Author: Serkadis

  • JP Morgan Bottom-Feeds The Troubled Florida Market (JPM)

    Florida House 16

    Yesterday, Jamie Dimon revealed JP Morgan Chase’s plans to expand into Florida — one of the most troubled economies around..

    Chase, primarily a NY-based bank, already gained a significant presence in Florida after it acquired WaMu in September 2008.

    Now Chase will open 20 to 30 new branches in Florida beginning in 2011, with some projects beginning sooner, according to The Miami Herald. As of now Chase only has 5 locations.

    The announcement comes a couple of weeks after Fannie Mae announced that it would be doing business in the Florida market again.

    Join the conversation about this story »

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  • Weekly Wrapup: Topic Trackers, Facebook Privacy, Mobile Web Sensors, And More…

    weekly_wrapup-1.pngIn this edition of the Weekly Wrapup – our newsletter summarizing the top stories of the week – we continue our analysis of Facebook’s sweeping new privacy policies (plus tell you how to protect yourself), explore how mobile phones and sensors are mixing, look at the launch of the U.K. government’s data.gov website, present our categorized list of the leading topic tracking tools, and more. And as usual we check in on our two main channels: ReadWriteStart (our daily resource for entrepreneurs) and ReadWriteEnterprise (devoted to ‘enterprise 2.0′ trends and products).

    Also read on for details about the newly released printed edition of our current premium report, about the Real-Time Web.

    Sponsor

    Now Available: Printed Edition of The Real-Time Web Report

    At the request of the librarian community and people that just like paper, we have made The Real-Time Web and its Future report available in print.

    For those of you that prefer it digitally, you can still download it.

    Don’t forget about our Community Management Report. It too is coming in print soon, so watch out for it!

    Web Trends

    The Facebook Privacy Debate: What You Need to Know

    Facebook changed the world by helping 350 million people publish their thoughts, feelings, comments, photos, videos and shared links much more easily than ever before. It’s the King of social networking.

    The network grew with a big promise of privacy at the center of what it offered: your information was by default visible only to people you approved as friends. In December that changed, in a fundamental way. We offer in this post a summary of the changes that were made and key highlights from the debate that’s raging around the world about privacy, public information and Facebook.

    2010 Trend: Sensors & Mobile Phones

    Last week in our Mobile Web Meets Internet of Things series, we looked at barcode scanning and RFID in the next generation iPhone. We expect to see Apple and Android battling it out for both barcode and RFID supremacy this year.

    Another key technology in the Internet of Things – where everyday objects are endowed with Internet connectivity – is sensors. In fact we’ve seen the most activity so far in the Internet of Things from sensor data. So in this post we explore how mobile phones and sensors are mixing; and what to expect in 2010.

    UK Launches Open Data Site; Puts Data.gov to Shame

    A new website dedicated to making non-personal data held by the U.K. government available for software developers has launched with the help of Sir Tim Berners-Lee, the inventor of the World Wide Web. Data.gov.uk is being slammed with traffic but six months after the U.S. government opened its Data.gov site the U.K. site already has more than three times as much data than the U.S. site offers today.

    At launch, Data.gov.uk has nearly 3,000 data sets available for developers to build mashups with. The U.S. site, Data.gov, has less than 1,000 data sets today.

    Open Thread: There’s No Such Thing As Free Content

    So why do users keep expecting to consume it, reuse it, share it and store it without paying for it?

    Someone, somewhere ends up putting out money for everything you do online, every piece of news you read, every Web app you use. It takes professionals and hardware across a gigantic industry to make these things work. In terms of overhead alone, content costs a lot. So why do some users always kick and scream at the first suggestion of paid content? Do you think content is worth paying for, and if so, what are you personally willing to pay?

    SEE MORE WEB TRENDS COVERAGE IN OUR TRENDS CATEGORY

    ReadWriteStart

    ReadWriteStartOur channel ReadWriteStart, sponsored by Microsoft BizSpark, is dedicated to profiling startups and entrepreneurs.

    Startup Finance: Xero Powers Accounting in the Cloud

    startup_finance_jan10.jpgWhen New Zealand-based entrepreneur Rod Drury began researching his market he could hardly believe what he was seeing. As seen in Drury’s comments last week on the state of the online finance ecosystem, only a handful of players like Saasu and MYOB were targeting small business clients. While Drury saw that a number of cloud-based personal finance companies like Mint were gaining traction with users, small businesses had been stuck with the same tired desktop accounting software they’d been using for the last ten years. Drury built Xero with the intent to help small businesses manage their accounts in the cloud.

    Never Mind the Valley: Here’s Austin

    Settled in the 1830s along the banks of the Colorado River and named for the Father of Texas Stephen F. Austin, the city of Austin is known for its thriving music scene and as the home of the University of Texas (UT) Longhorns. But in the past few decades, the Texas capital has built up a reputation of a different sort.

    With companies headquartered in Austin like Dell and Freescale Semiconductor, a spin-off of Motorola, the city has become a hotbed of information technology hardware and software. In the mid 1990s, Austin was put on the map by software companies like Motive, Vignette and Tivoli, the latter of which was quickly scooped up by IBM in 1996.

    SEE MORE STARTUPS COVERAGE IN OUR READWRITESTART CHANNEL

    ReadWriteEnterprise

    ReadWriteEnterpriseOur channel ReadWriteEnterprise, devoted to ‘enterprise 2.0′ and using social software inside organizations.

    IBM’s Project Vulcan: The Next Generation of Lotus Notes and a Rival To Google Wave

    images.jpegWilliam Shatner opened the IBM Lotusphere event this week, after which IBM launched Project Vulcan. This is a geek dream come true: a full-on collaboration environment with an open API and a name right out of Star Trek fame.

    Project Vulcan isn’t set for developer release until the second half of this year, but its potential as an all-encompassing cloud-based collaboration service is causing many to compare it to Google Wave.

    Web Products

    Top Tools For Tracking Topics on the Web

    Tracking topics on the Web can be a painful process, due to the amount of noise and difficulty of filtering it. So to help you out, we’ve selected and categorized the leading topic tracking tools. This is based on the discussion that arose from our earlier post about topic feeds, which are RSS feeds for keywords or phrases.

    During the process of analyzing these topic tracking tools, we discovered – to our surprise – that not many of these services output results as RSS. Some of the leading apps in this field require users to visit their service. With that in mind, here is our full list and analysis.

    The 3 Facebook Settings Every User Should Check Now

    In December, Facebook made a series of bold and controversial changes regarding the nature of its users’ privacy on the social networking site. The company once known for protecting privacy to the point of exclusivity (it began its days as a network for college kids only – no one else even had access), now seemingly wants to compete with more open social networks like the microblogging media darling Twitter.

    Those of you who edited your privacy settings prior to December’s change have nothing to worry about – that is, assuming you elected to keep your personalized settings when prompted by Facebook’s “transition tool.” The tool, a dialog box explaining the changes, appeared at the top of Facebook homepages this past month with its own selection of recommended settings. Unfortunately, most Facebook users likely opted for the recommended settings without really understanding what they were agreeing to. If you did so, you may now be surprised to find that you inadvertently gave Facebook the right to publicize your private information including status updates, photos, and shared links.

    Want to change things back? Read on to find out how.

    Twitter’s Growth Slows Dramatically

    hubspot_logo_jan09.jpgAfter news about the landing of US Airways 1549 in the Hudson first broke on Twitter in January 2009, the microblogging service quickly captured the imagination of a new group of potential users. Throughout the first months of 2009, Twitter grew at a rapid pace, peaking at a growth rate of 13% in March 2009.

    Now, however, according to the latest data from HubSpot, Twitter’s growth is slowing dramatically. In October 2009, Twitter’s growth rate had fallen to 3.5%. On a positive note, though, the average active user on Twitter today is more engaged than six months ago.

    hubspot_twitter_growth_jan09.jpg

    Why France and Germany Got it Right: IE Must Go

    ie6_logo_jul09.pngIt looks like Microsoft has moved to the “sticks and stones” method for handling public relations gaffes. As we reported earlier this week, France joined Germany in suggesting that its citizens switch from Internet Explorer to, well, anything else. Now, Microsoft’s UK security chief, Cliff Evans, has responded by saying that switching to other browsers will only open you up to more security vulnerabilities than staying with Internet Explorer.

    That’s saying a lot for the browser implicated in the Great Google Caper of 2010; and we have multiple security experts who have said a lot on why it just isn’t true.

    SEE MORE WEB PRODUCTS COVERAGE IN OUR PRODUCTS CATEGORY

    That’s a wrap for another week! Enjoy your weekend everyone.

    Discuss


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  • Boeing, Ethiopian Airlines announce order for 10 next generation 737-800s

    Boeing, Ethiopian Airlines Announce Order for 10 737-800sBoeing (NYSE: BA) and Ethiopian Airlines today announced an order for 10 Next-Generation 737-800s. The order is valued at $767 million at list prices.

    The order previously was listed on Boeing’s Orders and Deliveries Web site as unidentified.

    Based in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, the carrier is investing in the additional airplanes to expand its fleet and broaden its network.

    “Since its founding in December 1945, Ethiopian Airlines has been a dedicated Boeing operator — from [the carrier’s] first flights using DC-3 propeller-driven airplanes between Addis Ababa and Cairo, to recent orders for the long haul 787s and 777-200LRs, and continuing now with 737-800s.

    Ethiopian Airlines has been among the most profitable airlines in the region and one of our most valued partners,” said Marlin Dailey, vice president of Sales, Boeing Commercial Airplanes.

    In 2009, Ethiopian Airlines became the first African carrier to order and operate the ultra-long-range 777-200LR model. Ethiopian also was the first African carrier to order the 787 Dreamliner, ordering 10 in 2005.

    “The Boeing Next-Generation 737 has proven to be a reliable and profitable component of our fleet,” said Ethiopian Airlines Chief Executive Officer Ato Girma Wake.

    “Boeing has been an important and valued partner to Ethiopian for many, many years. This order reinforces the deep ties between our two companies.”

    Ethiopian Airlines is an all-Boeing operator. With the exception of the 747, it has operated every heritage Boeing commercial airplane since the 707.

    The airline operates five 737-700s and two 737-800s. Ethiopian also operates nine 757s, 10 767s and one MD-11BCF (Boeing Converted Freighter), with a second MD-11BCF arriving in August.

    MEDIA CONTACT:

    Nicolaas Groeneveld-Meijer, +1 206-228-4527
    International & Sales Communications
    [email protected]


  • HTC leaking bad intel, playing dangerous game of counter-espionage?

    HTC leaking bad intel, playing dangerous game of counter-espionage?

    Leaky faucets? Hate ‘em. Leaked gadgets? We love those dearly, but a rather compelling accusation is giving us pause over some of the juiciest: those from HTC. The claim is that HTC has made a “controled [sic] leak of some devices,” incorrect infos revealed by the company itself, designed to throw us all off the scent. It’s a strong accusation that we’d be inclined to ignore if not for the source: Eldar Murtazin from Mobile Review, who has brought no shortage of undisclosed bits of information to light himself. Eldar says that HTC has been trying to make people think the Halo is a smartphone, but it’s actually yet another Android tablet. What’s the truth? Can we handle the truth? Who does the Smoking Man work for?

    Filed under:

    HTC leaking bad intel, playing dangerous game of counter-espionage? originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 23 Jan 2010 08:14:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Permalink   |  source@eldarmurtazin  | Email this | Comments

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  • WEEKLY ADDRESS: President Obama Vows to Continue Standing Up to the Special Interests

    01.23.10 03:00 AM

    WASHINGTON – In this week’s address, President Barack Obama vowed to continue fighting for the American people to ensure their voices are heard over the special interests and lobbyists in Washington, despite this week’s Supreme Court decision to further empower corporations to use their financial clout to directly influence elections.

    The audio and video will be available online at www.whitehouse.gov at 6:00 am ET, Saturday, January 23, 2010.

    Remarks of President Barack Obama
    As Prepared for Delivery
    Weekly Address
    January 23, 2010

    One of the reasons I ran for President was because I believed so strongly that the voices of everyday Americans, hardworking folks doing everything they can to stay afloat, just weren’t being heard over the powerful voices of the special interests in Washington. And the result was a national agenda too often skewed in favor of those with the power to tilt the tables.

    In my first year in office, we pushed back on that power by implementing historic reforms to get rid of the influence of those special interests. On my first day in office, we closed the revolving door between lobbying firms and the government so that no one in my administration would make decisions based on the interests of former or future employers. We barred gifts from federal lobbyists to executive branch officials. We imposed tough restrictions to prevent funds for our recovery from lining the pockets of the well-connected, instead of creating jobs for Americans. And for the first time in history, we have publicly disclosed the names of lobbyists and non-lobbyists alike who visit the White House every day, so that you know what’s going on in the White House – the people’s house.

    We’ve been making steady progress. But this week, the United States Supreme Court handed a huge victory to the special interests and their lobbyists – and a powerful blow to our efforts to rein in corporate influence. This ruling strikes at our democracy itself. By a 5-4 vote, the Court overturned more than a century of law – including a bipartisan campaign finance law written by Senators John McCain and Russ Feingold that had barred corporations from using their financial clout to directly interfere with elections by running advertisements for or against candidates in the crucial closing weeks.

    This ruling opens the floodgates for an unlimited amount of special interest money into our democracy. It gives the special interest lobbyists new leverage to spend millions on advertising to persuade elected officials to vote their way – or to punish those who don’t. That means that any public servant who has the courage to stand up to the special interests and stand up for the American people can find himself or herself under assault come election time. Even foreign corporations may now get into the act.

    I can’t think of anything more devastating to the public interest. The last thing we need to do is hand more influence to the lobbyists in Washington, or more power to the special interests to tip the outcome of elections.

    All of us, regardless of party, should be worried that it will be that much harder to get fair, common-sense financial reforms, or close unwarranted tax loopholes that reward corporations from sheltering their income or shipping American jobs off-shore.

    It will make it more difficult to pass commonsense laws to promote energy independence because even foreign entities would be allowed to mix in our elections.

    It would give the health insurance industry even more leverage to fend off reforms that would protect patients.

    We don’t need to give any more voice to the powerful interests that already drown out the voices of everyday Americans.

    And we don’t intend to. When this ruling came down, I instructed my administration to get to work immediately with Members of Congress willing to fight for the American people to develop a forceful, bipartisan response to this decision. We have begun that work, and it will be a priority for us until we repair the damage that has been done.

    A hundred years ago, one of the great Republican Presidents, Teddy Roosevelt, fought to limit special interest spending and influence over American political campaigns and warned of the impact of unbridled, corporate spending. His message rings as true as ever today, in this age of mass communications, when the decks are too often stacked against ordinary Americans. And as long as I’m your President, I’ll never stop fighting to make sure that the most powerful voice in Washington belongs to you.

    White House.gov Press Office Feed

  • Gronholm to Drive for Stobart in Rally Sweden

    After a few years in which we heard little about former World Rally champion Marcus Gronholm, it has now surfaced in the media that the Finnish driver was included in Stobart VK M-Sport’s list for manufacturer points for the upcoming Rally Sweden.

    The fact that Gronholm wanted to return to WRC action in a Ford Focus WRC was no news to anyone, especially since the former rally champion announced in December that he plans to get behind the wheel of Mattias Therman’s Team Therminator-prepared Fo… (read more)

  • Felipe Massa Concludes Successful Barcelona Test

    If poor weather kept Valentino Rossi under 100 laps during the first two days of the Barcelona testing session this week, the Gods favored Felipe Massa more on Friday. In perfect weather conditions, the Brazilian driver completed no less than 400 laps at the wheel of a Ferrari F2008, fitted with demonstration tires.

    28-year old Massa decided that the meeting of the Corse Clienti department in Barcelona would be a great opportunity for him to further develop his racing skills, after his accide… (read more)

  • Revolution by the Beatles

    Happy weekend.

    revolution  Watch at Youtube.

     

    Revolution by the Beatles. Played on the David Frost show. This performance was a mixture of their version on the white album and their Revolution on their Hey Jude/Revolution 45.

     Wikipedia entry about Revolution

    Lyrics – my favorite part …

    You say you’ll change the constitution
    Well you know
    We’d all love to change your head
    You tell me it’s the institution
    Well you know
    You better free your mind instead
    But if you go carrying pictures of Chairman Mao
    You ain’t going to make it with anyone anyhow
    Don’t you know know it’s gonna be alright [x3]
    Alright [x7]

    The REVOLUTION LYRICS are the property of the respective authors, artists and labels, The lyrics are provided for educational purposes only – Courtesy of Sing365.com

  • Toro Rosso Confirm Jaime Alguersuari for 2010 Season

    Finally, the Scuderia Toro Rosso lineup for the 2010 season of Formula One is now complete. After months of uncertainty, Spanish driver Jaime Alguersuari was confirmed for the vacant spot within the Faenza-based organization, therefore joining 2009 teammate Sebastien Buemi.

    The 19-year old driver made his debut in F1 last season, when replacing Frenchman Sebastien Bourdais in the STR roster. As stated by the team at the time, the initial plan was to let Alguersuari get used to the action of F… (read more)

  • Heidfeld to Be Mercedes’ Test Driver – Manager

    Nick Heidfeld will not be making the 2010 Formula One grid, as the German driver is one step away from inking a test/reserve driver agreement with Mercedes GP. According to German publication Auto Bild, the 32-year old’s manager recently revealed that his client will focus on his new test driving responsibilities from now on, rather than look for a race spot for the upcoming season.

    The same publication revealed that Mercedes and Heidfeld shook hands on the test/reserve deal, but the contract… (read more)

  • Official Facebook client for Windows Mobile Standard updated

    Facebook1_2Standard Pocketnow reports that the official Facebook client for Windows Mobile Standard has been updated to version 1.2.

    Improvements include being able to read and respond to comments and a search feature that lets you find acquaintances. The software can be found in Marketplace.

    An updated version for Windows Mobile Professional is not available yet.

    Read more at Pocketnow here.

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  • Volcker Rule, Geithner, Obama Financial Tax

    bill-coppedge-dec09-1 original content selection by MortgageNewsClips.com

     

    ft-alphaville

    Can Goldman really dodge the Volcker rule? – Posted by Paul Murphy – … If the Volcker rule, in whatever legislative shape it eventually takes, were to let the likes of Goldman off the hook — while simultaneously dismembering its few remaining competitors — it is quite likely that rioting would break out on American streets. … – FT Alphaville

    ————

    latimes-business

    Is what’s bad for Goldman Sachs bad for America? – Tom Petruno – LA Times Business

    ————

    tpm

    Volker In, Geithner Out – By Jon Taplin – TPM Cafe

    ————

    zero-hedge

    The Volcker Rule & AIG: It’s Not About Prop Trading – Submitted by rc whalen – Watching the President announcing his proposals to forbid commercial banks from engaging in proprietary trading, I am reminded of the reaction by Washington a decade ago to the Enron and WorldCom accounting scandals, namely the Sarbanes-Oxley law.  The final solution had nothing to do with the problem and everything to do with the strange politics of the capital city and the national Congress.Zero Hedge

    ————

    nyt-dealbook nyt1

    Wall St. Will Find a Way Around Plan, Bogle Says – … Mr. Obama called the ban the Volcker Rule, in recognition of the former Federal Reserve chairman, Paul A. Volcker, who has championed the proposal. Big losses by banks in the trading of financial securities, especially mortgage-backed assets, precipitated the credit crisis in 2008 and the federal bailout. … – NY Times Dealbook

  • Facebook US User Base Doubled During 2009

    When a new year begins, we all start to create statistics and reports regarding the year that has just passed, and to make predictions for the ongoing one. When it comes to Facebook, we could only expect it to increase its popularity and its member base even more. It is when we analyze the 2009 reports that we find the interesting aspects of this servic… (read more)

  • Watch the PSP Go unassembled and reassemble itself

    Ready to burn two minutes of your day? I sure hope so, friend, because after the jump is what very well could be the most exciting deconstruction video ever posted to our fine Internet. Here’s hoping that this will become the standard format for the obligatory gadget teardown. I don’t think I’m the only one tired of looking at a stale pic of a random device’s guts. “Yup, there’s a circuit board in there.” Anyway, click through to watch the the PSP Go in a stop motion video.


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  • Samsung App store expands to more countries

    big

    Samsung Apps store has now expanded from UK to many more countries.

    Now Germany, Singapore, Brazil and China , France and Italy will be able to get access to games and applications like Guitar Hero from Mobile Bus, Need for Speed from Electronic Arts, Spiderman from Gameloft and other big names, all localized to their language.

    From mid-February, the Samsung Store will come preinstalled on devices sold in Germany and Singapore.  To add the store to a current device visit samsungmobile.com and download the client there.

    Read more at GSMArena here.

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  • More Political Spin On Wind Power

    Part of a 25 tower offshore Wind Power Farm in the UK.

    Will we ever be told the truth about any of this?

    This story was reported yesterday.

    For those without any knowledge, this story might actually be encouraging to see, and because the dates translate to almost 14 years away, and with such an immense amount of money being promised, then it actually seems that something like might be able to be achieved.

    What however is the absolute failure of this article to even mention is the fact that no one has even bothered to check if, (a) it can be achieved, (b) whether the costings are accurate, and (c) if the claims stand up.

    Something like this is easy to say, and then to be reported, but the hard part is doing the research to see if what is being said really does stack up. Just mentioning the fact that it is a Government Report does not make it the verbatim truth. The headline bold statement says:

    Wind energy could generate 20 percent of the electricity needed by households and businesses in the eastern half of the United States by 2024, but it would require up to $90 billion in investment, according to a government report released on Wednesday.

    For those reading the article, and then reading what I have to say here, the same could be said about veracity. What makes me so right, and the Government Report so wrong, and that is a fair and reasonable thing to ask.

    For more than 22 months now, I have been submitting posts on related subjects, and the fallacy that Wind Power can actually be viable is just part of those posts. Intensive and very detailed research has led me to literally hundreds of sites on the subject. For this research, I have not looked for ‘opinion’. I have looked for direct information, and from my background in the Electrical Engineering trade, at each stage, I have carefully worked out everything that there is to be seen on the subject. The strange thing about that is that each step of the way, each new site I visit confirms the others, so that now, I have a stock list of numerous things to call upon whenever I need verification.

    The three things that do stand out from that simple quote above are the 20% of all Eastern half of the U.S.A. power, the timeline of 2024, and the $90 Billion cost, so let’s look at them, and to do that I’ll be working backwards from the cost.

    For a direct costing, we only need look directly at the Cape Wind Project in Massachusetts, and here is a link to a post on that, with further links within that post. Why I’m using Cape Wind is because it actually is an Offshore Wind Plant, and the intent of this article is that these towers will be in the main ‘Offshore’, as mentioned in the article.

    Most of the big wind farms would be concentrated off the Atlantic Coast in federal waters from Massachusetts to North Carolina and on land in Midwest states from North Dakota to Nebraska and into Kansas.

    Cape Wind will (if it ever gets done at all) have 130 huge towers, each with a 3.23MW nacelle atop them, that nacelle holding the generator and being driven by the huge three bladed propeller fan out the front of it. That will give a total of 420MW of power. The cost of Cape Wind (now blowing out from the original cost) is $1.1 Billion.

    So, effectively using that $90 Billion cost from this Government report, that means we can effectively construct 82 plants the equivalent of Cape Wind, around 10,700 of these huge wind towers. This will give a total power output of 34,000MW of Nameplate Capacity power. However, even though that figure seems high, it is just part of the story, a part that they, er, neglect to mention to you.

    Wind power is notoriously fickle, and as shown so graphically in this post, and also in this post, the whole total of the German wind power fleet of nearly 25,000 wind towers is currently running at only 20% efficiency with respect of power delivery to the grids compared to maximum power able to be generated. 20%, and that’s not an isolated figure, but extrapolated out over a whole 12 month period, and even though a couple of months are up around 30%, there are extended periods of months on end where that delivery rate is down around 6%.

    Even at that 20% delivery rate, the total power from this $90 billion outlay, (10,700 towers and 34,000MW) will only amount to 60 Billion KiloWattHours (KWH). This, in actual fact amounts to around 2.7% of the total consumed power for that area, the Eastern half of the U.S. and this is calculated from the Government’s own figures at this link. If those turbines were to rotate at their maximum for 24 hours of every day (100%) and not just the expected 20% best estimate of 5 hours a day, then the power delivery is still only around 13% of the total needed for that area, and not even approaching the 20% quoted in this Government report, and that’s with those turbines achieving 100% efficiency rating.

    That Government report also states:

    Reaching the 20 percent threshold for wind by 2024 in the eastern electric grid would require 225,000 megawatts of wind generation capacity in the region, about a 10-fold increase from current levels, the study said.

    As you can see from the above figures, that $90 Billion (in today’s dollars) will provide only 34,000MW of power, nowhere near the 225,000MW they quote in their own report, in fact only 15 percent of that. So for them to actually provide that amount of quoted power, then the cost will be 6.7 times greater, closer to $600 Billion. If the Government proposes to commit  $90 Billion, then at the current costing estimates, the private sector will have to stump up the remaining $510 Billion. That amount of itself is problematic.

    Then, consider this. That 225,000MW of power that they quote so sanguinely amounts to 70,000 of those Wind towers. At the 20% power delivery factor, it is still only 17% of the total power being currently consumed in that area, the Eastern half of the U.S. which is close to the stated 20%, but still with figures even this reasonably close, they provide further problems not even considered. That’s 70,000 of those towers. The U.S. is currently building these things like there’s no tomorrow, and there are 33,000 wind towers already in service, and the U.S. has only recently taken over from Germany as the largest producer of wind power on the Planet. This Government report calls for another 70,000 of them. Perhaps it can even be accomplished, but consider this.

    Maintenance boat at the foot of an offshore wind tower at a Wind Farm in the UK.

    The length of Coastline for the  Eastern Seaboard States quoted in the report is around 960 miles. The blades of those huge towers have a swept distance of 364 feet, so you can’t place them any closer than 400 feet apart.

    At 960 miles that means you can construct 12,500 of them along that length of Coastline, each one 400 feet from the other.

    So for that figure of 70,000 you will need 6 rows of towers. Even considering that not all 70,000 will be offshore, that number of 70,000 will see most of them offshore, so the number to concentrate on here is one every 400 feet, for that 960 mile length. It really doesn’t matter how many rows there are. It’s inconceivable.

    From the thought bubble of proposing something like this to the point where they actually start delivering power to the grid is usually around ten years, and that’s provided all the legal hurdles, EPA approvals, case studies, environmental impact statements, public submissions, etc, all fall into place, and that is just taken on what Cape Wind is going through, and that project has had no end of trouble and is still nowhere near even the start of construction process, for a measly 130 towers.

    Let’s just say that everything was in place right this very second, and construction was actually starting right now, keeping in mind you will first have to massively gear up to manufacture the towers, the nacelles, the blades, and then transport them to myriad of construction sites, 70,000 of them in all.

    To have them built and delivering power to the grids by that stated 2024 timeline, you will need to have one finished every 50 minutes, and that’s if you start right now, working during daylight hours, for all 365 days of each year, from now until 2024. If  it’s only the 250 working days in a year then that figure comes down to one every 35 minutes. Considering there will probably be numerous crews working in different areas, and let’s guess 20 different sites, you’re still looking at one huge tower being constructed each day. Something like this could go on interminably, quoting as many crews at many more sites, but that figure of 70,000 towers in 14 years is ridiculous to even contemplate. The costs would be astronomically larger than what is quoted when you just take in the labor costs alone. Then, the infrastructure to move all this new power from the Wind towers to where it is actually needed will need to be constructed, another problematic task fraught with its own problems, that of transmitting power over the vast distances quoted here. The fact that the Government is only sinking in $90 Billion, no matter how much that sounds, is in fact a tiny amount of what the actual cost will be for the life of this project.

    70,000 towers.

    Can you see now how one small story about a Government report, something that looks so doable, is in fact nothing but hot air and spin.

    The same thing was trucked out in April of last year by Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar in his wonderful off the cuff statement that Offshore wind could replace all the coal fired power plants in the U.S. and luckily for him, that story has since been pulled, but the post at this link details what he said, and again does the math that he so horribly failed to even find out about.

    The same has happened here ….. again.

    It’s just so easy to find someone to make conjecture on how something like this can be done, to actually then give it the credence of calling it a Government report, and then to place these figures out there, as if it actually can be achieved.

    The hard part is actually finding out the facts, doing the correct math, and then telling it like it really is.

    This is something that will never be achieved, and if anyone is actually stupid enough to even attempt to get it off the ground, then it will turn into the hugest white elephant there ever could be. Something like this, if it ever can be achieved, and on this scale, will still only provide minimal amounts of power on a limited basis, and if the truth is to be told, will not result in the closing down of one coal fired power plant, because that coal fired plant will still be required to deliver power all the time, 24 hours of every day, something these huge wind towers will never be able to do.

    This is Government spin, flat out, nothing more, and in fact more than just spin. It’s outright insanity.

    Posted in 111th Congress, America (USA), Blundering Bureaucrats, Climate Alarmists, Climate Change, Conniving Politicians, Democrats, Environment, Environmental activists, Fraud/Waste, Global Warming, Infrastructure Problems, Liberals, Lily-Livered Liberals, Limp-Wrist Liberals, Political Prostitutes, Politics, Power Hungry, Propaganda, Spine Donor Politicians Tagged: Climate Change Funding, Climate Change Religion, Global Warming, Global Warming Hype, Renewable Power Plants, Renewable Power Targets, Secretary Of The Interior Ken Salazar, Wind Power Costings, Wind Power Generation, Wind Power Plant Efficiency

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  • The End Game: This Time Isn’t Different

    train wrecked tbi

    When I was at Rice University, so many decades ago, I played a lot of bridge. I was only mediocre, but enjoyed it. We had a professor, Dr. Culbertson, who was a bridge Life Master at an early age. He was single and lived in our college, playing bridge with us almost every night. He was a master of the “end game.” He had an uncanny ability to seemingly force his opponents into no-win situations, understanding where the cards had to lie and taking advantage.

    Traveling to London and on into Europe, I have some time to think away from the tyranny of the computer. Over the last year, and especially the last few months, I have written in depth about the problems we face all across the developed world. We have no good choices left, so making the correct unpleasant choice is now our most hopeful option.

    As I wrote in my 2010 forecast, this year is a waiting game. There are so many choices we must make, and the paths we will take from those choices vary wildly. But make no mistake, we are coming close to the end game. Some countries and economies are closer to that point than others, but the entire developed world is lurching, in almost drunken fashion, towards our economic denouement.

    Over the next several months, we are going to start to explore various aspects of the end game. Whither Japan? Are they actually, as I think, a bug in search of a windshield? What does that mean for the world? How safe is the euro? Everyone over here seems to think Germany will bail out Greece. A breakup seems unthinkable to the people I’ve been talking to (so far). But what about Spain? Italy? Can you spell moral hazard?

    The Fed has said it will exit quantitative easing (QE) at the end of March. But what if mortgage rates rise? Where do we find $1 trillion (plus!!!) in US savings to fund the deficit, assuming foreigners buy about $400 billion? By definition, savings and foreign investment and the federal deficit must add up to zero. (We will go into that later – just take it as gospel for now.) How can we run 10% of GDP deficits if the Fed does not print money (as they did by buying Fannie and Freddie paper, which became treasuries, as I outlined last week)? That would require almost a 10% savings rate – with it all ending up in treasuries. How can that happen? Really?

    But before we get into that, a few housekeeping items. First, more than a few of you have written to say you are not getting the letter as usual. There are some problems when your distribution list is 1.5 million closest friends. We try to fix them, working with the various ISPs to stay “white-listed.” It is actually a lot of work for Doug and my publisher. If for whatever reason your letter does not get into your inbox, just go to www.2000wave.com and find the letter there. And we are working on other mechanisms as well to insure you get this letter. And thanks for letting us know of problems. Rest assured, we do not randomly drop any of my closest friends from this list.

    Second, the invitations are starting to go out for our annual Strategic Investment Conference (co-sponsored by my partners Altegris Investments) which will be April 22-24 in La Jolla. In addition to David Rosenberg, Dr. Lacy Hunt, your humble analyst, Niall Ferguson, and George Friedman, my good friend Dr. Gary Shilling has agreed to come. There are several more rather exciting announcements I will be making in a few weeks. This conference will sell out. Unfortunately, for regulatory reasons, it is limited to accredited investors. If you have not already received an invitation, contact your Altegris Investments professional, drop a note to me, or register at www.accreditedinvestor.ws and you will get a call and an invitation.

    This year we are going to focus on “The End Game.” I can guarantee you lively debate, fun times, and over-the-top wines – plus, you will be with people who are simply the coolest ever. The speakers are all friends who “get it.” They called the crisis well in advance. These are the guys who sit and think every day about how this will all end up. The panels are going to be fun. Do not procrastinate. Register now.

    This Time is Different

    “But highly leveraged economies, particularly those in which continual rollover of short-term debt is sustained only by confidence in relatively illiquid underlying assets, seldom survive forever, particularly if leverage continues to grow unchecked.” – Carmen M. Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff from their new book, This Time is Different.

    I am reading (on my new Kindle as I travel through Europe) a very important book, which I will be referring to a lot in the future. Reinhart and Rogoff have catalogued over 250 financial crises in 66 countries over 800 years and then analyzed them for differences and similarities. This is a VERY sobering book. It does not augur well for the developed world to blithely exit from our woes. The book gives evidence to my adamant statement that we have a lot of pain to experience because of the bad choices we have made. This is the entire developed world, and the emerging world will suffer, too, as we go through it. It is not a matter of pain or no pain. There is no way to avoid it. It is simply a matter of when and over how long a period.

    In fact, Reinhart and Rogoff’s research suggests that the longer we try to put off the pain, the worse the total pain will be. We have simply overleveraged ourselves, and the deleveraging process is not fun, whether on a personal or a country basis.

    Let’s look at part of their conclusion, which I think eloquently sums up the problems we face:

    “The lesson of history, then, is that even as institutions and policy makers improve, there will always be a temptation to stretch the limits. Just as an individual can go bankrupt no matter how rich she starts out, a financial system can collapse under the pressure of greed, politics, and profits no matter how well regulated it seems to be. Technology has changed, the height of humans has changed, and fashions have changed.

    “Yet the ability of governments and investors to delude themselves, giving rise to periodic bouts of euphoria that usually end in tears, seems to have remained a constant. No careful reader of Friedman and Schwartz will be surprised by this lesson about the ability of governments to mismanage financial markets, a key theme of their analysis.

    “As for financial markets, we have come full circle to the concept of financial fragility in economies with massive indebtedness. All too often, periods of heavy borrowing can take place in a bubble and last for a surprisingly long time. But highly leveraged economies, particularly those in which continual rollover of short-term debt is sustained only by confidence in relatively illiquid underlying assets, seldom survive forever, particularly if leverage continues to grow unchecked.

    “This time may seem different, but all too often a deeper look shows it is not. Encouragingly, history does point to warning signs that policy makers can look at to assess risk – if only they do not become too drunk with their credit bubble – fueled success and say, as their predecessors have for centuries, “This time is different.”

    A small confession. I am in a London hotel, it is late on a Friday, and my mind is slowing down. So rather than ramble, I am going to hand you off to Van Hoisington and Dr. Lacy Hunt, two of the brightest economists I know (Lacy will be at my conference). The following is their latest quarterly letter. I have already read it five times. It is THAT important, and chock full of intriguing concepts.

    They also reference Reinhart and Rogoff, and offer up a very contrarian view about deflation. Open your minds, and let’s jump in.


    Quarterly Review and Outlook – Fourth Quarter 2009

    Hard Road Ahead

    The U.S. is facing a long and difficult road as it attempts to correct the over-indebtedness and wasteful expenditures of the past two decades. Both current and historical research help us to understand where we are in the continuing economic crisis, and to put it in perspective.

    The brilliant U.S. economist Irving Fisher first highlighted the fact that an economy’s debt level could have a deleterious impact on economic growth if it is, in fact, excessive. At $3.70 of debt for every dollar of GDP, U.S. debt is excessive (Chart 1). Fisher pointed out that the unwinding of debt levels results in prolonged economic distress, and we certainly agree. In 2009, the book This Time is Different – Eight Centuries of Financial Folly, by Reinhart and Rogoff, shed new light on the role of debt by compiling a database that looked at financial crises in 66 countries over a period of 800 years. The main standard in explaining more than 250 crises studied is whether debt is excessive relative to national income, even though idiosyncrasies apply in each case. They reiterate that this old rule (excessive debt) continues to apply, and this time is not different.

    jm012210image001

    Research and the Deflation Risk

    We glean five important factors from this work that pertain to our present situation. First, financial imbalances occur when aggregate domestic debt is excessive relative to income, regardless of whether the government or private sector is accumulating the debt. Once debt becomes excessive, countries do not grow their way out of the problem; they must go through the time consuming and often painful processes of debt repayment and increased saving.

    Second, whether the domestic debt is externally or internally owed is not as critical as the excessiveness of the debt.

    Third, government actions, even involving sizeable sums of money, are far less helpful than they appear. As the book states, “Infusions of cash can make a government look like it is providing greater growth to its economy than it really is.”

    Fourth, Reinhart and Rogoff cover countries in debt crisis with a host of different conditions, such as growth and age of population, political regimes, technology status, education, and other idiosyncratic features. Nevertheless, economic damage as a result of extreme over-leverage has remarkably similar results, whether the barometer of performance is economic output, the labor markets, or asset prices.

    Fifth, further increasing leverage to solve the problem only leads to greater systemic risk and general economic underperformance.

    The real question for financial participants is whether all these influences result in inflation or deflation, and the authors’ research details both outcomes. As is widely feared here in the U.S., they outline that many countries have had the right circumstances and mechanisms to inflate away their debt overhang, and, in fact, have done so by debasing their currency. Those particular circumstances are not currently present in the United States.

    According to Reinhart and Rogoff the norm is that major economic contractions lead to deflation. Importantly, they call our present economic circumstances the “second great contraction.”

    Thus, not only has the historical “qualitative” research on the subject of deflation chronicled the deflationary impulses emanating from overindebtedness (Fisher’s 1933 “Debt-Deflation Theory of Great Depressions”), but also modern “quantitative” methods have now essentially confirmed this conclusion. Over-indebtedness and major contractions lead to deflation.

    Debt Overwhelms Monetary Policy

    It has been more than a year since the Federal Reserve began a massive expansion of Federal Reserve Bank credit, from $1 trillion to $2.2 trillion, flooding the banking system with reserves. This unprecedented action naturally raised inflationary fears since it was assumed that this was the beginning of a monetary creation process which would eventually lead to job and income growth, excessive expenditures, and finally massive price increases.

    If the economy were not in the throes of writing down bad debts that were caused by a massive decline in asset prices, it is possible that the money supply (M2) in response to this increase in reserves could have expanded by $4 trillion, or 96%. According to the late Nobel prize winning economist Milton Friedman, an increase in M2 of that magnitude would have been highly inflationary. However, M2 did not explode. Instead, in the past twelve months this aggregate has risen only 3%. This is less than 1/2 of the average growth rate over the past fifty years (Chart 2).

    jm012210image002

    If, as Friedman assumed, the velocity of money is stable (MV=GDP) then nominal GDP expansion in the ensuing quarters can be expected to grow about 3%. If prices rise about 1.5%, then real GDP growth would also rise about 1.5%, which is far below the level of growth needed to employ new labor force entrants and existing unemployed or to more fully utilize our present unused capacity in our factories. In the last six months the growth rate of M2 has slowed to near zero. If this pattern continues, it would be rational to expect GDP to grind to zero with no change in the price level.

    The very first step toward an inflationary cycle has to be to get the monetary aggregates expanding vigorously. That cannot be accomplished with the Fed “printing money”, i.e., adding more reserves into banks that cannot or will not make loans. The reason this process has not begun (and will not for a time) is the overhang of excessive indebtedness and asset price depreciations. No one needs to borrow, or has the resources or balance sheet to borrow, and banks are busily writing off bad debt. Irving Fisher warned of that process (note our Third Quarter 2009 quarterly letter).

    Over-indebtedness Creates Excess Supply

    Despite the concurrent developments of little money growth and declining loan growth (Chart 3), the fear nevertheless remains that an inflation surprise might be just around the corner. The reason to discount this notion is that excessive debt has contributed greatly to a flat, or perfectly elastic aggregate supply curve. A country’s inflation is determined by the interaction of aggregate supply and demand. Friedman wrote that a large increase in money in the hands of the non-bank public would be inflationary because he assumed a normal upward sloping aggregate supply curve (Chart 4). In this case the aggregate demand for goods (depicted as the demand curve Line A) would shift outward to Line A1, and thus prices would naturally rise. You will note what happens to prices if a demand curve B is intersecting the supply curve in the so-called Keynesian range where it is flat. If aggregate demand increases to B1, prices do not change.

    jm012210image003

    jm012210image004

    Whether the supply curve is in a flat, normal, or upward sloping position depends on the extent of excess resources in the economy. Today it is obvious that the U.S. economy has plentiful excess resources, so any increase in demand will result in little price change. This will be the case until our unemployment rate of over 17% (the U6 measure) drops by a considerable amount and we begin to use our factories well above our current 68% utilization rate.

    Thus, our current economic circumstances guarantee there will be no surprise inflation. Employing those who are out of work and fully utilizing our resources will be a slow process. More importantly, it will take time to get the monetary engine reignited. Banks will have to begin lending and people and companies will have to determine that prospects are good enough to take the risk for expansion and investment. It will take years for these processes to get started because of our over-indebtedness and falling asset prices.

    The consequences of excessive debt are already painful at the household level. The civilian employment to population ratio, a highly important barometer of the average household’s standard of living, fell to 58.2% in December, the lowest reading in 26 years and down from a peak of 64.7% in April of 2000 (Chart 5). Thus, the standard of living has worsened as the debt to GDP ratio has marched steadily higher. With debt to GDP still rising, a further deterioration of the standard of living is inescapable.

    jm012210image005

    Debt and Fiscal Policy

    Deficit spending only provides a transitory boost to the economy. It initially raises GDP, as it did in the second half of 2009, but then the effect dissipates and later is reversed, as financial resources available to the private sector are reduced. In a separate research study Rogoff and Reinhart write, “At the height of Japan’s banking crisis in the 1990s, repaving the streets in Tokyo became a routine exercise. As a result, Japan’s gross (government) debt-to-GDP ratio is now nearly 200% and a drag on what once was a vibrant economy.” Our present high deficit situation suggests that taxes will rise (including those of state and local governments), depressing economic activity further. In addition to the expiration of the 2001 and 2003 tax cuts, the Obama administration is proposing substantial taxes on financial institutions to pay for the cost of the financial bailout. Since the tax multiplier is high, this will reinforce the drag on economic activity from the lagged effects of deficit spending.

    Treasury Bonds

    Since 1990 Treasury bond yields have steadily moved downward in line with a more benign inflationary environment (Chart 6). Those yearly declines in yields continued last year with an average interest rate of 4.07% versus 4.28% in 2008. Obvious sharp reversals have occurred in their downward trend due to shifts in psychology reacting to generally transitory factors, as we saw in 2009. To remain fully invested in long Treasuries in this high volatility environment requires a simple discipline based on the academic literature which demonstrates that over time bond yields move in the same direction as inflation (Fisher equation).

    jm012210image006

    Presently, we view the inflationary environment as benign because: 1) the U.S. economic system is overleveraged and academic research confirms that this circumstance leads to deflation; 2) monetary policy is, and will continue to be, ineffectual as efforts to spur growth are thwarted by declining asset prices, loan destruction, and adverse regulatory influences; 3) the federal government’s spending spree will necessarily cause taxes and borrowings to rise, further stunting any economic growth. These factors ensure that inflation will be quiescent. Interest rates easily can and do rise for short periods, but remaining elevated in a disinflationary environment is contrary to the historical experience. We are owners and buyers of long U.S. Treasury debt.

    Van R. Hoisington
    Lacy H. Hunt, Ph.D.


    Home Again

    I get home next Thursday night and wake up to write the next Thoughts from the Frontline. I have to say that these trips really get me fired up, as I visit lots of clients and serious hedge-fund managers who challenge me to think. Plus, I get some time to ponder the big picture.

    I was asked a lot about what the vote in Massachusetts meant. My take, for what it’s worth, is that it is part and parcel with the election of Obama in 2008. The voters in this country are increasingly getting scared. They may not mind that we will tax the golden goose a little more, they just want to make sure we do not kill the goose (Peggy Noonan’s column). While they may not be sophisticated in economics, they understand intuitively that you can’t run deficits at the current levels forever. That risks killing the goose. Obama was elected with a promise of change. McCain was seen as more of the same. The recent elections (Virginia, New Jersey, Massachusetts) were pointedly saying, this is not the change we had in mind.

    This is part of the equation that will give us the direction of the end game. How will the Democrats respond? Will we see the moderates wrest back control from the progressive wing? Blue dog Democrats allying with Republicans (the more things change…)? Can Republicans actually articulate a program and path to fiscal responsibility, or will they just sit on their hands, hoping the Democrats implode (a very bad idea!)? Stay tuned.

    Ok, it is time to hit the send button. Last week I was with my partners at Altegris for our annual planning meeting in the mountains of Santa Barbara. It was idyllic. Part of the meeting was about the conference, and I am telling you, this is going to be the best ever.

    Have a great week. I will be uber-busy, but there will be a lot of good times and great conversation. And I will be ready to get back home.

    Your thinking about the end game analyst,

    John Mauldin
    [email protected]

     


     

    John Mauldin, Best-Selling author and recognized financial expert, is also editor of the free Thoughts From the Frontline that goes to over 1 million readers each week. For more information on John or his FREE weekly economic letter go to: http://www.frontlinethoughts.com/learnmore

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