Stocks & Equities

Financial Hope in Creative Destruction

Ed Note: Good News is out there! With all the bad news raining down its wonderful that someone has worked hard on uncovering all of the positive things that are going on in the world today. Read this article below if you want to read read something positive….

Financial Hope in Creative Destruction

“I get up in the morning,” our friend Juan Enriquez told us during an interview one day late in 2011, “I read the paper and see all the bad things going on with the debt, deficits, wars and the economy. Then, I step into a lab and see all the potential breakthroughs the scientists I work with are about to unveil.”

We began following Enriquez with a camera crew not long after theI.O.U.S.A. project had run its course. Among other eccentric pursuits, Juan helped finance the mapping of the human genome with Craig Venter.

During I.O.U.S.A., we kept hearing the tandem refrain “Deficits don’t matter” and “We’ll grow our way out of this.” We wanted to learn from entrepreneurs on the front lines… who, in fact, is going to help grow our way out of the debt crisis?

Enriquez’s greatest fear at the time was that the political world would overwhelm the entrepreneurs — and the financial markets they depend on — before their discoveries could get put to good use. In fact, Juan’s bipolar view — debt, deficits and war versus inspiration, innovation and achievement — inspired the theme of this year’s Agora Financial Investment Symposium in Vancouver: “The Tale of Two Americas.” 

“When you look at the world,” a Symposium regular said, expressing a similar sentiment, “you see one contradiction after another. Cyber warfare, rogue political leaders, random acts of terror, the militarization of police and expanded surveillance equipment and drone usage make for a future resembling an Orwellian nightmare.”

“But at the same time, you can track breathtaking technological breakthroughs in oil exploration and new technologies that will revolutionize our health care, computing, automobiles, communication and agriculture… the many items we use every day.”

China is one such contradiction. They are in an economic slump. But despite the mandarin bear market, China’s innovators are making leaps and bounds. By 2015, they will graduate 17,000 postdoctoral fellows in science, math and engineering. That’s a 60% increase from 2010.

3dp 2415448bThe Chinese are building supercomputers that rival IBM’s and 3-D printers big enough to print airplane wings (the Aston Martin was 3D printed)! They have also granted 217,000 patents last year — a 26% increase in the past two years alone.

The German economist Joseph Schumpeter famously observed a similar bipolar disorder during the great credit bust of the 1930s.

“Lack of outlets, excess capacity, complete deadlock,” he wrote in Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy, “in the end regular recurrence of national bankruptcies and other disasters — perhaps world wars from sheer capitalist despair — may confidently be anticipated. History is as simple as that.                                                                                                                          

“The opening up of new markets, foreign or domestic, and the organizational development from the craft shop and factory to such concerns as U.S. Steel illustrate the same process of industrial mutation — if I may use that biological term — that incessantly revolutionizes the economic structure from within, incessantly destroying the old one, incessantly creating a new one. This process of Creative Destruction is the essential fact about capitalism.”

In his day, Schumpeter witnessed the triumphs of radio, frozen food, the gas stove and the traffic light — all technologies we currently take for granted. But his observations of “how” these innovations come about remain as relevant today as ever.

“Existing structures and all the conditions of doing business,” Schumpeter concluded, “are always in a process of change. Every situation is being upset before it has had time to work itself out. Economic progress, in a capitalist society, means turmoil.”

In an ideal world, entrepreneurs, innovators, the risks takers, would be free to embrace the turmoil at their own peril. But no… in the real world, we have the meddlers, the world improvers, (ahem) bureaucrats.

Recently, the Supreme Court ruled lawsuits against generic drug producers. “The nation’s most widely used medications,” reports the LA Times, “generic drugs, now carry a legal side effect: If you’re badly injured by one of them, you can’t sue the manufacturer.”

The seen effect? Generic drugs will stay low-cost. And the unseen effect? Good luck finding recourse if you swallow a pill from China that you think is Viagra but is really filled with yellow highway paint. Yes, you read that right — supply chains for drug companies are badly tainted.

Good luck finding a fix within the political system. Our money is on new entrepreneurs staying 10 steps ahead of the suits in D.C.

Supply chain for your generic drugs tainted? No problem, use plant-based DNA. Labor costs too high? No problem, 3-D print your products instead. Money too controlled? No problem, buy Bitcoin anonymously.

The list goes on.

Now is the time to invest in those little companies that will make these advancements possible.

As you read more Tomorrow in Review episodes, you’ll understand why we place our confidence in the entrepreneurs… instead of the “talking-head, sound-byte” politicians who annoy you every Sunday morning.

Regards,

Addison Wiggin
For Tomorrow in Review

Ed. Note: Anti-counterfeiting plant DNA… 3-D printing … encrypted digital currencies… all of these are paving the way for a better tomorrow. The trick is finding those technologies on the “tipping point” — the ones that translate into financial opportunities that can transform your life.

In a free and new and improved report, we outline six money-making events that could transform your life, regardless of how much you invest.

Click here to get access to this bleeding edge research, before the mainstream catches on!

Thank you for reading Tomorrow in Review. We greatly value your questions and comments. Click here to send us feedback:tomorrowinreview@agorafinancial.com

 

 

 

 

What’s Next for Markets & Bernanke has a mutiny on his hands

Screen shot 2013-07-11 at 12.13.09 PMBernanke Is Losing Control of the Fed and the Markets (one Fed Governor has already resigned in the last 24 hours).

Ben Bernanke has lost any last shred of credibility he might have had.

The Fed no longer believes in QE. And for good reason. We’ve seen QE 1,2,3,& 4 and yet we’ve not seen any meaningful uptick in employment or GDP growth. Indeed, since Bernanke took the reins at the Fed we’ve not seen a single year of 3+% GDP growth.

In this light, several Fed members are no longer fans of QE. Some of them want it tapered soon. In fact HALF of them want QE STOPPEDcompletely by the end of 2013.

And yet, Bernanke decided that despite this dissent, he should make a speech stating that “highly accommodative policy” should continue along with the usual claims that inflation is under control.

These were the words of one man, not the Fed.

The markets exploded higher on Bernanke’s comments while the Dollar collapsed. And Bernanke now has a mutiny on his hands (one Fed Governor has already resigned in the last 24 hours).

Given that the Fed has been the primary driver of just about everything for the last five years, a fractured Fed is very bad news for the markets. Sure, we will see prices spike in the near term on Bernanke’s comments, but he has made it clear, point blank, that he has lost control of the market and really doesn’t have a clue what he’s doing.

This man knows only one thing: bubbles. Congratulations Bernanke, you’ve created an even bigger bubble than that of 2007. Your latest statements about providing liquidity have destroyed completely destroyed your credibility as Fed Chairman. And they’ve bought you at most a brief pause before this whole mess comes crashing down.

The entire environment feels just like 2007 again. The only difference is that this time everyone knows that we’re on shaky ground and has an eye for the exits. And in this mess, Bernanke announced nothing new, but simply stated that he remains a money printer.

The Economic “Miracle” Has Failed… What’s Next For the Markets?

…..read more HERE

 

‘This is probably a historic day for the gold price,’ he said. ‘With the $1,275 barrier broken we are back on the way up.’

Veteran gold guru and chairman of the Tanzanian Royalty Exploration Corporation, Jim Sinclair told an audience of 591 in Vancouver today that the gold price correction was over.

The gold price jumped after Fed chairman Ben Bernanke said ‘highly accommodative’ monetary policy will be needed for the ‘foreseeable future’ following a speech in Cambridge, Massachusetts after US markets had closed.

…..more HERE

Ed Note: Another interesting article – Inside the white hot Chinese gold market

 

“If The Government [Still] Can’t Allow Failure Then We Are Indeed Close To Collapse”

UnknownOne of the most insightful comments explaining what happened last night, when Bernanke just killed all credibility that the economy may soon be able to stand up on its own two legs, comes from Seth Klarman who crushed the logic (or lack thereof) behind proclaiming any recovery in a world in which the only marginal factor preventing an all out collapse in the stock market and thus economy is, and continues, to be the Federal Reserve which has not only destroyed the market’s discounting function, but with every passing day is taking over both the entire US economy (the Fed’s balance sheet is now 25% of US GDP) and the US bond market (currently in possession of 30% of all 10 Year equivalents).

To wit:

If the economy is so fragile that the government cannot allow failure, then we are indeed close to collapse

….read much more HERE

It’s Getting Closer – Don’t Say I Didn’t Try To Warn You

If the economy is so fragile that the government cannot allow failure, then we are indeed close to collapse  – Seth Klarman, money manager, via Zerohedge (Ed Note: That is the article above)

We’ll know the collapse is coming sooner rather later when CNBC’s viewership plummets to nothing – Dave and Friend of Dave circa mid-2002

That Zerohedge link is worth the quick read.  It has been reported over the past couple of weeks that CNBC’s viewership has fallen to all-time lows this year.  It’s a trend that’s been ongoing since the economy crapped out in 2007.  In fact, the New York Post has reported that Larry “Cocaine Brain” Kudlow’s show – “The Kudlow Report” has been cancelled, citing that viewership in its key demographic, 24 – 50 yr olds – is off 60%. 

 
…..read more HERE

The stock market is rising to record highs after Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said the central bank would continue to support the U.S. economy.

The Dow Jones industrial average was up 141 points, or 0.9 per cent, to 15,432 shortly before noon Eastern Daylight Time Thursday.

The Standard & Poor’s 500 index rose 17 points, also 1 per cent, to 1,670.

The early advance put the Dow and S&P above their previous record closes set in May.

All 10 industry groups in the S&P 500 rose, led by materials companies.

Investors also bought bonds after being reassured that the Fed was not in a hurry to pull back on its huge bond-buying program.

The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note fell to 2.60 per cent from 2.63 per cent late Wednesday.

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