Thank you for your message.. Interesting.. that I am still confused about what 
to do, while the departure time is few weeks away. But I will consider you 
messages.. Although things may need to be re assessed when I will be in New 
Zealand in real.



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  S1000+ 
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--- On Thu, 5/21/09, xi <[email protected]> wrote:

From: xi <[email protected]>
Subject: Definitely US economy enters into phase 2 of this crisis.
To: "World-thread" <[email protected]>
Date: Thursday, May 21, 2009, 10:45 AM


My comment: Most leading indicators are gaining while some decline.
This mixed situation means that pace of decline decelerates. Now we
can predict accurately that this U-type recessionary crisis is
bottoming at the very end of 2009 or begining of 2010.

Also, in different circumstances we could predict that the whole
crisis will come to its end at the end of 2010 or 2011. But in this
circumstances we cannot.

Unbalances in the US economy are not being fixed. On the contrary,
main macromagnitudes are worse than before the financial crash in
September-October 2008. Foreign deficit widens as imports grow faster
than exports, in fact exports still lose ground. Federal and local
governmental deficits raise. Federal debt grows. While liquidity grows
without being back by real wealth.

Based on those data, what we can predict is another wave as soon as US
economy enters into third phase of the U, in other words, just after
this wave bottoms. Therefore, very probably next crisis will It will
start in the first half of 2010 and will be featured by weaker US
dollar and higher price inflation.

Again, at the end of 2009, the safest place to look for protection
will be commodities and, in particular, farmland. If we can invest
long term, we could get positions as soon as we want.

Peace and best wishes.

Xi

U.S. Economy: Leading Indicators Index Gains as Recession Eases
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aSXpXEqWbpKs&refer=home

May 21 (Bloomberg) -- The index of U.S. leading economic indicators
rose more than forecast and a manufacturing gauge improved in signs
the deepest recession in five decades could end later this year.

The Conference Board’s leading gauge increased 1 percent in April, the
biggest gain since November 2005, the New York-based group said today.
The index points to the direction of the economy over the next three
to six months. A separate report showed manufacturing in the
Philadelphia area shrank in May at the slowest pace in eight months.

A recent rebound in stock prices and improving consumer confidence are
among components of the leading index that are stoking speculation the
economy will begin to grow again in the next six months. Still, with
unemployment at a 25-year high and projected to keep climbing into
2010, and lenders restricting credit, the recovery may be muted.

“This recession is losing its bite,” said Tim Quinlan, an economist at
Wachovia Corp. in Charlotte, North Carolina, who accurately forecast
the leading index. “It’ll be a gradual, slow recovery. We’ve got an
awful job market and factories are still shrinking, though at a slower
pace.”

For the first time since the recession started in December 2007, the
change in the leading index over the last six months, on an annualized
basis, surpassed the year-over-year measure as both improved. That
also happened before the end of the previous two recessions.

Philadelphia Fed

The factory industry’s contraction in the Philadelphia region slowed
as shipments and employment improved, the Federal Reserve Bank of
Philadelphia said in its report. Meanwhile, more Americans than
forecast filed claims for unemployment insurance last week, and the
total number of workers receiving benefits rose to a record, signs the
job market continues to weaken.

Stocks and Treasuries fell after the reports. The Standard & Poor’s
500 Index was down 1.7 percent at 888.19 as of 12:46 p.m. in New York.
Yields on benchmark 10-year notes rose to 3.29 percent from 3.19
percent late yesterday.

The leading index was forecast to rise 0.8 percent, according to the
median of 57 economists in a Bloomberg News survey, after an
originally reported drop of 0.3 percent in March. Estimates ranged
from a decline of 0.2 percent to a gain of 1.4 percent.

Seven of the 10 indicators in today’s report increased, with the
biggest boost provided by the Standard & Poor’s index, which gained 12
percent in April from the prior month’s average.

Consumer Sentiment

Another contribution came from the Reuters/University of Michigan
index of consumer expectations, a proxy for future spending, which
rose in April by the most in more than two years. A preliminary report
showed the gauge also rising in May.

Seven of the 10 indicators for the leading index are known ahead of
time: stock prices, jobless claims, building permits, consumer
expectations, the yield curve, factory hours and supplier delivery
times.

The Philadelphia Fed’s general economic index climbed to minus 22.6
this month from minus 24.4 in April, the bank said today. Negative
numbers signal contraction.

While the manufacturing slump is stabilizing after companies reduced
inventories in the first quarter at the fastest pace on record, the
global downturn will keep paring demand for American-made goods.
Production cutbacks at General Motors Corp. and Chrysler LLC will
ripple through the auto industry, meaning the factory slowdown and
soft labor market may persist for months to come.

Slower Contraction

“The economy is contracting and manufacturing is contracting, it’s
just contracting at a slower pace,” said Steven Ricchiuto, chief
economist at Mizuho Securities USA Inc. in New York. Ricchiuto
forecast the index would be minus 22.

Initial jobless claims fell by 12,000 to 631,000 in the week ended May
16, from a revised 643,000 the prior week that was higher than
initially estimated, the Labor Department said today in Washington.
The total number of people collecting benefits rose to 6.66 million, a
record reading for a 16th straight week, and a sign companies are
still not hiring.

Job losses are likely to continue after Chrysler filed for bankruptcy
and because General Motors may follow suit and terminate 1,100 U.S.
dealers.

Still, in a statement following their April meeting, Fed policy makers
cited improved financial conditions, stronger business and household
sentiment, and expectations of an increase in industrial production to
replace inventories, as reasons why the pace of contraction will
probably ease.

Fed Projections

Policy makers projected the economic slump this year would be deeper
than they forecast in January and estimated a slower rebound next
year, according to meeting minutes issued yesterday. Some officials
said the central bank may need to boost asset purchases to further
lower borrowing costs and secure a stronger recovery.

Some companies are gaining confidence any further decline in demand
will not be as dramatic. LSI Corp. Chief Executive Officer Abhi
Talwalkar said calling the bottom now would be “too bold of a
statement,” even as sales in the chip industry were improving.

Still, “I do believe we won’t experience another freefall like we did
in the last quarter and a half,” Talwalkar said in a May 18
interview.






      
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