Jun. 7th, 2008

solarbird: (sb-worldcon-cascadia)
[Cafe Ladro pays music over the speakers more loudly on Saturdays. Or at least this Saturday. So taking my mandolin to play while hanging out waiting for Anna to get done with massage therapy was kind of a fail. Foo. So here, you get this.]

Comptroller of the Currency John C. Dugan says banks are going to need to ramp up reserves dramatically to deal with HELOC and other home-equity-loan losses, nothing that at "some banks, the portion of reserves attributable to home equity loans just barely covers 2007 chargeoffs. With losses accelerating, those reserves are simply not going to be adequate." Similarly, Mish at Global Econcomic Trend Analysis notes that loan-to-value (LTV) ratios are terrible and getting worse, with data.

Calling for increased reserves is all fine and dandy, and almost certainly correct - Mr. Dugan has a pretty good track record - but let's see what the banks have in reserves according to the latest H.3 banking system reserves report - oh, look, a new record nonborrowed shortfall of US$-174 billion, another new record. Tasty.

As for yesterday's oil futures price leap - the move actually triggered the tiny circuit breaker system in place (in the cash markets only) when prices spiked up $10/barrel. However, the circuit breaker is only in place for five minutes and only in cash, so irrelevant - but I note it anyway, as a milestone. More importantly, Saudi Arabia has changed its sales pricing methodology for July, changing over to charging a "premium of $2.40 a barrel above the West Texas Intermediate benchmark, compared with a discount of $1.45" previously. To Europe, on the other hand, Saudi "Aramco will lower its price differentials by between 10 cents and $1.90 a barrel." And, mostly symbolically, a member of the Shura Council, the Saudi "consultative" parliament, called for oil production curbs, to preserve the fields. "Marri will seek to persuade council members that the oil production must be linked to the country's actual development needs not the needs of foreign consumers." For amusement value, compare and contrast with this June 2000 article Mish found with then-Governor George W. Bush saying he would lower oil prices by "work[ing] with our friends in OPEC to convince them to open up the spigot, to increase the supply."

Also in energy - sorta - Brad Setser (at the Council on Foreign Relations, formerly of RGE Monitor) notes that in 2009, the US expects 33% of the corn it produces will go to biofuels. Note that corn ethanol is a net energy loss. Let me bold that: corn ethanol, as produced in this programme, takes more energy to make than you get back by consuming it. This programme, particularly in this climate, is insane.

Mish at Global Econcomic Trend Analysis (same as above) deconstructs the latest job report, noting that despite measurable contractions in all areas of the job market, the BLS's black-box birth/death model added 217,000 jobs, including 42,000 in construction. (Remember that the 3rd quarter of 2007's job statistics were recently revised from three months of job gains to three months of job losses at a rate of about 100,000/month. These numbers do not use birth-death models but are actual hard data only.) He notes that this chart indicates a more reasonably likely unemployment rate of around 9.7%, tho' he considers that estimate possibly low.

Lastly, Nouriel Roubini thinks that the recent "complacency that the worst was behind us in [the] financial markets is breaking, and that people are realising that this isn't close to over. (See first paragraph above.) Salon notes a rush to more credit-card debt, with HELOCs and other home-equity lines being pulled. CNBC notes the credit-card half of the phenomenon, adding that delinquency rates are soaring. Going back to Mish again, he notes that Fed governors are starting to openly question Bernanke's policies (and by implication, competence), suggesting that he may not be Fed chair for that much longer. (We've already had one high-profile resignation, remember.)

Oh, and bond insurers MBIA Inc. and Ambac Financial Corp. had their ratings cut to Aa from Aaa. The problem with that is that their business model relies on having Aaa ratings. Oh well.

eta: D00d, omg. lookie this map. It's of the huge jumps in prime mortgage foreclosures.

droplets

Jun. 7th, 2008 04:00 pm
solarbird: (Default)

Droplets
solarbird: (Default)
Okay, so, remember Iraq? That place with, you know, the war? The Independent reports on the Bush administration's plan for a "security plan" that pre-empts Iraqi sovereignty and keeps US forces in the country indefinitely. In a separate article, The Independent also has a story on the Bush plan to blackmail Iraqi P.M. al-Maliki into accepting the plan by withholding US$20 billion in Iraqi assets. There have been protests against the plan in Baghdad; the plan includes immunity from Iraqi law for both US military forces and all US "contractor" mercenaries. Here's Juan Cole's commentary noting that P.M. al-Maliki really has no allies left except the Bush administration, with links to further articles.

The New York Times's recent hire from the Boston Globe brings forth coverage of Senator McCain's embracing of the Bush administration's theories of unlimited executive power. The coverage is unusual in that it's actual coverage of the issue; by contrast, Glenn Greenwald holds out David Broder of the Washington Post as yet another example of everything that's been wrong with the political media over the last decade or more. (C.f. this Wall Street Journal piece calling Gitmo a "model prison", which includes this amazing example of back surgery - not mentioning that the surgery was necessitated after "an IRF team cuffed his wrists to his ankles and jumped on his back after immobilizing him."

Meanwhile, the Obama-is-a-secret-Marxist meme on the batshit-crazy right is ramping up a bit, with Tom Delay contributing to it. Of course, that's only a follow-up to the "moderate" Senator Joe Lieberman thinking that's a very good question to ask. Christ, this is stupid.

The surveillance state in Britain now includes local councils snooping on, well, everyone; busybodiness has a new set of tools. In reality, of course, I'm posting this to highlight how far down the surveillance state will inevitably extend.

Finally, in better news, a clear majority of American citizens now think gay marriage is a private choice, with a majority now opposing laws against it. Those numbers will, of course, get worse in the privacy of the voting booth, but it's still good news. That isn't stopping one clerk in the California Central Valley to refuse to marry anyone in protest, on advice from the anti-gay fundamentalist legal group, the Alliance Defense Fund, but w/e, since she will issue the license, which will still allow people to get married. Someone else will have to perform the ceremony.

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