Author: Serkadis

  • Pasaquan: Home of St. EOM

    Georgia, US | Museums and Collections

    At one point in the late 1950s, during an extended and fever-ridden illness, Eddie Owens Martin experienced the first of a series of phenomenal visions that would drive his artistic efforts for the rest of his life.

    In the initial vision, he was confronted by a trio of extraordinarily tall personages who identified themselves as people of the future—special envoys from a vaporous land called Pasaquan, “where the past, the present, the future, and everything else all come together.”

    He had been chosen by them, he later reported, to help us attain an understanding of the peace and beauty that the future might hold for mankind, if mankind would only take heed. On that day, Eddie Owens Martin of Marion County, Georgia, became, at least to himself, St. EOM – the one and only Pasaquoyan of the twentieth century.

    Eddie Owens Martin left home at the young age of fourteen, after he saw his father kill a puppy that had been given to him as a gift. Eddie eventually settled in New York, working as “a male prostitute and minor-league hustler,” and becoming a fixture of the emerging Greenwich Village arts scene, where he was nicknamed the Tattooed Countess. It was here that Eddie experienced his visions. Among the messages about “how to ritually prepare for the proper conduct of his personal daily existence” was that he was to “return to Georgia and do something.”

    That something is Pasaquan, an artistic environment built over thirty years, made of painted concrete sculptures and four acres (16,000 square meters) of painted masonry concrete walls. Pasaquan also includes six buildings, including a redesigned 1885 farmhouse. Inspired by his visions and smoking “a fat one” (a joint) Martin (or “Big Mama” as he known by locals in Buena Vista) single-handedly created an amazing, religiously symbol-laden, sometimes beautiful and sometimes lewd arts environment. After working on Pasaquan right up until illness made it impossible, Martin, at the age of 77, laid out an African chieftain’s robe that he wished to be buried in and shot himself.

    In his own words, Martin or St. EOM said of Pasaquan:

    “I built this place to have somethin’ to identify with, cause there’s nothin’ that I see in this society that I identify with or desire to emulate. Here I can be in my own world with my temples and designs and the spirit of God. I don’t have nothin’ against other people and their beliefs. I’m not askin’ anybody to do my way or be my way. Although, when I’m dead and gone, they’ll follow like night follows day.”

    Of course he also said:

    “There’s no place like this anywhere, and people will come and deface it when I die, and then everything I’ve done will be forgotten.”

    It remains to be seen which vision is the correct one.

  • This Week, Bernanke Will Remind Congress That He’s Not Independent, And Won’t Do Anything Do Jeopardize All Their Spending

    ben bernanke

    This past week, Ben Bernanke introduced the Fed’s first move towards a tightening normalization of credit conditions, when the discount rate was raised by 25 bps.

    But have no fear!

    This week Bernanke talks to Congress, and the expectation from the likes of Bloomberg and others, is that he’ll promise them that no “real” rate hikes are in the cards anytime soon.

    Despite the ostensibly independent (ha!) nature of the Fed, this week will see its chief promise Congress that he won’t do anything to counteract their monster spending ambitions, and will continue to make money available to everyone at low cost.

    Should be good news for markets… unless he even utters the words “exit strategy,” at which point you should really be careful.

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  • The Giant Lemon of Lemon Grove

    San Diego County, California | Unusual Monuments

    Discovered on January 8, 2003, by Aharon Shemoel on his farm in Kefar Zeitim, Israel, was a lemon weighing an astonishing 11 pounds and 9.7 ounces, making it officially the world’s largest lemon. This sour giant, however, has nothing on the much less edible lemon found somewhat east of San Diego in the small town of Lemon Grove.

    In Lemon Grove (named for its famous lemons) is an enormous lemon about ten feet long and several feet high. It lies inside a small lemon grove near the Orange Line trolley tracks, and its concrete base sports the words “Best Climate On Earth.”

    Interestingly, the town doesn’t claim to have the “World’s Largest Lemon”—but the lemon of Lemon Grove is certainly extremely large enough to qualify.

  • HAPPINESS TIP: Spend time with your “hive.”

    bee hive

    Going through challenging times right now?

    According to my favorite philosopher buddy, Ari (otherwise known as Aristotle ), we humans are biologically social animals. Our first nature is to be around people.

    However if you’re going through a challenging time (aka: a break up, a work rejection, a money problem, a trauma, a difficult illness, the passing of a loved one) often being around people feels much more like a 2,841st nature.

    You gotta fight this urge to hide away.

    In my BOUNCE BACK BOOK (loved/hyped by Tony Robbins, Deepak Chopra, Peter Guber) I share research which shows it’s far more healthful to be around people.

    Dr. Dina Carbonell, a research associate at Simmons College, studied the secrets of people who successfully bounced back from hard times. She tracked 400 people for 25 years, from ages 5 to 30, studying the main characteristics of those who did best in difficult circumstances.

    Her findings?

    “Resilient people identify those who are available, trustworthy and helpful. Then they go towards this light,” says Dr. Carbonell.

    In psychologist Professor Ed Diener’s research he’s found that close relationships actually influence overall joy far more than income! And good strong friendships can even ward off germs – by lowering stress, and improving your immune system.

    A Bingingham University study dittos these findings — reporting people who claim to have 5 or more friends with whom they can discuss important problems, are 60% more likely to say that they are “very happy.”

    According to Dr. John Haidt the urge for humans to seek the sweetness of other people is just as natural and strong as bees who migrate towards a honey hive.

    Haidt believes we humans, just like bees, feel the most comfortable and thriving when we are members of a larger hive. Hence why many folks feel so unsettled and lost when alone too often, without the comfort of others.

    So if you want to feel at the top of your game, it’s essential to spend time buzzing around with supportive people!

    Your Assignment:

    Make sure you are playing the right amount of hide and seek! Figure out who your sweet hive people might be. Make a list of all the people you consider close friends. Now ask yourself: Who is 100% rooting for you to live your happiest life – and not competing or jealous? Who do you always feel happier after visiting – not more depressed? These are your your supportive hive people. Go towards these hive people often! Let them know how much you appreciate them often — and your hive will further thrive!

    Remember: One of the indirectly good things about going through bad times – it can bring you closer to others, bonding you in a truly emotionally, meaningful way!

    Want more resiliency psychology tips to help you thrive in the face of adversity? Check out THE BOUNCE BACK BOOK by clicking this line, right here, RIGHT NOW!

    Want to live your happiest life, dammit? Sign up for my famous and FREE “BE HAPPY DAMMIT” newsletter, by clicking this line, right here, RIGHT NOW!

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  • The Euro Isn’t Going To Dissolve, It’s Just Got A Long, Long Way To Fall

    Last week we talked about Greece. But the problems are more than just Greece. We look at two very different views of the euro, and then opposing thoughts on Spain. Is Spain a problem or not? And how can the US keep on spending? Is there a limit? There is a lot to cover in what has been an interesting, if confusing, week.

    Before we get into the meat of the letter, I want to give you a chance to register for my 7th (where do the years go?!) annual Strategic Investment Conference, cosponsored with my friends at Altegris Investments. The conference will be held April 22-24 and, as always, in La Jolla, California. The speaker lineup is powerful. Already committed are Dr. Gary Shilling, David Rosenberg, Dr. Lacy Hunt, Dr. Niall Ferguson, and George Friedman, as well as your humble analyst. We are talking with several other equally exciting speakers and expect those to firm up shortly.

    Look at that lineup. These are the guys who got the calls right over the past few years. They called the housing crisis, the credit bubble, and the recession. And, in my opinion, these are some of the best in the world at giving us ideas about where we are headed.

    Comments from those who attend the annual affair generally run along the lines of, “This is the best conference we have ever been to.” And each year it seems to get better. This year we are going to focus on “The End Game,” that is, on the paths the various nations are likely to take as they try to solve their various deficit problems, and how that will affect the world and local economies and our investments. We make sure you have access to our speakers and get your questions answered, and you’ll come away with excellent, practical investment ideas.

    This conference sells out every year, and it looks like it will do so this year. You do not want to miss it. There is a physical limit to the space. Every year I have to tell people, including good friends, that there is no more room. Don’t wait to sign up. There is still an early-registration discount. And while it pains me to say it, you must be an accredited investor to attend the conference, as there are regulations we must follow in order to offer specific advice and ideas. Click on the link and sign up now. https://hedge-fund-conference.com/2010/invitation.aspx?ref=mauldin

    Germany, Greece, and Spain

    Let’s start with a little theater of the absurd. Quoting from a Reuters story (you can’t make this up!):

    “Greek opposition lawmakers said on Thursday that Germans should pay reparations for their World War Two occupation of Greece before criticizing the country over its yawning fiscal deficits.

    “How does Germany have the cheek to denounce us over our finances when it has still not paid compensation for Greece’s war victims?” Margaritis Tzimas, of the main opposition New Democracy party, told parliament.”

    This was during a debate in the Greek parliament on how to handle the Greek debt. And it was echoed by both the left and right political parties. Somehow they forgot about the German government paying 115 million deutschmarks in 1960, not a small sum back then. It seems that many Greek politicians are still in the denial stage of dealing with this crisis.

    In Germany, it is becoming increasingly clear that there is little political will to bail out the Greeks without severe austerity measures that will further increase an already deep recession. But I wrote about that last week. Nothing has really changed, except that it has become even less clear how all this will unfold. But whatever happens, there is no positive outcome for the Greeks. Only less bad outcomes.

    Well, a few things did happen.  The rest of the EU took away the vote on some issues from Greece, and there are noises that if the Greeks do not take severe enough measures, they (the EU) will step in and take over. Now THAT would be an interesting spectacle. Just what the market likes: lots of confusion. Try selling a Greek bond in the midst of a modern Greek tragedy.

    There are those, both in Europe and without, who think a default by Greece will mean the end of, or at least do serious damage to, the euro. Count me among the skeptics on that, as a default by California would not do much damage to the dollar. Greece is only about 2.5% of the Eurozone GDP. It would be a problem, and maybe even a crisis, as European banks have large Greek debt exposure; but Germany in fact could bail out its banks a lot more cheaply than bailing out Greece. And Portugal is even smaller.

    I wrote in 2003 that I thought the euro (then at $.88) would go to $1.50 (it got to $1.60) and all the way back to parity ($1) over the course of many years. I still think so. It has and will be a long and rocky road. It is still not clear how all of the problems in the eurozone countries will be resolved, and by that I mean the serious entitlement liabilities they will face in the middle of the decade.

    Oh, and as a reminder, I wrote last year and at the beginning of this year that the dollar was going to get stronger. I got more than a few people telling me I was, well, wrong, with varying degrees of politeness. (You need a thick skin to write this letter!)

    Two Views on the Euro

    My good friends David Kotok and Dennis Gartman illustrate the two sides of the euro debate. Dennis has long been a euro skeptic, and of late has been especially forceful as he writes about the problems of the euro. David runs around with serious international thought shapers in Europe. David wrote a letter to Dennis this week, and Dennis responded. I am taking the liberty of reprinting part of that conversation, as it sets up the discussion we will have nicely.

    Dennis,

    Most of the time you and I are simpatico in view. But this time we are on totally opposite sides. You predict the EUR is toast. I think it emerges from this stronger than ever and that the weaker system is now the deficit-ridden US. I have organized and chaired conferences and seminars in Europe for the last decade as program chair of the GIC, www.interdependence.org. The next one is in June in Paris and Prague, to which I am inviting you with this email.

    In the course of this decade those meetings have ranged in location from south (Italy) to Baltic (Estonia) to west (Ireland). All of these meetings were multinational. None of them had language or cultural barriers. All of these various hosts were gracious and hospitable and welcoming. All of them had goodwill among nationals of the various European countries. None of them had internal antagonism.

    Come with me in June and see this with your own eyes. Europe wants a hard currency and better economics and knows how to get it. The Greeks will end up better off and the politics will force it.

    I am a euro bull. All the best. By the way, I still want you to come fishing with me.

    David [Kotok]

    Dennis answered.

    David,

    I’m writing from Calgary this morning. Nice town, and not all that cold. Nice people out here in Canada’s west. I always feel better about the world when I get to the Canadian west.

    We do indeed disagree on the EUR, David, and I hope you are right, but I fear you are wrong. These cultural differences are simply too great to be overcome. I have always been a EUR skeptic, and have been surprised that the whole experiment has lasted this long, but the Germans are not going to allow any of their money to be shipped to Athens to defend Greeks who have no pride in their own country [and are] tax-paying scofflaws. The German’s felt put-upon by the rest of Europe when they paid for the cost of reunification entirely, and they have no intention of now paying for Greeks who thumb their noses at law and fiscal responsibility.

    Right now, the market’s sayin’ I’m right, and for now I’m going to press the issue until the market tells me I’m wrong, David. It’s all I know to do. Expecting Papandreaou to change his fiscal spots is simply not wise. He has been a profligate all his life; so too his father. It is genetic and it aint’ gona’ change.

    Be well, my friend. We can disagree and still be impressed by one another’s work. I know I am.

    Dennis Gartman

    Who’s right? In an odd way, both of them.

    Let’s look at what I think is the difference between my two friends. If you read European papers and briefings by serious economists and euro politicians, the idea of the eurozone breaking up is simply unthinkable to them. So much time and effort was put into creating the euro to begin with that there is a lot of vested interest in keeping it. (And by the way, let me be clear that the world is better off with a viable euro.) When David goes to Europe, as he often does, he meets with the top tier of business, investment banking, and central banking circles. And they assure him they will figure this out. These are the thought leaders who brought the euro together in the first place.

    Dennis listens to the trading floors and people in the streets. He was a man born in the trading pits. He rightly looks at the politics of Greece and Germany and says that is a “dog that won’t hunt.”

    In the short term, a Greek default will put significant pressure on the European banking system and through that the euro. But it is not the end of the world for the euro. Ultimately, in the grand scheme of things, the value of the euro, within limits, is not significant. If it falls to dollar parity there are winners and losers, of course. European exporters will be delighted. So will be their farmers. If you are a consumer buying goods outside the eurozone, you will not be as happy.

    But the valuation of the euro is not in and of itself a reason for the euro to disappear. At one time it was $.82. Then over $1.60. All currencies fluctuate, some more than others. What destroys them is political malfeasance.

    What would put the euro at risk of a bad political decision?  A Greek bailout without serious conditions would be the one thing that could be a very bad start to a downward spiral. If Greece is bailed out, then why not Portugal or Spain or Ireland? What about the emergency room crisis that is Austrian banks?

    The line has to be drawn, and it has to be a hard line. And basically, what David is saying is that the serious leaders with whom he is in contact get it. But it is not certain how things will play out. Will Greek politicians and unions blink when faced with reality? Polls show that a majority of Greeks now favor making serious budget cuts. And the reality is that they will lose access to the credit markets if they do not make major spending cuts and get some kind of pan-European guarantee for their new debt. Losing access to the credit markets will mean even more (and immediate!) drastic cuts.

    The real choice for the Greeks is whether to stay in the monetary union. Of course, leaving and defaulting on their debt also cuts them off from the credit markets. It is a sad reality they face.

    The Pain in Spain

    That of course brings us to the elephant in the room – Spain. While the eurozone can survive a Greek default or a serious Greek depression, Spain is another story. Spain is a very large country whose deficits, if not brought under control, could in fact tank the euro.

    Spanish leaders have been all over Europe, loudly proclaiming that they are not Greece. However, their current fiscal deficit is in the same league (9%), and they have other problems. And just as Dennis and David disagree, this week I had two reports on Spain hit my inbox the same day, from two of the groups I respect the most. And they do not agree abut the future of Spanish debt.

    The first was from the European team of the Bank Credit Analyst. I have been reading BCA for decades, and they have a real knack for being right. I pay attention when they write something. They are a serious research firm, and consult with the biggest firms in the world. It is not an exaggeration to say the central bankers pay attention to them.

    And they think Spain is going to work out. Let’s look at a few paragraphs from their latest report:

    “Listen to the current market commentary and you might be forgiven for thinking that history is repeating itself. We don’t want to minimize the country’s woes. Unemployment has after all just breached the psychologically brutal level of 4 million.

    “But much of the analysis is backward looking. What the markets fear has already happened. A rerun of the Greek debt crisis is not inevitable, Spanish bonds are cheap relative to Bunds and many of the cyclical imbalances are on the mend. Spain has already undergone 18 months of painful economic adjustment. The current account deficit in relation to GDP has more than halved to 4.6% from its peak in 2008, when in absolute terms it was the second highest in the world after the US.

    “The budget shortfall is beginning to roll over, a reduction plan is in place and the public debt-to-GDP ratio is 60%, barely more than half the Greek ratio. Most importantly, the inflation rate has converged with the euro zone average, one of many indicators confirming the decade-long adjustment to membership of the currency club is complete.

    “Spain does not fit well into the caricature of a two speed Europe, with the south on a slow, unsustainable growth path. Its demographic profile is far more propitious to economic growth than Germany or France, never mind Greece and Portugal, and its policy makers are in many instances more vehement about the need for financial discipline. After all, it was Spain which recently attempted to get the EC to agree to penalties for countries that did not hit their economic targets, only to be blocked by Germany. If there is to be a euro crisis, it is not going to be Spain that causes it.

    “… The shakeout in the labor market will bring a sharp short term jump in productivity, with policy changes providing additional help thereafter. Immigration creates the potential for Spain to grow its way back.”

    It was just a few months ago that I published a report from Variant Perception on the serious problems of Spanish banks. Spain has almost 20% unemployment and the government deficit is almost 9%. They have a trade deficit of 4%. Real GDP is down by 5%. Getting back to growth and a less severe government deficit is going to take some serious willpower from a socialist government. So I was glad to read that someone I respect as much as BCA thinks things will work out.

    Then I read a short report by Ray Dalio and the team at Bridgewater. It is hard to get their work, but every now and then someone gets me a copy. I don’t know Ray, but I have serious respect for his work. I am a huge fan. He is one of those men about whom the word brilliant can be used without risk of exaggeration. Bridgewater manages $80 billion or so for some of the largest institutions in the world. ( www.bwater.com)

     So what do they write about Spain? They are not as optimistic.

    “[because of the recession] … the Spanish government decided to run big budget deficits that have been funded with big borrowings, but the more the debt increases, the closer this approach is to coming to an end. As of now, conditions are tenuous but acceptable because most investors a) are used to thinking of Spain as being safe and not having wide credit spreads and b) have been inclined to pick up yield by holding debt that was generally considered safe, so they funded these deficits with narrow credit spreads.

    “We do a lot of work estimating what a country’s credit spreads should be in light of its cash flows and asset values and have made more than a few bucks doing this. Based on these criteria, we judge Spain’s actual credit spread to be just about the narrowest relative to what it should be on the basis of its fundamentals — i.e., the spread is 1.4%, and we would assess the fundamentals to warrant it to be 6.5%, on the basis of fundamentals alone.

    “We judge Spanish sovereign credit to be much riskier than is discounted because it seems to us that there is a high risk that Spain won’t be able to sell the debt that it needs to fund its deficits, and there is virtually no chance that the government can cut spending (nor does it want to). That is because a lot of debt is coming due; the Zapatero government is weak, very socialist and supported by a collection of factions (e.g., those in states seeking independence); and the Spanish people are now politically fragmented and only care about what money the government is going to give them. Also, the private sector debt problems have largely been kept under the rug rather than dealt with via restructurings.

    “In other words, 1) Spain has big debt/deficit problems; 2) it is not dealing with these problems by doing the tough, forthright things to alleviate them; 3) it doesn’t have the printing press to avoid the risk of default (unless the ECB helps them); and 4) it has a narrow credit spread. Situations like this, in the past, have been associated with both debt rollover and capital flight problems.

    “… Spain’s external debts, have exploded without a significant offset of external assets. On net, Spain owes the world about 80% of GDP more than it has external assets. As a frame of reference, the degree of net external debt Spain has piled up in a currency it cannot print has few historical precedents among significant countries and is akin to the level of reparations imposed on Germany after World War I. We don’t know of precedents for these types of external imbalances being paid back in real terms.

    “On top of the debt that needs to be rolled, Spain’s cash flows (current account and budget deficit) are extremely bad. Spain’s current living standards are reliant not just on the roll of old debt, but also on significant further external lending.

    chart

    “For these reasons, we don’t want to hold Spanish debt at these spreads.”

    And this, gentle reader, brings us to the heart of the problem. These are two very smart research houses with opposite conclusions. Having disagreements is not all that unusual. Disagreements are what makes for horse races and markets.

    But the difference is in essence the same disagreement that David and Dennis have. It is one of political nuance. BCA thinks Spain will get its act together, and Bridgewater does not, or at least not until its hand is forced by the markets (my assumption, not theirs).

    The amount of pain that Spain must endure to get it fiscal house in order should not be underestimated. Wages are going to have to fall relative to northern Europe for them to be competitive. The dependence on government is going to have to be reduced. This is not going to be easy for a socialist government with a very thin coalition.

    And that brings us back to Greece. While Greece can be readily bailed out (assuming they accept large budget cuts) because it is small, Spain is too big to save. The European Union cannot set the precedent that countries that do not set their fiscal houses in order will be bailed out by countries that do.

    This is the nature of the End Game I have been writing about. The decisions are now political. How do we unwind the debts and the leverage? How much pain do we postpone and how much do we take on today? It is the same question for much of Europe, Great Britain (serious problems there), Japan (which is a bug in search of a windshield), and the US. We now have a limited number of path-dependent options. By that I mean the political paths chosen by the various governments will dictate the economic path we go down.

    How Much Is Too Much?

    And to close, I want to show a chart from today’s Wall Street Journal, from a column by Daniel Henninger.

    chart

     

    This is the definition of an unsustainable path. Spending has grown 7 times as much in real (inflation-adjusted) terms as median household income over the last 40 years. Like Greece and Spain and much of the rest of the developed world, we will be forced to make hard choices. We cannot afford to do everything that even conservatives would like, let alone liberals. We cannot fight two wars, increase spending on health care, stimulate a faltering economy, and fun a 20% explosion in federal employees in just one year, etc., etc.

    Pay attention to Greece and Spain and especially Japan over the next few years. Unless the US gets its fiscal house in order, we will be next. It will not be any easier for us in five years than it is for Greece today.

    Tampa, Austin, and California

    I leave way too early tomorrow morning to fly to Tampa to be with Jeff Saut, the chief investment officer for Raymond James. Sunday we will spend time on his boat in the bay, and then devote a few hours to work on Monday. Back Monday afternoon and then a quick one-day trip to Austin to be with George and Meredith Friedman of Stratfor, which is always fun.

    Then Friday I leave for California to participate in the Singularity U executive conference for nine days, listening to lectures and such for about 12 hours a day on how the world is changing in a dozen different fields from biotech to medicine to nanotech to robotics, informatics, and more. It will be a jam-packed information event. I will be sitting with my computer, making notes on what strikes me as most interesting; and that will be the next Friday’s letter, as I leave that day for San Antonio and a speech at the Cambridge conference and have to get my letter done early.

    This week we found out that it is once again time for an audit from FINRA. While we have done these before, they do consume a lot of preparatory time. We had one about 20 months ago, and thought we were not due for a while, but evidently we are on the list again. I am all for audits of brokers, as they are needed, but it is not something I personally like going through.

    Poor Tiffani, though, has to do most of the work for that. As she pointed out to them when they made the call, the last time they came it was a week before her wedding; and now it is just after she gets back from maternity leave and is behind in all her projects.

    As she was walking out after the call that informed us of the audit (in two weeks), she gave a big sigh. “Audits before my wedding and after the baby. I wonder what the next big thing in my life is, because it looks like that will be when they do the next one.” I could not help but laugh. Oh well, I guess you had to be there.

    Have a great week. Get out and enjoy being with a few good friends, and find some good wine to share. I am bringing some of my marvelous birthday wine to Tampa. Wine is best when it is shared with friends.

    Your thinking about how the End Game will look analyst,

    John Mauldin
    [email protected]

    Copyright 2010 John Mauldin. All Rights Reserved

    Note: The generic Accredited Investor E-letters are not an offering for any investment. It represents only the opinions of John Mauldin and Millennium Wave Investments. It is intended solely for accredited investors who have registered with Millennium Wave Investments and Altegris Investments at www.accreditedinvestor.ws or directly related websites and have been so registered for no less than 30 days. The Accredited Investor E-Letter is provided on a confidential basis, and subscribers to the Accredited Investor E-Letter are not to send this letter to anyone other than their professional investment counselors. Investors should discuss any investment with their personal investment counsel. John Mauldin is the President of Millennium Wave Advisors, LLC (MWA), which is an investment advisory firm registered with multiple states. John Mauldin is a registered representative of Millennium Wave Securities, LLC, (MWS), an FINRA registered broker-dealer. MWS is also a Commodity Pool Operator (CPO) and a Commodity Trading Advisor (CTA) registered with the CFTC, as well as an Introducing Broker (IB). Millennium Wave Investments is a dba of MWA LLC and MWS LLC. Millennium Wave Investments cooperates in the consulting on and marketing of private investment offerings with other independent firms such as Altegris Investments; Absolute Return Partners, LLP; Fynn Capital; Nicola Wealth Management; and Plexus Asset Management. Funds recommended by Mauldin may pay a portion of their fees to these independent firms, who will share 1/3 of those fees with MWS and thus with Mauldin. Any views expressed herein are provided for information purposes only and should not be construed in any way as an offer, an endorsement, or inducement to invest with any CTA, fund, or program mentioned here or elsewhere. Before seeking any advisor’s services or making an investment in a fund, investors must read and examine thoroughly the respective disclosure document or offering memorandum. Since these firms and Mauldin receive fees from the funds they recommend/market, they only recommend/market products with which they have been able to negotiate fee arrangements.

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  • Report: Chrysler legal turns into schoolyard bully over use of Ram logo *UPDATE

    Filed under: , , ,

    About the same time Chrysler and Fiat executives were running through a marathon eight -hour look into the future with the world’s automotive journalists, Pentastar lawyers were working over the principal at Lake Mary High School in Lake Mary, Florida. You may be asking yourself what Chrysler lawyers would want with principal Michael Kotkin when, just six months earlier, The Pentastar needed billions of taxpayer dollars to exit bankruptcy. Good question, for sure, but the answer appears to be pretty lame.

    Moto Bullet reports that Chrysler’s legal department has been all up in Kotkin’s grill because the school’s logo is a near-perfect match for the Dodge Ram logo. Team Pentastar ordered has the school to replace the company’s favorite goat head as the school logo or risk having to drive a Sebring head into court. Chrysler lawyers even have several photos of the logo being used at the school in several different spots. The Seminole County School District has decided that the logo isn’t worth an expensive legal battle, so the school, ranked in the top 1.4 percent nationally for academics, reportedly has until June 15 to remove it from the premises. But while avoiding court will likely save the district plenty of money, the school won’t get out of this mess scot-free. Removing the horned-head from the school’s gym floor alone will reportedly cost the school (read: local taxpayers) $15,000, or roughly the cost of a new science book for about 300 kids.

    We don’t want to pretend that we’re experts on branding rights and corporate logos, but we just can’t see what the harm is to Dodge if the brand and the school share the logo. After all, we’re assuming the school isn’t going to start making a competitive truck in wood shop. Principal Kotkin is still putting a positive spin on the situation, saying that Chrysler’s actions have “galvanized my school,” but unfortunately for Team Pentastar, the school’s new battle cry sounds something like “I’ll never buy a Chrysler as long as I live.”

    UPDATE: The Chrysler Group got in touch with Autoblog to tell its side of the story, which you can read after the jump.

    [Source: Moto Bullet]

    Continue reading Report: Chrysler legal turns into schoolyard bully over use of Ram logo *UPDATE

    Report: Chrysler legal turns into schoolyard bully over use of Ram logo *UPDATE originally appeared on Autoblog on Sat, 20 Feb 2010 15:22:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • HTC remains committed to Windows Mobile

    Despite launching twice as many Android as Windows Mobile phones at Mobile World Congress HTC’s Chief Executive Peter Chou has expressed its commitment to continue supporting the Windows Mobile platform.

    "Our commitment to Microsoft has never changed," Chou said in a meeting at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, the world’s biggest wireless industry fair.

    HTC however felt the need to qualify the statement:

    "Of course, we are very committed to Android as well. We are very long-term committed to those two."

    "We think we are doing the right thing for our future, our competitiveness and we are very confident on our strategy."

    Of course actions speak louder than words, and device announcements over the next few months will be a much better indication of where HTC’s heart actually lies.

    Do our readers feel HTC is still committed to Windows Mobile?  Let us know below.

    Source: Reuters.com

  • What is “just” about State justice? Alfredo Bonnano denied bail, parody-trial of Alexis’ murderers continues

    from occupied london, 20 February 2010: “The news has been coming in, one after the other: On February 12, Alfredo Bonnano and Christos Stratigopoulos had their appeal for bail rejected, despite the fact that Alfredo’s health condition is bad, and deteriorating. Days later, on February 17, anarchists Polys Georgiades and Vaggelis Chrysohoides were being handed convictions of 22 years and 3 months imprisonment each. Meanwhile, the trial of killer cops Korkoneas and Saraliotis, assassins of Alexis Grigoropoulos, continues in the remote city of Amfissa, with the court having rejected most of Alexis’ family’s requests for witnesses to testify. Today however is the turn of N.R., the friend of Alexis who was standing next to him at the time of the assassination, to speak…” more

  • COTE D’IVOIRE: Crisis Within a Crisis Delays Elections Again

    By Fulgence Zamblé* ABIDJAN, Feb 20 (IPS) A week after President Laurent Gbagbo dissolved the government and the electoral commission, thousands marched in the city of Bouaké, damaging cars and shops. There have been almost daily demonstrations in cities across the country as Côte d'Ivoire's political crisis deepens.

    Feb. 19 saw the first fatalities, in Gagnoa, in the country's southwest, when security forces shot at demonstrators; the military told state television that five protesters were killed and nine others injured. Opposition parties continue to boycott Prime Minister Guillaume Soro's consultations over forming a new government.

    "Until this problem is solved with the reinstatement of the CEI (the independent electoral commission) and its President (Robert Mambé), we will not participate in any government and we no longer recognize Mr Gbagbo as head of state of Côte d'Ivoire. We are not accepting this coup d'état," prominent opposition leader Alphonse Djedje Mady told IPS in a phone interview.

    On Feb. 14, Ivorian President Laurent Gbagbo, dissolved the government and the CEI, claiming the authority under special powers conferred on him under Article 48 of the Ivorian constitution.

    According to Gbagbo, the dissolution was in response to the stalemate between the CEI and the president's party over the supposedly fraudulent addition of 429,000 voters on electoral rolls.   In an interview with IPS, political scientist Herbert Aka stated that the move was more or less predictable and the decision to dissolve the government was actually taken much later than might have been expected.

    According to Aka, "some ministers place too much emphasis on their membership in a political party. This makes their presence in the government untenable as they regularly making scathing criticisms against the government they're a part of."

    This has caused members of the president's party to call for the creation of a government whose membership would mostly be technocrats with little or no affiliation to any party.

    "We're only too aware of the political vacuum. It must be filled as quickly as possible to preserve the gains of the electoral process," said Patrick N'Gouan, president of the Abidjan-based Ivoirian Civil Society Coalition.

    "We've stated repeatedly that the government should have 20 members and the CEI should be reconstituted with a majority of members drawn from from civil society institutions," he told IPS.

    As prime minister continues working to form a new goverment, Gbagbo announced that he had temporarily reinstated inance minister Charles Diby, minister of the interior Désiré Tagro, and the defence minister, Michel N'Guessan Amani, to carry out essential functions.

    Elections planned for the beginning of March are now unlikely to be held on schedule. This is the sixth time that elections have been rescheduled.

    *This article, originally appearing in French on Feb. 17, has been updated with information on the protests and repression.

  • ENERGY-SOUTHERN AFRICA: Small Is Beautiful, Say Independent Power Producers

    By Servaas van den Bosch WINDHOEK, Feb 20 (IPS) Independent power producers argue that small hydroelectric plants have a key role to play in avoiding an energy shortfall in the Southern African region.

    Cheap power from South Africa – which derives most of its 40,000 MW from coal-fired plants – has delayed investments in the Southern African Development Community's (SADC) electricity sector for three decades. But South Africa's surplus is drying up and countries are scrambling to build up generating capacity.

    "No significant new power plant has been built or commissioned in SADC since 1975," says Simson Haulofu, generation manager of Namibia national power utility Nampower.

    "Hydropower is the most logical answer to our predicament," he says. "It's clean, cheap and never runs out."

    The case for generating energy from Africa's rivers seems straightforward. "The continent has only tapped 20 percent of its 100,000 megawatt hydropower potential," calculates Katai Kachasa, general manager of the independent Lunsemfwa hydropower station in Zambia.

    "Africa has 12 percent of the world's hydropower potential, but has harnessed relatively little (of this)," adds Lewanga Tesha, senior manager hydro generation of the Tanzania Electric Supply Company. "This is strange, because after nuclear power it is the cheapest energy source per unit of electricity, followed by respectively coal, gas, oil, wind and solar."

    According to World Bank figures, hydropower contributed 36 percent of Africa's power generation portfolio, or 76,000 GW/h per year, compared to 4 million GW/h per year that is theoretically possible.

    But backed by international development finance institutions, African governments have concentrated on large hydropower projects like Zimbabwe’s Kariba dam, Ghana’s Akosombo dam on the Volta and the extensive Gilgel Gibe project in Ethiopia.

    A 2008 study of the Southern African power sector by market researcher Frost & Sullivan, found national power utilities showed limited interest in developing such projects. Where funds are available – and South Africa's Eskom is the utility most actively raising capital – investment is usually geared towards large-scale projects which promise to deliver power at a lower cost per unit.

    But even when large projects are successfully funded, constructed and brought online, they may not answer the particular needs of a growing continent.

    "It's just not feasible to erect an 80 kilometre power line to power an isolated town, the provider will not make back the investment in a hundred years," says Haulofu.

    Zambia's Kachasa argues small hydroelectric plants are the route countries must pursue. "Grand projects are hard to fund and are immensely complex to realise," says Kachasa. "Why not engage local IPPs to make small units of 5 or 10 MW at a cost of US$10 to US$15 million? Such a project can unlock a specific region, even where they don't feed into the grid."

    A 10 MW plant could power an African town of 50,000 people.

    Estimates of the untapped potential for small hydro plants in Africa range to over 60,000 MW, but only several hundred megawatts of capacity has been built. Independent producers argue that low tariffs and the monopoly position of national power utilities – which often function as generator, single-buyer, distributor – are obstacles to filling that gap, complain IPPs.

    "Countries must open up the regime, make the playing field clear and predictable," says Kachasa. "If the tariffs are not cost-reflective no one will come."

    Southern African electricity tariffs, says Frost & Sullivan, are the lowest in the world, but raising prices for consumers and industry counters development goals of governments. A way out of the predicament would be to create incentives without immediately raising the tariffs, counter the IPPs.

    "IPPs in East Africa have benefited from (value-added tax) exemptions and waived import taxes," says John Berry of IPP Bujagali Energy in Uganda. "By reducing the costs, hydro-resources can be developed and the tariff can rise over time."

    IPPs complain that incentives for smaller independent producers are still missing in Southern Africa.

    "But that’s not an issue of price," says Electricity Control Board of Namibia CEO Siseho Simasiku, who argues the region is moving towards a cost-reflective tariff.

    "If it wasn’t for the financial downturn we would have been there already, now it will take another two years. For green energy we already offer IPPs a competitive tariff."

    Simasiku accuses the region’s parastatals of protectionism. "It’s the power utilities that simply do not want competition. After three years of negotiating with an IPP that wants to build a windfarm on the coast, Nampower still hasn’t signed a Power Purchase Agreement. In South Africa Eskom shows exactly the same reluctance."

    Simasiku says the attitude of national power utilities compels regulators to take action. "In 2010 we will put in place regulations that force the parastatal to open up the regime."

    Since Uganda liberalised its electricity market in 1993, IPPs have initiated hydropower projects that, when completed, will triple the country’s total generating capacity, adding 565 MW of hydropower.

  • Leviathan of Parsonstown

    Ireland, Europe | Inspired Inventions

    The real measure of a telescope’s power is not how greatly it can magnify a distant object, but what portion of that object’s light the instrument actually collects.

    It’s easy if you think of the photons, or light particles, as raindrops, and the telescope as a bucket. The larger your bucket is, the more rain you will collect. Similarly, a telescope’s “light gathering power” is a measure of how efficiently it collects photons, and this power depends on the diameter or “aperture” of the lens, or mirror.

    For over a century, astronomers have raced to build telescopes with larger and larger apertures precisely so that they could gather more of the heavens’ light. In essence, a large lens or mirror allows scientists to look deeper into space and see fainter objects. An early example of this thirst for photons is the Leviathan of Parsonstown, a six-foot-diameter telescope built in the 1840s by William Parsons, the third Earl of Rosse.

    For many years, Lord Rosse studied the night sky using his 36-inch telescope at Birr Castle in Ireland. The objects which interested him most were called “nebulae,” a term that once referred to any fuzzy object in the sky. At that time, it was not known that these so-called nebulae were actually an assortment of different objects ranging from star clusters and galaxies to clouds of gas and dust. The telescopes of Parsons’s day were simply not powerful enough to resolve the mysterious wisps of light.

    Consequently, an outstanding question in astronomy arose: “Do nebulae contain stars?” Knowing that a larger instrument was needed to resolve this issue, Lord Rosse set out to build a six-foot telescope. All that stood in his way were a number of remarkable feats of engineering that would have to be performed to build such a device.

    Today it is possible to create telescope mirrors in excess of 30 feet by coating a glass surface with a reflective metal. In the late 1800s, however, mirrors were made using the much heavier and more problematic speculum metal. This copper and tin alloy is not only difficult to cast and shape, but also quick to tarnish in humid climates such as Ireland’s. However, after three attempts using large peat-fired furnaces, Lord Rosse and his men succeeded in creating the world’s largest telescope mirror. In actuality, two mirrors were made: a backup was necessary because the speculum’s sensitive nature required the mirror to be resurfaced every six months.

    Dubbed the Leviathan of Parsonstown, Lord Rosse’s reflecting telescope remained the largest in the world for over 75 years. However, the instrument was not without its drawbacks. To accommodate such a large telescope, a unique mounting system was employed which restricted motion in the east-west direction.

    This mount was the first and last of its kind, and, with a fortress-like appearance, it remains quite impressive. The 58-foot telescope tube is suspended between two stone walls, 70-feet-long and 50-feet-high. At the top of these walls, which protect the instrument from high winds, is a movable observing platform. From here Lord Rosse spent many cold nights drawing the elaborate celestial structures revealed to him.

    At first, the majority of observations taken were of the Moon and several of the planets. While the instrument exposed our solar system in greater detail than ever, the most important discovery made at Parsonstown was that of the spiral nature of the M51 nebula. Now known as the Whirlpool Galaxy, M51 was the first categorized spiral object. While Lord Rosse correctly observed M51 to be “studded with stars,” the debate over the true characteristics of nebulae lingered, and it was not until the 1920s that Edwin Hubble recognized some of the fuzzy objects to be galaxies like our Milky Way.

    Nevertheless, the Leviathan is a testament to Parsons’ skills in engineering, optics, and astronomy. In fact, for one galaxy, the Earl’s hand-drawn illustrations contain more detail than a photograph taken with the 200-inch telescope at Palomar Observatory a century later. Continuing in his father’s footsteps, the fourth Earl of Rosse, used the telescope for his own observations. The instrument fell into disuse in 1878, however, and was dismantled in 1908.

    Thanks to the sixth and present Earl, the telescope was reconstructed in the late 1990s with a new mirror and motors to make pointing easier. Observations continue even today, as amateur astronomers often peer through the Leviathan. Ireland’s Historic Science Center also resides at the castle, where a large collection of astronomical instruments and artifacts are on display.

    But to catch a glimpse of the original speculum mirror, you must travel to the London Science Museum.

  • International Surfing Museum

    Orange County, California | Unique Collections

    Huntington Beach, California was rated by Surfer’s Almanac as the “most heavily surfed beach on the West Coast,” so it should come as no surprise to find an International Surfing Museum in town.

    Curiously, the origins of surfing are unknown. First observed by Europeans at Tahiti in 1767, surfing was both pastime and class system for the Polynesians. The Polynesian elites controlled both the best beaches and the best boards. Commoners were not allowed to surf on the same beaches, but it was possible to gain status by surfing on the heavy lower-class surf boards.

    In Hawaii, Surfing was seen as both art and spiritual practice, though there was a class element to it there as well with the rulers having exclusive access to the best waves. Around the turn of the century small groups in Hawaii, Australia and California began reviving surfing, this time as a sport. After Gidget came out in the 1960s surfing exploded onto pop culture, and got periodic revivals such as in the 1980s.

    Established in 1988 by local realtor Natalie Kotsch, the International Surfing Museum aims to preserve the history of surf culture throughout the world. Vintage surfboards, classic surf music, films, and related memorabilia are all on display.

    Though the museum features rotating exhibitions, the permanent collection is mainly dedicated to Duke Kahanamoku, the Olympic swimmer from Hawaii who popularized the sport of surfing in the 1920s. Included in the collection is one of Duke’s surfboards, several of his trophies, as well as a bronze bust display, formerly located at Duke’s old surf spot under the Huntington Beach Pier.

    Past exhibitions have explored the relationship between skateboarding and surfing, as well as honored the “surf sounds” of the Beach Boys and Jan & Dean.

  • Barack Obama’s climate change policy in crisis by Philip Sherwell, The Telegraph

    Article Tags: Headline Story, Philip Sherwell

    President Barack Obama’s climate change policy is in crisis amid a barrage of US lawsuits challenging goverment directives and the defection of major corporate backers for his ambitious green programmes.

    The legal challenges and splits in the US climate consensus follow revelations of major flaws in the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report, which declared that global warming was no longer scientifically contestable.

    Critics of America’s Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) are now mounting a series of legal challenges to its so-called “endangerment finding” that greenhouse gases are a threat to human health.

    Source: telegraph.co.uk

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  • What the weatherman never said by Christopher Booker

    Article Tags: Christopher Booker, Headline Story, Met Office

    Might the beginning of Lent not be an appropriate time for a little repentance

    As the roof continues to fall in on them, in an endless succession of scandals, the beleaguered defenders of the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change have at last managed to mount a riposte by coming up with a “scandal” of their own. Under the headline “fabricated quote used to discredit climate scientist”, The Independent recently trumpeted that a quotation attributed by “climate sceptics” to Sir John Houghton – one of the IPCC’s founders and long a key figure in the production of its increasingly alarmist reports as chairman of its scientific Working Group I – was an invention. Sir John was now insisting, as he again did in a letter to last week’s Observer, that he never said it or anything like it.

    The sentence the former head of the UK Met Office now denies ever using – although in the past four years it has been cited unchallenged more than 100,000 times on the internet – was “unless we announce disasters, no one will listen”. In what looked like a concerted operation, Sir John’s disclaimer was circulated to sympathetic journalists across the world, along with demands for corrections and apologies issued to various prominent “climate sceptics” who had publicly quoted the remark, including Dr Benny Peiser, director of Nigel Lawson’s Global Warming Policy Foundation, Roger Helmer MEP, Lord Monckton, and the Australian geologist Professor Bob Carter.

    It was also asked, through this paper, that I publish a correction, because I quoted the sentence in my recent book The Real Global Warming Disaster – although I have never done so in these pages. Like many others, I was misled by the internet into assuming the quote, attributed to a book written by Sir John in 1994, was genuine, and that it must have been removed from the later edition I used when compiling my own account of the global warming story. Naturally, in the face of Sir John’s insistence that he never said it, we shall all in due course take steps to correct the record, as I shall do in the next edition of my book.

    Source: telegraph.co.uk

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  • $500,000 bond set for 22-year-old in NIU shooting

    Bond has been set at $500,000 for a 22-year-old student accused of shooting another student near a residence hall on the campus of Northern Illinois University in DeKalb.

    A judge set the bond and appointed a public defender for Zach Isaacman during a Saturday court hearing.

    During the hearing, Isaacman said that he was a junior, unemployed and lived at an off-campus fraternity. He faces felony weapon and battery charges.

    School officials say the Friday shooting was an isolated incident and the injured student was shot in the leg.

    The incident came less than a week after NIU marked the two-year anniversary of a campus shooting rampage that left five students dead before the gunman killed himself.

    Read the original article on DailyHerald.com.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • £60m bill for the CO2 of our political class by Christopher Booker

    Article Tags: Christopher Booker

    We pay billions of dollars to Asian countries for the right to continue emitting CO2 here in the West

    One could not want a better vignette of the gulf that has opened up between our “political class” and the rest of us than a bizarre little item which emerged last week on an obscure part of the European Commission’s website. The British Government, as revealed by the EU’s Official Journal, has allocated £60 million of taxpayers’ money to be spent on buying carbon credits from the Third World for the use of government buildings and other official purposes – so that our civil servants can continue to benefit from the CO2 emissions needed to keep their offices warm and lit.

    The Government has contracted to buy these credits, mainly available from China and India, through 10 British and foreign companies, including Barclays Bank and a branch of J P  Morgan rather oddly situated in a back street in Oxford.

    Our entire Government machine – politicians and civil servants alike – is now obsessively dedicated to the proposition that we must drastically cut our “carbon emissions” to save the planet, at virtually unlimited cost. But when it comes to the officials and politicians themselves having to make sacrifices, as our own fuel bills soar, they have quietly arranged for the rest of us to shell out £60 million to allow them to carry on much as before.

    Source: telegraph.co.uk

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  • Spotted in SoCal: Vauxhall VX220, a Lotus Elise in disguise

    Filed under: , , ,

    Vauxhall VX220

    Vauxhall VX220 in a La Jolla garage – Click above for high-res image gallery

    If you spend any time hanging out in the same areas frequented by the affluent, you’ll inevitably stumble across plenty of exotic motorized conveyances. Beverly Hills, Newport Beach and La Jolla, California are riddled with Bentleys, Porsches, Ferraris and Aston Martins. Since those vehicles are readily available for sale here, anyone with enough liquidity can wander in to a dealer and pick one up.

    Every once in a while, though, you’ll stumble across something genuinely unusual, that clearly took some effort to acquire. Such was the case the other day when we came across this diminutive silver speed demon in a La Jolla parking garage. Those familiar with the Lotus Elise and Tesla Roadster will recognize the lineage. However, this machine is far more sharply chiseled than its cousins.

    This is the Vauxhall VX220, complete with the steering wheel on the right-hand side of the cockpit. During the first half of the 1990s last decade, Vauxhall and its continental counterpart, Opel, collaborated with Lotus to produce a rebodied and stretched version of the Elise powered by General Motors Ecotec four-cylinder engines. We have no idea how this car came to make its way to the Golden State, but if the owner (we’re probably safe in assuming there is only one person in California with a VX220) reads this and cares to enlighten us, we’re all ears.

    Spotted in SoCal: Vauxhall VX220, a Lotus Elise in disguise originally appeared on Autoblog on Sat, 20 Feb 2010 13:48:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Rozbrat – the final strike

    from anarkisterna, 19 February 2010: “Demonstration on 20th March in Poznan! Support our protest! The auction of the grounds where Poznan’s Rozbrat squat is situated will take place on 26th March at 10 a.m. Since January 2008, when the bailiff came to the squat for the first time, we have managed to keep the squat, through different legal actions and protests. If nobody buys the ground on 26th March, the next auction will take place within the next 2-3 years. That is why this is a critical moment for us…” more

  • Poland: Rozbrat squat solidarity call – the final strike!

    from anarkisterna, 19 February 2010: “Demonstration on 20th March in Poznan! Support our protest! The auction of the grounds where Poznan’s Rozbrat squat is situated will take place on 26th March at 10 a.m. Since January 2008, when the bailiff came to the squat for the first time, we have managed to keep the squat, through different legal actions and protests. If nobody buys the ground on 26th March, the next auction will take place within the next 2-3 years. That is why this is a critical moment for us…” more