Karl confirmed for me when the market was to roll over...
He is of no use to me now...
Here is his latest neo-con rant...may he suffer deeply for his ignorance.
http://market-ticker.denninger.net/
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'B')y next summer the entire "emerging markets" area will be in freefall. I expect you will see a literal implosion in the emerging market stocks. China wants to try to keep all the balls in the air until after the Olympics - I wish them luck, because I don't think its going to happen, and when they come apart it is going to happen with ferocious intensity. Real civil unrest is a possibility, followed by the usual way out for a trapped government.
The US has options available to it that most other nations do not. Canada, for example, has an enormous resource base, and we're friendly. We have an enormous resource base, although we have to take the Greenies and string them up by their toenails first. We'll do it, once gasoline is $5/gallon - the Greenies will be thrown under the bus and then backed over repeatedly just to make sure that the last bit of life is squeezed out.
Then we will develop our oil and gas resources in the Gulf, we will drill off California and the East Coast, and we will recover shale. We will build nuclear plants. We will use the vast landmass out in the desert southwest to install aquaculture-based biomass production to eventually wean us off oil as a transport fuel, moving to biodiesel, using the nuclear plants we build next door to desalinate the water and provide artificial lighting so they can crank 24x7. We will "see the light" and ban gasoline cars, insisting on compression ignition or external-combustion if and when those prove more efficient (e.g. stirling cycle)
This path forward brings us to a carbon-cycle neutral and renewable resource for road and rail transport fuels, along with "heating oil." It leaves us with a nuclear-powered electrical system as we wean ourselves off coal, leaving our coal resources to be turned into petroleum for manufacturing purposes. Our remaining liquid oil (along with conversion from coal) will allow our use of polymers to continue.
Yes, the US will have a tough decade ahead of it. The age of the $30 DVD player will be over, and large price increases for things that currently are built with $2/day labor are in store for us.
But we will be ok, and we're isolated enough - by oceans - that others trying to come and steal our resources are in for a rough ride of it, as there are easier places for them to go to try to meet their needs than the United States.
The trick will be finding ways to stay out of wars that are inevitable in the Asian Theatre, all of which will threaten to go nuclear.
I wouldn't want to be a Japanese housewife, or a Chinaman, or, God forbid, someone living in Taiwan.
Europe will fare no better than us, and may fare worse. Their odds of getting embroiled in the mess over in Asia will be higher than ours, simply because of proximity, but if they can stay out of it they will be ok. If they get dragged into the mess, and there is a decent chance they will, then things will be bad over there too.
I took a lot of risk down this afternoon, mostly because I had a lot of potentially-expiring PUTs that were losing time value by the day, and if we had even a short-term corrective bounce tomorrow I was going to get hurt. So off they come; I can always buy 'em back on a daytrade if we get a good downdraft going again.