Grey

Watch the Video tutorial: How to draw Women X-men Jean Grey


Part 2: How to draw Women X-men Jean Grey (Foreshortening)


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-Character Design Tutorial: Dark Valkyrie

Here is the previous Jean Grey or Phoenix one on Dec 28, 2008.
Anyway, so I got inspire to do some x-men girl sketch of Phoenix or Jean Grey.

Here is step by step drawing of X-men:
1)
how to paint, face, front, 3/4 view, head, hair, female, painting

2)
how to paint, face, front, 3/4 view, head, hair, female, painting

3)
how to paint, face, front, 3/4 view, head, hair, female, painting

4)
how to paint, face, front, 3/4 view, head, hair, female, painting

5)
how to paint, face, front, 3/4 view, head, hair, female, painting

Watch the video process: How to draw x-men


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** 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,

Reflections on the Unexpected Negative Surprise in Chicago Purchasing Index PMI

With each passing day the number of people that think the bottom is in, earnings will keep improving, and even a correction is unthinkable keeps rising. Here are a pair of interesting headlines moments apart on Bloomberg.

U.S. Stocks Climb to Extend Biggest Quarterly Rally Since 1998

Bloomberg is reporting U.S. Stocks Climb to Extend Biggest Quarterly Rally Since 1998
U.S. stocks rose, extending the market�s biggest quarterly rally in a decade, as the government said the economy shrank less than estimated in April through June and earnings at Nike Inc. beat estimates. Oil and metals gained as the dollar slumped, while Treasuries retreated.

�A lot of people would be looking for a pullback, but we�re going to see improving fundamentals in the base economy, and with that higher earnings,� said William Dwyer, chief investment officer at MTB Investment Advisors, which manages $13 billion in Baltimore.

Today�s gains came after the U.S. Commerce Department said the world�s largest economy shrank at a 0.7 percent annual rate from April through June, less than the previous estimate of 1 percent and the median economist projection of 1.2 percent. Gross domestic product contracted at a 6.4 percent pace in the first three months of 2009.

The performance of the U.S. economy is probably more sluggish than reflected in stock markets, risking a correction in equities, Nobel Prize-winning economist Michael Spence said.

U.S. stock-market investors have �over processed� the stabilization of growth in the world�s largest economy, Spence said in an interview in Kuala Lumpur yesterday. The U.S. economy isn�t likely to experience a �double-dip� slowdown even as that remains a risk, said the professor emeritus of management in the Graduate School of Business at Stanford University.
I would be curious as to what William Dwyer, chief investment officer at MTB Investment Advisors was saying in 2008. Regardless, the idea that stock can keep rising forever even as the fundamentals of the economy are horrible, and the only game in town is government spending is rather remarkable.

As for the double-dip, I think one is coming. The not so robust alternative is flatline stagnation and extremely slow growth for 5 years or more.

Just moments after the above headline appeared, we saw this:

U.S. Stocks Drop as Purchasing Managers Index Trails Estimates

Please consider U.S. Stocks Drop as Purchasing Managers Index Trails Estimates
U.S. stocks retreated after a measure of business activity unexpectedly shrank in September, overshadowing an earlier report that showed the recession abated more than estimated in the second quarter.

The Standard & Poor�s 500 Index lost 0.7 percent to 9,678.27 at 9:47 a.m. in New York after the Institute for Supply Management�s gauge of business activity slipped to 46.1 in September, lower than the reading of 52 estimated by economists in a Bloomberg survey.
Business activity declines in Chicago area

Market Watch has more details on the PMI in Business activity declines in Chicago area.
More companies in the Chicago area reported business worsened in September, according to the Chicago-NAPM. The Chicago purchasing managers index fell to 46.1% in September from 50.0% in August, the trade group said. Economists were expecting an increase to 52%. The new orders index backtracked to 46.3% from 52.5% in August. The employment index was essentially unchanged at 38.8%. Readings under 50% indicate more firms said business was worsening than said it was improving.
Today a close friend, "HB", pinged me with this thought: "Today's unexpected negative surprise Chicago PMI which is back in contraction, reminds me of 2002. This is how the 2002 waterfall decline began. The trigger was exactly the same, a disappointing PMI."

Fundamentally and technically the market is prime for a huge correction. Sentiment is extreme and the viewpoint expressed by William Dwyer above is consensus. However, it is important to keep in mind that as long as the corporate bond market stays healthy, stocks will likely have a bid. How much longer that remains is anyone's guess.

That said, some cracks are starting to appear. As I pointed out yesterday in Bill Gross Bets On Deflation, the yield curve is flattening substantially and the treasury market is increasingly skeptical of the reflation effort taking hold.

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

Spread the Wealth

Here are a couple announcements for fundraisers, one for a non-profit organization in New York and the other an art installation in Detroit.

Our good friends at the Design Trust for Public Space will be holding their Annual Benefit on Thursday, November 5th at Ogilvy & Mather's offices in The Chocolate Factory, 636 11th Avenue in Manhattan. The benefit will feature "one-of-a-kind shelters created exclusively for the Design Trust by prominent architects, designers and artists on the theme of 'Nest: Creative Construction for any Living Creature.'" The impressive list of names creating shelters includes Christo & Jeanne-Claude, Hariri & Hariri Architecture, Lewis.Tsurumaki.Lewis Architects, Slade Architecture, Snohetta,Tod Williams Billie Tsien Architects and WXY architecture.

NOV05-2009.jpg

Ice House Detroit is an installation developed by photographer Gregory Holm and architect Matthew Radune. It "involves the acquisition and recontextualization of one of the 80,000 abandoned houses in the city. The house will be sprayed with water in subzero temperatures, gradually building up layers of ice over the course of several days or weeks." Photographs, a book, and a film will document the house, available to those who pledge, depending on the amount given. Holm and Radune are aiming to raise $11,000 by December 16 to make the project happen.

icehouse.jpg

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

BofA, Wells Fargo, JPM, Citigroup FDIC Fees May Top $10 Billion

The FDIC is struggling mightily to stay solvent. Given that there are bank failures every Friday, it's no easy feat for the FDIC to stay ahead of the game.

Please consider Bank of America, Major Banks� FDIC Premiums May Top $10 Billion.
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.�s plan to rebuild its reserves may cost Bank of America Corp. and three of the largest U.S. banks more than $10 billion.

Bank of America, the biggest U.S. lender by deposits, may owe $3.5 billion under an FDIC proposal that banks prepay three years of premiums, based on the lowest assessment rate multiplied by the bank�s $900 billion in June 30 U.S. deposits.

�This seems like a very hefty amount,� said Tim Yeager, a finance professor at the University of Arkansas and former economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. �The FDIC�s projections of future losses are pretty severe, and they are trying everything they can to avoid tapping the Treasury.�

U.S. bank premiums range from 12 cents per $100 in deposits for the safest lenders to 45 cents for banks the U.S. considers risky, said Chris Cole, senior regulatory counsel for the Independent Community Bankers of America. The FDIC yesterday proposed asking banks to pay premiums for the fourth quarter and next three years on Dec. 30. The fees will raise $45 billion.

Based on the current assessment and each bank�s deposits, Wells Fargo & Co.�s fee may be $3.2 billion based on its $814 billion in deposits, JPMorgan Chase & Co. may pay $2.4 billion and Citigroup Inc. $1.2 billion. The estimates exclude the FDIC�s plan to boost the assessment rate by 3 cents per $100 in deposits in 2011 or the agency�s assumption that bank deposits will increase by 5 percent annually.
FDIC Is Bankrupt

Last month I wrote As of Friday August 14, 2009, FDIC is Bankrupt.

Although that is a realistically correct headline (Please see You Know The Banking System Is Unsound When.... for a justification), I did overlook things FDIC did to temporarily stay in the game.

Prepaid fees is yet another attempt to keep the game going. How much longer this can last is anyone's guess. Those prepaid fees are going to hurt bank earnings 100% guaranteed. The fees may even push some struggling banks into bankruptcy.

Emails from a Bank Owner regarding FDIC

In regards to my post on FDIC bankruptcy I received Emails from a Bank Owner regarding FDIC and Under-Capitalized Banks.
ABO, who as been in the business 30 years, writes:

This will certainly mark the end of the banking model using wholesale funding and aggressive deposits to fund commercial real estate projects. In other words this is going to come down hard on the FIRE economy.

I have been in banking for over 30 years and from my perspective this is much worse than anything I have seen. God help us if cap and trade passes!
Newfound Praise For Shelia Bair

At times, I have been extremely hard on Shelia Bair. She has said many things that I strongly disagree with. However, I have to commend her for two things.

1) Shelia Bair stood up to Geithner regarding the PPIP and banks being allowed to bid on their own assets. Clearly she recognized banks bidding on their own assets at taxpayer risk was outright fraud. Of course, I think the whole PPIP proposal was (and still is) fraud, but in retrospect I have to wonder if her stance caused this ridiculous program to go on the back burner. If so, Bair deserves a salute. Note that PPIP is still not up and running.

2) Shelia Bair is now refusing to borrow money from the treasury (taxpayers) to shore up FDIC. Instead, she has been raising fees and now is proposing pre-paid fees. In other words, she strives to make the riskiest banks pony up for their mistakes, as opposed to dumping the risk on taxpayers.

The easy way out for Shelia would have been to simply take money from the Treasury. However, she is taking a much tougher stance, at least for now. I reserve the right to change my opinion down the road based on future actions.

Perhaps, like many of the rest of us she simply cannot stand Geithner. However, regardless of motivation, she is now doing the right thing by making risky banks pay for the risk they undertook.

Is the system fair?

Is the system fair? Of course not. Citigroup and Bank of America received debt guarantees from the Treasury making their debt appear to be less risky, and their FDIC insurance payments less than they should be. Wells Fargo was the beneficiary of huge tax breaks.

However, those items are not Bair's doing, so she should not take the blame.

The scorecard of Geithner and Paulson is a big fat zero. Yet, this is now the second thing major thing Bair has gotten correct. This is the best we can realistically expect.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
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Mish Mailbag: Anecdotes from Kentucky and St. Louis

Joshua from Kentucky thinks things are not going as well as they seem. Joshua writes:
Mish,

I wanted to write you in regards to what I see in the economic landscape here in Kentucky. I live in Hodgenville, KY (birthplace of Abraham Lincoln) and work in Elizabethtown which is 40 miles south of Louisville and about 10 miles from Fort Knox.

For about 2 years, up until December of 2007, I delivered pizza for Papa Johns here in the area and got to see many interesting sites. One feature that always caught my attention, as it did when I lived near Frankfort and Lexington, was all the �cookie cutter� neighborhoods that were springing up. I wondered then who was buying these cheaply built houses 2 feet from their neighbors and why. I soon found out shortly after I started reading your blog that it was everyone and because someone would give them the money.

I have returned to delivering pizza as a second income to increase the speed in which I can pay off my $9000 in debt I owe and become truly �free�! I have noticed an ENORMOUS change in the landscape since I am once again driving around. There are hundreds if not thousands of houses for sale in this city.

I am amazed at the number of houses are for sale in this the worst housing market in years if not generations. I went to one newly constructed neighborhood (built within the last 10 years) and ONE THIRD of the houses were up for sale and more than a couple looked empty. I do not know how many of these are short sales and foreclosures, but Fort Knox is supposed to be massively expanding and yet there is a glutton of housing, not to mention all the retail space!

To top it off, I only see about half the town as another store covers the rest, so I can only imagine the true state of housing here is much worse. These are not �poor� neighborhoods and even the upper end for this area have many for sale. I sold my house back in the summer of 2007 and went back to renting because I saw this coming, and man am I glad!! Kentucky seems to lag the rest of the country in nearly everything and this seems to be no exception despite what our worthless politicians say (minus Rand Paul). Thanks for your blog. I really enjoy it.

Thank you
Joshua
Appearances Can Deceive

I am on the road for the third consecutive week. Tonight I am typing from a hotel in St. Louis at a Sheraton Inn. I thought the place was reasonably crowded, at least for a Tuesday night.

However, being the inquisitive type, I asked the restaurant manager how things were and if things were getting any better. Based on the traffic I saw, I expected to hear that things were getting better or at least stabilizing.

Instead, I was told things are deteriorating, that there are fewer customers at both the restaurant and the bar (he was manager of both). He also said that customers are spending less per person, and even business types staying at the hotel are insisting on carrying their own bags so as to not have to pay the doorman for hauling their luggage.

Finally, the restaurant manager is also a part-time manager at the riverboat casino. He said the casino is doing just fine. High-roller traffic is way down, however the average Joe who cannot afford to lose, is gambling his paycheck away hoping to strike it rich.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
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Nikon D3s with 1080p video rumored for release next month

Nikon D3s with 1080p video rumored for release next monthThis sort of burst out of nowhere today, but word is that a new Nikon D3s will hit on October 15 -- the crew at NikonRumors puts it at '99 percent probability.' The D3s is expected to add 1080p video and an 14fps burst mode to the D3, as well as a 1.6x crop mode, but other than that we don't know too much. We'll keep you updated, it looks like the leaks are coming fast and furious.

(Via Engadget Digital Cameras.)

Phase One 645DF camera

Phase One 645DF camera

Phase One 645DF camera

Phase One has upgraded their 645 core medium-format camera into a newer model known as the 645DF, where you will find it to come in a seamless design with its careful amalgamation of lens, body, back and software. In addition, the 645DF comes with both a traditional leaf shutter and a focal plane shutter for superior responsiveness and image quality with each shot that you take. Apart from that, you will find that the Phase One 645DF also boasts one of the fastest flash syncs in a camera, capable of flashing the light up to a 1/1,600 second shutter speed, alongside exposure times from as low as 1/4,000 of seconds up to an hour. Ready for a debut this fall, the new Phase One 645DF is tipped to retail for $5,998 without lens or a digital back. Assuming you want both options, you will need to fork out another $2,490.




(Via UberGizmo, the Gadgets News Blog.)

Nikon D3s with 1080p video rumored for release next month

Nikon D3s with 1080p video rumored for release next monthThis sort of burst out of nowhere today, but word is that a new Nikon D3s will hit on October 15 -- the crew at NikonRumors puts it at '99 percent probability.' The D3s is expected to add 1080p video and an 14fps burst mode to the D3, as well as a 1.6x crop mode, but other than that we don't know too much. We'll keep you updated, it looks like the leaks are coming fast and furious.

(Via Engadget Digital Cameras.)

Phase One 645DF camera

Phase One 645DF camera

Phase One 645DF camera

Phase One has upgraded their 645 core medium-format camera into a newer model known as the 645DF, where you will find it to come in a seamless design with its careful amalgamation of lens, body, back and software. In addition, the 645DF comes with both a traditional leaf shutter and a focal plane shutter for superior responsiveness and image quality with each shot that you take. Apart from that, you will find that the Phase One 645DF also boasts one of the fastest flash syncs in a camera, capable of flashing the light up to a 1/1,600 second shutter speed, alongside exposure times from as low as 1/4,000 of seconds up to an hour. Ready for a debut this fall, the new Phase One 645DF is tipped to retail for $5,998 without lens or a digital back. Assuming you want both options, you will need to fork out another $2,490.




(Via UberGizmo, the Gadgets News Blog.)

Hasselblad 50 and 60 MP H4D Cameras

Hasselblad 50 and 60 MP H4D Cameras

hasselbladh4d lg1 Hasselblad 50 and 60 MP H4D Cameras


Hasselblad cameras aren�t the cameras of choice to snap casual candids at the weekend house party, but if you�re a serious photographer looking for an uncompromising set-up, these new upgrades for its H system camera line are certainly a good choice. The most exciting upgrade of the H4D cameras is True Focus-a true off-center autofocus system that uses a yaw rate sensor to detect and compensate for horizontal and vertical movement away from the focus. Automatic adjustment is available for image qualities such as color and vignetting. The camera can connect to a computer via FireWire to bypass internal storage, and features newly-upgraded version of Hasselblad�s Phocus software that will run faster. Here�s where we get to the average-cameramen-need-not-apply portion of the show: the 50MP H4D-50 will run $29,299 and be available in January while the 60MP H4D-60 will be available in November for $42,486.

[via Slippery Brick]

Hasselblad 50 and 60 MP H4D Cameras

Hasselblad 50 and 60 MP H4D Cameras

hasselbladh4d lg1 Hasselblad 50 and 60 MP H4D Cameras


Hasselblad cameras aren�t the cameras of choice to snap casual candids at the weekend house party, but if you�re a serious photographer looking for an uncompromising set-up, these new upgrades for its H system camera line are certainly a good choice. The most exciting upgrade of the H4D cameras is True Focus-a true off-center autofocus system that uses a yaw rate sensor to detect and compensate for horizontal and vertical movement away from the focus. Automatic adjustment is available for image qualities such as color and vignetting. The camera can connect to a computer via FireWire to bypass internal storage, and features newly-upgraded version of Hasselblad�s Phocus software that will run faster. Here�s where we get to the average-cameramen-need-not-apply portion of the show: the 50MP H4D-50 will run $29,299 and be available in January while the 60MP H4D-60 will be available in November for $42,486.

[via Slippery Brick]

The fifth wall. (And another dining room reveal!)

OK peeps. I've been wanting to talk about this topic for awhile. It's something very few do, but it makes a HUGE impact in a room. (In my little bitty opinion.)

The decorating element I love to add to a room is one most people never think of doing -- painting your ceiling. Not another coat of white -- a color. EGADS! Yes, I said it! Color on your ceiling! Ahhh, I've gone and lost my mind, right?

It is by far the one addition that I think makes a HUGE difference in the way a room feels, and it costs $20 for a gallon of paint.

The owner of the decorating firm I worked with turned me onto this, and I was SUCH a nonbeliever at first. I was hooked after our first painted ceiling though. I mean, head over heels in love, hooked. There are some "rules" that you may want to follow that I don't, and I'll tell you those in a bit. Also, there are some myths about painting a ceiling I'll address too.

I had the ceiling in our family room/kitchen combo painted the same color as the walls and absolutely love it:
Reason number one I love painted ceilings -- if you have crown molding, it will make them absolutely pop off the walls when your ceilings are painted. When you have crown and a white ceiling, at least the upper half of it washes away, and for all that work and money, you should SEE it. ;)

I am chomping at the bit to get the crown installed in these rooms, because I know it will look ahhhhmazing against the Sisal colored walls and ceiling. ;)

In our chocolate colored powder room, I painted the ceiling the same color as the walls, and look how the molding pops!:
I added a thin coat of my glaze over the paint, just to give it a little bit of fun. (I think you can do whatever the heck you want and get dramatic in three rooms -- laundry rooms, powder rooms and dining rooms.)

In our son's bathroom I did the same blue as the ceiling in his room:
I didn't go the same color as the walls in these rooms because I wanted to tie in the blue that was used throughout, I wanted it to give the look of a sky, and it was just plain cute:
We don't have overhead lighting in our den (pounds head on table for that), so it's the darkest room in our house. I went with the same color of the walls to keep the cozy feeling we had going:
And I. love. it. (I'm going to install crown in here too, forgive my horrible cutting in...)

There is a common thought that painted ceilings make the room darker -- this is only true if the room is small, has low ceilings has little lighting. If I did a dark color on the ceiling in our master bathroom, with tall walls and tons of natural light, I can promise you it would not be darker in there. Swear. Bet you one meeellion bucks.

Another thought is that it make the room seem smaller. Even a small room like our den didn't shrink -- I swear it got bigger. When you remove the white ceiling, the eye just keeps going...it doesn't stop. I make the room seem more expanse and taller...YES, taller. When the ceiling is white, it stops your eye and shows exact height of your ceilings.

My first attempt at a painted ceiling was years ago. I wanted to give the illusion (there I go with illuuuuusions again!) of a tray ceiling in our dining room, so I put up molding, and took a color out of the light fixture for the inside of the molding:
I added a glaze to the top to make it glitter just a bit, and at first we loved it. It has stayed like this for years, but with the recent dining room redo, it just wasn't working anymore. I had the ceiling painted a couple weeks ago (I splurged and called my "guy" I use for ceilings when I'm feeling lazy) and had him leave the color on the inside, thinking it would look cool: Ummmm, it didn't. It looked like baby puke.
So in about an hour and a half, I finished it up and continued the chocolate brown:
And I adore it. (Oh yeah, I'm waiting on a special little somethin' for that empty area to the right of the table...patiently...waiting...)

The light, I have always loved...

But now I'm craving something more traditional...is that wrong? I spent a pretty penny on this light. I can't believe I'm considering this. Yikes. I have a spot where I may be able to put it, but I'm not sure what I'll do. Thoughts?

There are general guidelines "they" say to use when painting a ceiling. The first is, if your ceilings are eight feet or lower, go half and half with the color -- like half white, half wall color. Or at least take the wall color lighter a few shades. Also, if you are painting ceilings in small rooms, the general thought is to go lighter.

If your ceilings are nine foot and taller, you can go the same color as the walls. If they are VERY tall, I'm talking like 15-20 feet -- you can darker than the walls. This is for instances when you want to make such a tall space cozier and not as cavernous feeling. And it works!

My rules are...do whatever the heck you want! I almost always do the same exact color that's on the walls, no matter the size of the room or ceiling height. You can do a different color, you can go lighter, darker, whateva. I highly recommend flat paint though. Any other finish will be too shiny. If you want some shiny, use a glaze like I did to glam it up...but do it sparingly.

Painted ceilings are not for everyone. And you will be sceered, verrrry screered the first time you do it. (Heck, the fifth time you do it!) But I have yet to regret one of them in our home.

Next up...I'll show you my cheap-o hutch redo!

P.S. I believe I said "ceiling" 267 times. 268.
P.S.S. I am finishing up answering your questions on my Q and A post tonight! That was FUN!
 
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