Archive - Apr 22, 2011

asiablues's picture

All's Fair in Coffee and Sugar





Although Kraft and Starbucks each has found new partners after their bitter breakup, surging prices of coffee (34-year high) and sugar (30-year high in Feb.) could bring margin and cost pressures in the food and coffee sector.

 

George Washington's picture

Jobs Bill? The Government Passed a Jobs Bill Years Ago ... Just Not for US





Government already PASSED a jobs bill, and Obama IS representing his constituency ... so stop whining!

 

Phoenix Capital Research's picture

The Great Con of the Recovery: The Stock Wealth Effect





Stepping back from this, you really can’t help but notice how stupid the whole “stock wealth effect” ideology is. Setting aside the fact that MOST of the gains stocks have produced since 2009 are due to US Dollar devaluation, it strikes me as odd that someone would think they were richer because their stock portfolio was up… while the cost of just about everything has ALSO gone up tremendously. For instance, since March 2009, stocks have doubled. However, oil has nearly TRIPLED in price.

 

williambanzai7's picture

"WHAT ME PRESIDENT?...You'Re FiReD!"





Your friends will be hysterical when they see you wearing...

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Open Thread





Since posting on Zero Hedge over the next 24 hours will be more sporadic than usual, please use this space for any news, discussions and general observations about life, the universe and everything.

 

Stone Street Advisors's picture

On the Relationship Between "Increased" Food Prices And Restaurant Margins





Would you like cheese with that burger? Ok, sir, that'll be $5.00...

 

Tyler Durden's picture

MIT "TEPCOes" Its Billion Prices Project





If there was one thing TEPCO was consistent in during the entire Fukushima crisis (and will be for a long time), was its ability to simply "disappear" data that was not palatable for general consumption. Well, it only took MIT 6 months to "TEPCO" its Billion Price Project. Launched early in 2011, the MIT BBP was the only place where one could get an objective look at how inflation was trending in the US and across other countries in the world (and as one can imagine, it was "trending" laughably higher than the CPI). Well, as of this morning it appears that each individual country's data has been "disappeared", and conveniently replaced with the "blended average" also known as the "World Inflation Index." For all those who previously had at least one recourse to see just what liberties the BLS was taking with its imaginary CPI data, well, that recourse is now gone.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

One Angry Rant: "Land Of The Stupid, Home Of The Freaking Screwed"





Zero Hedge is not a political blog. We take every opportunity to expose the hypocrisy and corruption on both sides of the aisle. Granted over the past 2 years we have seen quite a bit more of it from one side, but that has been primarily due to that one side being in control, and as always happens to whoever is in charge, screwing things up. For the most part, we try to be at least modestly picky about how we express ourselves now that politics and finance have become more intertwined than ever in history. The same can not be said about the following clip from Drinkingwithbob who appears to have said "basta" to diplomacy, and delivers one of the more memorable rants against what everyone knows to be true but few are willing to say out loud. If nothing else, it is... cathartic.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Weekly Chartology And An Advance Look At The Busiest Week Of Earnings Season





From Goldman's David Kostin: "Positive revenue surprises averaged 2% and helped drive the strong earnings season to-date with 28% of S&P 500 stocks now having reported 1Q results. Earnings surprises have averaged 11% and analysts have lifted their EPS estimates for all four quarters. Energy company revisions are the key reason. Bottom-up full-year 2011 EPS estimate now stands at almost $99, above our $96 topdown forecast. Earnings season continues next week with 178 firms representing 34% of S&P 500 market cap set to report 1Q results."

 

Tyler Durden's picture

"The Case Against Government Debt - PERIOD"





The most exciting episode of the neverending (and always distracting from far more important matters) political soap opera is without doubt the ongoing debate over the debt ceiling (which may legally be breached as soon as the week of May 1). For what it's worth, this is a complete sideshow as i) the ceiling will be raised, ii) both parties will blame each other for this outcome while shaking hands behind the scenes in expectation of more "gifts" from Wall Street and iii) the world will realize just how broke America is now that its debt ceiling, which we believe will be raised by just over $2 trillion to last the country until after the next presidential election, will for the first time ever be greater than its GDP, an event that has never before occurred. And so the distraction will shift to another even more meaningless debate. In the meantime, few ask themselves the key question: why is there government debt? In that regard, many have made the point against government debt, but few have done so as successfully and as succinctly as Bill Buckler does in his latest issue of the Privateer. In the below segment, Buckler does the definitive and most commonsensical reduction of the "government debt" issue and why what America is doing is nothing short of allowing itself to be hijacked on the road to a dictatorship.

 

Phoenix Capital Research's picture

Sorry Folks, Uncle Sam Can’t Solve This One





Taking over the private sector also occurred in the US monetary system with the US Federal Reserve allowing Wall Street to dish their junk debts onto its balance sheet in a kind of “cash for trash” program where Wall Street sells crap no one wanted for 100 cents on the Dollar to the Fed… and then the Fed doesn’t try to get its money back… EVER. Doing this had a profound psychological impact on the financial world. By swapping US Dollars for trash assets, the Fed sent a clear signal to all of us that cash was in fact becoming trash.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Bull/Bear Weekly Recap: Apr 18-22, 2011





The most concise summary of the key positive and negative events over the past week.

 

williambanzai7's picture

WHo SaYs TheRe'S No SuCH ThiNG AS THe EaSTeR BaMa





He who wants Lent to seem short should contract a debt to be repaid at Easter. Italian Proverb

 
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