So much for energy efficiency

From the Wall Street Journal….

An unexpected drop in U.S. electricity consumption has utility companies worried that the trend isn’t a byproduct of the economic downturn, and could reflect a permanent shift in consumption that will require sweeping change in their industry.

Numbers are trickling in from several large utilities that show shrinking power use by households and businesses in pockets across the country. Utilities have long counted on sales growth of 1% to 2% annually in the U.S., and they created complex operating and expansion plans to meet the needs of a growing population.

“We’re in a period where growth is going to be challenged,” says Jim Rogers, chief executive of Duke Energy Corp. in Charlotte, N.C.

So who cares right? Everyone has problems. But these problems are going to be your problems. Cut your energy usage in an effort to save money? Does not matter. From later on in the article….

Utilities are taking a hard look at the way they set rates and generate profits. Many companies are embracing a new rate design based on “decoupling,” in which they set prices aimed at covering the basic costs of delivery, with sales above that level being gravy. Regulators have resisted the change in some places, because it typically means that consumers using little energy pay somewhat higher rates.

But it could be worse. We could live in Ukraine.

A Forced Merger With Who?

From the New York Times…

That collapse began a steady decline in Citigroup shares that snowballed this week as speculation grew that the bank might require a government bailout, a forced merger that would crush common equity holders, or an ouster of Mr. Pandit.

In the last five days alone, more than half of Citigroup’s market value was vaporized, and investors and analysts intensified calls for the bank to find ways to lift its stock price, including splitting the company, selling pieces or selling itself outright.

“They don’t have the sovereign wealth funds or other big investors to turn to anymore,” said William Fitzpatrick, an equity analyst for Optique Capital Management. “There are two remaining options: a federally forced merger or nationalization.”

A forced merger with who? Doesn’t everybody realize that Citigroup is the largest financial services organization in the world? How can they solve Citigroup’s underlying problems by merging them with someone who is smaller?

All this crazy talk surrounding Citi is making me think that John Hempton was close to the truth with his crazy little conspiracy theory.

Good Point, Bad Solution

From Naked Capitalism…..

But one thing that continues to surprise me is the frequency with which the US in 2007-2008 is being compared to the US of 1929-1930. I’ve mentioned in passing that China is in the position that the US occupied in the late 1920s: a massive manufacturer that was generating large trade surpluses, to the point where the imbalance was destablizing (under a gold standard, the US was sucking the metal out of its trade partners; the modern analogy is China’s massive foreign exchange reserves). And as the US was the epicenter of the Great Depression, we cannot be certain of the trajectory of this economic crisis until we have a sense of how bad things are getting in China and how good its policy responses are.

Reader Michael has been e-mailing me from time to time with not-pretty sightings on China’s responses to the downturn. This post from Michael Pettis tells us that China appears to be trying to keep its exports up, which is eerily parallel to what the US did in the Great Depression.

The point is good one. The Michale Pettis post that she links to is interesting. The conclusions that Michale Pettis and herself draw is all wrong.

Keynesian economics has never been able to solve the problem of overcapacity. Japan could not do in 90’s. The US could not do it in the 70’s. Nobody has ever been able to use Keynes ideas to solve any problem successfully. Yet his ideas it is still held out as the solution to the problem of overcapacity on the belief that everyone else did not properly follow Keynes ideas.

We Are Setting Records

From dshort.com…

Over the 80-year period since 1928, the average volatility in the Dow is about 1.8%. There have been only 66 days when the intraday volatility exceeded 8%. That’s right — 66 out of over 20,300 market days. If they were evenly spread, that would be about one 8% plus volatility day every 14.5 months.

Here’s the amazing and rather disturbing part . . .

Sixteen of them have occurred since September 29th — two in the past five days. The Crash of 1929 had only eight. Another thirty followed during the ten-year Great Depression. Four were clustered around the Crash of 1987. Only two happened during the nasty 2000-2002 bear.

The current bear market has had a record-breaking nine consecutive days of 8% plus volatility (October 6 through the 16th). Second place goes to the Crash of 1929, with eight super-volatile days spread over a 14 market-day period (10/23/29 to 11/13/29).

A lot of people are given false hope by the sharp drops coupled with sharp upswings. They think that if they wait long enough, everything will go back to the way it was before. I wonder how long it is going to take before the majority of Americans realize that they have lost a lot of money they are never going to get back no matter how long they wait.

Interesting Read

From Spiegel…..

McGaugh and his staff realized they were looking at an exotic case, perhaps even a scientific sensation. For that reason they took a thorough approach, and for five years they subjected Price to batteries of neuropsychological tests, combed the professional literature for similar cases and developed special questionnaires to allow them to test her memory.

Once she was asked to write down the dates of all Easter holidays from 1980 to 2003. “It took her 10 minutes, and she only got one of the 24 dates wrong, where she was off by two days,” says McGaugh. He had Price repeat the test two years later, and the second time she got all the dates right. “I thought that was especially impressive,” says McGaugh, “because she is Jewish. Easter means nothing to her.”

The scientists were able to verify her autobiographical data because she has meticulously kept a diary since the age of 10. She has filled more than 50,000 pages with tiny writing, documenting every occurrence, no matter how insignificant. Writing things down helps Price organize the thoughts and images shimmering in her head.

In fact, she feels a strong need to document her life. This includes hoarding every possible memento from childhood, including dolls, stuffed animals, cassette tapes, books, a drawer from dresser she had when she was five. “I have to be able to touch my memories,” Price explains.

McGaugh and his colleagues concluded that Price’s episodic memory, her recollection of personal experiences and the emotions associated with them, is virtually perfect. A case like this has never been described in the history of memory research, according to McGaugh. He explains that Price differs substantially from other people with special powers of recall, such as autistic savants, because she uses no strategies to help her remember and even does a surprisingly poor job on some memory tests.

Oil Free Falls

From the Telegraph…

US benchmark commodity futures hit $49.75 a barrel in New York, while the price of Brent in London fell to $48.45 – prices not recorded since May 2005.

Oil has lost about two-thirds of its value since July’s record high prices, as the economic slowdown around the world has weakened demand.

I feel bad for all the people who pre brought their heating oil on the fear that it would keep going up.

The Dark Shadow

From SPIEGEL….

Lilian Engelmann never thought she would see neo-Nazis on her block. The young art curator works in a gallery in the trendy district of Mitte, a neighborhood in central Berlin. Her neighbors include an international cinema, designer hat store, Vietnamese restaurant and — as of last February — a store called Tönsberg, which sells clothing popular among right-wing extremists.

“By coming here, the neo-Nazis tried to come into the center of society,” Engelmann told SPIEGEL ONLINE. Once local residents and shopowners learned that Tönsberg planned to sell the clothing brand Thor Steinar, they organized against the store. The group led by Engelmann and other shopowners called itself the “Mitte Initiative Against the Far Right,” and mounted regular protests.

These people are only going to grow in strength and numbers. Contrary to what some people say, Germany never manged to lay a good moral foundation for a free society. The same could be said of many other countries in Europe.

No one is Safe

From Jeff Matthews Is Not Making This Up….

So the odds are good that Buffett himself is not breaking a sweat over his own stock’s 40% decline since his late September cavalry-to-the-rescue investment in Goldman Sachs.

After all, who knows more about Berkshire than Warren Buffett?

Still, somebody out there is indeed breaking a sweat about Berkshire, and not just the company’s stock. Credit default swaps in Berkshire—insurance against a default by Berkshire—have been climbing ever since the market began its September swoon, and suddenly spiked in the last few days.

In the end of the world as we know it, even Berkshire is not a safe haven. Although to be fair, people are mostly worried that it is going to lose its AAA rating. Not go bankrupt per say.

Hooray for Freedom

From Reuters…

Online dating service eHarmony has agreed to create a new website for gays and lesbians as part of a settlement with a gay man in New Jersey, the New Jersey Office of the Attorney General said on Wednesday.

From later on in the same article….

eHarmony was founded in 2000 by evangelical Christian Dr. Neil Clark Warren and had ties with the influential religious conservative group Focus on the Family.

Enough Said.