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Prepare for Economic War; As If We did Not Already Have Enough

“The international branches of the Federal Reserve Central Bank have recently had liens issued against them.

Those banks are the European central banks; BIS, Germany, France, Netherlands, Belgium, Italy and Japan.

The liens against the central banks were done so under Admiralty Law.

Admiralty Law or the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) is the Law of the Sea treaty that was agreed upon after 1982. This law defines the rights and responsibilities of nations in their use of the world’s oceans, establishing guidelines for businesses, the environment, and the management of marine natural resources.

These liens constitute legal arrest warrants against the central bankers as conspirators against the global financial markets with intent to usurp control over the global monetary system.”

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Get Out Your Vomit Bags; The EU Will Play Hardball With Greece

Earlier we wrote up a note from BNP Paribas discussing the dramatic economic collapse that would happen in Greece (on top of what’s happened already!) were Greece to quit the Euro.

But before Greece gets to that state, something else has to happen first: basically, the mother of all games of Chicken.
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How Bad is the Red Rain in Spain?

Spain is said to be underestimating the problems in their banking system. The recent requirement to set aside funds is only good for half the losses that could be realized. Will they go the way of Ireland ? Find out more in this descriptive article.

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The Growing Cult of Amazon Prime: Will it Make the Company, or Sink it?

via Jeff Bailey at ycharts.com

love free shipping as much as the next person, and also find the level of service at Amazon to be fabulous, so I read with great interest Jason Calacanis’ latest post on the Launch blog, “The Cult of Amazon Prime.”

“There are two types of people in the world: those with Amazon (AMZN) Prime and those without,” Calacanis begins. He has it and loves it, estimating it saves him 250 hours a year by keeping him out of stores and also lets him avoid “the most horrifying experience of all: retail employees.” He adds: “One of the greatest joys of the cult membership is never again having to deal with an apathetic teenager or bitter baby boomer forced to work retail.”

READ THE REST HERE 

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Carly Fiorina’s Open Letter to Mark Zuckerberg: $FB

Dear Mark,

Congratulations!

Through vision, grit, persistence and brilliance, you are about to launch the largest IPO in American history.

You have understood our needs and desires for connection and communication better than we understood them ourselves.

You have gathered a great management team around you, hired the brightest and most motivated employees, and maneuvered through a competitive landscape that is unprecedented in its complexity and pace of change. You are a great entrepreneur who will now define and personify our ideal of American innovation. You have made history and changed history, not just on Wall Street but on streets around the world. You have altered everything from teenagers’ social lives to tyrants political calculations.

None of us can imagine what it feels like to be you, which is one reason the cameras are ever-present and there will be more books and movies.

However, some of us can imagine the transition Facebook must now go through as the company rushes, with huge fanfare, headlong into the world of publicly traded stocks. (In 1995, I helped lead what was then the largest-ever IPO, spinning out Lucent Technologies from AT&T On the day of our New York roadshow, the WSJ headline read: “It’s The Rolling Stones, it’s Barbra Streisand, no it’s the Lucent roadshow”.)

Whatever the ultimate valuation of Facebook, it will be one of the most sought-after equities in the world.

It is in that spirit that I humbly offer three tips:

1) Do not change your focus on the creation of long-term value or deviate from your strategic ambitions.

While this may seem simple and obvious, it will become increasingly difficult. The majority of investors now hold stock for an average of four months. Most money-managers are rated annually on their performance against benchmark indices. While you are focused on the longer-term, those who buy your stock are focused on the shorter-term. And because your stock has received so much hype, these short-term investors will be very impatient. While you, your team and your Board know that their impatience cannot drive company strategy, their pressure will be real.

Do not establish the precedent of providing quarterly earnings guidance. While you must of course protect competitively sensitive information, communicate as proactively and transparently as possible about your strategic goals and operational performance metrics as well as how you track your own progress and performance against both.

2) Whatever the ultimate valuation of Facebook, it will be one of the most sought after equities in the world.

A lot of people are now counting on your performance. Beyond risk-tolerant venture capitalists, risk-averse pension funds and 401ks will now own your stock. Expect a lot more questions about how you make decisions.

Many of these questions will be driven by current headlines and conventional wisdom, but they are nevertheless legitimate. Your new owners want to understand how you lead and how you evaluate choices.

Answering them will encourage longer-term holdings.

3) Be patient.

No one knows more about Facebook, or has more riding on its performance, than you. That won’t stop what will quickly seem to be endless commentary, scrutiny, suggestions, questions and sometimes, criticisms. Some of it will be thoughtful, some ignorant, some well-intended and some malicious. Be open to what makes sense and try to ignore the rest.

You have come very far, very fast and the sky is still the limit.

You represent all that is right about our economy, our markets, our nation. In the midst of all the pressure and expectations, hold onto who you are and what you do best. We are all rooting for you.

Carly Fiorina

source: CNBC

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European Markets Remain Strong Into the Closing Bell

Into the close of European markets the indices seem to be sticking their gains.

Indices watch

European markets were happy to hear that attempts are being made to form a coalition government in Greece; but the main topic of concern was Spain. Spanish authorities nationalized  the 4th largest bank sending the Spanish stock market up 3%.

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Bernanke Makes Positive comments on Lending and Banking in General

“Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said that many businesses and consumers are finding it easier to borrow as banks shore up their balance sheets.

Getty Images
Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke.

Speaking by teleconference from Washington, he noted that the capital and liquidity positions of banks have been strengthened but he also said home mortgage lending continues to be very tight.

Bernanke said home mortgage credit outstanding with banks has contracted about 13 percent from its peak.

In response to criticism that regulators have made it difficult to lend, Bernanke said the Fed is taking a “balanced approach” in supervising banks.”

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Ron Paul: Central Bankers Are Intellectually Bankrupt

“The financial crisis has fully exposed the intellectual bankruptcy of the world’s central bankers.

Why? Central bankers neglect the fact that interest rates are prices. Manipulating those prices through credit expansion or contraction has real and deleterious effects on the economy. Yet while socialism and centralised economic planning have largely been rejected by free-market economists, the myth persists that central banks are a necessary component of market economies.

These economists understand that having wages or commodity prices established by government fiat would cause shortages, misallocations of capital and hardship. Yet they accept at face value the notion that central banks must determine not only the supply of one particular commodity – money – but also the cost of that commodity via the setting of interest rates…”

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Should You Get a Piece of Facebook ? How Should You Should Go About Tt ?

SWARTHMORE, Penn. (MarketWatch) — In a very modern version of ancient Rome’s bread-and-circuses formula, Facebook is staging its roadshow for major institutional investors this week.

The company will toss some bits to the masses — or, at least, to the individual investors among the masses who want to get in on its initial public offering when it hits the market next week.

However, it won’t be easy picking up those crumbs. Companies going public routinely distribute most of their available shares to the big-bank underwriters, who resell most of them to their biggest institutional clients. According to the New York Times, when the Facebook IPO launches on May 17 “as much as” 20% to 25% of the 337 million available shares will be distributed through brokerage firms that cater to individual investors. The usual cut to retailers is about 15%.”

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