Medicare
Two Reasons Why the Global Economy Will Slow and Government Promises to Retirees Will be Broken
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 03/12/2012 18:25 -0500The coming years will be marked by a seismic change in the economic landscape in the US. Firstly and most importantly, we are going to see economic growth slow down dramatically. The reasons for this slow down are myriad but the most important are: 1) Age demographics: a growing percentage of the population will be retiring while fewer younger people are entering the workforce. 2) Excessive debt overhang.
The Biggest Debt Write-Down In Human History
Submitted by Michael Victory on 03/10/2012 22:32 -0500- Bank of England
- Bank of Japan
- Berkshire Hathaway
- Bond
- CDS
- Central Banks
- China
- Corruption
- default
- European Central Bank
- Federal Reserve
- fixed
- France
- Greece
- Hyperinflation
- Insurance Companies
- Japan
- John Williams
- Medicare
- Mortgage Loans
- Obamacare
- Portugal
- Real estate
- Swiss National Bank
- Time Magazine
- Unemployment
- Unemployment Insurance
- Volatility
- Wachovia
- White House
Injection will have its desired affect.
Why China Is Dumping The Dollar - And Why You Should Read Up on the Weimar Republic
Submitted by CrownThomas on 03/10/2012 20:47 -0500China is trying to tell you something, are you listening?
Guest Post: Cause, Effects & The Fallacy Of A Return To Normalcy
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/06/2012 17:20 -0500- Alan Greenspan
- Bear Market
- Ben Bernanke
- Ben Bernanke
- Best Buy
- BLS
- China
- Commercial Real Estate
- Consumer Credit
- Corporate America
- CRAP
- default
- Demographics
- Fail
- Federal Reserve
- Florida
- Foreclosures
- GE Capital
- Guest Post
- Home Equity
- McDonalds
- Medicare
- None
- Personal Income
- Real estate
- Reality
- recovery
- Rolex
- Same Store Sales
- Sears
- Student Loans
- The Big Lie
- Unemployment
The most profitable business of the future will be producing Space Available and For Lease signs. Betting on the intelligence of the American consumer has been a losing bet for decades. They will continue to swipe that credit card at the local 7-11 to buy those Funions, jalapeno cheese stuffed pretzels with a side of cheese dipping sauce, cartons of smokes, and 32 ounce Big Gulps of Mountain Dew until the message on the credit card machine comes back DENIED. There will be crescendo of consequences as these stores are closed down. The rotting hulks of thousands of Sears and Kmarts will slowly decay; blighting the suburban landscape and beckoning criminals and the homeless. Retailers will be forced to lay-off hundreds of thousands of workers. Property taxes paid to local governments will dry up, resulting in worsening budget deficits. Sales taxes paid to state governments will plummet, forcing more government cutbacks and higher taxes. Mall owners and real estate developers will see their rental income dissipate. They will then proceed to default on their loans. Bankers will be stuck with billions in loan losses, at least until they are able to shift them to the American taxpayer – again.
On Politics, Social Security and Spine
Submitted by Bruce Krasting on 03/06/2012 08:11 -0500Social Security might be an issue for the election after all.
An Improbable Fireside Chat
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/03/2012 20:09 -0500Picture a fireside, stone around the hearth, Christmas logs of sometime past, a blazing fire and embers glowing beneath them. Imagine a simple room, wood panels and the glow that is reflected from the light that danced upon their lacquered finish. There sat a man next to the fire who was not the Pastor of some church nor some litigator stirring the listeners for re-election but a man speaking to the country and for the betterment of the nation. This man was neither a saint nor a person enshrined with excessive humility and while an American, he stood for those higher principles upon which the foundation of this country rested. He had been elected and while it can honestly be said that he inherited the problems and was not their creator; he knew that the task at hand would be his greatest accomplishment or his worst failure. Yet he was not afraid; he hearkened to the task because he would give his hallowed spirit to overcome what must be defeated. He knew he would persevere because he must and that the demands of this nation’s forefathers had called him to the task at hand.
David Rosenberg Presents The Six Pins That Can Pop The Complacency Bubble
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/24/2012 15:55 -0500The record volatility, and 400 point up and down days in the DJIA of last summer seem like a lifetime ago, having been replaced by a smooth, unperturbed, 45 degree-inclined see of stock market appreciation, rising purely on the $2 trillion or so in liquidity pumped into global markets by the central printers, ever since Italy threatened to blow up the Ponzi last fall. In short - we have once again hit peak complacency. Yet with crude now matching every liquidity injection tick for tick (and then some: Crude's WTI return is now higher than that of stocks), there is absolutely no more space for the world central banks to inject any more stock appreciation without blowing up Obama's reelection chances (and you can be sure they know it). Suddenly the market finds itself without an explicit backstop. So what are some of the "realizations" that can pop the complacency bubble leading to a stock market plunge, and filling the liquidity-filled gap? Here are, courtesy of David Rosenberg, six distinct hurdles that loom ever closer on the horizon, and having been ignored for too long, courtesy of Bernanke et cie, will almost certainly become the market's preoccupation all too soon.
David Rosenberg On Taxation-Shock-Syndrome
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/21/2012 22:07 -0500While nothing is more certain than death and taxes (and central bank largesse), David Rosenberg of Gluskin Sheff uncovers The Unlucky Seven major tax-related uncertainties facing households and businesses that will likely lead to multiple compression in markets (rather than the much-heralded multiple expansion 'story' which appears to have topped the talking-head charts - just above 'money on the sidelines' and 'wall of worry', as 'earnings-driven' arguments are failing on the back of this quarter). As he notes the radically changed taxation climate in 2013 and beyond will have an impact on all economic participants as they will probably opt to bolster their cash reserves in the second half of the year in preparation for the proverbial rainy day.
On the "Simple" Extension of the 2% Reduction in Payroll Taxes
Submitted by Bruce Krasting on 02/18/2012 17:53 -0500Stepping softly onto a slippery slope...
Senate Passes Payroll Tax Extension, Gas Price Increase Has Already Offset Benefits
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/17/2012 12:31 -0500In a 60-36 vote, Senate just passed the payroll tax extension, previously voted through by Congress. From Reuters: "The U.S. Senate on Friday passed legislation extending a tax cut for 160 million workers and long-term jobless benefits through December, clearing the way for President Barack Obama to sign the measure into law. The Senate approval by a simple majority vote followed the House of Representatives' approval earlier on Friday. The legislation, which also extends current payment rates to doctors through the Medicare health care program for older Americans, will add $100 billion to the U.S. deficit and is aimed at further stimulating the economy." As a reminder, all this means is that a repeat of the debt ceiling fiasco is now virtually assured before the presidential election as discussed here, which explains the GOP's willingness to pass this through as fast as possible with no offsetting spending cuts. As for the benefits of $1000/taxpaying household, the recent rise in gasoline prices has already offset those. One can only hope that crude prices are as susceptible to successful central planning intervention as all other assets, or else many more extensions will be needed before the year is over.
Guest Post: Bad Week For Freedom
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/15/2012 15:07 -0500- Ben Bernanke
- Ben Bernanke
- China
- Corruption
- Fannie Mae
- Federal Reserve
- Freddie Mac
- George Orwell
- Germany
- Great Depression
- Guest Post
- Home Equity
- Housing Market
- Insurance Companies
- Main Street
- Medicare
- MF Global
- Obamacare
- Rating Agencies
- Reality
- Recession
- recovery
- Romania
- Ron Paul
- SPY
- Subprime Mortgages

It was a bad week for freedom loving people, but I believe there are enough patriots left in this country to change our course. We are being buried under a blizzard of lies on a daily basis. We have a choice. We can support the existing corrupt crony capitalist establishment (Obama & Romney) or we can declare war on lies, deceit and misinformation by rallying behind the only person who would truly attempt to reverse decades of corruption, sleaze, incompetence, bloat, debt accumulation, and a warped version of free market capitalism – Ron Paul. He is the only public figure willing to level with the American people and tell them the truth. Will we let the concept of truth fade out of the world? The choice is ours.
“In our age there is no such thing as ‘keeping out of politics.’ All issues are political issues, and politics itself is a mass of lies, evasions, folly, hatred and schizophrenia. The very concept of objective truth is fading out of the world. Lies will pass into history.” – George Orwell
The Hidden Taxes In Obama's Budget
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/15/2012 13:48 -0500
While headlines yesterday crowed and complained of the small rise in the budget and the focus on taxing the wealthy - which admittedly given the peak polarization in political parties is unlikely to actually move into legislation anytime soon - JPMorgan's Michael Cembalest finds perhaps the most controversial part of the proposal hidden deep in the report. While the JPM CIO notes the CBO baseline and alternative scenarios, it is the difference between the $293bn benefit (CBO estimate from last year) and the Administration's new estimate of $584bn that caught his eye as buried on Page 73 of the Green Book were three new taxes on existing tax-efficient 'benefits'. Tax the mass-affluent (>$250k) seems indeed the new motto of this presidency.
Inevitable US, UK, Japan, Euro Downgrades Lead To Further Currency Debasement
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/14/2012 07:57 -0500While all the focus has been on Greece in recent days, the global nature of the debt crisis came to the fore yesterday and overnight. This was seen in the further desperate measures by the BOJ and Moodys warning that the UK could lose its AAA rating. Some of us have been saying for some years that this was inevitable but markets remain myopic of the risks posed by this. Possibly the greatest risk is that of the appalling US fiscal situation which continues to be downplayed and not analysed appropriately. President Obama unveiled a massive $3.8 trillion budget yesterday and he is to increase Federal spending by 53% to $5.820 trillion by 2022. The US government is projected to spend over $6 trillion a year by 2022. Still bizarrely unaccounted for is the ticking time bomb of unfunded entitlement liabilities - Social Security and Medicare, which Washington continues to deal with by completely ignoring them. While Washington and markets are for now ignoring the fiscal train wreck that is the US. This will change with inevitable and likely extremely negative consequences for markets – particularly US bond markets and for the dollar.
The White House and the Most Disparaged Profession, Again
Submitted by testosteronepit on 02/14/2012 00:10 -0500Even Greek politicians scored higher.
GOP Finally Discovers Obama's Achilles Heel: Just Let Him Do What He Does... And Encourage It!
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/13/2012 16:12 -0500Two weeks ago when discussing the latest lunacy surrounding America's exponential curve #1 also known as its debt balance, we suggested what the GOP election strategy should be: "[if] the debt ceiling becomes a sticking point at the election, Obama's chances of reelection plunge. Which makes us wonder - will Republicans grasp that the paradox of defeating Obama is precisely in giving him a carte blanche on all the stimulus programs he wants? Because if Congress approves another $200, 300 or even $400 billion in stimulus pork (the only thing better than one Solyndra? One thousand Solyndras!) the Treasury will drown in the need to raise hundreds of billions more, and will in fact hit the ceiling well in advance of the elections. As for the stimulus projects themselves, they will crash and burn just like all centrally planned endeavors, and actually result in a far worse outcome than if they had never been attempted. [Because] the best way to finally get back to a fiscally prudent regime? Why go to town, of course." We were delighted to discover that our policy anti-recommendation has finally been adopted. Because as the WSJ reports when it comes to the latest payroll tax extension we find something quite stunning: "House Republican leaders said Monday they would introduce a bill extending the payroll-tax break for the rest of the year without finding spending cuts to offset the program's cost. The proposal marks a major shift for Republicans, who previously had insisted that the costs of extending a trio of provisions expiring at the end of the month be offset with spending cuts." That's right - no offsetting spending cuts. Which means one thing - much more debt. How much more? At least $160 billion much. Which means that the debt ceiling discussion will hit not in November as we speculated previously, but potentially as soon as September.







