The U.S. Path to Collapse


NIA
The Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission today held hearings with former Lehman Brothers Chairman Dick Fuld. They are trying to figure out why Lehman Brothers was allowed to collapse, with the belief that the failure of Lehman Brothers caused the financial crisis of 2008. The truth is, the failure of Lehman Brothers was a result of the crisis and allowing them to fail was the only correct decision the government made during the crisis.

The pain that was felt after the collapse of Lehman Brothers is nothing compared to the pain that will come when we begin to feel the effects of bailing out the rest of Wall Street. U.S. second quarter GDP growth was revised down on Friday from 2.4% to 1.6%. In order to get this 1.6% GDP growth, the U.S. government had to spend $3.7 trillion on bailouts, stimulus bills, the buying of mortgage backed securities, and other commitments.

General Motors reported today that their August deliveries fell 25% from one year ago to 185,176 vehicles. The U.S. government used "cash for clunkers" to buy GDP growth in 2009, but that growth stole from future automobile sales. NIA believes that GM's sales decline is a sign that the U.S. will likely see a sharp contraction in GDP beginning in the third-quarter, which will lead to the Federal Reserve implementing the mother of all quantitative easing and cause a massive sell off in the U.S. dollar.

Christina Romer, outgoing Chairwoman of Obama's Council of Economic Advisers, today called for more government spending and less taxes as a way to bring down unemployment. The combination of more government spending and less taxes equals massive inflation, but this represents the state of mind in Washington today. Inflation is still the last thing on their minds because they don't see it yet.

Even though we might not see massive across the board price inflation at this time, gold and silver prices have been surging ever since NIA released its article "Gold and Silver Capitulation is Near" on July 28th. Gold is very close to breaking its all time nominal high of $1,264.90 per ounce set during June and silver is getting ready to test the critical $20-$21 per ounce resistance level.

Rising gold and silver prices indicate that the U.S. is headed for an explosion in budget deficits that will rise far beyond what it can pay for through borrowing. Leading Chinese economists are now calling Japanese debt less risky than U.S. debt and with the Japanese savings rate in decline, the U.S. will soon have nobody left to borrow from. The only option will be monetization and already the Federal Reserve is getting ready to buy $10 billion to $30 billion per month in U.S. treasuries to keep its balance sheet at inflated levels.

There are now 50 million Americans on Medicaid, with annual Medicaid costs rising 36% over the past two years to $273 billion. The recently enacted health care bill will add 16 million more Americans to Medicaid beginning in 2014, but the U.S. government will likely go bust by then. It is impossible to have an economic recovery when jobless benefits are encouraging Americans to stay unemployed. U.S. unemployment insurance spending has nearly quadrupled since 2007 to $160 billion annually. Even food stamp costs have surged 80% over the past two years to $70 billion annually.

Once Americans get used to receiving and relying on government entitlement programs, it is hard to wean them off of them. NIA has been hearing reports from members with friends who say they will only "come out of retirement" if they can find a job that pays $25 per hour or more, because with anything less it wouldn't be worth losing their jobless and food stamp benefits. Americans expect to receive their jobless benefits forever and we are sure Obama will continue to extend them leading up to the 2012 election.

There are now countless warning signs all around us on a daily basis that the U.S. is headed for a complete societal collapse. NIA received an overwhelming response from its members when we asked you to submit any signs you see that a societal collapse is near. The response we received was so strong that we are now beginning to produce a documentary about America's upcoming collapse of society. The documentary will be over an hour long and we are hoping to release it by the end of October. It will go beyond the economic facts and statistics that were discussed in 'Meltup' and help expose the upcoming collapse from a real life perspective. NIA believes this documentary will appeal to a very mainstream audience and help open up the world's eyes to the truth about the path this country is on.

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Global Trade


Monty Guild and Tony Danaher
The Rise of Smaller Emerging Nations as Trading Partners
Recent research by UBS economist Jon Anderson illustrates how trade is being reshaped in the developing world.  It will probably not surprise you to learn that between 1998 and 2008 six developing nations recorded an increase in exports (as measured by manufacturing & GDP) of more than 25 percent.  What will surprise you are the names of these countries.
The emerging market countries that grew their exports by the largest percentage were not the big countries one might expect, such as China, Brazil or India.  Instead, they were smaller countries, with less celebrated economies.  They were Cambodia, Thailand and Vietnam in South East Asia and the Czech Republic, the Slovak Republic and Hungary in Eastern Europe.
Why did these countries record the highest increase in exports?
Consult a world map and the answer becomes clear.  To quote Dr. Anderson:
"... all of these countries sit in exactly two small locations in the world directly east of traditional developed Europe [the Czech Republic, the Slovak Republic and Hungary], or just around the shipping lanes from the original Asian Tigers [Hong Kong, Korea, Singapore and Taiwan]." As we can see, "...the largest beneficiaries of the great secular expansion in global trade were those situated next to it, either in terms of outright proximity to markets or proximity to the sea- based production chain."
Trade Routes are Changing
In our opinion, it is significant that emerging nations are becoming less and less dependent upon the developed world for import and export trade.  According to estimates produced by the world trade organization, trade between emerging markets increased by 18 percent per annum from 2000- 2008.  This was a much larger increase than the trade between developed and emerging nations or the trade between developed nations.
Why?
1.)  For many years developing nations have been forming new trade relationships with each other.
It is clearly no accident that President Lula of Brazil has visited over 60 developing nations during his tenure and is working hard to develop trade with many nations.  This policy of extending Brazil's economic influence throughout the developing world is similar, albeit on a smaller scale, to China's huge efforts in this area.  India is also working to develop and enhance its trade contacts among developing nations, as are smaller countries all over South America, Southeast Asia, and Eastern Europe.
2.)  Many developing countries have begun acquiring assets in other less developed nations to fill their need for raw materials.
Companies from China, India, Brazil and others are acquiring properties: mines, oil fields, production facilities, farms and other assets in a large number of countries.  These companies may be acting for their own benefit or as part of a national policy to secure raw materials and other elements of production.  Not only does it make the purchasing country more secure by guaranteeing that certain materials available for key growth industries, it also provides them with a potential economic advantage over competitors because they can source their materials at lower price or in greater quantities.
China's Rare Earth Industry
Recently a wave of fear has been caused by China's announcement that they would implement export controls on some of their rare earths.
This announcement has caused the world to awaken to an issue that we have been commenting on for years.
Rare earths are necessary to make many high tech instruments and products that we rely on in our modern technological society for consumer, industrial and military goods. A lack of availability of some rare earths will create economic and militarily difficulty for many nations until alternative sources of these rare earths are developed elsewhere.  It is likely that the alternative sources of these materials will be found and/or produced, however, a long time lag before sufficient production of these raw materials could damage the competitive position of those who do not have access to the required supplies.
The Age of U.S. Dominance Draws to a Close
It is not an accident that English has been the language of commerce, diplomacy, and military activity for the past several decades. The U.S. dollar is the world's reserve currency and has also been used as the national currency by many nations around the globe.
The U.S. dollar's position as the world's reserve currency has been based on the U.S.'s leadership status on the world stage, not just on economic issues, but on political, martial and social issues as well.
In short the U.S. sends foreign aid and other programs to allies and potential allies, and even fights wars to strengthen the political and economic positions the U.S. and our allies.  Very few would argue that U.S. companies and industries are not among the beneficiaries of these efforts.
Today, as emerging economies rise in global economic prominence and an increased proportion of global trade is being conducted between developing nations, the U.S. is losing its central role in world trade.
This Trend Will Eventually Impact the U.S. Dollar's Position as the World Reserve Currency
As the U.S. loses economic power, American citizens and most especially American investors should be prepared to have the U.S. excluded or at least not included in many multilateral trade, economic and political talks.  This will decrease the clout and the economic benefit for many large U.S. companies and industries.
Stock Valuations
Asian stocks in fast growing nations have begun to sell at prices equal to or at a premium to U.S. and European stocks. Why is this happening?
Asia has:
1.)  3 billion new consumers
2.)  Robust trade between Asian economies and other developing markets.
3.)  Strong banking systems, not the highly leveraged banking systems that we find in much of Europe and in the U.S.
4.)  Reasonable expectations of growth for companies and economies as a whole.
5.)  Populations with strong entrepreneurial spirit and the desire to rise up the economic ladder.
We have often discussed the problems facing the developed nations, so I will not go into detail again here.  Suffice it to say, that while Asia enjoys much of #s 1-5 the developed world is busy dealing with:
1.)  A badly damaged banking system.
2.)  Overwhelming debt (This debit is so high that if inflation develops, and we believe that inflation is inevitable, interest costs can overcome growth every rapidly.).
3.)  Low economic growth.
The emerging economies of Asia have 5 positives on their side and the developed world has 3 negatives.  If you are a global investment analyst, it's not hard to choose where to invest.
If the Obama administration wants to gain favor with investors, may we suggest that they consider extending tax cuts and implement other programs to spur capital formation and new job creation in the U.S.   If the administration were to undertake such a program the U.S. economy and U.S. stock market would immediately benefit.
Mexico and U.S. Immigration
Many Americans are aware of a serious problem, which has been growing in Mexico for some time.  Mexico's police, economic and political systems are collapsing.  Most serious is the fact that a large percentage of all of the police forces in Mexico may have been compromised or moved into the employ of drug traffickers.  The causes of this problem have been a long time in the making.  For generations police and political corruption has been an open secret in Mexico.  The effect of chronic corruption combined with the lack of growth of a middle class, the high profits in the drug business and a volatile social environment Mexico has been brought to a tipping point.
To those who live in the Southwest of the U.S. and share a state border with Mexico this has become more obvious in just the past 6 months.  In our opinion, many more Mexicans will vote with their feet and leave Mexico for the U.S. if they can figure out how to get here.
We expect the U.S. to end up spending a large amount of money fighting narco terrorism in Mexico and, eventually, on U.S. soil.
Summary
During the past few weeks; gold, silver, wheat, corn and some other metals have been accumulated by investors.  We believe that the current news background will continue to support higher prices for precious metals, grains, oil, and fast growing stocks in countries with high growth rates.
We believe that political instability in Mexico, Pakistan, Afghanistan and elsewhere will keep investors focused or risk rather that reward.
In such an environment it is our experience that one is wise to hold gold, oil, high yielding stocks and food commodities and to keep a large percentage of cash available to spend should opportunities arise.
If the Obama administration were to continue the tax rates currently in effect rather than raise them, and if they were to implement programs to stimulate capital formation and new business development and thus job creation in the U.S., the U.S. economy the stock market and the election prospects of Democrats would all be benefited.  It would be a change in their approach of tax and spend but perhaps they have been listening to the electorate.
We continue to warn all readers against long-term bonds of any issuer.
We see inflation developing in India, China, and elsewhere and believe that within a few quarters this inflation could be imported into the developed world.  In such an environment holding long duration bonds could lead to huge losses.
For those of you who hold Municipal Bonds, we will be happy to analyze the stability of the issuers of your bonds free of charge.  Contact our office at (310) 826-8600 if you would like to accept this free offer.
Thank you for listening.
Monty Guild and Tony Danaher
Guild Investment Management Inc.'s mission since its founding in 1971 has been to provide our clients with consistently high returns while minimizing our risk profile over both intermediate and long term periods.
Guild's philosophy is to seek value, and invest with a global view. Guild believes that having this perspective is essential to understanding the macroeconomic trends, changes and relationships that create investment opportunities. Our global approach to selecting investments not only helps Guild discover new investment opportunities, it is essential to understanding and anticipating risks in increasingly interconnected, changing economies.
Thorough research and a disciplined analysis of returns and risks increase long-term success. In our portfolio management, we weigh the relevant pieces of information, estimate the risks of the unexpected, anticipate change, and then make judgments based on the odds, with the knowledge that success is never guaranteed. Uncertainty is an unavoidable part of investing and it is naïve to believe that it can be eliminated. Occasionally, good investment ideas have poor results.
Recognizing that uncertainty exists increases long-term investment success in changing market environments. Having the flexibility to concentrate when opportunities are present, and to reduce exposure when risks dictate caution, has been a key to our success.

The Reckless Mess Created by The Fed


Bob Chapman
Almost two years ago the US Treasury was selling large amounts of short-term Treasury bills to fund bailouts and stimulus. That caused a major increase in debt. Most of that paper was 2-year bills and it is coming due for rollover shortly. While that transpires, October will report the annual fiscal deficit of 9/30/10 of about $1.5 trillion, a figure thought impossible just 1-1/2 to 2 years ago.
This time around the Treasury will have to depend on the Fed and US banks and institutions to fund this mountain of paper. China has reduced its holdings of Treasury debt by about 6%, or by about $6 billion over ten months, or by about 10% or almost $100 billion over the past year or so. We know these figures are estimates because the Chinese government has the same trouble the US government has, it cannot discern truth from fiction.
Now that the effect of the first quantitative easing is behind us the economy is facing a hangover even with zero interest rates and a 2.42% ten-year T-note. It was just months ago that those rates were close to 4%. The sale of Treasuries for the past six months was easy with a strong US dollar caused by a manufactured crisis in Greece and in the euro. As we look back we can see almost the whole picture. We saw major NYC banks going very long the dollar and short the euro beginning in late October of last year. At the time we couldn’t figure out what they were up too, but it became apparent this past March. The contrived attack on Greece and the euro was to allow the Treasury to fund its debt and to make the banks, which own the Fed, a fortune. 100 to 1 leverage is a lock when you have inside information and are creating the crisis.
Except for Greece, Euro Zone members numbers welcomed the 17% fall in the euro vs. the dollar, because their exports were cheaper and more price competitive. What is there not to like about that? As a result the bond vigilantes went into hiding, because they were afraid to go head to head with the Treasury and the Fed. This wasn’t the old days when these entities did not rig the markets. This was today, when they rig every market 24/7, under the Executive Order that created "The President’s Working Group on Financial Markets." This is a page out of the national Socialist handbook of Germany in the 1930s. Government and markets by regulation known as corporatist fascism aided by collectivist Keynesian economics. The result has been 17 months of net financial inflows, part of which was aided by the Fed in their secret offshore operations. It is no wonder they do not want to be audited and investigated. Now we are back to square one again. We announced two months ago that QE2 was on the way, but as usual few were listening. Monetization is the name of the game.
Quantitative easing will put the American public at ease, at least temporarily. They do not realize it but the American and world economies are in a deliberate state of slow collapse. Yes, the Fed has created a terrible mess. They have been totally unprofessional and reckless. The result has been, even after five quarters, averaging 3-1/4% growth, sales of new and used homes are dismal with no hope in sight for improvement, unemployment just under its highs, record debt, slight wage increases, lost purchasing power due to inflation and few prospects for improvement. Inventory is all in place, so that can no longer be a plus.
What the Fed has been approaching since June is a "liquidity trap." That is when loans are offered to business and they refuse to borrow. They stop using credit because they question the future of the economy, their government and the specter of new taxes in the future. Money and credit is available, but few want to assume the risks to borrow.
Between stimulus and federal government hiring there has been nothing sustainable about the economy. It’s on federal life support with assistance from the Fed.
This market is the exact opposite of the gold and silver markets, which are in an 11-year bull market. The metals separated from the dollar 15 months ago and they have already won the battle of the world’s only real currency. Gold has gained 15% a year for those last 7 years. This is a secular bull market and cannot be denied. Further, gold has appreciated annually against every currency.
One of the things we find extremely interesting is that many well-meaning, bright professionals do not really understand what this is all about. They do not know the ulterior motives of those in power behind the scenes. They do not know who really pulls the strings politically, in government, at the Fed, and even on Wall Street and in banking and insurance. They do not understand the hidden agendas of enrichment and power. They do not know the real goals of legislation for Cap & Trade and Carbon Taxes when it has been proven, without a doubt, that global warming is a fraud. If they knew of the Council on Foreign Relations, the Trilateral Commission, or the Bilderberg Group, and these men and women express their ideas and nothing more at their meetings and in their committees, but that is not the way it works. These people and groups set policy for government and the shape the future of our country and the world. We have been reading their publications for more than 50 years, so we feel qualified to express our opinion. Just look at one of their recent failures, the North American Union. This was an attempt to merge Canada, the US and Mexico into one country. It’s a matter of record, their records, that the planning for this project began in the early 1990s in conjunction with the sister organization, the Royal Institute of London. They laid all the plans out to set up the NAU to eventually merge it into a world government. They admit this, but the brightest on Wall Street, in banking, etc., don’t get it.
They don’t understand, or want to understand the control these people have and how they shape the world’s future. What difference does it make if they really do not understand the problem. Who really pulls the strings and how the game works. Is Obama better than Bush, or Bloomberg, etc.? No, because they all take their order from different factions of the same group of people. We understand what these people are up too and that is how we are able to back into what they are trying to accomplish. That is why we are right so often. We understand who they are and what their game is. We know why intelligent people and newsletter writers are wrong so often. They do not understand who is really in charge and who pulls the strings and what their final goals are.
As an example, we witnessed an annual meeting put on by these people at Jackson Hole, Wyo. It is a showcase to present a path, which is to be followed for the next two years. They didn’t tell you that. They presented it as a showcase of ideas. The meeting was far from that. All the players had their marching orders. The results were preordained. We wrote about what would happen and why before it ever happened, just as we forecast two month ago that those behind the scenes had decided that quantitative easing was the only option they had for the future to keep the financial and economic system from collapsing even though that process is only temporary. All we can say is we will never understand how bright people miss the obvious. There is no logic here, only agenda.
The 3-card Monte game continues. The Fed desires to free up its balance sheet in order to have money and credit available; the Fed will sell mortgage backed securities they paid banks $0.70 to $0.80 on the dollar for, back to them for $0.20 on the dollar. This allows the banks to carry this paper on their good books at market value and allows the taxpayer to pay the difference, and the Fed cleans up their books. They do not have to do this, but they are going to do so. The losses will be about $1.2 trillion. That is why, among other things, the Fed does not want to be audited. That is why they paid billions to Congress to kill the legislation. That is why the incumbents have to be removed in November. Incidentally, the banks won’t mark their newly acquired paper to market. They will mark it to model, and gain even more profits, which, of course, are just an illusion. This gives the Fed a year of QE, while the sheep sleep.
The bond market is a bubble and it could last another two years or more, so do not short it. Those seeking safety and stability are being deceived by an investment that every day loses purchasing power to gold and silver. In fact, the investors are so misled that market sentiment is 73% bullish on bonds. They will fall as interest rates rise, but no one knows when. The bond market has continued to attract funds. Recently almost $8 billion flowed in one week into bonds, as equity funds lost almost $3 billion. This means the dollar carry trade will flourish and the stock market will remain under pressure. Why not, earnings will be weaker next year among the higher rated companies and even with QE, GDP growth probably will be even to 1% better. At the same time inflation will rage. The worst of all investment worlds, except for those in gold and silver related assets. Just as an example, during the period from 1929 to 1936, gold doubled and gold and silver shares rose over 500% in a deflationary period. Between 1978 and 1981, during an inflationary recession the average gold and silver share appreciated 40 times the price of gold bullion. We ask you, who would want to be in bonds while we witness the greatest gold and silver bull market in history? This certainly is a once in a lifetime opportunity that has been proven for the past 11 years.
What we are seeing in bonds we saw in late 2008, as the first QE began. Ten-year note yields fell to close to 2% and a short covering market rally began at Dow 8,500 causing massive short covering. The reality of the following time frame was that GDP only grew an average of 3 to 3-1/4%, or 1% in inventory is extracted. The result has been little sustainability. Now here comes QE2, but this time the growth will be less with inflation higher and higher gold and silver prices. The credit contraction continues, feeding deflation and a liquidity trap, which will be held at bay by a $2.5 trillion injection annually. We still presently have core inflation above 2% and real inflation over 7%. We show official inflation at 9.5%, versus 7.4% in 2008, while real unemployment is 21-1/2%. The economy cannot extricate itself from that dilemma. On top of this we’ll have a further falling dollar. All we can say is this is terrible and it is going to get worse.
As far as the Fed is concerned what does it do in a liquidity trap. That is when interest rates are very low and both people won’t buy homes for fear of lower prices and businesses won’t borrow for fear of falling growth and higher unemployment. It is simple the Fed just creates more money and credit out of thin air. But, for rising government employment and war spending the economy would be like a wet noodle.
What is equally tragic about all this is that 1/3rd of experts, economists, analysts and newsletter writers have not been correct. How do they get so incompetent?
How do lending institutions sell off a 3-1/2 year inventory of homes when four months is normal? Yes, we know official figures are far less than that, but they are usually wrong. Look at their horrible track records. The high-end market in homes is virtually non-existent. No sales for the past two months. Only 1,000 units priced over $500,000 were sold. Even in new homes 80% that were sold were priced under $300,000. If it were not for the activities of Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Ginnie Mae and FHA making a great many subprime loans, there would be very little buying activity at all.
There you have it, and it is quite a mess. Unfortunately it is going to get worse.
Defense companies and other major industries are hoping to block disclosure of their own fraudulent or substandard performance in federal contracts, despite a mandate this year by Congress that such potentially embarrassing information be released to the public.
Sensitive to concerns raised by the companies, the White House has delayed enacting the little-known disclosure provision while it studies the issue, officials said.
The controversy highlights the extent to which efforts to make the government more transparent often garner bipartisan support but then stall in the face of powerful interests seeking to limit public disclosure.
An Albemarle County Circuit Court judge has set aside a subpoena issued by Virginia Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli to the University of Virginia seeking documents related to the work of climate scientist and former university professor Michael Mann.
Judge Paul M. Peatross Jr. ruled that Cuccinelli can investigate whether fraud has occurred in university grants, as the attorney general had contended, but ruled that Cuccinelli's subpoena failed to state a "reason to believe" that Mann had committed fraud.
The ruling is a major blow for Cuccinelli, a global warming skeptic who had maintained that he was investigating whether Mann committed fraud in seeking government money for research that showed that the earth has experienced a rapid, recent warming. Mann, now at Penn State University, worked at U-Va. until 2005.
According to Peatross, the Virginia Fraud Against Taxpayers Act, under which the civil investigative demand was issued, requires that the attorney general include an "objective basis" to believe that fraud has been committed. Peatross indicates that the attorney general must state the reason so that it can be reviewed by a court, which Cuccinelli failed to do.
Peatross set the subpoena aside without prejudice, meaning Cuccinelli could give the subpoena another try by rewriting the civil demand to better explain the conduct he wishes to investigate. But the judge seemed skeptical of Cuccinelli's underlying claim about Mann, noting that Cuccinelli's deputy maintained in a court hearing that the nature of Mann's fraud was described in subsequent court papers in the case.
"The Court has read with care those pages and understands the controversy regarding Dr. Mann's work on the issue of global warming. However, it is not clear what he did was misleading, false or fraudulent in obtaining funds from the Commonwealth of Virginia," Peatross wrote.
Additionally, the judge said Cuccinelli could only ask about one of five grants issued to Mann that the attorney general has been seeking to investigate. That's because the other four involved the use of federal, not state, funds.
In a statement, Cuccinelli said he will take the judge's ruling into account and rewrite the civil investigative demand. Spokesman Brian Gottstein said Cuccinelli is also examining the ruling to decide whether to appeal.
"While this was not an outright ruling in our favor, I am pleased that the judge has agreed with my office on several key legal points and has given us a framework for issuing a new civil investigative demand to get the information necessary to continue our investigation into whether or not fraud has been committed against the commonwealth," he said.
Mann, meanwhile, said he was pleased with the judge's ruling.
"I'm very pleased that the judge has ruled in our favor," he said in a statement. "It is a victory not just for me and the university, but for all scientists who live in fear that they may be subject to a politically-motivated witch hunt when their research findings prove inconvenient to powerful vested interests.
"I'm looking forward now to trying to get back full time to the things I really care about: doing research and extending the forefront of our scientific understanding of the science of climate and climate change, teaching and advising students and postdoctoral scholars, and doing the best I can to communicate to the public important scientific findings," he said.
A spokeswoman for the University of Virginia said a statement from the university would be forthcoming.
If you think you've been seeing more people sleep on city streets, statistics back up the perception. The homeless population living on New York City streets has gone up 50 percent in the past year, according to city statistics reported by the HellsKitchenLife.com blog.
The New York City Department of Homeless Services conducts a yearly survey of the streets of the city to count the number of homeless who are not in shelters. The HOPE survey was conducted in January 2010.
The number of homeless in the borough of Manhattan was up 47 percent in the past year, according to the count. The 2010 count had 1,145 people living in the streets. That is up 368 from 2009.
Brooklyn had the biggest increase of any borough. It saw a homeless increase of more than 100 percent in 2010.
More than 1,000 people now live in New York City's subway system -- up 11 percent in the past year.
While the numbers are alarming, they are still at historically low levels and the ratio of homeless to the general population remains low compared to other major cities, according to the city. The HOPE survey showed a 29 percent drop in homelessness from 2005.
DHS works to prevent homelessness and also provides short-term emergency shelter. The agency seeks to help homeless individuals move from shelters back to permanent housing.
For example, the DHS says it provided temporary, emergency shelter to 8,230 families with children equating to 25,204 adults and children in July. But the agency says shelters have seen fewer families. From October 2009 through June 2010, shelters had 11 percent fewer children, who are now back in homes of their own.
U.S. auto sales in August probably were the slowest for the month in 28 years as model-year closeout deals failed to entice consumers concerned the economy is worsening and they may lose their jobs.
Industrywide deliveries, to be released tomorrow, may have reached an annualized rate of 11.6 million vehicles this month, the average of eight analysts’ estimates compiled by Bloomberg. That would be the slowest August since 1982, according to researcher Ward’s AutoInfoBank. The rate would be 18 percent below last year’s 14.2 million pace, when the U.S. government’s "cash for clunkers" incentive program boosted sales.
Bernanke Faces Skepticism on Policy Tools
"There’s now a cost-benefit analysis for future actions which I’d contrast with the ‘whatever it takes’ philosophy of the crisis," Stanford University Professor John Taylor, creator of an interest-rate formula used by central banks, said in an interview. "The benefits of additional quantitative easing are quite small."
"I really don’t think that there’s a lot that the Fed can do," said Martin Feldstein, a professor at Harvard University... and member of the committee that dates the beginning and end of recessions. While additional asset purchases are probably the best option, "even if they did quite a lot of it, say $1 trillion worth, I don’t think it will have a substantial impact," he said in an interview.

Risk You Can Believe In


Gerald Celente
We understand that there is no aspect of life that is risk free. Beyond the obvious personal risks (mountain climbing, sky-diving, drug running, marriage), every human activity carries some degree of risk.
In the extended era of post World War II inflation, money has continually lost purchasing power. Therefore, just staying even involves risk at some level. For business owners and self-employed professionals, the safest and most satisfying investment will be to invest in yourself rather than putting your money in the hands of financial advisors. This means expanding or refining products and services with self-generated revenues rather than by taking on loans and carrying debt.
Whatever the trade or profession, the strategies are analogous. Every extra buck and spare minute of time is reinvested in more knowledge, deeper vision, and intensified drive. While it’s not quite true that if you do what you love the finances will take care of themselves, it is true that the more skilled anyone becomes at any trade, art or profession, the greater the odds that life will provide opportunities to practice it at some level.
On the most basic, with mouths to feed, bills to pay and wolves to keep from the door, compromises may be necessary, but they need not be permanent or unproductive. In mid-career the pianist Hank Jones, who played with Coleman Hawkins, Ella Fitzgerald, Benny Goodman and other jazz legends, was forced to work as a staff musician at CBS for 15 years during an era when jazz had become unfashionable.
"Most of the time ... I wasn’t playing the kind of music I’d prefer to play," Mr. Jones said. Post CBS, Jones resurrected his career, bringing it to new creative heights, gaining wide recognition and recording prolifically until his death at age 91.
However unwelcome the CBS experience had been, Jones explained that it had given him "an economic base for trying to build something." The moral of the story: even compromises and setbacks can be productive as long as the drive to succeed is not lost.
"If I miss one day of practice, I notice it. If I miss two days, the critics notice it. If I miss three days, the audience notices it," proclaimed Ignacy Jan Paderewski, renowned pianist, composer and the third Prime Minister of Poland.
Regards,
Gerald Celente
for The Daily Reckoning

[Editor's Note: The above essay is excerpted from The Trends Journal, which is published by Gerald Celente. The Trends Journal distills the ongoing research of The Trends Research Institute into a concise, readily accessible form. Click here to learn more about and subscribe to The Trends Journal.]


Gerald Celente is founder and director of The Trends Research Institute, author of Trends 2000 and Trend Tracking (Warner Books), and publisher of The Trends Journal. He has been forecasting trends since 1980, and recently called "The Collapse of ’09." Also a Close Combat practitioner and black belt trainer, Celente has made many media appearances including Oprah, CNN, The Today Show, Good Morning America, NBC Nightly News, C-Span, and CNBC. He has been cited in the Economist, Chicago Tribune, LA Times, Entrepreneur, USA Today, and many other publications.