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Bloomberg: Labor Shortage Forces Employers To Fight Over Employees. Salaries To Surge?

Nice fluff piece Bloomberg. I am not sure who paid for it, the FED or the America Is The Best Country In The World propaganda group. 

Companies across the U.S. from Texas to Virginia and Nebraska are struggling to fill positions with metropolitan jobless rates below the 5.2 percent to 5.6 percent level the Federal Reserve regards as full employment nationally. Competition for workers is prompting businesses to raise wages, increase hours for current employees, add benefits and recruit from other regions.

Give me a f&#*ing break Bloomberg. If you believe their reporting is anchored in reality, give me a call, I have some Pets.com and Nortell stock to sell you. If you want a better look at the employment/unemployment situation, here are a few links worth checking out. 

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Bloomberg: Labor Shortage Forces Employers To Fight Over Employees. Salaries To Surge?  Google

Bloomberg Writes: Tight Job Market in U.S. Cities Prompts Higher Pay

To hire 10 to 15 project coordinators this year, Sabre Commercial Inc. has boosted pay 10 percent and added a 401(k) retirement plan.

“It is an employee’s market,” said John Cyrier, co-founder and president of the 48-employee Austin, Texas-based builder. “We are definitely seeing a labor shortage in Austin and central Texas. I see it only getting worse.”

More from Bloomberg.com: Toyota Responds to Hyundai’s Sonata With Refreshed Camry

Companies across the U.S. from Texas to Virginia and Nebraska are struggling to fill positions with metropolitan jobless rates below the 5.2 percent to 5.6 percent level the Federal Reserve regards as full employment nationally. Competition for workers is prompting businesses to raise wages, increase hours for current employees, add benefits and recruit from other regions.

“There are spot labor shortages” that probably will “broaden out over the next year as the job market steadily improves,” said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Analytics Inc. in West Chester, Pennsylvania.

More from Bloomberg.com: S. Korea Says 284 Missing After Ferry Sinks

Unemployment in Austin-Round Rock-San Marcos was 4.8 percent in February, Labor Department figures show. Forty-nine, or 13 percent, of the 372 metro areas reported jobless rates below 5 percent that month, the most for February since 2008, two months after the start of the recession. The lowest was 2.8 percent in Houma-Bayou Cane-Thibodaux, Louisiana, because of offshore-oil exploration in the Gulf of Mexico.

Four years ago, during the worst of the labor-market slump, just two cities had rates below 5 percent.

More from Bloomberg.com: Chinese Thunder God Herb Works as Well as Pain Therapy

Wage Pressure

“That says the economy is getting better in a lot of places,” said David Wiczer, labor-market economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. While national unemployment is a closely watched indicator, “it is difficult to average things. This does have implication for wage pressure at the local level.”

The Fed’s Beige Book review of regional economic conditions has highlighted the pinch. Labor markets in the Minneapolis Fed district have tightened, with “strong demand for welders and health-care workers, such as certified nursing assistants,” and earnings at “high levels in the oil-drilling areas of North Dakota and Montana,” the Fed reported March 5. The next review is due today.

Compensation has risen about 2 percent nationally so far this year and probably will increase by 2.2 percent next year, 2.5 percent in two years and 3 percent by late 2016, Zandi estimates.

“The national economy will return to full employment one metro area at a time,” he said.

Benchmark Rate

As incomes edge higher and labor markets tighten, the Fed may raise its benchmark interest rate more than policy makers have projected, said Joseph LaVorgna, chief U.S. economist at Deutsche Bank Securities in New York and the top unemployment forecaster for the past two years, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

The FOMC has held its federal funds rate on overnight loans among banks near zero since December 2008 and has predicted the rate will be 1 percent at the end of 2015 and 2.25 percent at year-end 2016. LaVorgna estimates it will be 1.5 percent in December 2015 and 3.5 percent a year later.

Regional demand will have the greatest impact on paychecks for the lowest-wage jobs, such as fast-food, because people aren’t likely to relocate for these positions, said Gary Burtless, an economist in Washington at the Brookings Institution who was previously at the U.S. Labor Department.

‘Geographic Mismatch’

“Tightening local markets while the national market remains weak would reflect some geographic mismatch, in which demand is rising in some localities while the supply — unemployed workers — are concentrated elsewhere,” said Harry Holzer, a professor of public policy at Georgetown University in Washington and former chief Labor Department economist.

While some people will move for good-paying careers over time, migration can be limited by poor information about opportunities, houses with mortgages more than the value of the properties and an aging population, Holzer said.

The number of positions waiting to be filled climbed by 299,000 to 4.17 million in February, the most since January 2008, the Labor Department reported April 8. The figure is among the job-market barometers Fed Chair Janet Yellen tracks.

In New Orleans, where unemployment is 4.2 percent, “we are getting killed on overtime,” said Ti Martin, co-owner of Commander’s Palace, SoBou and Café Adelaide, which employ a total of more than 350 people. “We are doubling up and working extra hours,” and managers are filing in as cooks. The restaurants have a dozen or more openings, mainly for experienced chefs and servers, she said.

Needed Staff

Martin is leading an effort among proprietors to start a nonprofit culinary institute in the city to train needed kitchen staff.

In Omaha, with a 4.5 percent unemployment rate, the Greater Omaha Chamber is coordinating a program that will increase the number of internships to more than 300 this year from 135 in 2012 at employers including Mutual of Omaha Insurance Co., Union Pacific Corp. (UNP) and ConAgra Foods Inc. (CAG) Exposing young people to the city has been an “excellent recruitment tool,” said Sarah A. Johnson, director of talent and workforce initiatives for the chamber.

A tight market “is literally our reality,” said Omaha Steaks International Inc. spokeswoman Beth Weiss. The food seller hired more than 3,000 people for seasonal jobs during the holidays and uses cash bonuses and employee discounts to try to attract workers.

Five-Year Low

The jobless rate in the Washington metro area, which includes the Virginia cities of Alexandria and Arlington, was 5.1 percent in February, near a five-year low, which means some professional jobs have gone begging.

“The competition for people is really fierce right now,” said Gar Muse, principal with Cooper Carry, an architectural firm that has increased staff to 50 in Alexandria from 40 in 2010 and plans to hire more. Cooper Carry boosted its advertising to seven print and online outlets this year from a single posting and uses social media to promote job openings.

The company also has had to work to keep existing staff. “We have lost a handful of people,” Muse said. “They are constantly being approached and we have had to make some counteroffers.”

Social-media sites are playing a bigger role in scouting talent. Some 77 percent of employers used networking websites to recruit potential job candidates last year, up from 56 percent in 2011, according a 2013 study by the Society for Human Resource Management, an Alexandria-based trade group representing human-resource professionals.

Worsening Shortage

The labor shortage is expected to worsen in some regions. In Houston and the surrounding area, construction for the oil, gas and petrochemical industries on the Gulf Coast will require about 36,000 more workers in 2016 than in 2013, according to Industrial Info Resources Inc., a Houston-area based research company.

Even with hot labor markets in some cities, twenty-nine metro areas still have unemployment rates of at least the October 2009 post-recession peak of 10 percent, including Atlantic City, New Jersey, and Fresno, California.

The national picture is “generally consistent with a slowly improving” job market that is “still far from complete health,” said Rob Valletta, research adviser at the San Francisco Fed, whose work has been cited by Yellen.

Moreover, some economists believe the decline in joblessness — which was 6.7 percent in March and has fallen faster than Fed policy makers predicted — is sending a misleading signal about the health of the economy.

More Slack

“The labor market actually has a fair bit more slack than would be indicated by the national unemployment rate,” said Jesse Rothstein, a former chief economist at the Labor Department who now teaches at the University of California at Berkeley. “If you believe that, then the same problem has to hold in local labor markets as well.”

Employers in Austin say they don’t see evidence of slack, such as discouraged workers waiting for more opportunities to start looking for jobs.

“There is a stronger economy and a lot of growth in the tech sector,” said Jason Schenker, president of Prestige Economics LLC, an Austin-based economic research company. “Construction is booming. There is some migration of people for jobs, which has a multiplier effect creating more jobs.”

The city was “relatively resilient” during the 18-month recession that ended in June 2009, in part because it is the state capital and home of the University of Texas, he said.

Talent War

“It is definitely a war for regional talent,” said Sherri Manning, vice president at Q2 Holdings Inc. (QTWO), an Austin company with 446 people that provides technology for online and mobile banking.

Q2 Holdings, which hires 70 percent of its staff from Texas, provides cash bonuses to employees for referrals and holds recruiting events with pizza at pinball arcades. Last year, it started a 90-day training program to teach needed skills to people with a technical inclination — such as a math or science degree — though no formal experience. Those who do well are hired, Manning said.

Shortages exist in Austin for construction workers in trades including installing drywall and painting, Sabre Commercial’s Cyrier said. His company, which began boosting wages in 2011, directly employs project coordinators, while contracting out most other tasks. Subcontracting costs have gone up 15 percent or more in the past three years, he said.

He has sought to create a more collegial environment to attract younger workers. One example: stressing more communication, including daily huddles among staff about project issues. Making sure the company is viewed as a good place to work is important because it receives a third fewer resumes than two years ago, he added.

“If we get a good resume, we have to make a decision really quick,” he said. “We are always looking.”

What Does Cramer Fear? It Should Shock The Fear Out Of You

Just as his latest blown up call to buy Tesla around at $240 about a month ago, Cramer is worried about the wrong things.  Japan, Ukraine, China and Bonds. To be hones…..who cares? While these things are not necessarily wrong from the fundamental perspective, they will have very little impact on the overall stock market and/or the US Economy going forward. 

The fact that fundamental factors have very little impact on the overall stock market is our claim to fame. Again, it is not the fundamentals that drive the stock market, it is the stock market that drives the fundamentals. Trying to figure out what the stock market will do based on fundamental data is like looking up a horses ass to try and see it’s teeth. Once again, the stock market has a beautiful mathematical/cyclical structure within it. Once that structure is understood the stock market can be predicted with the precision of a surgeon. If you would be interested in seeing what this works predicts for 2014-2017, please Click Here. 

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What Does Cramer Fear? It Should Shock The Fear Out Of You Google

Cramer: Amid fits and starts, what do pros fear?

With volatility returning to the market, it’s become apparent that Wall Street pros have grown fearful. But what exactly do they fear?

Jim Cramer has an ear to the ground. Here are the concerns that he’s hearing about:

Worry #1—Japan: “Frankly, it is downright scary what’s happening in Japan,” Cramer said. “This country’s pretty much left the grid with what now looks like a failed strategy to get some sort of boom going. The Japanese stock market’s down 14 percent this year, by far the worst major market in the world, and the country’s retail sales have plummeted since a recent hike in taxes.”

Impact: Considering Japan is among the world’s largest economies, pros worry that an unexpected ripple could catch them off-guard, so they sell first and ask questions later.

Mario Tama | Getty Images News

Worry #2—China: “No matter how low the estimates go for the purchasing managers’ reports or import or export data or money supply data, the news still disappoints,” Cramer said. “I think China’s growth, at one time double digits, right now is falling from 7 percent to 5 percent. I know, I know, most countries would kill for that kind of growth, but for China that’s not good.”

Impact: Not only is China the world’s second largest economy, but, as an emerging nation, there are real concerns on Wall Street that insufficient growth could trigger serious political upheaval. And that sends buyers to the sidelines, the “Mad Money” host says.

Worry #3—Ukraine: “I think this issue is at the fulcrum of much that goes wrong these days. Every time there is a provocation by Russia, we sell off; every time,” said Cramer. “Some of that is our knee-jerk following of the selloff in Europe. Some of it is we worry about sanctions put on Russia that could end up slowing world growth.”

Impact: If there was ever a wildcard in the market, it’s Russian President Vladimir Putin. Cramer says he presents significant uncertainty to the market, which in turn prevents money from going into some higher risk assets.

Worry #4—U.S. bonds: “Bond prices are going higher and interest rates are going lower. Professionals fear this move because in a thriving economy, the opposite happens, money goes out of bonds and rates go higher.”

Impact: Cramer says the Street fears the decline in interest rates more than anything, with pros wondering if rates signal something seriously wrong in the world. “As a result, nervous money managers dump stock furiously at a moment’s notice,” he said.

Mainstream Financial Media Shocking Revelation: BUY, BUY, BUY!!!

Well, that didn’t take very long. Just 4 trading hours after Nasdaq’s bottom, the fools at traditional financial media outlets have called a market bottom. Wonderful. According to them, if you have any brains left, you should get on this spaceship as it lifts off to 5,000 and beyond. If that in itself is not a contrary indicator, I don’t know what is. 

Understandably, the reality is a little bit more complicated. In fact, our mathematical and timing work does not partake in their optimism. Quite on the contrary. As our mathematical work shows, the bear market of 2014-2017 is just around the corner. When it starts it will very quickly retrace most of the gains accrued over the last 2 years. As such, the rally over the last few days might be a simple case a bounce. If you would be interested in learning exactly when the bear market will start (to the day) and its subsequent internal composition, please Click Here.      

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Mainstream Financial Media Shocking Revelation: BUY, BUY, BUY!!! Google

Breakout Writes: The rally has begun – here’s how to play it

With less than two hours to go in the trading session on Tuesday it looked like we might be watching the death throes of the five-year old bull market. The S&P500 (^GSPC) was down over 1%, the Nasdaq (^IXIC) was collapsing below support at 4,000 and there seemed as if the last of the dip buyers had finally run out of cash.

Just when all seemed lost the market staged one of the snapback reversals that have been the defining characteristic of 2014 thus far. Cynics would suggest there was something artificial (read: “rigged”) about the start of the rally but that didn’t make it less impressive. Paul Schatz of Heritage Capital says yesterday wasn’t the bottom for stocks in the big picture but says the trading set-up clearly favors the bulls.

.

“It’s a trading bottom,” opines Schatz in the attached video. “To me it’s pretty clear: if you close below the lows of the reversal day you’re clearly wrong and you get out but I think there’s enough indication to at least warrant a trading rally.”

For the record those lows are roughly 3,950 on the Nasdaq, 1,820 on the S&P 500 and call it 16,000 for the Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) (NB: when in doubt round to the nearest big round number). Those acting on Schatz’s idea would buy stocks now and sell if or when the market closes below those levels. Trades don’t get less complicated in terms of controlling downside risk.

None of which applies to longer-term investors who are probably better off ignoring all the mania and sticking to their long-term plan. Days like yesterday are certainly more entertaining for market watchers but they’re also a sign that all is not well in the financial world. There’s no fundamentally rational excuse for the value of the U.S. stock market to vary by about half a trillion dollars in less than 7 hours.

The animal spirits are in control of the stock market for the time being. Be careful out there.

The Secret Behind Valuing Tesla (TSLA)

You can’t. Get over it. There are just too many uncertainties and unknowns to assign any sort of proper valuation or intrinsic value to Tesla. There is no doubt that the company has a superb and market leading product, but that in itself doesn’t mean anything. While the company has the potential to dominate the industry over the next 10..20..50…years it can also falter away and die. This is a no way to invest if you are interested in making money on Tesla. 

On top of that, Tesla is severely overpriced. Just to give an indication, it is selling at 12X Revenue Vs Apple (another high flyer) selling at just 2.7X its revenue. The bottom line is, no one really knows what Tesla’s real value is. If you would like to make money on the stock you have to look at the charts. With an upcoming bear market of 2014-2017, a severe recession, overvaluation and it’s technical setup I believe Tesla will see $50/share before it sees $250 again (if ever). In fact, we follow the stock and have a position in it in our Subscriber section if you need more information.   

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The Secret Behind Valuing Tesla (TSLA) Google

Talking Numbers: The problem with Tesla? No one knows how to value it

Its cars inspire envy in auto enthusiasts all over the world. But recently, Tesla Motors’ stock performance has elicited a different emotion: despair.

That’s because the company’s stock price has fallen nearly 30 percent since hitting its February high. The move has come on relatively little news, which is not that surprising given the confusion among the analyst community about exactly how to value electric automaker

Of the 16 analysts that cover the stock, five have a positive rating, eight list it as a “hold,” and three have it as either an “underweight” or a “sell,” according to Factset, 

“There is no strong consensus here, and that contributes to its volatility,” said Andy Busch, editor of the Busch Update and a CNBC contributor. “Is it an auto company or a technology company? All we really know is that it’s the poster child for momentum,” Busch added. 

With few fundamentals to rely on, many traders have turned to the charts for help. But unfortunately, they aren’t looking much better, at least according to some technicians.

“I don’t like it when we see a stock up 550 percent in 18 months,” said Rich Ross, chief market technician of Auerbach Grayson and a “Talking Numbers” contributor. “Go back longer term, we can see Tesla’s in real danger of pulling back to the 50-day moving average. That brings you to about $150 per share. I would not be surprised if we touch that level.” 

Whatever’s driving Tesla, traders says the stock’s next move is likely to be determined by whatever the market does, and that could mean little relief for investors.

“We are due for a larger selloff in the broader market,” said Enis Tanner of riskreversal.com. “If that’s the case, Tesla still likely has more selling ahead of it.”

Junk Bonds Surge Past 2007 Top. What It Says About The Stock Market Is Beyond Disturbing

As per Bloomberg report below, a total of $85 Billion in junk loans have been raised this year to finance acquisitions, topping 2007’s record pace.  This should not come as a surprise to the readers of this blog. While most market pundits will see this as a positive economic development, it is anything but that.  It is a symptom of the financial system that has gone awol.

A system where the Central Bank and the US Government encourage speculation and massive asset bubble creation. A system where the capital is miss allocated and only the rich benefit. Unfortunately, this sort of a financial stupidity can only lead to one thing. An eventual collapse of our financial system and a severe US Recession. As such, you should not view this “Junk Bond” surge as anything other than a proverbial market TOP Bell. 

This is further confirmed by our mathematical and timing work showing a severe bear market between 2014-2017. If you would be interested in learning when such a bear market will start (to the day) and it’s internal composition, please Click Here

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Junk Bonds Surge Past 2007 Top. What It Says About The Stock Market Is Beyond Disturbing Google

Bloomberg Writes: Junk Buyout Loans Eclipse ’07 Record in Dealmaking Frenzy 

The U.S. junk-loan market has never fueled so much dealmaking.

A total of $85 billion of loans have been raised this year to finance acquisitions, topping 2007’s record pace, data compiled by Bloomberg show. Issuance is set to accelerate as Avago Technologies Ltd. locks in the year’s second-biggest loan for its takeover of chipmaker LSI Corp. as soon as today and Men’s Wearhouse Inc. (MW) borrows $1.1 billion to fund its deal for Jos. A. Bank Clothiers Inc.

Leveraged loans are booming as the value of takeovers in the U.S. reaches levels last seen in 2008. While regulators have warned excesses may be emerging in riskier parts of the market as the Federal Reserve’s zero-interest rate policy extends into a sixth year, the loan surge underscores renewed confidence in the ability of the least-creditworthy companies to expand as the world’s largest economy strengthens.

“There’s a lot of money waiting to be put to work,” Judith Fishlow Minter, co-head of U.S. loan capital markets at Royal Bank of Canada, said in a telephone interview from New York. “The market is exceptionally strong.”

Acquisition Debt

Acquisition financing accounted for 29 percent of the $20.5 billion in leveraged-loan issuance this month, rising from 20 percent of overall borrowings in March, according to a JPMorgan Chase & Co. report dated April 11.

The bank is arranging the loan for Houston-based Men’s Wearhouse, which has a B+ rating atStandard & Poor’s, or four levels below investment-grade. The retailer’s Ba3 junk rating from Moody’s Investors Service is one step higher.

Leveraged loans are rated below Baa3 by Moody’s and lower than BBB- at S&P.

“It’s great from a shorter-term perspective to see more supply,” Jamie Farnham, who manages about $7 billion of high-yield bonds and leveraged loans for Los Angeles-based TCW Group Inc., said in a phone interview.

“From a longer-term perspective it’s indicating that you’re in a later part of the cycle,” Farnham said. “This is the time where you shift up in credit quality.”

Private-equity firms are using more debt to finance buyouts.

Rising Leverage

First-lien borrowings at speculative-grade companies equaled 4.2 times their earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization in the first quarter, the highest since the 4.6 ratio in the last three months of 2007, according to S&P Capital IQ Leveraged Commentary & Data.

A total $760 billion in mergers and acquisitions of U.S. companies were announced in the year ended March 1, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. That’s the most for a 12-month period since April 2008.

“Markets are extremely accommodating for M&A financing,” John McAuley, co-head of U.S. Leveraged Finance at Citigroup Inc., said in a phone interview. “We expect that conditions will remain favorable for some time.”

The $4.6 billion loan being raised by Avago is the biggest since the one obtained by Community Health Systems Inc., a U.S. hospital chain, in January to help fund its $7.6 billion purchase of Health Management Associates Inc., Bloomberg show data show.

The takeover was the largest of a hospital company since 2006, when HCA Holdings Inc. (HCA) was acquired by private-equity firms including KKR & Co. for about $33 billion including debt.

“We’re not in an environment that some could argue we were in pre-crisis,” said McAuley. “Today’s market is still exercising discipline.”

Fund Inflows

The Fed has kept its benchmark rate close to zero since December 2008 to help support an economic recovery after the collapse of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. deepened the worst recession since the Great Depression.

After inundating the U.S. economy with more than $3 trillion, the Fed began reducing stimulus by scaling back its monthly bond purchases this year.

Individuals have made deposits into funds that buy junk loans for 95 straight weeks, including a record $63 billion in 2013, according to JPMorgan. The funds this year have attracted $7.8 billion, with last week’s inflow of $48 million being the smallest since July 2012.

‘Hot’ Demand

The loan for Men’s Wearhouse is covenant-light, meaning it lacks financial maintenance requirements that, when violated, can give lenders an opportunity to negotiate with the borrower. About two-thirds of loans this year are without such protections, rising from about half in 2013, according to JPMorgan.

Covenant-light lending is on the rise as the global default rate for speculative-grade corporate debt is projected to decline to 2.2 percent at the end of this year, from 2.3 percent at the end of March, according to an April 7 report from Moody’s. The forecast is below the historic average of 4.7 percent, based on data going back to 1983.

“There’s enough demand for virtually any deal,” John Fraser, a managing partner at 3i Group Plc’s U.S. debt business, said in an interview at the firm’s New York office.

The rise in acquisition loans gives lenders more opportunity to be selective in a “hot” market, according to Fraser, who oversees $3.8 billion of U.S. credit assets for the London-based private-equity firm.

Careful Investing

The Fed, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency updated guidance on lending to speculative-grade borrowers about year a ago, citing “deteriorated” standards and the willingness of investors to accept looser terms.

“You just have to be very careful,” Beth Maclean, a bank loan manager at Pacific Investment Management Co., said in a Bloomberg radio interview on April 11. “There are more aggressive deals being done.”

Collateralized loan obligations, the biggest buyers of junk loans that fueled the 2005-2007 buyout boom, will raise as much as $90 billion in 2014, the most in seven years, based on a forecast fromWells Fargo & Co. this month.

Deals done before the financial crisis were “incredibly large,” with private-equity firms grouping together to back a single buyout, said RBC’s Fishlow Minter.

The strongest single quarter on record for merger loans was when $118 billion were raised in the last three months of 2007, Bloomberg data show. That was the same time when Energy Future Holdings Corp. got more than $20 billion of loans backing its $48 billion buyout by KKR, TPG Capital and Goldman Sachs Capital Partners, Bloomberg data show.

The Texas utility, formerly known as TXU Corp., is negotiating a plan with creditors that would reduce the time it takes to reorganize under bankruptcy protection.

Lenders are still looking for more opportunities to invest in M&A financings and LBOs, according to Citigroup’s McAuley.

“They are overwhelmed with refinancing opportunities, and underwhelmed with strategic financing opportunities” he said.

Ukrainian Forces Switch Sides. End Of “Anti-Terrorism” Operation? Update

Would you want to be on a receiving end of a massive Russian army parked across your border while supporting illegitimate government financed by the West and the American warmongers……. All while conducting “Anti-Terrorism” operations against your own people? Of course you wouldn’t and that’s why you are seeing Ukrainian forces abandon their duties to switch to the Russian side. Seriously, you got to be a special kind of stupid to die for Obama in the middle of Ukraine while fighting your own people.   

“We’ve seen here that these are neither separatists nor terrorists, but ordinary local residents, with whom we are not going to go into battle,” one of the defecting soldiers said. 

Here is what most westerners don’t understand. There is absolutely no distinction….ZERO.…between Russians and Ukrainians. It’s the same people and they have to been together for thousands of years. In fact, Kiev was the birthplace and capital of the original Russian kingdom/empire. Yet, the American government is too stupid not to step into this pile of shit. Instead of sending $1 Billion to Ukraine we could have sent it to Detroit or better yet, to bail out a few more banks. 

Will Russia go in anyway?  I continue to believe so at the moment, but it might not be in the form I originally thought. If Ukrainian forces/government disintegrates there might be no need for Russia to go in. The next 5 days are critical.  

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Ukrainian Forces Switch Sides. End Of “Anti-Terrorism” Operation?  Google

RT Writes: Anti-govt protesters seize Ukrainian APCs, army units ‘switch sides’ (VIDEO)

Kiev’s military faced off with protesters in east Ukraine on Wednesday to sort out their differences…and found none. Soldiers appeared reluctant to go into battle against anti-government activists.

When Ukrainian Armored Personnel Carriers (APCs) entered downtown Kramatorsk as part of Kiev’s military operation against anti-government protesters in the east of the country, they were stopped in their tracks, surrounded by crowds of local residents. 

One YouTube video of what happened next shows a woman coming to a soldier with the reproach: “You are the army, you must protect the people.” 

We are not going to shoot, we weren’t even going to,” is the soldier’s reply. 

Similar conversations could be heard at each of several APCs which entered the city, with locals promising to defend their neighbors, in case the soldiers start a military operation.

Military vehicles parked in downtown Kramatorsk have turned into hotspots for political discussion, with people beside the vehicles trying to get their views through to people on top of the tanks.

Another video features the Kramatorsk crowds loudly chanting “Army with the people” and applauding the soldiers as they were leaving their APCs. 

“Guys, we are with you! You are great!” women are heard yelling to the vacating soldiers.

Six Ukrainian military vehicles in Kramatorsk actually switched sides and began flying Russian flags on Wednesday.

Later a report emerged that three more Ukrainian armored vehicles had switched sides in the Donetsk Region. The vehicles came to the center of Slavyansk, took down their Ukrainian flags and handed their weapons to self-defense squads. 

We decided not to be at war with the people and not to defend authorities like this,” members of the crews explained to RIA Novosti.

This YouTube video shows an encounter where some of the Ukrainian military vehicles raise Russian flags, while others raise the flags of the Donetsk People’s Republic that the supporters of federalization want to establish. The crowd reacted with loud cheers.

Vladimir, a resident of Kramatorsk who witnessed the events, told RT in a phone call that a clear majority of the soldiers who arrived at Kramatorsk in armored vehicles were “boys of only 18-20 years old, with their heads freshly shaved as they had just entered military service.” 

Immediately after the column of armored vehicles was blocked near the local market, local residents surrounded the column with a human chain, but did nothing more, Vladimir said. 

Both sides were simply standing there and smoking, waiting for God-knows-what. Then the local militia came to the scene, and asked the locals to step back and started negotiations. The soldiers were asked if they would like to surrender. They thought a little bit – and agreed,” Vladimir said.

 

Anti-government activists block a collumn of Ukrainian men riding on Armoured Personnel Carriers in the eastern Ukrainian city of Kramatorsk on April 16, 2014. (AFP Photo/Anatoly Stepanov)

Anti-government activists block a collumn of Ukrainian men riding on Armoured Personnel Carriers in the eastern Ukrainian city of Kramatorsk on April 16, 2014. (AFP Photo/Anatoly Stepanov)

The soldiers and civilians started fraternizing very quickly and soon were joking about “coming for a visit without weapons next time.” Many of the soldiers put on St. George’s ribbons, the traditional Russian emblem used to commemorate the Soviet Union’s fight against Nazism in World War II. 

The tanks have already been driven away to a safe place by the local militia, the witness said. 

Vladimir said that Kramatorsk was not under siege, but he confirmed that there were armed checkpoints throughout the city. Military helicopters have been flying over the city since Tuesday, when there were clashes at the local airport. The local Internet connection is extremely unstable and mobile networks has been functioning only intermittently over the last few days, he said.

 

Tuesday, when the military operation against anti-government protesters in the east was launched, was not as peaceful. 

According to activists, four people were killed and two others injured when troops seized an airfield in Kramatorsk, which had earlier been controlled by protesters.

Stock Market Update. April 15th, 2014. InvestWithAlex.com

daily chart April 15 2014

A volatile day with the Dow Jones up 89 points (+0.55) and the Nasdaq up 11 points (+0.29%)

What you have witnessed today is the tag of war between cyclical composition within the stock market and macroeconomic issues associated with Ukraine. Unfortunately, I believe the situation in Ukraine will continue to dominate global markets over the next few weeks (if not months). Should things in Ukraine deteriorate significantly (as I fully expect), I would anticipate Russia to invade and global markets to sell off. That can happen at any day now.

With that said, it is important to remind you that from the fundamental perspective all markets and most asset classes continue to be incredibly overpriced. People who believe that a small sell off over the last two weeks CAN or WILL set valuations right need to pause and study financial market history. There is nothing to stop today’s “incredibly overpriced” stocks from becoming “dirt cheap”. And no amount of wishful thinking or market optimism will change that.  

Why is this important? Our mathematical and timing work continues to indicate that the bear market of 2014-2017 is just around the corner. Once it gets going it should very quickly retrace most of the gains accrued over the last two years. If you would be interested in learning exactly when the bear market of 2014-2017 will start (to the day) and it’s internal composition, please Click Here.  

(***Please Note: Due to my obligations to my Subscribers I am unable to provide you with more exact forecasts. In fact, I am being “Wishy Washy” at best with my FREE daily updates here. If you would be interested in exact forecasts, dates, times and precise daily coverage, please Click Here). 

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Stock Market Update, April 14th, 2014. InvestWithAlex.com

daily chart Feb 14, 2014

An up day with the Dow Jones up 146 points (+0.91%) and the Nasdaq up 23 points (+0.57%). 

Out of all the major indices, only the DOW didn’t close it’s morning gap, suggesting further downside at some point in the future. Otherwise, the markets continue to perform as anticipated. This is what we have told our subscribers over the weekend….

Case For A Strong Bounce: On Friday, the Dow bottomed dead on one of our mathematical points of force. It’s not a particularly strong point of force, but it would work for a short-term bounce. Further, on Friday the Dow bottomed at a fairly strong resistance point located at around 16,000-16,050. Further, on Friday the Nasdaq bottomed at its February 5th intermediary low, without being able to break it. Finally, most indices are oversold and are due for some sort of a bounce. XXXX….etc…. 

While most markets will continue to bounce around today’s levels over the next few days, their long term future is unmistakable. Based on our mathematical and timing work, the bear market of 2014-2017 is just around the corner. If you would be interested in learning exactly when the bear market will start (to the day) and it’s internal composition, please Click Here.

(***Please Note: Due to my obligations to my Subscribers I am unable to provide you with more exact forecasts. In fact, I am being “Wishy Washy” at best with my FREE daily updates here. If you would be interested in exact forecasts, dates, times and precise daily coverage, please Click Here).

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Stock Market Update, March 14th, 2014. InvestWithAlex.com Google

Is It Possible That Ukraine’s Conflict Escalates To An All Out War Between Russia and The US?

While most people (even investors/traders) could care less about Ukraine, such a stance should bring a swift kick to the ass. American warmongers (just as their Russian counterparts) are itching for a fight. I continue to believe that Russia is going into Ukraine within the next 10 days. Based on today’s developments and my analysis of the situation, that is a foregone conclusion.

The more important question here is…..can the US and Russia somehow get into an all out military conflict over Ukraine? Which would, understandably, be devastating to both countries. While unlikely, it is certainly possible. For instance, Russia goes into Ukraine and the US sends in military assets or worse get involved directly with it’s destroyer Donald Cook(currently in the Black Sea) . Russia immediately sinks the destroyer  and we are off to the races(so to speak). It wouldn’t take much. Just a few bad decisions by either side. Here is the latest and what you need to know ……

 russian war plane

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Is It Possible That Ukraine’s Conflict Escalates To An All Out War Between Russia and The US?  Google

What Goldman Sachs Told Their Clients Will Shock You. Why Goldman Sachs Clients Are About To Lose A Lot Of Money

Goldman Sachs believes that the recent decline in the stock market (in tech and IBB in particular) is not indicative or the repeat of the 2000 top. Let’s take a look.

The short answer, according to Mr. Kostin:  Current valuations and the market’s historical performance indicate it’s unlikely that the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq Composite are poised for similar 50% and 75% declines they suffered in the early 2000s. The bull market since March 2009 is likely to remain intact.  “We believe the differences between 2000 and today are more important than the similarities and the recent momentum drawdown is unlikely to precipitate a more extensive fall in share prices,” he said in a note to clients.

While I agree that we will not suffer a 50-75% on the DOW, momentum tech stocks are another matter.  Further, why would the bull market of 2009-2014 remain intact? There is no rationale behind such thinking.  I have already outlined the 5-Year and the 17-Year cycles (among many others) that basically kill any hope for continuation of this bull market. 

Even the stocks hit hardest this year aren’t nearly as overvalued as they were in 2000. The S&P 500 biotech index, for example, traded last week at about 29 times component companies’ earnings, which is above its median of 26 but far below the level of 57 at which it traded in 2000. The Morgan Stanley Technology Index trades at 22 times earnings, near its median of 23 and far from the 65 level of March 2000.

Yes, of course, the valuation argument. As I suggested before, today’s valuations are incredibly expensive. Much more expensive than they were at 2000 top, even though various valuation metrics do not reflect it. Why? Most of the earning over the last 5-Years were the direct result of a massive credit infusion by the FED. If you take such earnings out, the valuations you will see in today’s market will be astronomical. To the tune of P/E ratio of 50 – 80, making today’s market no only highly speculative, but “Are you f&#$ing kidding me” expensive. 

Once the bear market of 2014-2017 starts, you will see P/E ratios surge as earnings disappear. In the same fashion they did in 2007-2009, going from 18 to 128 at the height of the recession. In fact, our mathematical and timing work clearly shows that we will go through such a severe bear market between 2014-2017. If you would be interested in learning when this bear market will start (to the day) and its subsequent internal composition, please Click Here. 

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What Goldman Sachs Told Their Clients Will Shock You. Why Goldman Sachs Clients Are About To Lose A Lot Of Money  Google

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Goldman Sachs: Why This Isn’t 2000 All Over Again

Check the calendar. Turns out this isn’t the year 2000. And it isn’t Groundhog Day either.

Goldman SachsGS +1.24% is telling clients that the stock market is unlikely to pull off a repeat of its antics in March 2000, when the tech bubble peaked and a market crash ensued.

The selloff in the so-called momentum names, such as biotech and social-media stocks, “dominated client discussions” last week, with many investors concerned that the selloff among these high fliers could lead to more widespread weakness, said Goldman Sachs’s stocks strategist David Kostin.

Two questions that Mr. Kostin says garnered the most attention from clients: “When will the reversal end?” and “Will the sell-off in momentum stocks drive a market-wide price decline as occurred in 2000?”

The short answer, according to Mr. Kostin:  Current valuations and the market’s historical performance indicate it’s unlikely that the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq Composite are poised for similar 50% and 75% declines they suffered in the early 2000s. The bull market since March 2009 is likely to remain intact.

“We believe the differences between 2000 and today are more important than the similarities and the recent momentum drawdown is unlikely to precipitate a more extensive fall in share prices,” he said in a note to clients.

The S&P 500 is 4% off its record high hit earlier this month. The Dow Jones Industrial Average has dropped 3.3% for the year. The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite, which has suffered the brunt of the selling in recent weeks, is down 8.2% from its 14-year high hit early last month.

Goldman isn’t the only one suggesting comparisons to the previous tech bubble aren’t warranted. As others have noted, stocks in general still aren’t nearly as expensive as they were in 2000. That is one reason selling has focused mainly on the volatile Nasdaq while the Dow Jones Industrial Average, made up of more-established blue-chip stocks, has been less-affected.

Back in 2000, broad stock indexes had been rising at 20% annual rates for five years. The S&P 500 was trading at 29 times its component companies’ earnings for the prior 12 months, according to Birinyi Associates. Inflation was running at 3.8% and the Federal Reserve was raising interest rates in an effort to cool off the economy.

Market watchers have noted in recent days that much has changed this time around. Inflation is running at just over 1%. The S&P 500 trades at 17 times earnings, slightly above average but far from 2000 levels. While the S&P gained 30% in 2013, it was up 13% in 2010 and 2012 and little-changed in 2011. Economic growth has been running below 3% and the Fed has been stressing how reluctant it is to raise its target interest rates any time soon.

Even the stocks hit hardest this year aren’t nearly as overvalued as they were in 2000. The S&P 500 biotech index, for example, traded last week at about 29 times component companies’ earnings, which is above its median of 26 but far below the level of 57 at which it traded in 2000. The Morgan Stanley Technology Index trades at 22 times earnings, near its median of 23 and far from the 65 level of March 2000.

Goldman calculates a basket of momentum stocks has dropped 7% from its recent highs. Since 1980, there have been 46 other instances in which momentum stocks suffered similar declines over comparable time frames. Following those selloffs, the S&P 500 averaged about a 5% gain over the following six months, while those momentum names dropped another 4%, on average.

“The S&P 500, but not momentum, will likely recover during the next few months,” Goldman’s Mr. Kostin says.