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Monthly Archives: October 2012

GM Volt Battery Workers Idle, Play Cards, Read Mags, Watch Movies

HOLLAND, Mich. (WOOD) – Workers at LG Chem, a $300 million lithium-ion battery plant heavily funded by taxpayers, tell Target 8 that they have so little work to do that they spend hours playing cards and board games, reading magazines or watching movies.

They say it’s been going on for months.

“There would be up to 40 of us that would just sit in there during the day,” said former LG Chem employee Nicole Merryman, who said she quit in May.

“We were given assignments to go outside and clean; if we weren’t cleaning outside, we were cleaning inside. If there was nothing for us to do, we would study in the cafeteria, or we would sit and play cards, sit and read magazines,” said Merryman. “It’s really sad that all these people are sitting there and doing nothing, and it’s basically on taxpayer money.”

Two current employees told Target 8 that the game-playing continues because, as much as they want to work, they still have nothing to do.

“There’s a whole bunch of people, a whole bunch,” filling their time with card games and board games,” one of those current employees said.

That employee says some workers are doing odd jobs around the building, including cleaning and maintenance, while others hang out in the cafeteria playing video games, Texas hold-’em and Monopoly or doing Sudoku or crossword puzzles — all on company time. The employee said some watch movies.

Read the rest here.

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Documentary: Race 2012

Cheers on your weekend!

Race 2012 is a conversation about race and politics….

Click here for video

[youtube://http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P-Q9D4dcYng&feature=related 450 300]

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Greed is Good, but Derivatives are Better

“The mysteries of complexity for exotic financial instruments disguise the pure simplicity of their shared origin; namely, gambling games where the house always wins. Who exactly is the casino host? Is it the exchange, the brokerage firm or the government regulators? What about the credit rating agencies, the insurance bookie companies like AIG or the too big to fail banksters? Surely, the Federal Reserve, foreign central banks or the infamous Bank of International Settlements, must be the bottom line keeper of the cage.

Each play their role and share or lose according to the screenplay script written for all those speculators. Money is the medium to buy in. Volatility is required to maximize percentages. Risk is predetermined when the wheel of fortune is rigged. The HOUSE never loses in the end when the public is the last resort to cover foolish bets.

Sovereign wealth funds are governments in drag. The chorus line in this elaborate production entertains only the backers of the show. The audience is the butt of jokes as they pay top dollar to enter the arena. Greed keeps the doors open as the barkers create the allure of easy money. What is wrong with this financial model and how long can this play on the great Green Way of Wall Street?

That is where derivatives come to the rescue. Wikipedia says, “a derivative is an agreement or contract that is not based on a real, or true, exchange, i.e.: There is nothing tangible like money, or a product, that is being exchanged.” Roy Daviesrefines the definition accordingly, “Derivatives are financial instruments that have no intrinsic value, but derive their value from something else.” Since the common denominator is that there is no inherent, natural or real value changing hands, any swap of an intangible, but imaginatively designed financial instrument, could qualify in the broadest sense as a derivative. Does this make any sense? Well, only addictive confidence thieves, who masquerade as respectable traders of markets that do not exist in the real world, would see this as the new normal.

Futures and options have a long record of pork belly slaughter that brings home the bacon for the stage-managers of this theater of the absurd. Credit default swaps CDS, collateralized loan obligations CLO, collateralized debt obligation CDO, collateralized mortgage obligations CMO, and collateralized bond obligations CBO are relatively new in comparison. The Commodities Futures Modernization Act of 2000 falls short from meaningful regulation. “There are a set of defined rules that govern stocks, bonds, options and futures. Now that the 2000 Act was in place, the derivatives which encompass: CDSs, CLOs, CDOs and CMOs, do not have to abide by any of the standard guidelines.”

Shifting risk to anybody else is the beauty of these derivative devises. “Anybody else” was AIG, temporally, before the U.S. Treasury was left holding the bag when the game of musical chairs stopped. Hedge funds are in the business of playing a catchy tune and duck for the exit before the melody ends. Naked short selling is immoral at face value, but deceptive derivative instruments give legal cover for outlaw behavior.

Now that the banking collapse has been papered over with mountains of additional debt, just how can these bond obligations be serviced? Sensible questions are no longer significant and are certainly ignored by governments. The answer is obvious, forget about a VAT to make the payments and rule out that growing the economy is the solution. The apparent response needs to be more derivatives . . .”

Full article

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The Real Jobs Numbers: 41% of America Unemployed, 1 in 3 Doesn’t Want Work at All

 

“Even if the US Labor Department has determined that the unemployment level has finally plateaued after months of staggering jobs statistics, the truth behind the numbers isn’t all that nice. Only four out of every 10 adults in the US is employed.

While the percentage of Americans filing jobless benefit claims isn’t what it was during an unemployment epidemic that ravaged the country throughout the majority of US President Barack Obama’s administration, the Labor Department’s numbers are largely inflated on account of how they determine what actually constitutes looking for work.

Officially, the unemployment rate in America for the month of September was only 7.8 per cent, but that statistic stems from only the number of citizens who have been actively searching for a paycheck. In reality, only around 5 per cent of the adult population in the US is unemployed in the eyes of the government, because they have been handing in applications during the four weeks before the Labor Department conducted their research. Additionally, another 3 per cent are interested in work, but haven’t actively engaged in a job hunting during that span, creating an unemployment figure of just under 8 per cent.

The real figures, however, reveal a much scarier statistic.”

Full article

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Existing Home Sales Drop 1.7%, In Line With Expectations

“Existing home sales declined to 4.75 million in September right in line with expectations.

This was down 1.5 percent.

 

But last month’s reading was revised up to 4.83 million and up 8.1 percent.”

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Ship of Fools: QE Infinity Won’t Work, What the Banks are Really Afraid Of

“Keith Fitz-Gerald writes: Dallas Federal Reserve President Richard Fisher recently offered a stunning assessment about our policymaking central bankers down in Washington.

They’re winging it.

In a talk before a Harvard Club audience, Fisher presented a candid assessment about all the levers the Fed has been pulling in the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis. And that includes the recently announced QE3.”

Full article

[youtube://http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6iZ49s7eH5g 450 300]

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A Look at Some Insider Buying: $CYTR, $DVA, $HNSN, $JNS, $ODP, $SONS, $THC, $VSAT

” There are a number of reasons that insiders and large holders sell shares of public companies. There is really only one reason that insiders and large holders buy shares, and that is because they think the stock is undervalued or will rise soon. 24/7 Wall St. tracks insider buying and selling, and here we look at eight companies where insider buying has stood out over the past week or so.”

Full article

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Gapping Up and Down This Morning

Gapping up 

RVBD +10.2%, LSCC +5.4%, NCR +4%, COF +3.5%, RMBS +3.1%, SNDK +2.4%,

OEH +2.3%, FFIV +2%, GOLD +1.3%, HBAN +1.5%,  TKR +1.1%, SE +0.6%,

ISIS +6%, PCS +1.1%, SNDK +6.6%,  CALL +5.1%, NCR +4%,  RHI +2.6%, GOOG +0.7%,

Gapping down 

PXLW -21.3%, MRVL -13.5%, CBLI -13.3%, CMG -10.6%, CCC -5.5%, ETFC -4.5%,

CPNO -4.1%, ACTG -4.1%, FLEX -3.1%, MIG -3%, DB -2.7%, MSFT -2%, PNRA -1.9%,

CS -1.9%, BWLD -1.1%, VVUS -0.6%, GNK -4.5%,  VOC -9.3%, PNRA -1.9%, BWLD -1.1%,

DRI -0.2%, BCS -2.1%, ING -1.4%,

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$GOOG Posts a Surprising Earnings Miss

“Google’s stunning earnings disappointment on Thursday is a dramatic example of what has become Wall Street’s latest worry: revenue is coming in much worse than anyone thought.

Google
Tony Avelar | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Overall this earnings season, third-quarter profits have managed to be a shade better than the doom-and-gloom forecasts.

But company top lines—or the revenue generated that should be driving those bottom-line profit beats—have been even worse this quarter than they were last.

Full report

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$SNE to Pink Slip 10k Employees

OUCH !

“TOKYO (Reuters) – Sony Corp said it will cut staff in its headquarters by a fifth and shutter a factory making camera lenses and mobile phones in Japan, providing new details of a previously announced plan to trim its global headcount by 10,000 by end-March.

In addition to 1,800 at a chemical business it sold to a state-run bank in Japan, Sony will let go roughly another 2,000 people from its head office and plant in Gifu, central Japan, Sony said in a statement on Friday.

Around another 2,000 workers will be trimmed in Europe, half at a joint mobile phone venture with Ericsson it recently ended. The remaining job losses will be at other factories around the world, the company said.

The maker of PlayStation and Bravia TVs expects the job cuts to save about 30 billion yen ($378.6 million) a year, funds the company needs as it struggles to stem losses in televisions and other consumer electronics operations.”

Read more

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$MSFT Sees Profits Fall 22%

Microsoft Corp.’s MSFT -0.32% quarterly earnings dropped 22% amid weak demand for personal computers and slowing growth for its once-strong business software, underscoring the stakes for the company to successfully launch its dramatically overhauled Windows operating system next week.

The software company, whose technology has long been used in most personal computers, has largely stayed on the sidelines as consumer spending shifted to smartphones and tablets. The trend has contributed to slowing sales of PCs, as has anticipation for new hardware that runs the company’s new operating software due out Oct. 26.

Microsoft said revenue for the fiscal period ended Sept. 30 declined 8%. The numbers were weighed down by Microsoft’s practice of putting off recording revenue from the revamped operating software, known as Windows 8, and other new products. Adjusted for those deferrals, revenue in the Windows division fell 9%”

Full article

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$HON Tops Estimates as Profits Rise 10%, Company Expects a ‘Continued Challenging Macro Environment’

 

“(Reuters) – Diversified U.S. manufacturer Honeywell International Inc reported a 10 percent rise inquarterly earnings as declining natural gas prices helped boost profits at its UOP chemical arm, offsetting weakness in Europe.

The maker of aircraft electronics and building control systems said on Friday that third-quarter earnings came to $950 million, or $1.20 per share, compared with $862 million, or $1.10 per share, a year earlier.

The results came in 6 cents per share ahead of the analysts’ average estimate of $1.14, according toThomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

Honeywell tightened its full-year profit forecast to a range of $4.45 to $4.50 per share. Its previous outlook was $4.40 to $4.55, and analysts had expected $4.50.”

Full report

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$MCD Posts Lower Profits Missing Street Estimates, Global Comps Trend Lower for October

Source

“(Reuters) – McDonald’s Corp reported a lower quarterly profit on Friday that missed analysts’ expectations, as the weak global economy and the strong U.S. dollar weighed on results, pushing its shares lower in premarket trading.

The world’s biggest fast-food chain also said that global comparable sales are down so far in October as it feels pressure from the global economy and competitors.

Shares of McDonald’s fell to $90.73 in premarket trading after closing at $92.90 on Thursday.

Income at the world’s biggest fast-food chain fell to $1.46 billion, or $1.43 per share, during the third quarter, from $1.51 billion, or $1.45 per share, a year earlier.

Analysts, on average, had expected McDonald’s to earn $1.47 per share, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

Total sales slipped to $7.15 billion from nearly $7.17 billion.

Global sales at restaurants open at least 13 months rose 1.9 percent during the third quarter, falling just short of the 2 percent gain analysts polled by Consensus Metrix had expected.

(Reporting by Jessica Wohl in Chicago and Lisa Baertlein in Los Angeles; Editing by Gerald E. McCormick)”

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$GE Misses Estimates and Cuts 2013 Growth Estimates Nearly in Half

General Electric Co. (GE) reported third- quarter revenue that trailed analysts’ estimates as the decelerating global economy eroded demand for equipment from medical scanners to jet engines.

Sales totaled $36.3 billion, the company said. While that represented 3 percent growth from a year earlier, it trailed the average analyst estimate of $36.9 billion. Infrastructure orders fell 5 percent as the upcoming expiration of a federal tax credit damped purchases of wind turbines.

GE is facing tougher markets as airlines put off non- essential engine repairs to save cash and European hospitals contend with government austerity programs enacted to blunt the region’s sovereign debt crisis. Chief Executive Officer Jeffrey Immelt is still squeezing higher earnings from industrial businesses, with profit margins in the quarter rising for the first time since 2010.”

Full report

 

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Disappointment Over the EU Debt Crisis Summit Sends the Euro Lower

“The euro declined for a second day against the dollar on speculation this week’s European Union summit in Brussels will fail to provide clarity on potential financial aid for Spain.

The 17-nation currency dropped for the first time in seven days versus the yen after Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy said his nation doesn’t feel under any pressure to ask for a bailout, fueling concern the debt crisis will be prolonged. The yen rose after French President Francois Hollande said leaders at the EU meeting didn’t discuss more assistance for Spain, spurring demand for safer assets. The pound gained against the euro after the U.K. budget deficit narrowed.

“There is some disappointment over the latest EU summit,” said Neil Jones, head of European hedge-fund sales at Mizuho Corporate Bank Ltd. in London. “That’s why the euro is a bit lower. We need some fresh good news to get things going further. It’s not apparent today.”

The euro fell 0.2 percent to $1.3047 at 7:48 a.m. in New York time after dropping 0.4 percent yesterday. The shared currency depreciated 0.3 percent to 103.27 yen. The yen strengthened 0.2 percent to 79.15 per dollar, trimming this week’s decline to 0.9 percent.”

Full article

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EU Leaders Strive to Create a Euro Bank Supervisor by the New Year

“European leaders committed to their goal of establishing a euro-area bank supervisor by year-end, opening the prospect of direct aid to Spain’s banks.

The European Union will seek to agree on a framework that makes the European Central Bank the main supervisor by Jan. 1, according to conclusions released early today after leaders met at a summit in Brussels. The new system, intended to break the link between banks and governments at the root of the region’s financial crisis, will phase in over the next year and could cover all 6,000 euro-area banks by Jan. 1, 2014.”

Full article

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Standard Charter Suggests China’s Growth Data May be Weaker Than Official Posting

China’s third-quarter growth may have been weaker than official data indicate even amid increased signs the economy is stabilizing, according to analysts at Standard Chartered Plc and Capital Economics Ltd.

A slowdown in electricity production and an “unimpressive” reading in a manufacturing survey are reasons September’s pickup in factory output was “a bit difficult to believe,” Standard Chartered said in a note yesterday. Capital Economics said its own analysis indicates the economy expanded about 6.5 percent in the third quarter, below the 7.4 percent year-over-year growth reported by the government yesterday.”

Full article

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Black Gold Posts Weekly Gains on Mid East Tensions and TransCanada Shutting Down Keystone

“Oil headed for a second weekly gain in New York after TransCanada (TRP) Corp. shut its Keystone pipeline for repairs, disrupting crude supplies to the U.S. Midwest.

Futures rose as much as 0.2 percent, extending the longest run in more than a decade of daily price moves of less than 25 cents. Crude pared a decline of as much as 1.6 percent yesterday after TransCanada shut the 590,000 barrel-a-day link for three days, saying it found a “small anomaly” in a section running from Missouri to Illinois. Improving U.S. fuel demand is being met by rising local supplies, a government report this week showed. The latest U.S. growth data were mixed.

“The macro-economic side is not showing big enough figures to pull the market up significantly,” Thina Saltvedt, an analyst at Nordea Bank AB, said by telephone from Oslo. “Any move upwards will be driven by the political risk increasing or further supply disruptions such as the pipeline in the U.S. having to close for three days.”

Crude for November delivery was little changed at $92.09 a barrel, in electronic trading on theNew York Mercantile Exchange at 12:09 p.m. London time. Futures slid 2 cents yesterday to $92.10. Prices are 0.3 percent higher this week and down 6.8 percent this year.

Brent for December settlement was at $112.66 a barrel, up 24 cents, on the London-based ICE Futures Europe exchange. The front-month European benchmark’s premium to the corresponding West Texas Intermediate contract was at $20.56. The gap has narrowed since reaching a one-year high of $23.95 on Oct. 15.”

Full article

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