Friday, June 15, 2012

"Great Deception of 2012" is now very imminent


In our opinion, the sense of impending and unavoidable gloom that does pervade the following article proves that the MSM’s (MainStream Media) PORE (Psy-Ops Reporting and Editorializing) is now setting up the 'Sheeple' for the summer of 2012’s “Surprise that is NO Surprise” (Blog of 12/9/11) as a Monetary and Fiscal Union of Europe is gradually unveiled, as we clearly did outline in our Blog of 12/5/11.

  (These original projections of ours were extended over five times: we were forced to do so by the continual extension of the FED's ZIRP - by the Panicked Banking Authorities.  Therefore, we were forced to extend the projected timing of the ultimate Mother of All Crashes out to roughly the summer 2016!)

But, just to keep the 'Sheeple' off-balance and make them think that everything is quite uncertain and, therefore, unknowable,  the MSM must give them a dose of horrific news first to scare the S__T out of them before the FED does crank up their FMMM (FED's Magic Money Machine) and the New machinations of the yet-unveiled (and still secretive) European FED does crank up their own versions our FED's FMMM!  

And, in our opinion the second article from the WSJ proves that the “Surprise That Is No Surprise” is now very imminent, as the 'Banksters' are preparing their Balance Sheet accounting rules to accommodate Bernanke's imminent 'Black Helicopter' money drops - of our money over there in Europe!

As subscribers to our Market Reviews – and readers of ALL our Blogs – do know, we have predicted a “Surprise that Is NO Surprise” involving the creation of a Euro FDIC-like Supra Bank Guarantee facility (with at least 15 to 20% being backed by our FED, with our money BUT WITHOUT our approval) to solve the Euro mess/dilemma and then ALL the world’s Stock Markets will rally BIG as the ”Great Deception of 2012” is kicked off to bring the 'Sheeple' into the world's stock markets; so that, they can be slaughtered yet again in late 2014 to early 2015 with the “Mother of ALL Stock Market Crashes.”

Well here we go folks, because these financial machinations are being set in motion with the vote in Greece this very weekend, right before the selling and trading of "Dead Mule Raffle Tickets" (aka, Government Bonds) does begin in earnest, later this summer.  For, our expose on the Central Bank's game of trading raffle tickets on Dead Mules, see our Blog of 12/6/11.

Are you and your company ready for the Euphoria and Celebrating and the Joyousness of the return to the “Good Times” into 2013?

Well, if you are, then don’t get caught by this well-crafted TRAP of the century, which is very much like the three “False” stock market rallies that set up the huge crash of 1973-74.  The economic horrors set to follow the sheering of the "Sheeple" in the coming "Great Crash of 2014-15" will totally catch most companies unprepared as they are even now totally unprepared for the imminent False Economic Dawn that will follow the "Great Deception of 2012."  

For, the second wave of the Super Tsunami “Kondratieff” Long-Wave is as sure to follow the “Great Deception of 2012,” as is the night ordained to follow the day!

Industrial Production in U.S. Unexpectedly Dropped in May

By Alex Kowalski and Lorraine Woellert - Jun 15, 2012 11:52 AM ET
“… “We’re traveling along a canal of miserable growth,” said Brian Jones, a senior U.S. economist at Societe Generale in New York, who correctly forecast the decline in production. “It’s not fast enough to bring the unemployment rate down or generate an appreciable number of jobs, yet it’s not weak enough that we’re going back into recession.”
Shock waves from Europe are roiling U.S. markets, denting business and consumer confidence and cutting demand for American goods.
The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index advanced 0.6 percent to 1,337.17 at 11:45 a.m. in New York. Treasuries climbed, pushing the yield on the 10-year note down to 1.58 percent from 1.64 percent late yesterday.
Monetary policy makers from the U.K. to Japan and Canada this week sounded the alert about potential fallout from the euro zone’s troubles.

Watching Markets

The Bank of Japan today kept the size of its asset-purchase fund unchanged, two days before a Greek election that may determine whether Europe’s crisis worsens, and said it will pay “particular” attention to global markets.
Reports in the U.K. today showed exports fell in April and construction slumped, highlighting the economy’s weakness as Bank of England Governor Mervyn King warns that the outlook is deteriorating rapidly.
New York-area factories expanded this month at the slowest pace since November, another report showed. The Federal Reserve Bank of New York’s general economic activity index dropped to 2.3 from 17.1 the prior month. ….

‘Continued Weakness’

“We’ve seen continued weakness in Europe and we’ve seen only moderate growth in the U.S.,” Gregory Hayes, chief financial officer at United Technologies Corp., ….
“We are seeing a slowdown in Asia that we had not expected about three months ago, and the United States is not out of the woods yet either when we look at the unemployment numbers,” Clay Jones, chief executive officer of Rockwell Collins Inc., said at a June 13 conference. …

Motor Vehicles
….Consumer goods decreased 0.2 percent after a 1.4 percent gain.
Today’s data cap a week of reports pointing to an economy that’s losing momentum. Retail sales fell in May for a second month, …

Jobless Benefits

More Americans than forecast applied for unemployment insurance payments last week, another sign the labor market is struggling to improve after the unemployment rate unexpectedly rose to 8.2 percent last month. Payrolls increased by 69,000 in May, the fewest in a year.
Labor-market weakness is starting to take a toll on the confidence of consumers, …

Consumer Expectations

The index of consumer expectations for six months from now, which more closely projects the direction of consumer spending, decreased to 68.9, also the lowest this year, from 74.3, which was the highest since July 2007. …”

Market Pulse Archives

Europe could ease new banking rules: report


Market Watch; WSJ; June 15, 2012, 1:57 p.m. EDT
By William Spain






CHICAGO (MarketWatch) -- International regulators are on the verge of easing new banking rules that are meant to help the safety of the financial system, the Wall Street Journal reports, citing unnamed sources. Some of the regulators apparently worry that forging ahead with the new requirements could actually make the European financial meltdown worse, the newspaper noted. So, the new plan is to make it easier for the industry to comply with requirement that lenders keep on hand enough liquid assets to weather market plunges or other disasters.

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