Super-bust: Bailing A River

When the boat’s below the water-line, you can’t bail out a sinking river…

From BoingBoing

Bailout costs more than Marshall Plan, Louisiana Purchase, moonshot, S&L bailout, Korean War, New Deal, Iraq war, Vietnam war, and NASA’s lifetime budget — *combined*!

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• Marshall Plan: Cost: $12.7 billion, Inflation Adjusted Cost: $115.3 billion
• Louisiana Purchase: Cost: $15 million, Inflation Adjusted Cost: $217 billion
• Race to the Moon: Cost: $36.4 billion, Inflation Adjusted Cost: $237 billion
• S&L Crisis: Cost: $153 billion, Inflation Adjusted Cost: $256 billion
• Korean War: Cost: $54 billion, Inflation Adjusted Cost: $454 billion
• The New Deal: Cost: $32 billion (Est), Inflation Adjusted Cost: $500 billion (Est)
• Invasion of Iraq: Cost: $551b, Inflation Adjusted Cost: $597 billion
• Vietnam War: Cost: $111 billion, Inflation Adjusted Cost: $698 billion
• NASA: Cost: $416.7 billion, Inflation Adjusted Cost: $851.2 billion

TOTAL: $3.92 trillion

Today’s S3 Crash is Tommorow’s Gloom 1.0, & Later, the Birth of the Grid

One day, all our computational abilities will flow, as electricity does, into every home, carrying with it the full force of the entire orchestra of functionality on the Internet — it will cease to be the Internet and become the Grid.

A prediction inspired by this...

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Back to the Future

Huxley, Friedman and Roosevelt

Perhaps the deepest truth I know of, is an utterance that comes to us long lost from an English novelist of the 19th Century by the name of Aldous Huxley, who said “That men do not learn very much from the lessons of history is the most important of all the lessons that History has to teach.Today we live in a literal proof of a society misunderstanding of the profound nature of this observation, at least economically speaking. In 1929, on the day the stock market crashed, the headline of Variety read, Wall Street Lays an Egg. Thats timid compared to whats already been said about today’s circumstances. The fact is though, Variety like today’s media, has it all wrong.

It was the economist Milton Friedman who best summed up the cause of our present-day economic woes with his thoughts on what caused the Great Depression, saying The Great Depression, like most other periods of severe unemployment, was produced by government mismanagement rather than by any inherent instability of the private economy,” Change came from an usher as desperate as were the times. Just four short years later, in his 1933 campaign speech, Roosevelt said, “It is common sense to take a method and try it. If it fails, admit it frankly and try another. But above all, try something.” And try they did.

Day in the Life

Such brute force as proposed there, howsoever, will serve ill the very different America of today. How different is it? In some ways very different, in others respects not at all.

- Food Shortages: The Tri-State Observer reports that the US has no remaining grain reserves

According to the May 1, 2008 CCC inventory report there are only 24.1 million bushels of wheat in inventory, so after this sale there will be only 2.7 million bushels of wheat left the entire CCC inventory,” warned Matlack. “Our concern is not that we are using the remainder of our strategic grain reserves for humanitarian relief. AAM fully supports the action and all humanitarian food relief. Our concern is that the U.S. has nothing else in our emergency food pantry. There is no cheese, no butter, no dry milk powder, no grains or anything else left in reserve. The o°©nly thing left in the entire CCC inventory will be 2.7 million bushels of wheat which is about enough wheat to make 1?2 of a loaf of bread for each of the 300 million people in America.”

Here is a direct link to that report.

- Energy Crisis: Fox News asks, “Are We at Risk of a Global Recession Because of Oil?”

- Environmental and Natural Disasters: Some of these Oil spills, Ozone depletion, Earthquake related Tsunamis, a European heatwave that killed over 37,000 in 2003, and Hurricane Katrina just to name a few.

It sounds as if I’m describing doomsday but I’m not. I’m describing today, the 1930s, the 1970s, and I might as well be describing any day at random. The fact is these things happened before and will again. And Huxley’s lesson will continue to escape most of us just as it has done and will continue to do.

Not everyone comes as late to History class fortunately, some realize this and try and find new, more useful ways to look at the past. And some manage to apply what they learn. Current Macroeconomic theory suggests consumers and businesses of Great Depression era relied on cheap credit. Consumers did so purchasing goods, while businesses did so investing in production. This economic behavior fueled rapid, short-term economic growth, creating swells of debt. When prices deflated, growth essentially collapsed. As the corporations and consumers both defaulted on loans, unclaimed, full inventories further deflated prices. The corporations laid off workers reducing consumer spending, eventually creating a kind of self-sustaining cycle, and later the wave of defaults shook banks. Confidence plummeted in corporations, the markets, and finally the banks themselves, creating a ‘run on the bank.’ This suggests a way to look at today.

Today, we face very alike conditions. A systemic networked banking system creates investment banks such as Bear Stearns, called “too big to fail”, that require 30 billion dollar rescues when the same debt-fueled growth cycle causes just their collapse. And while that may have plugged one very apparent hole, the overall cycle will continue.

Starting in 2003 until sometime in 2007, the economy saw the same sort of rapid, short-term growth across a majority of markets, favoring housing, equities and derivatives, relying on the same kind of cheap, plentiful credit used prior to the Great Depression. Today different from the 1930s, that cheap credit has been delivered by sharing the debt amongst banks and further wrapped up as derivatives securities — this, and inter-bank lending creates the systemic connection between banks potentially making them too big to fail.

Before long though, debt-fueled growth causes confidence scares; loans come to term and defaults drive the flow of money out of lenders and spenders and into things like commodities, where the cycle enters the next phase. The new and higher commodity prices push down the equities and other securities and raise costs. The whole tree begins to poison, spreading one branch at a time.

Back to the Future

The future cannot be known but the past is not as limited. Thus, I feel confident in the future I see ahead, so mindful of the past. I say next, we’ll begin to hear about other lenders, spenders and connected investment vehicles; as CNN has only just put it, there are more perils ahead. Problems will crop up with automobile loans and students loans as well the securities that are related. The government may step in or reduced auto sales might help ease certain energy prices; the oil bubble might burst, leaving just food and other inflation to deal with. The student loan market is already drying up though and the government is already getting involved.

Despite the panic in the markets and all the volatility, I’m confident, though I realize quite sadly, to know our future, we needn’t look into any sort of crystal ball, but instead right where Huxley would suggest, using eyes focused backward in time.

Survival Will be Shrink Wrapped

I’ve written about this topic before. And though I type on it, stare at a laptop screen framed of it, and am utterly surrounded by it, the idea is still provocative even to me, that plastic (an innovation so subtle yet ubiquitous) is also at the core of a potential threat to life on Earth. I took a real interest in this idea because it seemed obviously urgent, but because one particular aspect seemed totally, and a bit ironically neglected. The irony I find is, so many people fall back on the topic of the weather. Evidently, not so much when it counts. To help myself and others understand my somewhat radical thoughts about the environment, and to discuss such ironically neglected aspects, I present as preface three very real, very relevant facts about our planet and life, followed by obvious speculation about how these phenomena might be inter-connected and in such a way as to to change life as we know it.

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Peak Education

Summer, 2008. You can’t seem to buy a headline that doesn’t remind you that the price of gasoline is at a record high. Everyone is coming out of the wood-work talking Peak oil. Articles stapled to the same headlines fall back on the same, now tiring, discussion about rising demands, shrinking supplies, and the myriad speculative strategies playing out on the open energy market — they talk about anything except solving the problem. Thats because we’re not only at a peak in oil production (which generally drives all other production), we’re at a peak in our production of educated problem solvers. We’ve got a nation of pontificates (at times, myself included).

While Congress questions Big Oil hoping markets can police themselves (lasting it’s tie to capitalism), the opposite only seems obvious and true to consumers and the American people, leaving some of the best analysts wondering, “Is speculation or fundamentals driving the price of oil?” I prefer my question, is it Need or Greed? But, there should be no surprise so little has gotten done, Americans always worry first about who is to blame despite whats opportunities are lost in the meantime — thats the terrifying reality that landed us in Iraq: the need to blame. But, even as we grow nearer to what may amount to the largest energy crisis in American history (perhaps the history of all of our species), and America spirals downward, I realize I have a greater fear, one worse than expensive commodities: my fellow Americans.

Besides the pointless chatter surrounding oil that fills the media — which wastes more energy (in the form of oil, et al) than anything else given its return value — I hear a common notion threaded across the perspective of average Americans: Americans believe George W. Bush, our current President, did all this with a simple policy of “drill and veto.” But, and this is what scares me most, they also believe conversely, that when Bush leaves office these problems will go with him. They believe somehow through Bush’s ties to Big Oil, he was capable of masterminding this global economic shift at the most fundamental level: commodities pricing. Our President alone is not that powerful, thankfully. However, the American people are when they can be united.

So, my poor, undereducated Americans, so down-turned by bad policy, despite your instinct, please forget your dire need to blame. Realize that holding a belief that any such problems will vanish overnight is in fact a form of greed itself, and not need, and is an idea that is plain stupid. We as a society, must exercise the discipline we lacked prior to this, leading us here, in order to find the way out.

Beyond that, personally I feel, George W. Bush, our President, couldn’t mastermind a few elegant English statements in the form of complete English sentences given chair, desk, ink, pen and good reason to do so. And that my friends… is the problem with America, forget oil, we’re at Peak education.

Peak education is the point in time when the maximum rate of distribution for global education, training, and knowledge is reached, after which the rate of that production and distribution enters its terminal decline. If global consumption is not mitigated before the peak, an education crisis may develop because the availability of conventional education, training and knowledge will drop and the population will rise, perhaps dramatically (Hubbert peak theory).

Apophis Adjustment

Say hello to my pet rock: Apophis. This last time we talked about him was February 19th, 2007.

So, what is so exciting about a rock? Especially one thats so far away? I don’t think its that this rock is partly iron. In fact, that may be something that makes it seem less exciting. Its not that this rock is humming through space at the breakneck speed of 1145 MPH. Its not the rock’s mass, some 260,000,000,000 kilograms. No, even though this rock is big and its moving ridiculously fast, theres something much, much more interesting and exciting about Apophis: It just might destroy all or most life on Earth. This isn’t exactly the kind of headline one likes to come across, but especially regarding my old friend, Apophis.

In the article below, a 13 year old German school boy revises NASA estimates on the trajectory of Apophis as it relates to Earth-orbiting satellites. Interestingly, according to various media outlets NASA agreed with the young boy. The original [NASA] estimate concluded Apophis would pass Earth in 2029, giving the giant rock a 45,000 in 1 chance of hitting the Earth on its next pass in 2036. Accounted here, the revised estimate by the German boy suggests that Apophis may have a much better chance of impacting with the Earth. The young boy suggests when Apophis passes in 2029, a pass whereby the asteroid will come closer to the Earth than some man-made satellites, that if Apophis were to come into contact with any of those satellites, it would have the much geater chance of 450 to 1, of hitting and devastating our planet in 2036.

Those satellites travel at 3.07 kilometres a second (1.9 miles), at up to 35,880 kilometres above earth — and the Apophis asteroid will pass by earth at a distance of 32,500 kilometres.

Both NASA and Marquardt agree that if the asteroid does collide with earth, it will create a ball of iron and iridium 320 metres (1049 feet) wide and weighing 200 billion tonnes, which will crash into the Atlantic Ocean.

The shockwaves from that would create huge tsunami waves, destroying both coastlines and inland areas, whilst creating a thick cloud of dust that would darken the skies indefinitely.

Edit: News outlets are now reporting that NASA believes the boy’s sums may have been incorrect.

Historical Moments: Bear Stearns is No More

After 85 years on the market Bear Stearns is no more. The brokerage was consumed for a mere $2 per share, after being priced at one time for $160 — the buyer JP Morgan. This is perhaps only the first in what will be a series of downturns.

Super-bust

It was Marcus Aurelius who said “Each thing is of like form from everlasting and comes round again in its cycle.” Looking toward our future in this age of industrial and technological super-boom, maybe whats looming just ahead, is the justice of a balance only nature must keep. In other words, the eventual, equally unrelenting… Super-bust. Its a topic I’ll continue to discuss from a variety of perspectives going forward. The content shown below is mostly reiterated from here, it describes how something just like this can happen, only with our financial structure.

Financial speculator and billionaire, George Soros states in his FT.com commentary: “the current crisis is the9360_a.png culmination of a super-boom that has lasted for more than 60 years.” In June’s Higher Rates Reflect Default Risk we described the end of the last credit boom: “In 1928, the U.S. Treasury Bond similarly broke out of the channel and rose to a higher yield. This coincided with the end of ‘easy’ money which forced the deleveraging of the economy and concluded with the financial crisis of 1929-1932.” Compare the two Treasury Bond Yield charts below. In 2005-2006 higher bond rates “broke out of the channel” and inflicted damage on the housing market. This marked “the end of ‘easy’ money.” Similarly since 2006, there has also been a flight to quality.

George Soros explains what happens next: “if federal funds were lowered beyond a certain point, the dollar would come under renewed pressure and long-term9360_b.png bonds would actually go up in yield. Where that point is, is impossible to determine. When it is reached, the ability of the Fed to stimulate the economy comes to an end.” As we described last June, we expect 10 year Treasury Bonds to be sold for cash in the panic, just as occurred at the end of the last credit cycle. Billionaire investor Julian Robertson agrees. As he revealed to Fortune: “the biggest bet that Robertson has in his own portfolio at the moment” is “long the price of two-year Treasury and short the price of the ten-year Treasury.”

Take Out the Papers & the Trash

Trash

A Final Light Falls on Darken

Over a year ago I created a monster…

It was a 4 processor 3.0Ghz Linux box. Strung unto its many available ports were over 12 terabytes of mounted data. I struggled with what exactly to call the beast until finally turning it on for the first time.

While the hum of all those drives and all that cooling equipment left me somewhat hypnotized, I was immediately aware that all the lights in the house flickered into that dim, please-give-me-more-power, state.

Thus was born, “darken.infophobia.net.”

For the last year “darken” served its 12 TB, also providing a nice extra desktop through VNC. Last night though, I came in to the smell of electric fire. It seems ole’ “darken” just couldn’t handle the heat (and being a computer obviously could not get out of the kitchen; err bedroom). Sad.

And so, I must explore an alternative solution to serving my 12 terabytes, as “darken”’s processor melted down at 5:10pm, January 16th, 2008. Perhaps I’ll buy the latest XPS from Dell that uses the new liquid cooled H2C system.

Until then…all now a moment of silence for my once mighty Core 2 Quad that overheated last evening, creating with its death, the worst smell of electric fire I’ve come across.

Darken… you will be missed!