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Mar 19

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Extracts from the Telegraph 19th Mar 2010

  • “For oil markets, it as if the Great Recession never happened. Surging demand in China, India and the Middle East is making up for decline in the debt-crippled West, ensuring another global crunch within three or four years.”
  • “The groundwork for the next sustained step up in oil prices is now almost complete. Global spare capacity is likely to be reduced to low levels within a relatively short time. The global economic crisis was postponed, but not cancelled, a crunch which would otherwise be starting to bite now,” said Barclays.
  • Francisco Blanch, from Bank of America Merrill Lynch, said crude may touch $105 next year, with $150 in sight by 2014. “Approximately 1.7bn consumers in emerging markets with a per capita income of $5,000 to $20,000 are eagerly waiting to buy cars, air-conditioning units, or white goods,” he said.
  • Painfully high prices are needed to unlock fresh supplies as reserves are depleted in the North Sea and the Gulf of Mexico. Deep-water rigs off Brazil are costly and require drilling far below the seabed. Canadian oil sands and US biofuels have break-even costs near $70.

Source… Telegraph

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Mar 18

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Consumers with excellent credit histories are seeing their card limits slashed, often without warning.

Are you one of the growing band of Britons to have mysteriously had their credit card limit cut in recent months? Despite signs the economy is improving, and with huge sums of money being pumped into the banking system, it appears credit card providers fearing a rise in bad debts have been slashing credit limits.

In recent weeks Guardian Money has had letters from readers complaining about limit cuts, in some cases for no apparent reason. Internet chatrooms are buzzing with similar complaints.

The problem now appears to be increasingly affecting customers with excellent credit histories.

Traditionally, it has been the financially wayward who have seen their limits unilaterally lowered.

Citi is one of the latest card providers to upset some customers in this way. Last year Citi said it was going to withdraw its popular Shell MasterCard, which offered discounts on petrol purchases. However it has recently issued replacement cards with, in some cases, significantly reduced credit limits and higher interest charges.

Some other cardholders claimed they didn’t know their limit had been lowered until a payment was refused.

Jan Johnson, who lives in Harrogate, North Yorkshire, contacted us after Santander wrote to say that it was reducing the limit on her Asda credit card from £5,000 to £300. The teacher, who regularly spends around £1,500 a month on the card, always paying in full each month, has repeatedly asked Santander why it picked on her but, in spite of a lengthy correspondence, has failed to get a straight answer.

“I’ve had the card for eight years without a problem. I phoned to ask what was going on and they suggested I check my credit rating. When it came back as being in the “excellent” category – 999 out of 1,000 – I wrote back pointing this out, and was then told their decision was based on either a change in employment, a change in personal circumstances or credit rating, or a change in payments. None of these applied to me, so I wrote again. Finally, they said they could do what they wanted under the terms and conditions of the card.”

More at Source… Guardian.co.uk

It looks like the banks have started to punish customer loyalty by cutting back on debt that they can make reliable money from.  Where will these people turn when other banks refuse them other options.  Card users will have their backs to the wall, loan sharks will be rubbing their hands and burglary and financial crime will no doubt increase as the cracks of the credit crunch grow further out towards to the man on the street.   Fiscal stimulus has stopped now in the UK, the free money has stopped flowing and even worse, at some point it will have to be drawn back in.  Al

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Mar 17

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Prepper News

The Peak Oil Crisis: 2014– The Year of Transition.

The key remaining question of the peak oil crisis is just when world production is going to start on an unstoppable decline.  A few years ago those analysts who were deeply enmeshed in the problem were saying that 2011 or 2012 looked like the fateful year.

But then the unexpected happened — a great recession came along and the demand for oil plunged. Although global oil production set a nominal high during the great price run-up back in the summer of 2008, production soon fell away as the deepening recession cut demand by some 4 million barrels a day.As prices collapsed in the winter of 2008-2009, OPEC got its act together and cut production dramatically, leaving the world, or at least a few OPEC countries with what is known as spare productive capacity — oil wells that are ready to produce, but have been shut down because there is no market for their product. Keep in mind when you have to shut down some of your oil wells, you usually stop those with the heaviest most sulfur-laden oil first as this oil does not bring as good a price as better grades.

World oil production, including about 10 million barrels a day (b/d) of various forms of combustible liquids such as biofuels that are usually counted as “oil,” currently stands at about 86 million b/d. This number got as high as 87 or 88 million (depending on whose numbers you like) back in the summer of 2008, fell to 83 or 84 million b/d in the winter of 2009, and then has been climbing back slowly as China, India, and the oil exporting countries step up their demand.

Behind these numbers however are two forces, the inexorable depletion of existing fields which is currently running about 4 million b/d each year and new oil fields coming into production which for 2009 and 2010 is expected to add about 6 million b/d of new productive capacity each year. As long as the completion of new oil production projects exceeds 4 million b/d — all is well.

Indeed for the last few years the capacity to produce more oil has been growing ahead of the demand so spare capacity to produce more oil is now in the vicinity of 5 or 6 million b/d. This means that if there were sufficient demand, global oil production could be cranked up to 91 or even 92 million b/d – for awhile. As even the Chinese don’t seem to need an additional 5 billion b/d, at least not right away (their current consumption is about 8-9 million b/d), those 5 or 6 million b/d seem destined to remain spare for a while.

Now if the world’s oil producers could add another 5 or 6 million b/d of oil production each year indefinitely, there would not be a problem and you would not be reading this article. Unfortunately, however, they can’t. People who follow these matters, and it is rather straight forward to do, say that for the next few years we will only be adding about 3-4 million b/d of new capacity to produce oil and by 2015 this will be down to about 2 million b/d. This, of course, is well below the annual drop of 4 million barrels per day from the existing fields due to depletion.

As long as the additions to our capacity to produce oil do not get too far below the pace of depletion, there would seem to be no reason for wild spikes in oil prices – in the near term. If the world continues to bump along in its current state for the next 3 or 4 years, it would seem that the availability and price of oil will not upset the apple cart with shortages or unaffordable gasoline prices. After 2013, however, all bets are off as there does not seem to be enough new production starting up to balance depletion.

“The next few years are like to be seminal ones in modern history.”

These days, new oil production capacity, on the scale of millions of barrels a day, does not appear overnight from the drill of a lucky wild catter. Large new oil production projects take five, six, or seven years before the first oil can be shipped and cost billions of dollars.  If a major project is not already well along, we are unlikely to see any oil from it until the latter half of the decade. For the next five years we are stuck with those projects that are already underway.

This train of thought seems to say that somewhere around 2014, world oil production, which has been on a rough plateau since 2005, will start to decline, perhaps rapidly.

There are a number of forces already in motion which could interrupt this rather tidy schedule of four more good years and then “le deluge.” Believe it or not the only good news in sight could come from Iraq which seems to be the last remaining place on earth where lots of cheap and easy-to-produce oil is still available. The Iraqis recently let contracts to increase their oil production by 7 or 8 million b/d in order to become the world’s biggest and richest oil producer. However, anyone familiar with the history of Iraq over the last century has reason to be skeptical that the Iraqis, even with the help of nearly all the world’s major oil companies, can save the world by stopping the decline in oil production for very long.

On the downside, there are numerous forces in play that could send oil prices to economy-killing highs or plunge the world into the greatest depression ever within the next three years. These range from hostilities in the Middle East to the bursting of China’s economic bubble, the bankruptcy of a major country,  or the collapse of a currency. Some of these developments could send oil to undreamed of prices, while others could so reduce the demand for oil that its price and availability would no longer be of much interest.

The next few years are like to be seminal ones in modern history.

Source… fcnp.com

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Mar 17

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Prepper News

The Chinese official statistics say that the average rise in property prices was 10.7 per cent in February. The increase is accelerating from a year-on-year rise of 9.5 per cent in January. However, the data may significantly underestimate what is going on for prime properties in China. My friends in Shanghai and Beijing say the rate of price increases of typical housing units is above 50 per cent a year and may reach 100 per cent, and that new property developments are spreading fast from firstto second-tier suburbs, with less convenient transportation.

According to the official statistics, the rate of price increases of newly-built residential buildings (at 90 square metres and below) in Beijing, Shanghai and Shenzhen are 19.3 per cent, 11.6 per cent and 19.6 per cent, respectively. In the same category, the highest property inflation was in Sanya, Hainan Island, at 57.9 per cent. However, the location and quality of the buildings are most likely not controlled for in the official statistics. (Beyond “average prices”, no detailed description is available.) Suppose that the market has more buildings in the second-tier than the first-tier suburbs; then the average price may be lower than the location-controlled index. Official statistics most likely underestimate the size of the housing bubble.

In real estate economics, the quality-adjusted property price index can be constructed by the sampling of repeated-sale (identical) properties (like the Case-Shiller index), by running a hedonic regression (in many academic studies for particular cities), or by using expert appraisal (like the frequently quoted Japanese land price index). Having a quality-adjusted property price index is a critical base for timely policy decisions.

What is happening in China now is familiar to any Japanese aged above 45. Japan experienced one of the largest property bubbles in the 1980s. The land price index tripled in five years. (The six-city price index for residential land rose from 39.2 in September 1985 to 105.8 in September 1990. The commercial land price rose from 27.9 to 104.5.) First, the land price rose in central Tokyo, then spread to first-tier suburbs, other large cities,second-tier suburbs and finally to rural land. The recent US housing bubble had a similar process of moving from prime to subprime mortgages. The quality of borrowers progressively worsened. In both Japan and the US, the loan-to-value ratio rose sharply towards the end of the bubble. Is this bubble now being repeated in China?

More… ft.com

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Mar 16

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Prepper News

Drivers face record £1.20 a litre petrol at the pumps over Easter
petrol. Petrol prices are set to soar to a new record within days, it has been predicted.

A litre of fuel is set to cost an all-time record of £1.20 by Easter as international oil speculators drive up prices, the AA warned.

Image

Alistair Darling’s planned April 1 tax hike will add another 3p in duty and VAT – costing motorists a massive £5.59 a gallon.

The huge hike will add around £4 to the cost of filling up a tank and will hammer recession-hit families almost £20 a month extra.

Source… dailymail.co.uk

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Mar 16

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Mortgage lending dived to a 10-year low last month as the housing market slumped following the end of the Government’s stamp duty holiday, figures showed today.

Total mortgage advances dived by 32 per cent to £9.1 billion during the month, the lowest level since February 2000, according to the Council of Mortgage Lenders.

The sudden drop will fuel fears that the housing market is heading for a second price crash, following recent warnings that the recent recovery is unsustainable.

The group said there was typically a fall-off in lending during January, as househunters put moving plans on hold over Christmas.
The number of new mortgages h

The number of new mortgages has slumped after the stamp duty holiday ended

But it said this year’s drop was larger than usual, and had been caused by people rushing to push through their purchases before the stamp duty holiday ended at the beginning of this year.

The drop in lending comes after the group reported a ’surprisingly strong’ figure for December, with mortgage advances jumping by 14 per cent during the month, bucking the usual seasonal trend.

Source… dailymail.co.uk

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Mar 15

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Prepper News

The latest Rightmove house price index has revealed a virtual price standstill as new sellers are asking for just 0.1% more for their properties in March. This is way below the usual monthly average of 1.3% recorded between 2002 and 2009.

The lull has coincided with the return of sellers, with 34% more properties coming to market compared to March 2009, meaning more competition and less opportunity to increase asking prices.

Miles Shipside, commercial director of Rightmov, said: “As usual we’ve seen a winter price lull followed by a New Year bounce, though at a national level it’s never previously fizzled out before spring has really sprung.

Source… mortgagesolutions-online.com

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Mar 15

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The recent recovery in UK house prices appears to have run out of steam as asking prices rose by the smallest amount on record for the month of March.

New sellers are asking for just 0.1% more than they were in February, taking the price of a home to £229,614, according to Rightmove. The average increase at this time of year has been a sturdy 1.3%. They’d spiked 3.2% a month ago.

Image

A big increase in the number of sellers is blamed, with 34% more properties hitting the market than at the same time last year, the most in 18 months, and 17.5% more than in February.

Source… Sharecast.com

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Mar 11

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Prepper News

Millions of families’ homes are at risk from shock interest rate rises or falls in property prices, Britain’s financial regulator warned yesterday.

It fears that households who have failed to pay back debts could be pushed to the brink should the economic recovery falter.

Under greatest threat are credit-hungry families who use credit cards and loans to keep up an affluent lifestyle, and young professionals who borrowed many times their income to get onto the property ladder.

In a bleak analysis, the Financial Services Authority forecast that any rise in unemployment, interest rates or a further crash in property prices could drastically slash the already stretched incomes of many middle class families.

This would lead to them missing mortgage repayments, and eventually losing their homes.

It will come as a timely warning to thousands of homeowners. Yesterday, it was reported how more than a million desperate borrowers are applying for credit cards with interest rates as high as 60 per cent.

Many economists believe interest rates will start to rise at the end of this year. And this month Halifax and Nationwide both reported falls in the value of houses for the first time in more than a year.

FSA chairman Lord Adair Turner warned yesterday: ‘This recession is really quite different than the early 1990s.

‘We have households which are more indebted than they were in the past and that creates a vulnerability.’

Source… DailyMail.co.uk

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Mar 11

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Prepper News

“Big chunks” of hospitals could close to help the NHS save billions without patients necessarily suffering, health service leaders have claimed.

Last week opposition parties claimed that secret plans were being drawn up to close hundreds of hospital wards, and warned that the proposals would not be made public until after the General Election.

The NHS is facing a tough financial climate and has already been warned that it will have to make savings of between £15 and £20 billion over the next three years.

In a new report into the squeeze on budgets, the NHS Confederation, which represents health service managers and health trusts, insists that, if done correctly, the changes do not have to mean worse care for patients.

The Confederation calls for more patients be treated outside of hospitals, either in the community or in their own home.

The report warns that “health policy based on the model of planned surgery is no longer appropriate” and recommends “changing the role and services offered by a significant number of hospitals”.

“Improving the management of care for people with long-term conditions and providing support for care at home will also help prevent avoidable, and costly admissions,” it claims.

Source… telegraph.co.uk

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