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#265 | |||
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Bamboozled!
"𒉺𒌌𒇷𒆷đ’€"
May 2003
Down not across
250428 Posts |
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Now explain why a liquid fuel needs to be derived from crude oil. Quote:
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Paul |
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#266 | ||
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Feb 2007
33×5 Posts |
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Trains. Notice I said small and light. A locomotive needs to be heavy in order to pull thousands of tons of cars. Notice that even in the UK only 40% of the rail network is electrified. The rest is presumably served by diesel-electric locomotives. In the case of diesel electric locomotion, the advantage of the electric motor is getting rid of the gearbox. For stationary equipment an electric motor is preferable, provided that the grid can handle the load, and the power supply is reliable. gasoline or diesel engines have the advantage of being mobile. For an electric motor to be mobile it needs a battery, wich is a serious drawback. And that's perhaps the USA's biggest disadvantage at the moment; they aren't used to the high oil prices. |
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#267 | |||||
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∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
RepĂşblica de California
2D7F16 Posts |
Bank failures to surge in coming years
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Goldman Sachs: Bank-Proposed Relaxed Writedown Rules are "Alice In Wonderland Accounting" Quote:
And, I do believe that it's high time for us to check up on the latest doings in the mortgouge industry: Aha, it appears that those Masters of Spin at the NAR are hard at work as always, this time calling a loss a win: Realtors settle case with U.S.: Real estate agents were accused of illegally blocking posting of home listings and limiting competition from online brokers. Quote:
So "no fine" is a win, and "admit no liability" - another win. Potential "losses" due to loss of ther monopoly starnglehold on the MLS? Not deserving of mention. [Perhaps they're too busy figuring out ways to subvert that part of the settlement.] But, back to the "There are no infidel U.S. tanks in Baghdad! Never!!" stuff: Quote:
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#268 | |||||||
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∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
RepĂşblica de California
2D7F16 Posts |
Forgot to mention in yesterday's posting: the Wall Street Journal has a detailed 3-part examination of the the collapse of Bear Stearns running this week - Part 1 was yesterday, Part 2 is today, Part 3 tomorrow. Highly recommended for folks who receive either the print or online edition.
Speaking [as I did yesterday] of "the price of oil in China", we have an interesting situation there: the government is artificially keeping prices low, but that obviously costs them a lot money, and not even they can pull oil out of thin air - so you increasingly have a "artificially low price on something that's not available for purchase anyway" situation. Kinda like in the old Soviet Union, government announces "sausage is on sale this week", but nary a sausage to be found on a store shelf anywhere. Obviously not quite as dire yet in China, but the trend is clear. Rating Agencies Face New Standards; Cannot Recommend Deal Structure Quote:
1. I see nothing about eliminating the practice of "bundling a small percentage of allegedly high-rated debt in with 99% horsepucky and labeling the whole thing 'prime'." That was of course the modus operandi for the now-busily-imploding trillions of dollars of subprime and Alt-A-style mortgage debt. 2. The "rules" are nonbinding as far as the U.S. operations of the major rating agencies are concerned. Right on cue in the wake of my recent posts describing the problems facing regional banks: U.S. Stocks Retreat, Led by Banks; KeyCorp, AIG Shares Tumble Quote:
U.S. Driving Plummets in April Quote:
Home prices plunge 14.1% in first quarter: Standard & Poor's/Case-Shiller study shows record decline for housing prices in first three months of 2008. Quote:
Bush: Stimulus starts to kick in: Tax rebate checks are set to make a 'positive contribution to economic growth,' says President Bush. Quote:
Indonesia Pulls out of OPEC: Indonesia is pulling out of OPEC because it is no longer a net oil exporter, the Minister of Energy and Mineral Resources said Wednesday. Quote:
In still-way-off-at-the-margins-of-most-people's-radar-screens finance news: Banks to link dark liquidity pools Quote:
Last fiddled with by ewmayer on 2008-05-31 at 00:18 Reason: Added WSJ Bear Stearns links |
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#269 | ||||
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∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
RepĂşblica de California
265778 Posts |
Fed Governor Mishkin Resigns
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There is also a link to a very scary talk given last night by Dallas Fed President Richard "Don't call me Rick, Benny Boy" Fischer in the latter article, in which he lays out the "frightful storm" brewing in the form of out-of-control government spending and Federal deficits. Highly recommended - unless you like sleeping at night, that is. Of course it's quite disingenuous for Fischer to blame out-of-control Government entitlement spending for the problem, since although that is certainly one of the major causes, the "debauching of the credit markets" he mentions in his speech was a direct result of his employer's irresponsible monetary and credit policies over the past decade-and-a-half. Pot calling kettle black... Dow Chemical to raise prices up to 20 percent: CEO blasts Washington for 'true energy crisis' Quote:
Telegraph UK | Phase 2 of the Credit Crisis Imminent? Quote:
And if you thought the issue of commodities speculators possibly being responsible for a major portion of the recent run-up in oil prices, that is far less serious than allegedly similar manipulation of the price of a crucial commodity near and dear to my heart: Candy Companies Blame Higher Prices On Hedge Funds' Chocolate Cravings Of course the commodities hedge funds respond with a loud "We didn't do it!", and point the finger right back at the candymakers: 80 chocolate price fixing cases to be combined Mish Shedlock comments on Standard & Poors' "Hey - We finally pulled our heads out of our asses, and did not at all like what we saw!" announcement about their first mass downgrade of Liar-Loan-backed securities [a.k.a. Alt-A, which is considered a separate category from "subprime" but is proving to be similarly rotten, and even bigger in terms of size]: S&P Downgrades $34B in Alt-A Mortgage Securities Quote:
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#270 | ||
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∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
RepĂşblica de California
19·613 Posts |
One of the Wall Street Examiner bloggers weighs in on the price of oil, including the skyrocketing tanker rents recently noted in this thread. This particular WSE blogger can be a bit odd-sounding because his English ain't the greatest - I quote him as much for the 2 articles [the first by Minyanville's John Mauldin, the 2nd from an oil-industry website] he links to as for his own take:
So what's up with oil? Quote:
Back on-topic: If there is a significant speculative-bubble component in recent runaway commodity prices [and I believe that there is], there's an interesting potential scenario there: If the speculative bubble in oil goes "pop" and the price quickly plunges back toward the $100-per-barrel mark, instead of recognizing that for what it is - i.e. the pricking of a speculative bubble - the markets instead take it as an "all is well with the world economy after all" sign. That would be shades of early 1930, when the stock markets rallied hugely as investors [even, or perhaps especially, the big so-called "smart money" institutional ones] deluded themselves in similar fashion, only to really get hammered when the second act of that great debacle unfolded. In-house ratings disagreements at Moody's Quote:
Last fiddled with by ewmayer on 2008-05-30 at 19:10 Reason: Added Moody's piece |
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#271 | ||
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"Gang aft agley"
Sep 2002
2·1,877 Posts |
der Wunderdoktor has opened my eyes to dark pools. There are many crossing networks and dark pools -- looking around leads into a maze of twisty little passages, all alike.
What disturbs me is the dynamicly developing nature of them: CBOE inks deal with 3D Markets on block trading(Reuters Wed May 21, 2008) Quote:
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Last fiddled with by only_human on 2008-05-30 at 23:27 Reason: attribution: Reuters |
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#272 | |
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"Richard B. Woods"
Aug 2002
Wisconsin USA
22·3·641 Posts |
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As you can see there, now that I have additional information about the oil market, I consider my only-10-day-old prediction almost certainly dead, in keeping with (* sigh *) my past record on publicly-posted predictions. However, inspired by recent U.S. political events, I shall not officially withdraw that prediction before August of this year. (After all, who knows which way the supertankers will lean at that time?) - - - - - P.S. This is my 2001st posting at mersenneforum.org. Last fiddled with by cheesehead on 2008-06-01 at 10:09 |
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#273 | ||||
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∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
RepĂşblica de California
19×613 Posts |
In oh-so-typical fashion, the prototypical long-term-strategy-challenged U.S. automaker, GM, finds itself hemorrhaging sales volume and cash and way behind the curve it's going to take them three years to increase car production [as opposed to guzzler-truck production] from just 50 to 60% of their fleet:
GM Will Close Four Truck Factories in Shift to Small Cars, May Drop Hummer: General Motors Corp., struggling to return to profit amid record gasoline prices, said it will close four truck plants, make more small cars, and may drop its Hummer brand of large sport-utility vehicles. Quote:
Some nice quotes about the current debt shell games being played the Banks, and the effect of the Fed liquidity spigot on the commodities markets at this blog [some of the same blogger's other posts are just a tad "out there" but this one is on-point]: China Warns U.S. To Stop Global Inflation Quote:
Reuters | April factory orders post surprising gain Quote:
Toll Brothers Swings To 2Q Loss On More Land Write-Downs Quote:
Last fiddled with by ewmayer on 2008-06-03 at 21:25 |
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#274 | |
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"Richard B. Woods"
Aug 2002
Wisconsin USA
170148 Posts |
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The universe's first Hummer dealership is a few miles down the highway from where I live. Magnificent view of it from the US 45 expressway. It was originally intended to be even closer ... just walking distance (heh, heh) from my front door! But the vacant plot of land they originally considered was not quite the right size and shape. They needed to construct an obstacle course for demonstration drives, and that just wouldn't quite fit on the plot. (So, now there's a furniture superstore, a Best Buy, and a couple of lesser retailers there instead.) It'll be a real shame to see that grand Hummer building, with its fancy upswept sorta-half-cylinder roof, quite dramatically unlike any vehicle dealership you've ever seen before, go vacant. There really isn't any suitable prospective replacement tenant. Jeeps would just look dinky there. Range Rovers might work, but their prospective buyers might be put-off by the ordinary-middle-classness of the neighboring Chevy place located in neither of this metro area's suburban upper-income nexuses (nexi?). It's a good eight-to-ten miles from the nearest Mercedes, or even Lexus, dealer. Probably best to just tear it down, level off the lot, and pretend it never happened. (* sigh *) ... unless J. Paul Getty would buy it as a museum to the Crowning Glory of the Oil Age. Last fiddled with by cheesehead on 2008-06-03 at 21:18 |
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#275 | |||||
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∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
RepĂşblica de California
19×613 Posts |
S&P nears agreement with Cuomo: The ratings agency agrees to change some business practices amid pressure from the New York attorney general
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On the "Major 'TempĂŞte du Merde' About to Hit the Proverbial Fan" front, the New York Times informs us that government - in this case state and local - is indeed the last bastion of the Profligate Spenders - "Coming soon to a massive tax hike near you": NYTimes | State and city governments still spending despite plummeting tax receipts Quote:
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Lehman's Shares Rebound as Bond Fund Buys Debt Quote:
[Edit: Actually the bond fund only said it was purchasing the debt - likely at a juicy discount-to-par - but they way they're pumping the stock makes me suspect they're trying to get a nice short-term profit pop from manipulating that as well]. Quote:
Last fiddled with by ewmayer on 2008-06-04 at 16:33 |
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