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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
3/11/2016 5:04:15 PM

North Korean leader Kim orders more nuclear tests: KCNA

Reuters


A ballistic rocket launch drill of the Strategic Force of the Korean People's Army (KPA) is seen at an unknown location, in this undated photo released by North Korea's Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) in Pyongyang on March 11, 2016. REUTERS/KCNA

By Jack Kim

SEOUL (Reuters) - North Korean leader Kim Jong Un watched a ballistic missile launch test and ordered the country to improve its nuclear attack capability by conducting more tests, the official KCNA news agency reported on Friday.

The report did not say when the test took place but it was probably referring to North Korea's launch of two short-range missiles on Thursday that flew 500 km (300 miles) and splashed into the sea.

"Dear comrade Kim Jong Un said work ... must be strengthened to improve nuclear attack capability and issued combat tasks to continue nuclear explosion tests to assess the power of newly developed nuclear warheads and tests to improve nuclear attack capability," KCNA said.

The North Korean leader was quoted in state media this week as saying his country had miniaturized nuclear warheads to mount on ballistic missiles.

Tensions have risen sharply on the Korean peninsula after the North conducted its fourth nuclear test in January and fired a long-range rocket last month, spurring the U.N. Security Council to adopt a new sanctions resolution.

Conducting more nuclear tests would be in clear violation of U.N. sanctions, which also ban ballistic missile tests, although Pyongyang has rejected them. North Korea has a large stockpile of short-range missiles and is developing long-range and intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs).

South Korea's Unification Ministry spokesman Jeong Joon-hee said: "It's simply rash and thoughtless behavior by someone who has no idea how the world works," when asked about Kim's comments.

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon urged Pyongyang to "cease destabilizing acts," adding that he remained "gravely concerned" by the situation.

North Korea has recently stepped up its cyber attack efforts against South Korea and succeeded in hacking the mobile telephones of 40 of its national security officials, said members of parliament who received a closed door briefing by the country's spy agency.

South Korea has raised its alert against the threat of the North's cyber attacks and this week said it had intercepted attempts to attack its railway system.

In China, North Korea's most important economic and diplomatic backer, the top newspaper, the People's Daily, urged all sides to be "patient and brave", show goodwill and resume the talks process.

South Korea said it did not believe that North Korea had successfully miniaturized a nuclear warhead or deployed a functioning intercontinental ballistic missile.

The U.S. Defense Department said this week it had seen no evidence that North Korea had succeeded in miniaturizing a warhead.

However, Admiral Bill Gortney, the officer responsible for defending U.S. air space, told a U.S. Senate panel on Thursday it was "prudent" for him to assume North Korea could both miniaturize a warhead and put it on an ICBM that could target the United States.

"Intel community gives it a very low probability of success, but I do not believe the American people want (me) to base my readiness assessment on a low probability," he said.

North Korea has issued nearly daily reports in recent days of Kim's instructions to fight South Korea and the United States as the two allies began large-scale military drills.

North Korea called the annual drills "nuclear war moves" and threatened to respond with an all-out offensive. Kim last week ordered his country to be ready to use nuclear weapons in the face of what he sees as growing threats from enemies.

The United States and South Korea remain technically at war with North Korea because the 1950-53 Korean War ended in a truce instead of a peace agreement.

(Additional reporting by Ju-min Park in Seoul, David Brunnstrom and David Alexander in Washington and Ben Blanchard in Beijing; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan and Clarence Fernandez)

"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
3/11/2016 5:18:07 PM

China howls but Dalai Lama draws crowd at human rights talk

Associated Press

Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama speaks during a debate about the Nobel Laureates on Human Rights "a view from civil society", in the Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies, in Geneva, Switzerland, on Friday, March 11, 2016, a moderated panel discussion by Nobel Peace Prize recipients on the subject of human rights in civil society, as a side event of the UN Human Rights Council's 31st session hosted by the Permanent Missions of the United States and Canada. (Martial Trezzini/Keystone via AP)


GENEVA (AP) — The Dalai Lama appeared Friday at a Geneva human rights conference, despite China's plea to diplomats to stay away from the event.

China's U.N. mission in Geneva circulated a letter to other missions this week asking them to avoid the Tibetan spiritual leader's appearance at a conference built around Nobel peace prize winners and co-sponsored by the United States and Canada.

Hundreds of supporters of the Dalai Lama, some waving Tibetan flags, rallied at the giant three-legged chair landmark outside the U.N. complex as he attended the packed-house conference nearby at Geneva's Graduate Institute. The number of diplomats in the throng was unclear.

The Chinese mission's letter dated Tuesday, the same day that press invitations for the conference were made, said the event was "of grave concern to China."

It called the Dalai Lama "a political exile who has long been engaged in activities to split China under the pretext of religion," and said the mission "kindly requests the permanent missions of all member states, U.N. agencies and relevant international organizations not to attend the above-mentioned event."

The mission provided a copy of the letter to The Associated Press.

Referring to Tibet, the Dalai Lama told the conference: "We are not seeking separation" from China. However, he referred to a "totalitarian system" and "hardliners" in China. He said he had heard from some in China that change "may happen" at the 19th Communist Party meeting next year, though he did not elaborate.

Afterward, about a dozen heavily armed police stood watch as the Dalai Lama glad-handed the crowd outside the and addressing the supporters in Tibetan — primarily on religious and spiritual themes, according to attendees. Many were dressed in traditional costumes, and some danced.

The conference was billed as a side event to the ongoing U.N. Human Rights Council in Geneva, where the U.S. and 11 other Western countries on Thursday expressed concerns about human rights in China, notably over the arrests of lawyers and activists in recent months, and "unexplained recent disappearances and apparent coerced returns" of Chinese citizens and foreigners to China.

China shot back on Friday with a statement from Ambassador Fu Cong on the mission's Web site, accusing the United States of "hypocrisy and double standards on human rights issues." Among other things, it cited "rampant" gun violence and the "deep-rooted malaise" of racism in the United States, and said the U.S. was "notorious for its abuses and torture at prisons at Guantanamo Bay."

It cited "a huge number of civilian casualties" caused by U.S. drone strikes and said U.S. troops abroad "commit rape and murder of local people."

"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
3/11/2016 5:36:07 PM

Sudden Plunge In Japanese Government Bonds Triggers Circuit Breaker, Halts Market For 30 Seconds

Tyler Durden's picture
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/09/2016 05:40 -0500


It was just yesterday when we observed the record collapse across the Japanese curve when first the 10Y JGB plunged to an all time low -0.10%, followed promptly by 30Y yields dropping 21bps - the biggest absolute drop in over 3 years and biggest percentage drop ever - to a record low 47bps following Japan's 30Year auction on Monday night. As we further noted, since Kuroda unleashed NIRP, the entire JGB curve has been crushed and the Monday night rush for long duration debt flattened the curve to record lows.


What a difference a day makes.

Just 24 hours later trading of Japan’s government bond futures was halted for less 30 second after the price of the contracts dropped as much as 0.6 percent. As Bloomberg reports, the dynamic circuit breaker on the Osaka Securities Exchange was activated at 12:32 p.m. and was applied to March contracts according to Masaki Takahashi, who works in the market management department at the Osaka Securities Exchange.

The website of the OSE parent Japan Exchange’s website said the circuit breaker is triggered "to temporarily halt trading in order to allow investors to calm down when the market is overly volatile."

The reason for the trading halt is that a day after sliding to the lowest yield on record, on Wednesday the benchmark 10-year bond tumbled, pushing yields up eight basis points to minus 0.015 percent as of 2:51 p.m. Yields rebounded after dropping more than five basis points to a record minus 0.1 percent Tuesday. The selloff was triggered after an increase in selling into the BOJ's POMO when the bid-to-cover ratio for debt with 10 to 20 years to maturity rose to 3.58 from 2.93 last week, indicating stronger investor demand to sell, and that investors were looking to offload inventory to the BOJ.

"Weak outcome of BOJ’s bond purchase, especially 10y-25y tenor, spurs selling JGBs given that yesterday’s rally was excessive move,” says Takenobu Nakashima, quantitative strategist at Nomura Securities.

The BOJ’s bond operation result spurred JGB selling “given that yesterday’s rally was excessive,” Nakashima said.

Here is the dramatic surge in yields, the biggest jump since February 12.


And here is the moment the price collapsed triggering the circuit breaker.


And so the market chaos even among the "safest" of securities, the result of central bank intervention, continues. Bloomberg's Richard Breslow summarized it best:


Even with QEs creating what look an awful lot like bubbles, it’s been fair to say, those distortions reflected the reaction function of how central bankers interpreted the state of play. Yield levels, let alone negative rates, and volatility are making these guideposts increasingly questionable.

If you look at the yield curves of much of the world, you’d be hard pressed not to conclude we are very much still experiencing a severe global recession. Central bankers may strongly disagree, yet Japanese 10-year JGBs haven’t seen 2% this century. German bunds have backed up to 21bps. Both are likely to increase QE. The U.S. is tightening (?) and 10- year yields are still down 42bps on the year

The Fed wants to raise rates but insists on re-investing the take on its massive portfolio. They act like fund managers protecting their AUM.

The Osaka Stock Exchange had to invoke circuit breakers today on the March JGB future for excessive volatility. Buying panic yesterday to front-run today’s QE buying led to panic selling today into BOJ bids 22 bps through Monday’s close. Oh, and did I mention, ahead of an auction tomorrow. The take-away is mayhem, not analysis.


And now we look forward to an even greater surge in volatility first ahead of tomorrow's ECB meeting, and then first the Fed and BOJ next week, who - just like everyone else - have no idea what is going on any more.


(ZeroHedge)


"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
3/11/2016 5:48:04 PM

IMF Issues New Warning on Global Economy as Chinese Exports Plunge

Global Research, March 10, 2016


economy-crisis

The International Monetary Fund warned this week of a further weakening of the global economy following the release of figures showing a significant decline in Chinese and global trade.

In a major speech to the National Association for Business Economics in Washington on Tuesday, the first deputy managing director of the IMF, David Lipton, said that it was “most disconcerting” that the rise in “risk aversion” was leading to a “sharp retrenchment in global capital and trade flows.”

He noted that emerging markets experienced a capital outflow of $200 billion last year compared to a net inflow of $125 billion in 2014. “Trade flows meanwhile are being dragged down by weak export and import growth in large emerging markets such as China, as well as Russia and Brazil, which have been under considerable stress,” he said.

Lipton made his remarks following the release of data showing that Chinese exports experienced their biggest contraction since 2009. It was another sign that, far from the world economy being on the road to “recovery,” global demand is continuing to fall.

Chinese exports in February were down by 25.4 percent in dollar terms from a year earlier, after falling by 11.2 percent in January, while imports declined by 13.8 percent, after dropping by 18.8 percent in January. While the figures may have been somewhat distorted because of issues related to the lunar New Year holiday, the combined January and February falls add up to a marked decline over the previous year, and no one is expecting the March data to show any improvement.

The Chinese results are the latest in a series of reports showing a decline in world trade, especially over the past two years, as a result of intensifying recessionary trends. In the years before the financial meltdown, world trade grew at about twice the rate of growth for the world economy. Since 2011, it has been in line with or even below that figure.

Last year, the value of global trade fell by 13.8 percent in dollar terms, the first contraction since 2009. Figures released last week for the US, the world’s largest economy, show the same trend as the second largest economy, China. US exports fell by 2.1 percent, while imports were down by 1.3 percent. The value of goods exports from the US was the lowest since February 2011.

Lipton concluded his speech by repeating the official mantra that “global economic recovery continues.” However, everything that came before showed the opposite to be the case.

“The IMF’s latest reading of the global economy shows once again a weakening baseline,” he said. “Moreover, risks have increased further, with volatile financial markets and low commodity prices creating fresh concerns about the health of the global economy.”

These concerns were being fed by the “perception that in many economies policymakers have run out of ammunition or lost the resolve to deploy it.” Repeating the call issued by the IMF prior to the recent G20 meeting in Shanghai, he said it was “imperative that advanced and developing countries dispel this dangerous notion by reviving the bold spirit of action and cooperation that characterized the early years of the recovery effort.”

He claimed the G20 meeting had recognized that the global economy remained too weak and had provided “some reassurance that countries stand ready to act if necessary.” In fact, such are the divisions within the G20 that proposals for cooperation did not even make it onto the agenda of the meeting. As a number of media reports noted, the gathering was characterised by the efforts of every country to blame every other country for the worsening situation.

Lipton pointed both to what he called “unresolved legacies” and the “emergence of new risks.” In many parts of Europe, government and private debt remained high, as well as banks’ non-performing loans. In the US, unfilled infrastructure needs “diminish economic prospects,” while in Japan, “deflation is putting the recovery at risk.”

On top of these “legacies,” new risks had developed. “The global economic slowdown is hurting bank balance sheets and financing conditions have tightened considerably,” he warned. “In emerging markets, excess capacity is being unwound through sharp declines in capital spending, while rising private debt, often denominated in foreign currency, is increasing risks to banks and sovereign [government] balance sheets.”

Lipton pointed out that the decline in stock market indices for this year implied a loss of market capitalization of more than $6 trillion, equivalent to about half the total losses incurred in the most acute phase of the 2008 financial crisis. While the decline on a global scale was 6 percent, some markets had experienced losses of 20 percent.

He warned that protracted low global demand coupled with financial turbulence created the risk of “negative feedback loops” between the real economy and markets, generating deflation and “secular stagnation”—a situation where the level of savings permanently outstrips the demand for investment funds.

In other words, low global demand, in large measure the result of low investment, leads to financial volatility, which in turn leads to reductions in investment, further lowering demand.

Lipton said commodity exporters had to recognise that commodity prices “may well be permanently lower.” This assessment has also been made by Goldman Sachs, one of the largest banks operating in commodity markets. In a series of reports issued this week, it said the recent spike in prices was likely to be temporary, and the 20-month decline had further to run before supply was cut and markets rebalanced.

Lipton repeated the now obligatory statement from the world’s major economic institutions that the lessons of history had to be learned and zero-sum policies, in which one country attempts to alleviate its position at the expense of others, had to be eschewed, because in the long run, they made all countries worse off.

One of the chief mechanisms of such zero-sum games is competitive currency devaluation. But such measures are being intensified, not reduced. While all central banks insist that their quantitative easing programs, through which they pump money into the financial system, together with negative interest rates are not aimed at lowering the value of their currency, this is their effect.

Following the decision by the Bank of Japan to introduce negative interest rates at the end of January, a further step in this direction is expected today when the European Central Bank governing council meets. It is widely forecast to extend its quantitative easing program and take interest rates further into negative territory, exacerbating the tensions in financial markets.

"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
3/12/2016 12:21:46 AM

Leaving a Legacy of Destruction: Fracking Industry Threatens U.S. National Parks


11th March 2016

By Carolanne Wright

Contributing Writer for Wake Up World

As if it wasn’t bad enough to have fracking operations in our backyards — destroying local ecosystems, human health and property values — the oil and gas industry has expanded into public lands, with many national parks now under threat. Not only does fracking for petroleum and natural gas promote ecological and climatic changes, but it also destroys the water we drink and the air we breathe. Not to mention the practice has been linked to an increase of earthquakes. Moreover, waste generated by the industry is exceptionally toxic and difficult to dispose of safely — to the point where municipalities are resorting to spraying it on roadways, and other acts of insanity. Keep in mind fracking fluid contains a slew of hazardous chemicals and is oftentimes radioactive.

To date, over 34 million acres of public land in the U.S. has been leased to fracking companies, with another 200 million acres in danger because the land overlays oil and gas deposits. Public outcry has fallen on deaf ears, as corporations and the government plow ahead with their agenda, which is nothing short of greed and environmental destruction. National parks like Arches and Canyonlands in Utah, Chaco Culture in New Mexico, Glacier in Montana, Sequoia and Kings Canyon in California, are just a few examples of public land under threat. What will it take to stop this rampant destruction of America’s most cherished natural spaces?

Forget About Beauty, Nature and Clean Water— This is About Profit People

“In March 2015, despite receiving 650,000 public comments from people in favor of a ban on fracking on public lands, President Obama’s Bureau of Land Management – an agency whose mission is “to sustain the health, diversity, and productivity of America’s public lands for the use and enjoyment of present and future generations” – finalized weak new rules for drilling and fracking on federal lands that will not protect these lands from damage.” [source]

The Federal Bureau of Land Management (BLM) has a long history of selling out public land to special interests — and the fracking industry is no exception. Even though the agency’s new rules require oil and gas companies to disclose the chemicals they use, adhere to construction standards in drilling wells and safely dispose of contaminated water, many believe these measures don’t go far enough. A growing number of people believe fracking shouldn’t be allowed at all, especially not where public land is concerned.

But the oil companies are savvy about how to maximize profits and soon realized that leasing land from the BLM was much more cost effective than private property — the latter going for thousands of dollars an acre, the former, a mere $47/acre in 2012.

The problem is, many public lands and national parks include local watersheds, which puts drinking water at risk. And let’s not forget about the delicate ecology in these areas, home to a variety of wildlife and sensitive plant species.

Take for instance Los Padres National Forest in California. If fracking were to take place, drinking water contamination would be all but guaranteed, along with habitat damage — negatively affecting a range of animals and plants. The Santa Ynez basin is already plagued by drought and will only become worse through fracking, which uses millions of gallons of water for a single well.

Also in California is Sequoia National Park, home to some of the largest trees in the world, together with well over 200 unique marble caves below the surface. Already, fossil fuel companies are fracking and acidizing just west of the park, jeopardizing its ecology, the air and three aquifer systems — including the Central Valley, the Antelope Valley and the Mojave River Basin.

In the northwest, Glacier National Park in Montana is in danger as well. Known as “Shinning Mountains” by local Native American tribes, the park spans more than a million acres of forests, glacial valleys and alpine meadows, against a backdrop of soaring mountains over 8,000 feet high. The glaciers supply headwaters for a multitude of rivers and streams, and have produced over 200 lakes within the park.

Currently, the park is near drilling and fracking by the Upper Missouri River watershed. Additional fracking in this area could pollute the water serving a third of Montana’s population, fifty-percent of agricultural irrigation and half of its recreational fishing.

These are just a few examples of what’s at risk with continued expansion of fracking operations across the U.S. — in truth, many more national parks and public spaces are in peril of irreversible damage inflicted by the oil and gas industry.

“Our public lands are a national treasure and a sacred trust passed by one generation of Americans to another,” said Drew Hudson of Environmental Action. “Fracking on public lands threatens the drinking water of millions of people, including the President’s daughters and everyone else here in Washington, D.C. It would also poison many of our last wild and pristine ecosystems. Fracking has no place on our public lands, and these citizens, more than half a million of them, are calling on the President and the Bureau of Land Management to say: ‘Yes we can ban fracking.’” [source]

Learn about the process — and hazards — of fracking here. Then take action to protect our natural spaces, before it’s too late.

"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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