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Phil De Carolis
Let Me Help You Protect And Grow Your Wealth NOW Before It Is Too Late. Contact Me Right Away For A Referral To My Own Personal Broker With Euro Pacific Capital That Can Advise You On The Purchase Of Precious Metals (Gold, Silver, Copper, etc..), Soft Commodities (Coffee, Cotton, Sugar, etc...) And/Or Foreign Dividend Paying Stocks To Hedge Against Rising Prices And Your Loss Of Hard Earned Wealth. Join Me In Preserving Your Savings So That We Can Utilize Our Retained Purchasing Power To Purchase Discounted/Cash Flowing California Real Estate Assets At The Bottom Of This Downturn For Pennies On The Dollar That Will Rise In Value Dramatically During Californias' Next Cyclical Inflationary Real Estate Bull Market.
 For More Info Visit www.PhilDeCarolis.com

Phil De Carolis' Weekly Update: June 28, 2008

Need To Sell NOW? Need To Buy? Are You Looking For Cash Flowing Investment Properties Or Do You Just Need Information Visit www.PhilDeCarolis.com 

Press Release
Peter Schiff On Kudlow & Company August 28, 2006 (8:14 min)
 
Peter Schiff Predicts Recession, Real Estate Bubble Burst, Mortgage Crisis And More Over Two Years Ago
Peter Schiff On Kudlow & Company August 28, 2006
  (Click On The Image Above To Watch This Amazingly Accurate Prediction Of Current U.S. Economic Turmoil By Economist Peter Schiff)

"The American consumer is basically going to stop consuming and start rebuilding a savings, especially when he sees his home equity evaporate." -Peter Schiff/2006

 
Peter Schiffs' Economic Commentary
"Intervention Will Not Stop the Dollar's Slide"


 
Friday June 27, 2008
By Economist Peter Schiff                                                                                       

 Peter Schiff & I

This week the Federal Reserve took a step closer to acknowledging reality. Unfortunately it didn't let that admission move it from a policy course firmly guided by fantasy. In its policy statement, Bernanke & Co. took the important step in noting that inflation expectations had taken hold in the country at large. However, in asserting that it expects inflation to moderate this year and next, the Fed gave no indications that these heightened expectations are gaining traction within the Open market Committee itself. As a result, it signaled no likelihood that it was actually prepared to do something to fight a problem which it doesn't really believe exists in the first place.

In fact, by indicating that they expect inflation to moderate, the Fed is saying that elevated expectations are unwarranted. In other words, Bernanke claims that despite the fact that so many people are carry umbrellas, he still believes it will be a sunny day. The takeaway from the statement is that no rate hike is forthcoming. The markets saw this position for what it is....capitulation to inflation and a weakening dollar. No surprise then that the gold responded with the biggest single day gain in more than 20 years!

With the ensuing carnage on Wall Street, many Thursday morning quarterbacks claimed the Fed missed an opportunity to reverse the dollar's slide by either talking tougher or perhaps actually raising rates a quarter point. If the Fed really believed it could talk the dollar up, or that a small rate hike would do the trick, they would have given it a try. I believe they chose a dovish route because of a greater fear of having their hawkish stance casually disregarded. Imagine what would happen if the Fed raised rates and the dollar kept falling? It would be like one of those horror movies where someone holds a cross up to a vampire, and the Count tosses it aside with nary a cringe.

Others claim that now is the time for coordinated central bank intervention to reverse the dollar's decline. Those who place their faith in such a plan, overlook the fact that Asian and Middle East central banks have been unsuccessfully intervening on the dollar's behalf for years. Those nations maintaining dollar pegs must constantly intervene in the foreign exchange markets by buying dollars to keep their own currencies from rising in value. Over the past few years the scope of this intervention has been unprecedented, with foreign central banks accumulating trillions of excess dollar reserves. Yet despite these Herculean and misguided efforts, the dollar has fallen drastically.

Intervention advocates must believe that if the ECB and a few other central banks joined the fray, that a better outcome would be achieved. However any additional efforts to artificially prop up the ailing dollar will be equally ineffective. Even if ECB intervention could slow the dollar's decent, what possible reason would they have for doing so? The ECB is already concerned about inflation and is preparing to raise rates as a result. Intervention to support the dollar will only worsen Europe's inflation problem and run counter to these efforts. This is because to buy dollars the ECB must increase its own money supply. That is exactly what is happening in countries like China and Saudi Arabia, which is why inflation in those nations is already much higher than it is in Europe.

Further, since the ECB is asking Europeans to endure higher interest rates to fight their inflation battle, why should they have to make additional sacrifices to help Americans fight their own inflation? Especially when our own central bank has held interest rates at the ridiculously low level of 2%, and has effectively excused Americans from the conflict.

Since we can't count on any help from our friends, the only option would be for the Treasury to intervene unilaterally. However, the U.S. government should think twice about bringing a knife to a gunfight. The Treasury only has about $75 billion in foreign currency reserves with which to intervene. The war chest is just a spit in the ocean. To put this number in perspective, Poland has $77 billion, Turkey has $78 billion, and Libya has $79 billion. On the other end of the spectrum, China has $1.7 trillion (not counting Honk Kong's 150 billion) Japan has $1 trillion, Russia has $550 billion, India and Taiwan each have about $300 billion. Singapore, a nation with fewer than 5 million people, has $175 billion. In fact, the United States holds just about 1% of the world's $7.6 trillion of foreign currency reserves, and our total position amounts to just 2.5% of the total daily volume of foreign exchange trading. Talk about Bambi vs. Godzilla! In other words, if the dollar is going to fall, the Treasury is completely powerless to do anything to stop it. 
Click The Icon To Listen To The June 25, 2008 Installment Of Wall Street Unspun With Host Peter Schiff
 
Wall Street Unspun

The Norris Group Real Estate Radio ShowBruce Norris
 
June 28, 2008: Christopher Thornberg Of Beacon Economics
Bruce Norris is joined by Principle at Beacon Economics and panelist for I Survived Real Estate 2008, Christopher Thornberg. Bruce and Christopher discuss how Christopher got started in the prediction business, letting the data speak to you and street smarts, how this journey caught so many off guard, the duration of bubbles, how the downturn is worse then expected, looking at past real estate bubbles and how they compare, the chance that people who can afford home payments walk away because their neighbor owes half what they do, looking at what caused most of the damage, subprime being the fuel for the fire, the main problem being people paid too much, how falling prices will eventually allow people to get back in the market, home prices and consumer spending, unemployment and what that can mean for migration, when it might turn, if downturns hit coastal regions, the price decline and how it works its way out to coastal regions, returning to more reasonable ownership levels, following the foreclosure lists and realizing that investors weren't the problem, how lenders are tightening financing, how Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are exposed in volatile markets, the large amount of leverage within banks, equity position of banks, the story behind pent up demand, commercial real estate in the coming years, the land price bubble, false wealth and consumer spending, how to notice a commercial bubble is popping, the Federal Reserve and how they're dealing with the market, dealing with inflation compared to past cycles, and what policy Christopher would change in the current market. See iSurvived2008.com for more details about our fundraiser "I Survived Real Estate 2008."
 
 
 
 
The Norris Group Radio Show
 
 
Interest Rate Cuts
(Sep 18, 2007)- "A Fed bailout in the form of rate cuts will neither prevent the recession nor keep house prices from collapsing. It may slow the process down a few quarters, but it will cost us dearly" -Peter Schiff

"Barclays Warns Of A Financial Storm As Federal Reserve's Credibility Crumbles" -  UK Telegraph

June 28 -- Barclays Capital has advised clients to batten down the hatches for a worldwide financial storm, warning that the US Federal Reserve has allowed the inflation genie out of the bottle and let its credibility fall "below zero". "We're in a nasty environment," said Tim Bond, the bank's chief equity strategist. "There is an inflation shock underway. This is going to be very negative for financial assets. We are going into tortoise mood and are retreating into our shell. Investors will do well if they can preserve their wealth." Barclays Capital said in its closely-watched Global Outlook that US headline inflation would hit 5.5pc by August and the Fed will have to raise interest rates six times by the end of next year to prevent a wage-spiral. If it hesitates, the bond markets will take matters into their own hands. "This is the first test for central banks in 30 years and they have fluffed it. They have zero credibility, and the Fed is negative if that's possible. It has lost all credibility...................................


Click Here To See The Entire Article

Recession:
(Sep 19,2007)- "We borrowed trillions of dollars to remodel our kitchens, buy SUVs and plasma TVs, and there are consequences. We are in serious trouble. The piper has to be paid" -Peter Schiff

"This Recession, It's Just Beginning" - Washington Post

June 27 -- So much for that second-half rebound. Truth be told, that was always more of a wish than a serious forecast, happy talk from the Fed and Wall Street desperate to get things back to normal. It ain't gonna happen. Not this summer. Not this fall. Not even next winter.
This thing's going down, fast and hard. Corporate bankruptcies, bond defaults, bank failures, hedge fund meltdowns and 6 percent unemployment. We're caught in one of those vicious, downward spirals that, once it gets going, is very hard to pull out of. Only this will be a different kind of recession -- a recession with an overlay of inflation. That combo puts the Federal Reserve in a Catch-22 -- whatever it does to solve one problem only makes the other worse. Emerging from a two-day meeting this week, Fed officials signaled that further recession-fighting rate cuts are unlikely and that their next move will be to raise rates to contain inflationary expectations..................................

Click On This Link To View The Entire Article

Dollar
(Sep 18, 2007)- "If the dollar loses value too quickly, it could wreak havoc on the economy and financial markets - driving up interest rates and inflation and slashing Americans' purchasing power" -Peter Schiff 
 
"What's Behind The Dollar's Decline In Value?"- Los Angeles Times

June 22 -- The dollar has lost a big chunk of its global purchasing power since the end of 2001 -- an average of 37%, as measured by one index that tracks the greenback against other major currencies. Gauging the decline is easy; explaining why the buck has slumped is much more complicated. Some theories about the dollar's fall are grand in scale: for example, the concept that the buck's fate is a symptom of a fading U.S. empire. Other explanations are largely technical, including the idea that currency values are cyclical, and that the dollar's downswing inevitably will give way to an upswing. On some level, the dollar's shift has to be about basic supply and demand.
 
The price of anything usually will decline if there is an excess of it in the marketplace. That's how Michael Woolfolk, veteran currency strategist at Bank of New York Mellon Corp., frames the buck's slide. He sees it as "the unintended result of globalization." The boom in the developing world occurred in large part to supply the goods U.S. consumers wanted at low prices. As a nation, we borrowed heavily in the last decade to sustain our lifestyles, and sent trillions of dollars abroad to pay for imports, including oil. The cumulative U.S. trade deficit -- the amount by which imports exceeded exports -- was a whopping $4.4 trillion from 2000 through 2007. With the world awash in dollars, they've lost a portion of their value...................................

Inflation
(Sep 19, 2007)- "People keep talking about Fed bailouts as if there is no cost. All the Fed can do is create new dollars. What that does is diminish the value of all the dollars everybody already has. They try to socialize the losses among all the holders of dollars" -Peter Schiff
 
"Construction Materials Costs Go Through Roof" -  Dallas Morning News

June 27 -  With the sharp decline in U.S. home production - currently at a 17-year low - builders were hoping to see a dip in construction costs. No such luck. A combination of soaring global demand and high energy prices has caused construction material prices to explode for both commercial and residential builders. Construction costs have been increasing at more than twice the level of overall consumer prices, according to statistics from the Associated General Contractors of America. And prices for many building components - including steel, roofing materials and concrete - have grown even faster. "Costs are up most for products currently being used for nonresidential building and highway projects," said D'Ann Petersen, a business economist with the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas. "Higher energy prices are pushing up production prices for many of these products. "In addition, raw materials prices continue to rise." For developers, the surge in pricing makes it hard to nail down the economics of a deal............................


 
Real Estate
(Aug 16, 2007)- "The housing bubble has burst. Prices are going to collapse and sales are going to fall through the floor." -Peter Schiff 
 
"Housing Crash Hits Baby Boomers" -The Wall Street Journal

June 24 -- The median household headed by those between 45 and 54 in 2009 will have about 25% less wealth than the median household of that age in 2004, according to the report. That household's wealth will decline to $113,268 in 2009, from $150,113 in 2004. And that's if housing prices remain at the level they were in March. The report, "The Housing Crash and the Retirement Prospects of Late Baby Boomers," extrapolates from data in the Federal Reserve's 2004 Survey of Consumer Finances (the most recent available). The authors also used the Case-Shiller home price index for their estimates. Read the report (PDF). The Center for Economic and Policy Research is a Washington, D.C.-based nonpartisan think tank that focuses on economic and social issues. The picture gets even worse if real home prices fall more. If prices, adjusted for inflation, fall 10% by 2009, the median household would see a 35% drop in wealth compared with the same age group in 2004; and if prices fall by 20%, there would be a 46% difference...........................


Click On This Link To View The Entire Article
Gold
(Sep 21, 2007)- "With the Federal Funds Rate cut, the Fed revealed that it has no interest in defending the dollar or containing inflation. This kind of irresponsibility is all gold needs to move higher from its current levels unless the Fed somehow finds its backbone within a year or two, then gold has a good chance to take out its inflation-adjusted high of nearly $2,000 per ounce within this decade." -Peter Schiff
 
"Gold Rises As Oil's Surge Boosts Demand For Inflation Hedge" - Bloomberg


June 27 -- Gold rose to the highest price in a month as record energy costs boost demand for the precious metal as a hedge against inflation. Silver also gained. Crude-oil futures reached an all-time high of $142.99 a barrel today and have doubled in the past year. Gold climbed to a record $1,033.90 an ounce in March as a slumping dollar and soaring raw-material prices spurred investors to buy precious metals to protect against a loss of purchasing power.
"Gold will be used as an inflation hedge, and the No. 1 worry is high oil prices,'' said Joel Crane, a metals strategist at Deutsche Bank AG in New York. "We're maintaining the view that the dollar can continue to be weak. As long as oil stays high, the gold price will stay high.''
Gold futures for August delivery gained $16.20, or 1.8 percent, to $931.30 an ounce on the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange. Earlier, the price reached $933, the highest for a most-active contract since May 27. The metal gained 3.1 percent this week and is up 11 percent this year.

Silver futures for September delivery rose 49 cents, or 2.8 percent, to $17.71 an ounce. The metal climbed 1.8 percent this week and is up 19 percent this year.
Oil has jumped 4.2 percent this week, while the dollar has fallen 1.1 percent against the euro. The UBS Bloomberg Constant Maturity Commodity Index of 26 raw materials extended a rally to a record today and has gained 32 percent this year. Gold may reach $1,000 next month as the Federal Reserve holds interest rates steady, while prospects for inflation escalate, said James Turk, founder of GoldMoney.com, which held $352 million in gold and silver in storage for investors at the end of May............................

Click On This Link To View The Entire Article

 

Oil
(July 31, 2007)- "It's going to soon hit $90 and go north of $100 next year. We should see $150 to $200 oil in the next two to three years because of the drop in the dollar.'' -Peter Schiff
 
"Oil Rises To $142 For The First Time" - Rueters


June 27 -  Crude oil rose to a record above $142 a barrel in New York on Friday and gold advanced as falling stock markets spurred investment in commodities. Oil has gained 47 percent this year, headed for the biggest six-month gain since 1999, as recession concerns have pushed the MSCI World Index of global equity markets down 12 percent. Oil may rise further if the European Central Bank raises rates on July 3, further weakening the U.S. dollar, traders said.
"It's a combination of equities underperforming and pricing in some further risk on what the ECB will do next week," said Oliver Jakob, managing director of Petromatrix in Zug, Switzerland.
 
Trading volumes are so low that price movements are being exaggerated, he said.
Crude oil for August delivery rose as much as $2.62 a barrel, or 1.9 percent, to $142.26 in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. It was at $141.95 at 12:31 p.m. London time. On Thursday the contract rose $5.09, or 3.8 percent, to $139.64 a barrel, a record settlement price, as Libya threatened to cut output and the president of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries said prices may reach between $150 and $170 within months................... 

 
Futures Prices 
 
Todays Prices (June 28, 2008)
*Gold Futures $931.3/Ounce(Up)
 
Last Weeks Prices (June 21, 2008)
*Dollar Index 73.380/Basket Of Currencies 
*Gold Futures $903.7/Ounce 
* Crude Oil $135.36/Barrel
Federal Funds Rate 2.00%
Federal Discount Rate 2.25%
30yr Fixed Mortgage 6.28%
 
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Prudential California Realty
Phil De Carolis
Realtor/Investor
Cell (909) 910-9618
Fax (909) 752-5353


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