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To: Crimson Ghost who wrote (62157)1/17/2007 5:29:08 PM
From: regli   of 115618
 
SABRE-RATTLING IN ANKARA
Turkey Concerned as Kurds Take Control of Northern Iraq

spiegel.de 

January 17, 2007

By Annette Grossbongardt in Istanbul

Ankara is thinking aloud about a possible military intervention in northern Iraq. As the Kurdish population consolidates its hold on oil-rich Kirkuk, the Turkish government worries about increased sectarian violence among the separatist PKK.

The confidential report on strategic threats to the Turkish nation issued by Turkey's National Intelligence Service (MIT) bore a simple title: "Iraq, Terror, Kirkuk and the PKK." Copies of the explosive document were already lying on the desks of the Turkish president and of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan before the beginning of the new year.

And it is explicit about the threats facing Turkey -- especially the one posed by Iraq. Kurdish PKK militias have withdrawn to the northern part of Turkey's neighbor to the south, and the region's Kurdish population already enjoys far-reaching autonomy. Were Iraq to break apart, Ankara would suddenly be faced with a Kurdish state as a neighbor, a situation, the report makes clear, which could incite Kurdish separatists in south-eastern Turkey to continue their fight for independence.

Kurds are already attempting to alter the demography of the oil-rich northern Iraqi city of Kirkuk in their favor, the document warns. Some 600,000 Kurds have already been drawn into the multi-ethnic city, many of them returnees after former Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein followed a policy of increasing the city's Arab population. Some Kurds have even been lured back with cash -- while at the same time some 200,000 members of the Turkmen minority have been driven out, according to the confidential report. Come referendum time -- when Kirkuk residents will be asked to vote on whether the city should become part of the autonomous Kurdish region in Iraq -- the increase in Kurdish residents is meant to ensure a favorable result.

A Turkish military intervention in Iraq ?

Turkey, the report says, cannot afford to remain passive in the face of such developments, a point of view Erdogan emphasized in Ankara on Tuesday. "Turkey will not remain a silent observer of developments in Iraq and will not remain indifferent to developments in Kirkuk," he said.

The Turkish government has called for the referendum in Kirkuk to be postponed -- a position that reflects a recommendation of the Iraq Study Group, which provided a non-partisan analysis of the situation in Iraq for the US government in early December.

Even a military intervention could not be excluded as "one option" an Erdogan advisor told DER SPIEGEL. "The territorial integrity of Iraq has to be preserved. A civil war in Kirkuk must be prevented," he said.

But the advisor also said the bases the separatist Kurdish Workers Party (PKK) has set up in northern Iraq remain Ankara's greatest worry. The number of Turkish troops around the Iraqi border has already been increased, Turkish newspaper Zaman reported. Even the political opposition in Ankara has said it would support a parliamentary resolution to send Turkish troops into northern Iraq.

Deniz Baykal, the leader of CHP, the largest opposition party in Ankara, is interested in attracting popular attention ahead of presidential elections in May and general elections in November. He has effectively urged the Turkish government to prepare a military intervention in Iraq. "We are ready to back the government (on intervention)," he said over the weekend. "We're planning to invite parliament to debate this."

Alarmed, the US government in Washington had its ambassador in Iraq, Zalmay Khalizad, warn the Turkish government against interfering in Iraqi affairs.

Increasing the pressure on Washington

Despite the rhetoric, it is hard to imagine Turkey risking a major confrontation with its close ally the US. Such a move would also risk spreading the conflict to the entire region and bogging Turkey down in the increasingly violent Iraq quagmire. The fallout would be difficult, if not impossible, to control.

But things are far from having developed that far. Ankara's threats are intended first and foremost to up the pressure on Washington. Turkey already feels its overseas ally has let it down when it comes to fighting the PKK. Now it wants the United States to at least make sure the Kurdish leaders in northern Iraq keep their hands off Kirkuk. "We have to make it clear to the Iraqi Kurds that they mustn't go too far with their demands," one Turkish diplomat said.

Turkey is especially sensitive when it comes to Kirkuk: The city, whose oilfields are among the richest in the world, was once part of the Ottoman Empire. The prospect of it becoming the capital of a wealthy Kurdish state is a nightmare for Turkey. An oil pipeline connects Kirkuk to the Turkish port of Ceyhan on the Mediterranean coast. But oil delivery has been interrupted repeatedly since the war in Iraq. Turkey also feels obliged to use its political power to protect the Turkmen minority living in Kirkuk, a population ethnically related to the population of Turkey.

Let down by the United States

But sending troops into Kirkuk would be highly risky for a Turkey which is primarily interested in peace and stability in the region. A military intervention against the leaders of the PKK -- which both the US and the European Union classify as a terrorist organization -- who are hiding in the mountains of northern Iraq seem like a more probable development. It is from there that the PKK organize attacks on Turkey -- and where they acquire weapons before smuggling them across the border.

Turkey has kept quiet for years, repeatedly pacified by promises from Washington. Now Ankara is making it clear its patience is running out. Ankara, for example, recently received classified information that the two PKK leaders most wanted by Ankara, Murat Karayilan and Cemil Bayik, were on their way for a health check-up at a hospital in northern Iraq. The government was enraged to find it had no means of arresting them.

Ankara felt it had been let down again by its American friends. At the party meeting, Erdogan said he expected "solid results" from the United States showing that Washington shares Ankara's concern about the PKK and is willing to lend its support just as Ankara supported Washington after the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks.

The Turkish government is concerned about a possible new wave of PKK attacks in the spring. But Ankara ignored a cease-fire offered by the organization last year, stating blandly at the time that the offer was not to be taken seriously. Now, Erdogan seems to be making up for having previously neglected to formulate a comprehensive strategy to deal with the PKK.

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From: Mike Johnston1/17/2007 5:29:45 PM
1 Recommendation   of 115618
 
Good piece on inflation from Barry Ritholtz:



With PPI out today, and CPI out tomorrow, inflation will be on Trader's minds. Now is as good a time as any to update our thinking on Inflation.

Its been quite a while since we last railed against the absurdity of inflation ex-inflation -- the reporting of only items that don't go up in price to determine price increases. Given the Bank of England's surprise rate hike last week, we thought today was as good a day as any to update this issue.

For those of you relatively new to the Big Picture, here's our story so far: When the Fed slashed rates to half century lows, they jump started a flatlined economy. First, we reflated, then we inflated. With the cost of capital (i.e., borrowing money) so cheap, demand for anything dollar denominated lifted off. This sent prices for oil, gold, real estate, industrial metals, etc. skyrocketing.

Politicians hate to make it appear that growth is merely price increases, so the US government has an inherent bias in its data reporting -- Inflation is understated and Growth is overstated. Nothing so corrupt as the data being fudged; rather, the tilt of BLS and Commerce Dept is to be "growth friendly and inflation hostile." Given how massive the COLA payments based on BLS CPI are, its almost understandable.

All economic models in their attempt to depict reality have a slant, and our official models massage the data: They seasonally adjust them, account for hedonic improvements, create new modifications. The problem with this is that as time goes by, the cumulative impact of this is to create a disconnect between the model and reality. Like a small error in the initial trajectory of a rocket launch, a few million miles later and you are way off course.

The long term impact of this bias is to make the official inflation data more and more fictionalized. This forces economists to put themselves thru circus-worthy contortions to rationalize the disconnect. A classic example: Rising oil prices are not considered inflationary, but falling oil prices are somehow disinflationary. The lack of symmetry is at best annoying, and at worst intellectually dishonest.

Back to the BoE: They have matched the Federla Reserve's Rate of 5.25% -- yet somehow, inflation in the UK is admitted as rising, yet inflation in the US is declining. As Bill King astutely points out, this is simply false: "It’s comparing apples to oranges. The UK doesn’t engage in the plethora of ‘hedonic’ adjustments that pervert US CPI, and the UK uses real home prices plus mortgage rates to determine housing inflation.” In other words, inflation is rising in both locales, only its reported differently.

Now here's where things get interesting: This past Monday, the Financial Times reported that the Office for National Statistics (ONS) -- the British Equivalent of the BLS -- published a web calculator to let consumers determine their own inflation rates, as people have accused them of doctoring the sata:

“The nation's top statistical office is fighting back against accusations, fuelled by newspaper campaigns, that its inflation index is inaccurate and underestimates the rate of inflation experienced by most people.

The Office for National Statistics today launches a personal inflation calculator on its website so people can see for themselves how their spending pattern is likely to deviate from the average for the retail price index, the most comprehensive measure covering goods and -services bought by most households.

Jim O'Donoghue, ONS inflation statistician, said: "It is clear from correspondence received and reports in the media that many people think inflation is higher than that shown by the official figures and that this has gone some way in under-mining confidence in them."

It getsw even better: Bill King delves into the details, and finds that, despite being vastly more accurate than our own system, the Brits still underreport their inflation rate:

"One of the findings of the ONS research is that people’s perception of inflation has been skewed by higher price rises of goods they buy regularly. [No kidding, Sherlock!] Big ticket electrical items and clothes have fallen in price, but since they are bought relatively rarely, the ONS believes consumers have a false perception of rapidly rising prices...

But the ONS has recognized that some people, particularly those spending a high proportion of their incomes on services, would have a higher inflation rate in recent years.” To quote Guinness, Brilliant!!!...Western governments are ‘fooling’ with economic data to obfuscate lower living standards due to the enormous transfer of wealth to Asia. But fin traders/investors heed the data."

A classic example of how inflation is underreported showed up in (of all places) Parade magazine. They noted that the US spend smore on healthcare in both percent of GDP and absolute dollar amount than any other country on the planet.

This massive expenditure didn't happen overnight, but has steadily built up over time. And, BLS continues to dramatically understate it: King notes that "For 12 years, the BLS has been reducing double-digit real healthcare inflation to about 4.2% per annum via hedonic adjustments. If they were honest, they should increase healthcare costs more than the actual gains due to negative hedonic adjustments for the deteriorating healthcare results."

We noted a few weks ago in Wage Surge? that the actual annual increase in health care costs has been well north of 10%. Indeed, Tuesday's WSJ had an article that detailed

"Increasing numbers of Americans are encountering similar choices as employers ask them to buy their own benefits, including disability and life-insurance policies, medical and dental coverage, and even benefits not normally found in the workplace like homeowner insurance and identity-theft coverage. Few businesses are actually replacing employer-paid benefits with these so-called voluntary benefits -- "voluntary" because you pay for them yourself. But some experts predict that eventually, American workers will have to buy many of the benefits they now get free at work, much the way most of the burden of funding retirement savings has shifted from employers to employees in recent years."

Paying for something that was previously part of your compensation package? Pick your poison: Either that's wage and income deflation, or price inflation.

Our curmudgeonly bottom line: Though decellerating somewhat, Inflation remains a genuine issue, and it is still considerably higher than reported. Wage gains, on the other hand, are actually worse than reported.

Or to quote the eminent Judge Smails on the current state of data reporting: You'll get nothing, and like it.

bigpicture.typepad.com 

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To: Handlarz Piotrek who wrote (62096)1/17/2007 5:49:44 PM
From: mishedlo   of 115618
 
I think soybeans are a better bet most likely

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From: regli1/17/2007 6:01:49 PM
   of 115618
 
California hasn't benefited a lot from the oil price drop.



State's gasoline costs decline

latimes.com 

By Ronald D. White, Times Staff Writer
January 17, 2007

California motorists last week saw their first relief at the pump since the Thanksgiving weekend, but analysts warned Tuesday that the reprieve would be short-lived.

The price of a gallon of self-serve regular dropped nearly a nickel to $2.583, according to the Energy Information Administration's weekly survey of filling stations.

Despite the weekly drop, the first in seven weeks, the California average remained 16.6 cents higher than a year earlier, as the trend in the West ran counter to the lower year-over-year prices in most of the country.

Nationally, prices have followed a more traditional script in January, a slow month for driver demand. The U.S. average of $2.229 a gallon was off 7.7 cents for the week and 9.1 cents from a year earlier. Prices fell most dramatically in the Midwest during the week, off 13.3 cents to $2.077.

"In California, prices might fall to $2.25 or so, but it's dropping like a rock in the Midwest, where they tend to cocoon a little bit in the winter months or travel south," said Tom Kloza, chief oil analyst for Oil Price Information Service in Wall, N.J.

Kloza said aggressive price wars were driving the pump numbers lower in the Midwest.

In commodities markets, crude oil futures continued their recent free-fall — declining $1.78, or 3.4%, to $51.21 a barrel — despite world events that might otherwise have lifted prices.

In Venezuela on Monday, government officials said they would not negotiate with foreign energy firms regarding the potential takeover of some oil operations. In Nigeria on Tuesday, oil companies evacuated two facilities in the southern part of the country after violent clashes left 13 community chiefs dead.

And in California on Monday, a fire broke out at Chevron Corp.'s Richmond refinery, the Bay Area's largest such facility.

Analysts attributed Monday's price decline to unseasonably mild winter temperatures and comments by Saudi Arabia's oil minister that he saw no reason for an emergency meeting of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries to discuss further cuts in production.

"Saudi Arabia is the voice that matters in OPEC," said Phil Flynn, senior market analyst at Alaron Trading Corp. in Chicago, "and today what they were saying is that they think these price drops are short term and weather related and not long term and market driven."

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To: John Carragher who wrote (62097)1/17/2007 6:17:14 PM
From: mishedlo2 Recommendations   of 115618
 
The Warming of Greenland
nytimes.com 

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To: Mike Johnston who wrote (62098)1/17/2007 6:18:29 PM
From: mishedlo   of 115618
 
All fiat currencies go to zero over time.
The only issue is at what rate.

Mish

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To: jimmg who wrote (62162)1/17/2007 6:20:35 PM
From: NOW   of 115618
 
well i can see you have only just now looked into them.. i am not a salesperson for them and it pays to do your own due diligence...
my post was in response to this, in case your short term memory aint too good: "I don't find gold easily converted to cash. I either have to go to some slimeball coin dealer/pawn shop or execute a trade over the phone with Kitco or another reputable dealer and then go through the hassle of mailing the coins registered mail and then waiting for a check to come back"...so i see you prefer to deal with the hassle after all?

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To: jimmg who wrote (62099)1/17/2007 6:22:00 PM
From: mishedlo   of 115618
 
The best hedge? Why not oil, wheat, corn, or practically any other necessity?

Ah...
This gets into the properties of gold.
It does not spoil
It is finely divisible
It is easily transportable
It is not abundant
It has minimal storage costs
It can be easily be formed into coins
It can not be grown

Mish

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To: NOW who wrote (62169)1/17/2007 6:25:32 PM
From: jimmg3 Recommendations   of 115618
 
I've looked into them a long time ago and came to the realization that giving money to someone who claims they are keeping gold safe for you and paying them a storage fee isn't what I wanted. If you like the arrangement, then it works for you.

I don't see it as owning gold. I see it as owning an IOU issued by goldmoney.com. In my view, it's neither gold nor money.

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To: Tommaso who wrote (62104)1/17/2007 6:26:27 PM
From: mishedlo   of 115618
 
The thing is--if you say "the dollar will decline" you usually imply that it will do so as measured in other currencies. If all currencies decline, that is by definition world-wide inflation. Such inflation will be perceived by most of the public as a rise in prices.

If wages do not rise (supporting debt becomes impossible).
If debt collapses because of bankruptcies inflation is not what will happen. If you prefer, prices will not likely skyrocket either.

But the prices of gold or silver or oil could.

Mish

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