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With the new $25b mortgage deal about to pass, capitalism in America is about to die.

By targeting those with underwater mortgages, this deal provides a windfall benefit to those that indulged in the real estate bubble, didn’t pay down their principle and, in many cases, simply stopped paying their mortgage.

Those with the discipline to behave rationally, save and abide by their contractual obligations are punished.

“There is no sanctity of contracts in the United States. Only fools meet their financial commitments.” — Dick Bove

How are the banks paying for this? With leftover bailout money. This bailout money is tax payer funded. So effectively the hard working, disciplined savers are bailing out their reckless neighbors (again).

There is no mechanism for failure in America. Without failure capitalism does not exist.

As I’ve noted in the recent past, American’s are dipping into savings to fund consumption. A new Reuters article supports my view:

American households “have been spending recently in a way that did not seem in line with income growth. So somehow they’ve been doing that through perhaps additional credit card usage,” Chicago Federal Reserve President Charles Evans said on Friday.

“If they saw future income and employment increasing strongly then that would be reasonable. But I don’t see that. So I’ve been puzzled by this,” he said.

No need to be puzzled. Spending tomorrow’s unknown earnings is an American past time. Making things worse, prices have been rising whereas incomes have not:

“When the stock market and the housing market were booming, we saw that a lot of people would take on more debt and save less. They felt the saving was being done for them,” said Mark Vitner, managing director and senior economist at Wells Fargo Securities in Charlotte, North Carolina.

“Today, the saving rate is falling out of necessity. Food and energy prices have risen and folks don’t have as much money to spend on the things that they would like.”

Yes, but is Lloyd Blankfein OK?

Reuters

Source: Washington Examiner

Ohio homes that paid an average 8.51 cents per kilowatt hour for electricity in 2005 were paying 11.32 cents, on average, last year, according to information from the U.S. Energy Information Administration. The 2010 price was below the national average of 11.54 cents per kilowatt hour.

Read more at the Washington Examiner: http://washingtonexaminer.com/news/2011/12/ohio-electric-bills-rise-33-pct-over-5-years/2019696#ixzz1hGbkD6WH

Eye opening research conducted by Heldrich Center shows that 36% of those who lost their jobs during the recession are in the ‘devastated’ or ‘totally wrecked’ categories.

What these definitions mean:

Workers classified as DEVASTATED have experienced a major change to their lifestyle due to the recession. They can be either in poor financial shape and think the change is temporary, or in fair financial shape but think this change is permanent.

Workers that have been TOTALLY WRECKED by this recession have experienced a major change to their lifestyle that is permanent and are in poor financial shape.

Only 7% of unemployed workers have made it back to where they were prior to the recession.

What this really means to people in the ‘devastated’ and ‘totally wrecked’ categories:

66% Sold possessions to make ends meet
66% Borrowed money from family or friends
60% Cut back on medical visits
67% Reduced spending on food so much it affects daily life
72% Feeling ashamed or embarrassed
79% Strain in family relations

This is just sad. Welcome to the new America.

Check out the research by Heldrich Center

Another Don Quixote Thanksgiving

Forget freedom 55. Forget freedom 65.

Today, Wells Fargo is saying that 80 may be the new retirement age. Why? No savings and uncertain investment prospects.

Americans are prepared to work longer in order to save enough for retirement, according to a survey by Wells Fargo & Co. (WFC)

About 76 percent of respondents said it’s more important to reach a specific dollar amount before retiring, compared with 20 percent who said it’s more important to retire at a given age, regardless of savings, according to the survey of adults with household incomes or assets from about $25,000 to $100,000.

“Eighty is the new 65,” Joseph Ready, executive vice president of Wells Fargo Institutional Retirement & Trust, said in an interview at Bloomberg headquarters in New York before the survey was released today. “It’s a real sea change.”

Read more

Higher savings rates coupled with strategic mortgage defaults and consumer debt reorganizations have brought the debt payments to income ratio close to 1980 and 1994 levels. The lower this ratio goes the stronger the financial footing of the average American. A couple more years of this trend and we could actually have a consumer that is in good financial shape.

If  you ask the common man in the street about investing in gold (GLD) most will give you a funny look. After all, mainstream investing is about stocks, bonds and term deposits.

If you ask someone with a bit more investing knowledge they will tell you to buy gold during inflationary periods.

If you ask someone with a relatively sophisticated investing knowledge they will tell you to buy gold during deflationary and inflationary periods. Some may even say to buy gold during periods of uncertainty and instability, or when real interest rates are low/negative.

If you ask the world’s wealthy elite about gold they will give you a very different answer. At Plan B Economics, we’ve found that most of the world’s wealthy elite don’t view gold as an investment at all. I would argue these folks have it right. Simply put, they consider gold to be a store of wealth and believe that anytime is a good time to own some gold.

The rich are less concerned with fluctuations in gold prices than most investors. They aren’t trying to profit from gold ownership – they are trying to maintain their overall purchasing power. Since the wealthy have a large asset base, losses in purchasing power add up to big dollar figures. Therefore the protective characteristics of gold are critically important.

Gold can protect real wealth because it tends to move in a different direction than other types of assets. When gold prices are falling, other forms of wealth are usually rising in real terms. When gold is rising, other assets are usually falling in real terms. Gold has an offsetting effect when it is part of an overall asset base.

However, there are other, more important reasons the wealthy use gold as a way to preserve wealth, regardless of its correlation with other assets. As the world sinks into greater financial and political uncertainty, the wealthy want to protect their families if the unthinkable happens. Physical gold can store substantial wealth in a compact, universally-accepted form that can be hidden from the prying eyes of governments. So if/when collapse truly occurs, as it has consistently throughout history, the wealthy can escape with a big portion of their assets.

At this point, many of you reading this may be rolling your eyes, thinking such asset positioning is reserved for conspiracy theorists, but history and current anecdotal evidence suggest this is how many wealthy people think. In fact, through Plan B Economics I have encountered many wealthy people who have caches of food, precious metals and weapons (but rarely admit it). They are acutely aware that if society broke down, they’d be the first scape-goats the masses, and any government filling a power vacuum, would seek.

Ask the rich people who escaped Hitler’s Germany (or many other similar situations throughout history) about gold. These are the people who left behind houses, businesses and paper assets to escape their home country. They may have even left behind assets in savings and securities accounts, the withdrawal of which would have created a paper trail. (Moreover, German currency and securities may not have been accepted by non-German institutions.) They did, however, take as much gold as was physically possible. To these people, gold wasn’t an investment but a way to smuggle a lifestyle across borders in a suitcase.

Today, I believe gold can provide the same utility to rich and middle-class alike. Everyone should have a portion of their wealth stored in a fungible, highly-concentrated, portable form. The goal here is to prepare, not to predict. After-all, you buy house insurance but never expect your house to burn down.

So next time you consider gold as an investment, ask yourself why you are buying it. If you’re worried about 20% up and down moves then you are simply speculating on the price of gold. If you’re looking for a portfolio diversifier then you will be willing to accept gold’s counter relationship to other asset classes. But if you are truly looking for a store of wealth, like the world’s wealthy elite, you may want to hold physical gold in a hidden yet easily accessible location.

More:
Is Gold Overvalued?
How to Buy Gold for Under $300
How Gold Performs During a Financial Crash

Guest post by Kurt Cobb of Resource Insights:

My grandfather loved to gamble. So, it is no surprise that my father likes to gamble. I confess that even I enjoy the occasional challenge of facing an opponent when both us have a little skin in the game. But my grandfather–who didn’t always follow his own advice–gave my father some advice which he has taken seriously and passed on to me, to wit: Don’t gamble with the grocery money.

It sounds simple enough. But the real trick is to figure out whether you are gambling with the grocery money. I began thinking about all this as I was seated next to a woman retiree on a train ride during a recent trip. We got to talking about the Occupy Wall Street protest, and we went on from there to talk about the stock market and retirement savings. I suggested to her that the retirement savings of the entire middle class of America are at grave risk. I explained that the seeds of that risk were sown back in the early 1980s when a then little-known provision of the tax code labeled 401k–which was designed to encourage supplementary retirement savings–was used to transfer all the risk of pensions from companies to employees.

Before the 401k craze (403b for nonprofits) companies with pension plans generally guaranteed a specific benefit, i.e., an amount per month that would be paid to retirees for life based on years of service, pay level and sometimes other factors. It was up to the company to figure out how to make that happen with money set aside usually through both employer and employee contributions. The company often hired outside money managers to invest the money based on the projected needs of retirees. Such plans are usually referred to as defined benefit plans, and they were the norm before the 401k. Now, they are rare.

The result has been that every person with a 401k has had to become an amateur investor. And, all seemed well from the early 1980s onward when such plans first came into widespread use. The world had just embarked on what would turn out to be the biggest bull market in stocks ever seen. As John Kenneth Galbraith once said, “Financial genius is a rising stock market.” It became common wisdom that everyone should own “stocks for the long run.” We were told we were in a “new era” of unprecedented technological progress. We were also told that monetary authorities had now mastered the business cycle through their clever manipulation of interest rates and other levers of finance.

(It is puzzling why anyone would continue to assign omniscience and omnipotence to central banks and governments after the Bear Stearns collapse, the 2008 crash, phase one of the European debt crisis last year, and now phase two of the European debt crisis. If central banks and governments are so powerful and all-knowing, shouldn’t they have been able to prevent these serial financial implosions?)

Back to the poor woman sitting next to me on the train. I suggested that faith in the narrative described above was borne of a highly unusual period of history, and that one has only to go back to The Great Depression to find that it is possible for the stock market to decline 80 percent and not recover to its old highs for two and half decades. (I forgot to mention that today Japan’s stock market is down more than 75 percent from the high it reached in 1989!) I suggested that the current system of retirement finance was largely concocted to relieve corporations and other institutions of their retirement obligations to employees and to enrich Wall Street. Wall Street, after all, gets its fees whether the client makes money or not.

I proffered that the game was a dangerous one for all but the largest players. Why? Three reasons: First, those players have access to information, connections and great gobs of capital that can move markets, and they are perfectly capable of making money when markets go down as well as up. Second, they have so much money that even severe losses will not prevent them from buying groceries and paying their mortgages and utility bills. Third, the government will step in to prevent them from going bust if it believes this means preventing a systemwide financial meltdown.

Were average people like her really in a position to compete with that? I asked. I thought to myself that this woman and so many like her are not playing with money they can afford to lose. They are gambling with the grocery money and they don’t even know it! And, that’s because they’ve been sold the idea that they are investing which sounds a lot nicer than gambling. But it amounts to the same thing.

Of course, if everyone took my advice tomorrow, the stock market would collapse. But my argument is that we should have never have gotten to this point. We should never have abandoned a system that makes retirees essentially indifferent to the level of the stock market. But because of the move to 401ks, many are now risking losing their grocery money and do not seem to know it.

Perhaps my fears are unfounded. But as I look at the amount of gray hair in the crowds at various Occupy Wall Street events, I wonder if a lot of damage hasn’t already been done. The last 10 years have netted the average investor essentially nothing. And, the most recent market swoon has once again tested hopes that the casino profits in the market can continue.

With the Europeans outdoing the Keystone Cops as they slide toward an ineluctable default in Greece and a possible worldwide contagion; with a worldwide economic slowdown and possibly a recession already underway; with rumors arising nearly every day that one bank or another may soon go down; and with a severe property bust already evident in China, I fear there is worse to come.

Kurt Cobb is the author of the peak-oil-themed thriller, Prelude, and a columnist for the Paris-based science news site Scitizen. His work has also been featured on Energy Bulletin, The Oil Drum, 321energy, Common Dreams, Le Monde Diplomatique, EV World, and many other sites. He maintains a blog called Resource Insights.

There is an old saying that a penny saved is a penny earned. The premise of this saying is that an individual can create  as much wealth by saving money as by earning money. Let me add a modern twist.

This saying originated in the days when income taxes and sales taxes were immaterial. Believe it or not, income tax in the US did not become a permanent fixture until it was introduced in a sixteenth amendment to the constitution made in 1913. Prior to that income taxes existed periodically, but usually only during times of war. Also, income taxes were relatively small proportions of total income. Broad-based sales taxes were introduced across different states between 1930 and 1969 (some states still do not have a sales tax).

Prior to the introduction of income and sales tax a penny saved truly was a penny earned. Today, however, savings is even more important to generating personal wealth.

While the calculation varies, let’s imagine a person has a 25% average tax rate and lives in a region with a 13% sales tax. For this person to buy $1 worth of goods he would have to earn $1.50 in income. Clearly, spending money is an expensive hobby – more expensive than most realize.

If one were to consider money as units of effort, it turns out this person needs to work 1.5 units for each unit spent. So a penny saved is more than a penny earned. I think if more people thought of spending this way they’d save more.

I really like his conclusion: the only successful people are the ones that pursue their own passions…no matter how absurd they are. In fact, “the more absurd the better”.

RIM offers free premium Blackberry apps as it apologizes for recent outages:

Waterloo, ON – Research In Motion (RIM) (NASDAQ: RIMM; TSX: RIM) announced today that a selection of premium apps worth a total value of more than US $100 will be offered free of charge to subscribers as an expression of appreciation for their patience during the recent service disruptions. The apps will be made available to customers over the coming weeks on BlackBerry® App World™ and will continue to be available until December 31, 2011.*

“Our global network supports the communications needs of more than 70 million customers,” said RIM Co-CEO Mike Lazaridis. “We truly appreciate and value our relationship with our customers.  We’ve worked hard to earn their trust over the past 12 years, and we’re committed to providing the high standard of reliability they expect, today and in the future.”

The complete selection of premium apps will become available to download at BlackBerry App World over a period of four weeks beginning Wednesday, October 19th.  The selections over this period will include the following (with more to come):

• SIMS 3 – Electronic Arts

• Bejeweled – Electronic Arts

• N.O.V.A. – Gameloft

• Texas Hold’em Poker 2 – Gameloft

• Bubble Bash 2 – Gameloft

• Photo Editor Ultimate – Ice Cold Apps

• DriveSafe.ly Pro – iSpeech.org

• iSpeech Translator Pro – iSpeech.org

• Drive Safe.ly Enterprise – iSpeech.org

• Nobex Radio™ Premium – Nobex

• Shazam Encore – Shazam

• Vlingo Plus: Virtual Assistant – Vlingo

Be prepared.

Guest post by Braden Goyette ProPublica, Sep. 20, 2011, 12:39 p.m.

Last month, we detailed the dismal state of the nation’s economy [1]. Now that the Census Bureau has released new poverty figures [2], we wanted to give you another snapshot of how Americans are faring more than two years after the recession.

Americans below the poverty line in 2010 [3]: 46.2 million

Official U.S. poverty rate in 2007 [4], before the recession: 12.5 percent

Poverty rate in 2009 [3]: 14.3 percent

Poverty rate in 2010 [3]: 15.1 percent

Last time the poverty level was this high [5]: 1993

Poverty line in 2010 [6]: $22,314 for a family of four, or $11,139 for an individual

Rough amount the poor are living on per week [7]: $200 or less

Poverty rate in American suburbs: 11.8 percent [8], the highest since 1967 [9]

Percentage of the population making less than half the poverty line [10] in 2010: 6.7 percent

Percentage of the population making less than half the poverty line in 2007, before the recession [10]: 5.2 percent

Poverty rate for white Americans in 2010 [8]: 13 percent

Poverty rate for African-Americans in 2010 [8]: 27.4 percent

Real median household income [11] in 2010: $49,445

Decline in median household income [11] since 2009: 2.3 percent

Decline in median household income since before the recession [11]: 6.4 percent

The last time median household incomes have been this low [5]: 1996

Real median household income in 1999 [5], in 2010 dollars: $53,252

Median income for full-time male workers in 2010 [12]: $47,715

Median income for full-time male workers in 1973 [12], in 2010 dollars: $49,065

Official unemployment rate in August 2011 [13]: 9.1 percent

Total unemployed people [13] in August: 14 million

People who were employed part-time for economic reasons in August 2011 [13]: 8.8 million

People not counted in the labor force who wanted work [13]: 2.6 million

Net jobs created in August 2011 [13]: 0

Long-term unemployed people [13] as of August 2011: 6 million

Unemployed workers per job opening as of July 2011: 4.34 (3.2 million openings [14] and 13.9 million unemployed people [15])

Uninsured Americans [16] in 2010: 49.9 million

Percentage of Americans without health insurance in 2010 [17]: 16.3 percent

Percentage of Americans without health insurance in 2007 [18], before the recession: 15.3 percent

Percentage of children who were uninsured in 2010 [16]: 9.8 percent

Percentage of children in poverty who were uninsured in 2010 [16]: 15.4 percent

Percentage of American households that had enough to eat throughout the year in 2007 [19]: 88.9 percent

Percentage of American households that had enough to eat throughout the year in 2010 [20]: 85.5 percent

 

 

 

Another sad, but not atypical, American story:

After 30 months of unemployment, 400 applications, and only three in-person interviews, I stood looking at my last unemployment benefit without a job in sight.

Read more

The American consumer remains on his back. A recent report by Blackrock, From Keeping Up with the Joneses to Keeping Above Water: The Status of the US Consumer, reveals the following:

In the past expansion, consumer spending growth was able to outpace income growth because of the wealth effect created by the housing boom, which increased the collateral value upon which consumers could lever, fueling a coincident expansion of credit. In our view, however, the era of abundant consumer credit has ended, at least for the time being. In future years, it is more likely that secular tightening in consumer credit markets will force US consumers to keep consumption growth roughly in line with income growth and to slowly reduce their current level of leverage.

We think that these trends, coupled with stubbornly high unemployment, higher commodities prices, and slower growth in wages and salaries, will likely contribute to a lower level of personal consumption growth over the next few years. Moreover, since consumer spending is a key component of the GDP growth rate, this would argue for generalized economic growth levels that are, at best, modest for years to come, and may in fact appear anemic when compared to pre-crisis growth rates.

In Detroit, perhaps a foreshadowing of America’s future, today more people are living in poverty than there are cars on the road:

Sep 122011