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	<title>Contrarian Stock Market Investing News - Featuring Bargain Stocks &#187; Debts</title>
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		<title>How to play the dangerous dollar</title>
		<link>http://www.contrarianprofits.com/articles/how-to-play-the-dangerous-dollar/21017</link>
		<comments>http://www.contrarianprofits.com/articles/how-to-play-the-dangerous-dollar/21017#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 12 Nov 2009 14:15:38 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Andrew Snyder</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Notes From the Investment Underground]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Bribe]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[China Currency]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[contrarian]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Currency Markets]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Dangerous Entity]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Debt Problems]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Debts]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Distortions]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[dollar]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Dollar Game]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Exchange Rate Policy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Fiat]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Financial News]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Financial Wellbeing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[gdxj]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Greenback]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Handful]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Hinges]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Manipulation]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[No Doubt]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Oprah]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Uncle Sam]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[<p>Baltimore – (<a href="http://www.todaysfinancial.com" target="_blank">TFN</a>): The dollar is a dangerous entity these days. Never has there been such a globally important currency with as much political and financial manipulation.</p>
<p>The distortions from reality are mind-boggling, yet all of us depend on the status of the simple fiat for our financial wellbeing. </p>
<p>The person with the most skin in the dollar game is, no doubt, President Obama. The nation’s economy hinges on the fate of the greenback and the White House knows it. That is why it is doing anything it can to slow the slide.</p>
<p>Even if it is entirely psychological.</p>
<p>Today, reports are flowing from Washington that show Obama may have plans to use up to $210 billion in TARP money to lower the&#8230;</p>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Baltimore – (<a href="http://www.todaysfinancial.com" target="_blank">TFN</a>): The dollar is a dangerous entity these days. Never has there been such a globally important currency with as much political and financial manipulation.</p>
<p>The distortions from reality are mind-boggling, yet all of us depend on the status of the simple fiat for our financial wellbeing. </p>
<p>The person with the most skin in the dollar game is, no doubt, President Obama. The nation’s economy hinges on the fate of the greenback and the White House knows it. That is why it is doing anything it can to slow the slide.</p>
<p>Even if it is entirely psychological.</p>
<p>Today, reports are flowing from Washington that show Obama may have plans to use up to $210 billion in TARP money to lower the nation’s ever-increasing deficit.</p>
<p>It is creative accounting at best and a $210 billion bribe at worst.</p>
<p>While the average Oprah-watching, Crocs-wearing American won’t take a second out of their do-nothing day to read below the feel-good headline, there is a handful of us that are actually paying attention.</p>
<p>With this idea of “paying down our debts,” it is vital to remember the Treasury didn’t pull the $700 billion in TARP funds out of some cavernous account.</p>
<p>We borrowed that cash. And now Obama wants to use the borrowed money to pay back our debts, minus a year’s worth of interest of course. It’s like taking out a loan to pay off your mortgage.</p>
<p>The timing of these rumors is more than suspicious.</p>
<p>Just yesterday, China slapped the currency markets in the rear by once again raising the notion of dumping the dollar and making a sudden change in its exchange-rate policy.</p>
<p>Ironically enough, less than 24 hours later, Obama has a $210 billion check in his hand ready to “repay” our debt.</p>
<p>It is money from one hand, around the back, and into the other.</p>
<p>But it gets better.</p>
<p>Obama is not the only one trying to mask Uncle Sam’s debt problems. Just about every exporting country in the world is desperate to keep the dollar strong.</p>
<p>They have to. Their economies depend on it.</p>
<p>Rumor has it countries like Russia and South Korea have been buying dollars on the open market over the past few weeks, in an effort to keep the greenback’s slide from gaining even more momentum.</p>
<p>The governments would rather risk devaluing their reserves than allow their economies to suffer from the effects of a weak dollar.</p>
<p>Looking forward, the question is how long can the manipulation last? How long can the dollar remain artificially inflated? And how long until the markets naturally take care of the situation?</p>
<p>While we may not know the exact answer to any of those questions, it does not take an economics scholar to realize the outcome will be horrific, at least for those of us with dollars in our pockets.</p>
<p>*** The solution? Buy gold. According to the top dog at Canada’s behemoth gold miner, Barrick, we have every reason to believe we surpassed “peak gold.”</p>
<p>That means all the easy gold has already been stripped from the ground and supplies are only going to shrink from here.</p>
<p>According to the CEO, Aaron Regent, global gold production peaked in 2000 and is expected to continue declining into the foreseeable future. So far, mine production is down by nearly 10%.</p>
<p>The news of increasing supply constraints comes at a time when demand is already surging. For those of you that were under the bleachers during Econ 101, it means prices will continue to rise.</p>
<p>There has been a lot of discussion about a sudden collapse in gold prices as many investors believe the current boom is merely a fear-induced bubble. Two or three months ago, I would have bought the story. But not now.</p>
<p>The dollar is simply too weak and foreign reserves are accumulating gold too quickly for prices to fall sharply.</p>
<p>China’s immense buying alone is enough to limit near-term fallout. The country has already doubled its gold reserves and Beijing continues to be a major buyer.</p>
<p>Just one more reason for bulls to send prices higher.</p>
<p>*** Just so you can’t say I don’t let you in on anything for free, I’m going to toss a freebie your way.</p>
<p>With gold prices reaching into record territory, it is a perfect week for Van Eck to release its <strong>Market Vectors Junior Gold Miners ETF (NYSE:<a href="http://www.google.com/finance?q=gdxj" target="_blank">GDXJ</a>)</strong>. The freshly created fund gives investors a stake in 38 small- to mid-sized gold miners.</p>
<p>For investors looking for a simple way to take advantage of the gold bull with some additional leverage, this is the ETF to do it.</p>
<p>Thanks to the speculative nature of junior miners, expect shares to beat the market when gold prices are surging and underperform when the bears return. For now, there is plenty of upside potential.</p>
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		<title>Grand Larceny on a Super-Madoff Scale</title>
		<link>http://www.contrarianprofits.com/articles/grand-larceny-on-a-super-madoff-scale/18280</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 24 Jun 2009 15:00:32 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Bill Bonner</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Politics & Economics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Bill Bonner]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Debts]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Feds]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Financial Crisis]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Grand Larceny]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[UK politics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[US politics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Warren Buffett]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[<p>This is the age where politicians get their chance to run up huge debts.  “Politics is about what works,” said Hillary Clinton. At least, we think it was Hillary Clinton. Someone said it. Someone who is an imbecile.</p>
<p>Politics is not about what works, it’s about what you can get away with. And what you can get away with is often exactly what doesn’t work at all.</p>
<p>Our beat is money, here at the <a href="http://www.dailyreckoning.com"  class="alinks_links">Daily Reckoning</a>. We specialize in fraud and folderol. We leave the homicide beat to someone else.</p>
<p>What the US is getting away with, from a financial point of view, in addition to counterfeiting, is very grand larceny on a Super-Madoff scale. It is borrowing trillions of dollars even though&#8230;</p>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>This is the age where politicians get their chance to run up huge debts.  “Politics is about what works,” said Hillary Clinton. At least, we think it was Hillary Clinton. Someone said it. Someone who is an imbecile.</p>
<p>Politics is not about what works, it’s about what you can get away with. And what you can get away with is often exactly what doesn’t work at all.</p>
<p>Our beat is money, here at the <a href="http://www.dailyreckoning.com"  class="alinks_links">Daily Reckoning</a>. We specialize in fraud and folderol. We leave the homicide beat to someone else.</p>
<p>What the US is getting away with, from a financial point of view, in addition to counterfeiting, is very grand larceny on a Super-Madoff scale. It is borrowing trillions of dollars even though it has no way to honestly pay back the money.</p>
<p>Still, so eager are the lenders to part with their money that <strong>the yield on the 10-year T-note fell yesterday to 3.64%</strong>. The more the feds borrow, apparently, the more lenders are willing to lend.</p>
<p>We’re in the Third and Fatal stage of a great country – the political stage. In this stage, money and power migrate from the financial community to the political community. The politicians get away with taking trillions out of the productive economy and spending them on their pet projects and private corruptions.</p>
<p>Warren Buffett described the America of the Bubble years as “Squanderville.” Private citizens were living beyond their means, he pointed out. But he hadn’t seen nothin’. Now, the squandering is done by government. The politicians are spending trillions they don’t have on projects nobody was willing to pay for even when they had some money in their pockets.</p>
<p>What the government can get away with now – under cover of a financial crisis – is a big grab for money and power. It ‘works’ in the sense the feds are able to get away with it. But it will prove fatal to the dollar&#8230; and to the US economy.</p>
<p>We will return to that subject below&#8230;</p>
<p>Back in the markets, the Dow fell modestly yesterday, down 16 points. Oil clung to the $69 level. Gold was up $3 to $924. And the dollar saw its biggest drop in weeks as speculators waited for word from the Fed on its next move.</p>
<p>The Fed is expected to talk about an “exit strategy.” It is intervening in markets as no Fed ever has. Its balance sheet – a measure of how much intervention it has done – has shot up in a way that is not only unprecedented, but almost unbelievable. In an effort to provide liquidity, it has bought up the contents of every neglected refrigerator on Wall Street. The smelly, furry stuff – “toxic” derivatives&#8230; SIVs&#8230; MBAs&#8230; no one seems to know exactly what it is – enters the Fed’s books as an asset. Altogether, along with its not-so-pungent holdings of US Treasury bonds, the Fed’s balance sheet shows more than $2.7 trillion worth of assets.</p>
<p>What happens next?</p>
<p>We don’t know. But it is far too early to worry about it. The Fed is in no position to head for the exit. It will have to stay on this road for much, much longer.</p>
<p>Why? Because the “green shoots” are shrivelling up. There is no real economic revival. And there can’t be one until the underlying problems are corrected.</p>
<p>One of the big problems is too much capacity. We mentioned it yesterday. During the Bubble Epoque the squanderers would buy anything. So, you could make an almost unlimited amount of money by providing them with things to buy. This meant building factories&#8230; buying trucks&#8230; and renting retail space. Now, however, the squanderers have come to their senses. They want to save their money. So, no need for so much retail space in the malls, so many trucks on the highways or so many factories in China.</p>
<p>America’s middle class has rediscovered thrift.</p>
<p>There are a number of sit-down restaurant chains that cater to the middle class – Applebee’s&#8230; Chili’s&#8230; Ruby Tuesday and a few others. They expanded greatly during the ‘90s and ‘00s in order to meet the desires of the big spending masses. But now that the masses aren’t so free and easy with their money, New York Times reports that they are in desperate competition for remaining diners. This competition is manifesting itself as price deflation.</p>
<p>Applebee’s offers dinner for two for only $20. Chili’s advertises entrees (the main course in America) for just $7. Ruby Tuesday’s is going for a 2-for-1 deal. Buy one meal, get one free. All of them are making heavy use of discount coupons.</p>
<p><strong>Oversupply is producing deflation</strong>. Prices are falling as suppliers fight for demand by offering more for less. And over at the Red Roof&#8230; the roof has already caved in as the chain has defaulted on its mortgage debt.</p>
<p>This is what you’d expect at the end of a long period of credit expansion. EZ credit brought forth too much demand and too much supply. Now, the demand is disappearing&#8230; and the suppliers struggle to hold on.</p>
<p>This is natural, normal and perhaps necessary to a market economy. And it will take years to sort out. Roofs have to fall in on thousands of enterprises, speculators and households. Then, the rebuilding can begin.</p>
<p>But the Bernanke Fed is not about to let nature take her course. The Fed is on the road to ruin&#8230; and it’s not about to “exit” yet. Deflation is still enemy number one. Don’t expect any tightening from the Fed anytime soon, dear reader&#8230; it is far too soon for that.</p>
<p>*** More news from Manraaj Singh on why “captains of industry” are furiously selling out of shares in the companies they run.</p>
<p>“Insiders are selling-out. Investors have increasingly reached the point where they been questioning the sustainability of the rally.</p>
<p>“The signs of a coming sell-off have been rising sharply recently. Share valuations in both emerging and developed markets have reached unsustainable levels. And another key indicator of a coming market correction has been the scale of insider selling within the big US companies. This is a measure of whether the top managers of publicly-listed companies have been buying or selling shares in the companies that they run. And the data has not been good.</p>
<p>“So far this month, company insiders in the US have sold 22 times more shares than they have bought. In other words, the majority of people who run listed companies in the US just don’t consider their own companies worth investing in right now. The data for June, up to now, shows that insiders of S&amp;P 500 listed companies have sold $2.6 billion in shares, compared with just $120 million in purchases.</p>
<p>“This is a very important clue as to where markets are heading. Because the last time there were more U.S. corporations with executives reducing their share holdings than adding to them was during the week that ended 19th June 2007. Global stock markets went into meltdown shortly after that. I expect to see the same thing happen over the next couple of weeks.</p>
<p>“Right now, the chaps with ring-side seats of the US economy see plenty more pain head. And as the US economy goes, so goes the world economy&#8230; ”</p>
<p><strong>Editor’s note:</strong> Manraaj Singh believes the sell-off is a good thing for long-term investors. The sharper the falls, the cheaper the price at which we can get into the investments that we want. Manraaj is Chief investment strategist of Profit Hunter, which looks to profit from special situations around the world. To learn more about his service and discover his latest investment recommendation, <a href="http://www.fsponline-recommends.co.uk/legalblackmail?WPLTK606" target="_blank">click here</a>.</p>
<p>And more thoughts&#8230; .</p>
<p>*** Governments are essentially parasites on productive activity. So the best governments are the smallest – meaning, the least parasitic. “The government with governs best governs least,” is how Jefferson put it.</p>
<p>But now we are in the third and fatal stage of a great country – the political stage. In this stage, the parasites take over. Government governs a lot. And governing a lot costs a lot of money. In England, the government budget is bumping up against half the total GDP of the nation. In America, health care is still largely a private matter, so the government spends a smaller percentage of GDP&#8230; but it is a percentage that is rising quickly.</p>
<p>Where will the money come from? Taxes. Gordon Brown has already put the income tax rate up to 50%. Michael Caine, an English actor who moved to California to escape the high taxes of the ‘70s, says he will tolerate 50%&#8230; but not a penny more.</p>
<p>“If it goes to 51% I will be back in America,” he says.</p>
<p>Ahem… he might have to try somewhere else. Everybody’s gunning for the rich – in America as well as England. Obama has pledged to raise taxes on the rich. The states, notably California, are desperate for more revenue too. Add federal, state and local levies&#8230; and private health care costs&#8230; and you could easily be over the 50% bracket in America too.</p>
<p>But when you rob the productive Peters to pay the parasite Pauls two things happen. The Peters get their backs up. And you’ve soon cleaned them out anyway.</p>
<p>So, governments need to find other sources of financial support. Typically, they borrow money.</p>
<p>The history of European monarchies is largely a history of debt. Kings and queens squeezed what they could out of the turnips. Then they turned to the moneylenders. These lenders had to be careful. They were happy to extend monarchs credit, because in this way they gained a measure of control over them. But there were many dangers.</p>
<p>Kings lost their heads&#8230; or went broke. Or, often, the monarchs could turn the tables on the moneylenders&#8230; and have their heads cut off. Reading the history of the loans to the French crown it is eye-opening. It is amazing anyone wanted to lend at all. The risks were great; the rewards were few. Rarely were the loans settled honorably.</p>
<p>What you come to see is that lending to the government – which always has the power to betray the loan and behead the lender – is merely another form of taxation. Government raises money. Sometimes it repays the loan with revenues from other taxes. Sometimes, it is the lender who pays the tax himself – either because the government defaults&#8230; or because inflation reduces the value of his money.</p>
<p>This week&#8230; indeed, this year&#8230; lenders are turning over massive amounts of money to the US government. There is so much demand for US paper that the yield on the 10-year note fell yesterday to 3.64% – despite the huge new supply of T-notes coming on the market. It is breathtaking to watch. But it is a story that will end badly. We predict that lenders will end up like the financiers who lent to Louis XIV and later regretted that they ever met the man.</p>
<p>“Every loan always diminishes the free revenue and necessitates, at the end of a certain time, either bankruptcy or the increase of taxes,” explained Turgot to a later Louis. “In times of peace it is permissible to borrow only in order to liquidate old debts, or in order to redeem other loans contracted on less advanta¬geous terms.”</p>
<p>Any borrowing in excess of that puts you on the road to ruin, Turgot went on to explain.</p>
<p>More on Turgot – a man sadly neglected by historians – in upcoming reckonings.</p>
<p>Source:  <strong><a href="http://www.dailyreckoning.co.uk/economic-forecasts/politicians-profit-economic-condition-99466.html">Grand Larceny on a Super-Madoff Scale</a></strong></p>
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		<title>How Wall Street Manufactures Financial Services Products</title>
		<link>http://www.contrarianprofits.com/articles/how-wall-street-manufactures-financial-services-products/11358</link>
		<comments>http://www.contrarianprofits.com/articles/how-wall-street-manufactures-financial-services-products/11358#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 13 Jan 2009 16:15:14 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Shah Gilani</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Financial News]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Debts]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Interest Rate Mortgages]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Shah Gilani]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Subprime Mortgages]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Wall Street]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[<p>Wall Street bankers create products like any other manufacturer seeking to sell goods or services for a profit. The products those bankers create are financial instruments and the services they sell include advisory services, which they provide to investors and use to sell their financial products. And being the shrewd businessmen and women they are, Wall Street’s bankers also make a habit of being both buyers and sellers of their own products. All the better to serve their customers who wish to trade their products.</p>
<p>The uniqueness of Wall Street’s products is that simply by buying any of their products, purchasers own an opportunity to make money. If bankers can manufacture products that have greater moneymaking potential, it stands to reason&#8230;</p>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Wall Street bankers create products like any other manufacturer seeking to sell goods or services for a profit. The products those bankers create are financial instruments and the services they sell include advisory services, which they provide to investors and use to sell their financial products. And being the shrewd businessmen and women they are, Wall Street’s bankers also make a habit of being both buyers and sellers of their own products. All the better to serve their customers who wish to trade their products.</p>
<p>The uniqueness of Wall Street’s products is that simply by buying any of their products, purchasers own an opportunity to make money. If bankers can manufacture products that have greater moneymaking potential, it stands to reason that they can sell them for a greater profit. And like in any other business, the more products and services bankers sell with higher profit margins, the more they make.</p>
<p>The ingenuity of Wall Street is on full display when it comes to packaging products that incorporate mortgages. Banks assemble large numbers of individual mortgages into pools and sell pieces of those pools as securities.</p>
<p>The buyer of one of these securities owns a piece of the cash flow that comes into the pool every month when the actual mortgage holders send in their monthly payments. In order to manufacture higher-margin mortgage-related products, bankers amassed pools of subprime mortgages, where the underlying mortgages were debts of less than high quality but where the borrowers were willing to pay higher interest to qualify for that mortgage.</p>
<p>The underlying higher-interest-rate mortgages in the new pools meant that the subprime-mortgage-backed securities would pay investors a greater return, so Wall Street charged more for these products. And, in an effort to further boost the yields on these subprime-mortgage-backed securities, bankers “structured” pools into “collateralized mortgage obligations.”</p>
<p>Structuring is a method by which the cash flow from a particular pool of mortgages does not simply “pass through” to the investors, but is actually re-routed to different investors who pay a higher price for a preferred directed cash flow. Again, the ingenuity of these products is that they offer different potential earnings opportunities for the purchasers, and have higher profit margins for the bankers who manufacture, sell and trade them.</p>
<p><a class="titleref" rel="bookmark" href="http://www.moneymorning.com/2009/01/13/how-wall-street-manufactures-financial-services-products/">Source: How Wall Street Manufactures Financial Services Products</a></p>
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		<title>Give Me Inflation or Give Me Death</title>
		<link>http://www.contrarianprofits.com/articles/give-me-inflation-or-give-me-death/1694</link>
		<comments>http://www.contrarianprofits.com/articles/give-me-inflation-or-give-me-death/1694#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 30 Apr 2008 14:57:54 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Russell McDougal</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Politics & Economics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Central Banks]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Debt Money]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Debts]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[deflation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Federal Reserve]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[fiat money]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[inflation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Monetary System]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[<p> Inflate or Die! The Federal Reserve has been on the US scenes since 1913. Not even Biblical plagues lasted 95 years. The ultimate effects aren’t much different. The Fed may or may not make it to a centennial commiseration. They are on the ropes.</p>
<p>It is beyond comical to watch all the various pundits applaud the Fed’s action as they piece together bailouts and desperately cheap money. Those who cheer them are nothing more than apologists for a crooked and predatory monetary system. Maybe it would be wise to look deeply and understand that this <a href="http://www.investorsdailyedge.com/archive/html/11-28-06-Tue-IDEweb.html" target="_blank">“ultimate private  franchise”</a>  is the root cause of the problems they are getting credit for  patching up??</p>
<p>The elitist  international bankers who own the Fed are <strong>inflators </strong>by&#8230;</p>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p> Inflate or Die! The Federal Reserve has been on the US scenes since 1913. Not even Biblical plagues lasted 95 years. The ultimate effects aren’t much different. The Fed may or may not make it to a centennial commiseration. They are on the ropes.</p>
<p>It is beyond comical to watch all the various pundits applaud the Fed’s action as they piece together bailouts and desperately cheap money. Those who cheer them are nothing more than apologists for a crooked and predatory monetary system. Maybe it would be wise to look deeply and understand that this <a href="http://www.investorsdailyedge.com/archive/html/11-28-06-Tue-IDEweb.html" target="_blank">“ultimate private  franchise”</a>  is the root cause of the problems they are getting credit for  patching up??</p>
<p>The elitist  international bankers who own the Fed are <strong>inflators </strong>by charter. They are  licensed by Congress to supply what we use as money. Here’s their historic  report card:</p>
<p>                              <wbr></wbr>      <img src="http://www.investorsdailyedge.com/Issues/Charts/April%202008/04-30-08-Wed-IDE_clip_image002_0000.jpg" height="194" width="215" /></p>
<p>One of the Fed’s  mandates is “stable prices”. A shrinking and shrinking dollar won’t get that  job done. That looks like an <strong>F </strong>from this angle, even if you grade on the  curve. </p>
<p>Pretty clever of  them for sure. How exactly did they accomplish such an extraordinary feat?</p>
<p>                              <wbr></wbr>        <img src="http://www.investorsdailyedge.com/Issues/Charts/April%202008/04-30-08-Wed-IDE_clip_image004.jpg" height="204" width="222" /></p>
<p>Yep, they issued unfathomable <strong>debt. </strong>This pleases the politicians. Well connected cronies are thrilled. Individual recipients of the funny money are certainly pleased. Too bad our future generations have to pay these debts. Or do they?</p>
<p>Both of these above  charts are from <a href="http://www.zimbio.com/Federal+Reserve+Chairman/articles/11/Dollar+Ain+t+Worth+Plug+Nickel" target="_blank">“Your US Dollar Ain’t Worth a plug Nickel”</a>.  I’m not quite old enough to know what a ‘plug nickel’ is but the illustration  gives a strong hint.</p>
<p>The more debt  (money) these central planners issue the <a href="http://www.investorsdailyedge.com/archive/html/04-02-08-Wed-IDEweb.html" target="_blank">more they cream off the top</a>. Debt is to the non-Federal non-Reserve as chicken is to KFC. One franchise is just an order of magnitude, more elite than the other.</p>
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<p align="center"><strong>INTERNAL                      ENDORSEMENT</strong></p>
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<p align="center"><strong>Imagine if There Were Only 6   Numbers to </strong><br />
<strong>Choose from When Buying   a Lottery Ticket!</strong></p>
<p align="center">Wouldn’t that be great?! Of course, the less the number of choices, the more likely your chance of success, right? How many choices are there when buying and selling shares? Errmm… a LOT!</p>
<p align="center">Hundreds…One of the reasons I enjoy such consistent success from trading, is because I only have 6 options to choose from! Except this is even better in a way, because the lottery is pure luck…</p>
<p align="center"><a href="http://web-purchases.com/700SFRX/E700J402/" target="_blank">I   only have 6 choices AND have a VERY good idea about which choice to make because   of the insider signal</a></p>
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<p>Would you like to  see an example of what happens when <a href="http://www.boj.or.jp/en/type/press/koen/ko0210a.htm" target="_blank">inflation fails</a>?</p>
<p>                   <img src="http://www.investorsdailyedge.com/Issues/Charts/April%202008/04-30-08-Wed-IDE_clip_image002.jpg" height="402" width="565" /></p>
<p>This is an example of a decade of falling real estate and stock prices from Japanese history. It is a clear cut demonstration of the ravages of <strong>deflation. </strong>Central  bankers have nightmares about such scenarios. This is what happens when fiat  money freezes up.</p>
<p>Japanese banks didn’t stop making money available. They were practically giving it away with itty bitty interest rates (under one percent). They tried and tried to “stimulate” their economy. Nothing worked. The populace refused to borrow and spend.</p>
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