World Trade
9/11: The Mysterious Collapse of WTC Building 7 was Not An Inside Job
Submitted by George Washington on 09/15/2012 18:54 -0500No One Was Killed, No Wars Were Launched, No Liberties Were Lost ...
New York Times: White House Didn’t Stop 9/11 Because It Thought “Bin Laden Was Merely PRETENDING To Be Planning An Attack ...
Submitted by George Washington on 09/11/2012 14:28 -0500Neoconservatives Ignored CIA Because They Had Other Priorities
9-11+11 (TeRRoRiSM CLoNeD BY CRoNY CaPiTaLiSTS)
Submitted by williambanzai7 on 09/11/2012 02:29 -0500A war of images...
Sleeping With the Devil: How U.S. and Saudi Backing of Al Qaeda Led to 9/11
Submitted by George Washington on 09/05/2012 12:12 -0500And NOTHING Has Changed ...
9/11: Criminal Incompetence and Ass-Covering by the Bush Administration
Submitted by George Washington on 08/26/2012 15:05 -0500Certified Conspiracy-Free
Japanese Trade Implosion Sends Futures To Lows
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/21/2012 20:47 -0500
Somewhat disastrous trade balance data from Japan - with exports dramatically worse-than-expected (EU exports -25.1% YoY) and imports worse-than-expected (which will come as no surprise to any ZH reader given Europe's depression and our discussion of world trade here) - has crushed JPY crosses overnight (especially AUDJPY) which is exactly what we said at the close today was required to extend today's equity weakness. Sure enough, S&P 500 futures are down over 6 points from the close now - and trading below day-session lows.
Former Marine Indefinitely Detained In Psychiatric Ward Over 9/11 Facebook Posts
Submitted by George Washington on 08/20/2012 23:50 -0500What Do Mental Health Professionals Say About Those Who Question 9/11?
22 Stats That Show How The Emerging One World Economy Is Absolutely Killing American Workers
Submitted by ilene on 08/16/2012 16:02 -0500"Houston, we have a problem"
The Economic 'Recovery' In Historical Context
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/14/2012 10:46 -0500
How does the current 'recovery', which according to the NBER officially began in June 2009, compare to those of the past? The Council on Foreign Relations updates its recovery chartbook and succinctly notes that "the current recovery remains an outlier among post-war recoveries along several dimensions." Consumers remain reluctant to take on new debt and the stock of debt is lower than it was when the recovery officially began. The global economic slowdown is beginning to manifest itself in world trade. After staging the strongest recovery of the post–World War II era (thanks to the depth of the plunge), growth in world trade has begun to decelerate.
The “War On Terror” Has Changed, And Not One In 1,000 Americans Has Noticed
Submitted by George Washington on 07/31/2012 13:19 -0500What You Should Know about this “Unthinkable” Development…
Frontrunning: July 25
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/25/2012 06:25 -0500- ECB's Nowotny - ESM banking license could be advantageous (Reuters) - just keep regurgitating headlines until they generate a short squeeze
- IMF Says China Downside Risks Significant as Growth Slows (Bloomberg)
- Moody's cuts outlook on EU stability facility to negative (Reuters)
- Rome places spending controls on Sicily (FT)
- Big banks' glory days feared to be gone for good (Reuters)
- China's CNOOC scoped Nexen, partnered, then pounced (Reuters)
- Germany backs Spanish austerity plans (FT)
- Are 2012 Games one too many for London? (Reuters)
- Euro Crisis Spreading East Damps Growth, Development Bank Says (Bloomberg)
- Japan Flags Yen-Sales Impact as BOJ Eyes More Easing (Bloomberg)
Thunder Road Report On The Death March: Approaching A New Financial System
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/05/2012 16:21 -0500
If you are reading this, you are probably a member of what the sociologists would term middle class (albeit at the upper end). This is precisely the segment of society which is poised to come off worst from what is coming. Here is a very disturbing idea. As this crisis develops, if you are an equity portfolio manager and you want to outperform the market, you are going to have to position your portfolio so that it benefits most from your own wealth destruction and that of your family, friends and colleagues. Almost everybody is going to lose and there aren’t many places to hide. This is deeply unpleasant but you can blame the central planners. I’ve written about my own investing, e.g. gold and silver, equities in terms of Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs, etc. In this Thunder Road Report (below) and going forward, I will discuss this middle class theme and highlight positions I have in individual stocks, etc. The only good thing that can come out of this is a rise in awareness. It’s just awful.
Obama Opens Car Front In Chinese Trade War
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/05/2012 10:26 -0500In Ohio today, President Obama will announce the latest World Trade Organization suit against China, this time addressing "unfairly" imposed duties on U.S. auto exports. The Administration will argue that these duties violate international trade rules. Whether or not China will reply that buying US 10 year paper at 1.6% is also unfair remains to be seen. But at least someone is happy. As reported earlier, ADP reported just 4,000 manufacturing jobs were added in the US in the last month: these are the same people who are supposed to be doubling US exports in Obama's latest 5 year plan. Good luck. Anyway, here is the take of the Alliance for American Manufacturing to this simplistic attempt to trade union for long-term stability with America's largest trading partner.
Guest Post: Coal - The Ignored Juggernaut
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/30/2012 08:38 -0500
Given the rather weak near-term and long-term outlook for US coal demand, it’s not surprising that within such a capital-intensive business, a number of smaller coal producers were hit recently with bankruptcy rumors. Indeed, even large cap names like Arch Coal have seen an escalation of concern over debt levels. Accordingly, many have concluded that coal -- in an era of solar, wind, and natural gas -- has finally displaced itself due to its problematic extraction, distant transportation, and overall costs. Is coal finally going away as an energy source?
Not a chance.
Indeed, everything currently unfolding for coal in the United States is precisely what is not unfolding for coal globally. Prices to import natural gas to most countries via LNG remain sky-high, easily protecting coal’s cost advantage. And the demand for coal in the developing world remains gargantuan. Accordingly, just as with oil, lower US demand simply frees up supply to elsewhere in the world. The global coal juggernaut rolls onward.






