Friday, February 28, 2014

Personal Income and Outlays Consumer Spending to be reported at 08:30

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Personal Income and Outlays PCE Price Index -- to be reported at 08:30

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Personal Income and Outlays Core PCE price index to be reported at 08:30

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ADP Employment Report employment to be reported at 08:15

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ISM Non-Mfg Index Composite to be reported at 10:00

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Productivity and Costs Nonfarm productivity to be reported at 08:30

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Productivity and Costs Unit labor costs to be reported at 08:30

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International Trade Balance Level to be reported at 08:30

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Employment Situation Nonfarm Payrolls to be reported at 08:30

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Employment Situation Unemployment Rate to be reported at 08:30

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Employment Situation Average Hourly Earnings to be reported at 08:30

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by via theflyonthewall.com

Employment Situation Av Workweek to be reported at 08:30

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Theflyonthewall.com provides the latest financial news as it breaks. Known as a leader in market intelligence, The Fly's real-time, streaming news feed keeps individual investors, professional money managers, active traders, and corporate executives informed on what's moving stocks. Sign up for a free trial at theflyonthewall.com to see what Wall Street is buzzing about.

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Employment Situation Private Payrolls to be reported at 08:30

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[video] Forex: Volatility Ahead with Record SPX, NFPs, ECB, Ukraine and More (Forex News by DailyFX)




by InformedTrades via InformedTrades

Recovery Fantasy Persists Despite Contrary Data (SchiffReport)




by InformedTrades via InformedTrades

The Difference A Little Help Can Make (Vic Noble)




by InformedTrades via InformedTrades

Valhalla Futures - NinjaTrader Partner Presentations - 2/26/2014 (NinjaTrader, LLC)




by InformedTrades via InformedTrades

Can anyone tell me where the UK100 is?

Closing Prices



FXCM 6799

OANDA 6786

GOOGLE FINANCE 6809



:confused:



by x3mtrading via InformedTrades

Trading Recap for this week and Update on the Russian effect on the markets (daytraderrockstar)

Broker Matrix | Premium Courses








from DayTraderRockStar



by InformedTrades via InformedTrades

Forex Weekly Technicals Data Dump on Market 03.3-7.14 (BK Forex)




by InformedTrades via InformedTrades

We Care About the World (Updated) (imf)






by imf



by InformedTrades via InformedTrades

[video] Forex Technical Focus: 2/28/2014 (Forex News by DailyFX)




by InformedTrades via InformedTrades

Japan's Fast Retailing interested in J.Crew buy: source

Japan's Fast Retailing Co Ltd , parent of apparel chain Uniqlo, has expressed interest in buying J.Crew Group Inc from private equity owners, a person familiar with the matter said on Friday. J.Crew, which ...

by via Yahoo! Finance: Top Stories

This Weekend, Think About That Most-Coveted Of Golden Awards: The Worst Company In America Trophy

oscarpoo This weekend, all of Hollywood — and really, all of the nation — will be thinking about who will take home the most sought-after trophy in the world: The Golden Poo. That’s right, it’s time to start sending in nominations for the annual Worst Company in America tournament!


Starting… now! and continuing through 5 p.m. ET on Thursday, March 13, write to us to let us know about those companies that most deserve to be honored with the Golden Poo.


As always, nominated companies must regularly provide goods and services to American consumers.


!!! NOTE: VERY IMPORTANT UPDATE TO THE NOMINATIONS PROCESS !!!

In order for a nomination to be considered, your e-mail must not simply name the company being nominated, but must include a sentence or two that contains actual information on why you’re nominating.


So a nomination that reads “Company X sucks!” would not be considered, but one that states, “Company X sucks because it [fill in the blanks with reasons for sucking]” would be considered a valid nomination.


You can still nominate multiple companies, but each nominee must have its own explanation.


Once you have your nominations ready, e-mail them to WCIA@consumerist.com before 5 p.m. ET on March 13.


This year’s WCIA bracket will be revealed Monday, March 17 with voting kicking off the next day.


Best of luck, and may the worst company win!




by consumerist.com via Consumerist

True Confessions Of A Temporary UberX Driver


If you’re 23 or older, have a driver’s license and car insurance, and have a nice, clean late-model four-door car, you can sign up to drive strangers around for UberX. Should you? Well, it depends on your feelings about voyeurism, cash, and people eating in your car.

Writer Mickey Rapkin signed on to drive his 2013 Prius for UberX in Los Angeles, and you really should check out his “Uber Cab Confessions” in the March issue of GQ. He pondered the wide swath of humanity (who can afford car service and smartphones) who climbed in his backseat, he gained new insights into life. “As I merge into traffic,” he recollects about a trip driving four young partying young adults who are drinking out of a pimp cup in his immaculate backseat. “I begin to understand how my parents must have felt all those years ago chauffeuring around me and my idiot friends.” So it’s like driving your kids around, but with strangers who you can’t ground or guilt if they misbehave.


Driving for Uber does provide some quality eavesdropping and glimpses into others’ lives that you may not have expected. It becomes addictive after a while. “The job becomes akin to binge-watching a TV series late at night on Netflix,” he writes. “Okay, just one more.”


Uber Cab Confessions [GQ]




by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

“I Just Won $50,000″ Is A Pretty Good Way To Talk Yourself Out Of A Speeding Ticket

The winning ticket/get out of speeding free card. (Massachusetts State Lottery)

The winning ticket/get out of speeding free card. (Massachusetts State Lottery)



“I’ve got to deliver this encryption key to super secret government operatives before aliens blow up the world” and “Seriously, I’m on my way to save puppies from a burning pet store” are pretty good excuses, but the truth worked great for one man caught speeding — he’d just won $50,000 in the lottery.

An unusual excuse, yes but it just so happened to be true, say police in Hingham, Mass. (via CBS Boston)



The 22-year-old man told cops he’d won the $50,000 on a $2 Massachusetts State Lottery scratch-off ticket and was racing to the lotto headquarters to collect his prize. The lottery confirmed he’d won.


The ticket provided just the proof he needed, and police decided to just issue him a verbal warning and sent him off to cash in on his newly rich future.


“Today was really his lucky day,” the department added on Twitter.




by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

Così Franchisee Bets TV Reporter $10,000 Restaurant Will Stay Mouse-Free

redsignA franchise of the sandwichery Così in Washington, D.C. was closed down yesterday due to a failed health inspection. What were the restaurant’s violations? Meats stored at unacceptable temperatures, improperly labeled food, food preparation surfaces not clean or sanitized, and mice. So many mouse droppings.


It turns out that the same restaurant was temporarily closed after a health inspection for a rodent infestation last year. When a crew from TV station WUSA stopped by to report on the situation, as they do for all post-inspection restaurant closures, they were ordered out of the restaurant. In a follow-up e-mail, a district manager told the station that “asking questions aggressively” and looking under the furniture caused “a great deal of distress towards our customers and our Cosi team.” You know what else causes customers distress? Mouse crap.


The franchise owner followed up with the station and promised to improve conditions in the restaurant and improve staff training. The $10,000 bet entered the picture when they reminded him of this promise a year ago.


If the restaurant gets cited for rodents in 2015, the franchise owner will make a $10,000 charity donation to the reporter’s choice of organizations. “Tell me the charity and we’ll make the donation on your behalf,” he said. Mark your calendars.


Restaurant Alert: Metro Center infestation closes Cosi [WUSA] (WARNING: AUTO-PLAY VIDEO)




by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

Bitcoin: Oh, what a wild, wild ride it's been

News of the Mt. Gox bankruptcy filing on Friday capped off a tumultuous week — and month — for bitcoin

by via Yahoo! Finance: Top Stories

To: Power Broker

Just to say hello I grew up in Detroit "back in the day"



wal



by wal via InformedTrades

Outside the Box: World Money Analyst Update on Europe (John Mauldin)

Originally Published by Mauldin Economics




For the last two weeks on Thursdays we have brought you special editions of Outside the Box featuring World Money Analyst Managing Editor Kevin Brekke’s interviews with WMA contributing editors. We heard from Ankur Shah on emerging markets and Alexei Medved on Russia, and this week we wrap up the series with a frank, hard-hitting interview with Dirk Steinhoff, who covers the European and Scandinavian markets for WMA.



Kevin and Dirk are both based in Switzerland, and so they lead off with a discussion of the recent Swiss referendum on immigration. Dirk’s interpretation of the vote, which imposes quotas on the number of foreigners allowed to enter the country, is that it has implications for the entire European Union:



[T]he Swiss people basically decided that they want to control immigration themselves and do not want to give up this control to the centralized administration in Brussels. I think that this is a clear signal to the Swiss government that the Swiss people don’t want to give up more sovereignty and that they would like to see more decentralization in the future.



Which leads Kevin and Dirk to take up the broader issues of the unresolved Eurozone debt crisis, unemployment mess, and the fate of the euro. With EU parliamentary elections coming up in May, there is change in the air! OK, let’s turn it over to Kevin and Dirk for the details.



John Mauldin, Editor

Outside the Box
subscribers@mauldineconomics.com








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World Money Analyst Update on Europe



World Money Analyst : With me today is Dirk Steinhoff. Dirk is a contributing editor at World Money Analyst and covers the European and Scandinavian markets. Great to have you with us.



Dirk Steinhoff: Thank you very much for having me.



WMA : Seeing that you're in Zurich and I'm in Fribourg, let's start with a look at developments in our own backyard. The Swiss are known for their system of direct democracy via use of the referendum. The recent success of a referendum that will restrict immigration into Switzerland made global headlines. What’s your position on the immigration issue and the consequences of this vote?



Dirk: First of all, I should mention that I was born and raised in Berlin and moved with my family to Switzerland in 2007. One of the main reasons why I decided to leave Germany and come to Switzerland, next to the great Swiss landscape, was the strongly centralized development of the European Union, which reminds me painfully of the political system in the former DDR [communist East Germany].



European politicians live a life that is completely detached from those that don’t belong to this elitist political class. Their decisions are based on distorted experience and lobbyist influence and not on real life experience and independent judgment. The strong, centralized power of Brussels, in combination with the desire to regulate everything in life, increasingly limits personal freedom, limits the development of entrepreneurship (and therefore the creation of non-government-related workplaces), and eliminates local, regional, and national characteristics.



The state is much less dominant in Switzerland, mainly due to its federalist and decentralized political system, which limits the power of the federal government. Due to my own background and my own moral conviction, I personally believe that every human being should be able to live and work wherever he or she wants, as long as they are self-reliant, willing to integrate, and do not become a burden to the community they recently entered.



My interpretation of the referendum is that the Swiss people basically decided that they want to control immigration themselves and do not want to give up this control to the centralized administration in Brussels. I think that this is a clear signal to the Swiss government that the Swiss people don’t want to give up more sovereignty and that they would like to see more decentralization in the future.



It also interesting to note that most of the media in Europe (even Swiss media) were shocked by the outcome of the vote. In sharp contrast, other polls in various European countries actually show that most citizens would have voted similarly to the Swiss, and some by an even higher margin than the outcome of the Swiss vote. I think that in the long run more and more of the European people will ask for the Swiss model of democracy to be implemented in their home countries.



Although the rhetoric used by politicians in Europe might change to the negative in the short term, I do not think that the referendum will have a long-term negative effect on the relations between Switzerland and Brussels. I believe that Brussels has to come to terms with our form of democracy and has to respect our sovereignty, even if they might disagree with some of our decisions.



WMA : The immigration debate is not unique to Switzerland, of course, and is a divisive issue across Europe. This seems to be part of a trend where we've seen a rise in popularity of nationalist and anti-euro parties? What's your view?



Dirk: You are right. The severe criticism of Switzerland because of the outcome of the referendum has eclipsed the fact that many European countries face the same issue. People are not only unhappy with the immigration politics within the EU, they are becoming more EU skeptical in general.



The political parties critical of the European Union – like the UK independence party in Great Britain, the Finns Party (formerly the True Finns) in Finland, the Lega Nord in Italy, the FPÖ in Austria, the AfD in Germany, the French Front Nationale, the Golden Dawn in Greece, and the Party of Freedom in the Netherlands – are gaining popularity. Of course, the reasons for and the scope of their EU criticism vary a lot.



I think this trend can be summed up as follows: the people want to have a voice and be able to decide their own fate! Pretty much everybody in the EU is unhappy about one issue or another. The Southern European countries are unable to cope with the austerity measures, and on the other hand you have a large part of the German population that is simply unwilling to continue financing the complete EU. I believe this trend will gain momentum, and it will bring some surprises in the elections to the European Parliament in May 2014.



Europe has so many different cultures that centralization just doesn’t work, because there isn’t a one-size-fits-all answer to most issues. The euro is a perfect example of this!



WMA : That's an important point on the euro. With the continued rise of anti-euro sentiment, what is your outlook for the currency? Will the euro survive?



Dirk: I don’t know. There are different scenarios that I can imagine for the euro: strong countries leaving the Eurozone, unwilling to pay for a bottomless pit of EU debt; weak countries leaving the Eurozone in order to be able to devalue their currencies and regain competiveness; or a split into a strong northern euro and a weaker southern euro. Or some combination of these. As you can see, there are many possibilities, and what we will see depends on economic and political developments in European countries over the next several years. In my view, something will happen and we won’t have the same euro in five years time that we have today.



WMA : The adoption of the common currency has limited how individual countries can respond to fiscal stresses. News about the euro debt crisis has been very quiet lately. What is the situation?



Dirk: As you say, there has hardly been any news recently regarding the troubles in the EU, which does not mean that the problems are solved. They are still bubbling under the surface. With the current papering-over and continuation of indebtedness, the need to address the problems, with their inherent negative consequences for most people, has been postponed. Because of that, most of the harsh protest has faded and turned away from the streets and is canalized into the euro-skeptic political parties. And when there have been noteworthy protests, such as last November in French Brittany, media coverage was excluded.



What has changed in the last year? Absolutely nothing fundamentally! So the euro crisis will at some point reappear with all its inevitable consequences.



WMA : You mention France, so let's continue down that path. The small and mid-sized Eurozone countries – Spain, Portugal, Italy, and Greece – are essentially bankrupt as measured by GDP and in receivership by Brussels. Today, there is growing speculation that France, too, is headed for trouble soon. What do you think?



Dirk: I totally agree! They have too much debt, a radical socialist government, and absurd, business-unfriendly regulation. I have several friends who are business owners in France, and they are all contemplating leaving the country and moving their businesses abroad. The quantity of regulation they have to comply with simply cannot be handled by a normal business, and the labor laws are so strict that no business owner in their right mind wants to take on the risk of employing someone.



Taking into consideration the unhealthy debt levels they have, the unsustainable social programs they offer, and the complete lack of any growth impulses, I have to believe that the French are indeed headed for trouble soon. And, as the second largest economy in the EU, France matters. If France stumbles, the EU is at risk.



WMA : Drawing on your comments about strict labor laws, the unemployment numbers in many EU countries are mind-boggling. You discussed this situation in your recent article for World Money Analyst. Can you talk about this for a minute?



Dirk: As we have seen since 2008, the trillions in newly created fiat money have mainly fueled asset bubbles. However, the real economy has not profited from it, because this money has not been lent to private industry. We are still facing 30% lower money velocity than before 2008 and that means that more than 30% of credit in circulation has disappeared. This is also why the real economy is still going down the drain.



Most jobs have been created within the government or government-related entities; and as we all know, these jobs are paid for by the taxpayers and are not a source of production. Therefore, I personally believe the situation in the labor market will further deteriorate, especially among the young generation, below 25; they are going to suffer the most. The current youth unemployment rates in Spain and Italy are just shocking: 58% and 42%, respectively. We are losing a whole generation, and we cannot predict how drastically the damage we are doing to them will play out in the future.



WMA : High and sustained rates of joblessness can lead to frustration and anger by the unemployed that turns to civil unrest and protests. We've seen riots in several EU countries, including France, Greece, and Bosnia. Is that also a real danger for the stronger European countries?



Dirk: Yes, this is a real danger. As soon as the deterioration of people's personal economic situations reaches a certain level they will be on the streets, and that includes the streets of the stronger countries. At the moment, most people still believe that all the debt and all the rescue programs come for free.



WMA : What does this all mean for the outlook for European stocks and bonds?



Dirk: That you have to watch closely what the European Central Bank and governments do. It’s a tricky situation – you don’t want to miss any upside rallies in equities and bonds induced by loose monetary policies. Yet, on the other hand you know the party could end at any time. Risk management is essential. The day of reckoning can be postponed by governments and central banks much further – as we know from the US and Japan – than common sense would allow for.



WMA : In your opinion, what European countries have the best economic outlook?



Dirk: The countries that have been strong in the past, with competitive industries and with sound current-account and budget balances. Countries like Germany, Austria, Denmark, Sweden, and Norway. And Switzerland.



WMA : As you mentioned above, in May 2014 there will be the EU Parliament election. Will that change anything?



Dirk: The potential increase of parliamentarians that are critical of Europe I mentioned before could intensify tensions within the EU and complicate the functioning of the EU system. But I don’t expect a quick change.



WMA : We must talk about the un-loved Swiss franc. Since Switzerland began intervention in the currency markets to halt the rise of the franc against the euro, the mainstream consensus has it that the franc is doomed. But the performance of the franc against other currencies, in particular the US dollar, has been very strong. What's your take on the Swiss franc going forward?



Dirk: It’s hard to say. In a euro crisis I would expect the Swiss National Bank [the central bank] to remove the floor to the euro. In such a situation the power of the SNB to keep the floor would be simply too small, I think. There are also attempts in Switzerland to once again constitutionally back the Swiss franc by gold. We’ll have to see. The Swiss franc, to me, still belongs to the upper class of paper currencies.



WMA : Do you have any last thoughts for our readers?



Dirk: Globally, we have entered a time when substantial corrections of past misadventures are likely to occur. It’s not the end of the world, but it's worth being prepared.



WMA : I really appreciate your insights on the European markets. Thank you for taking the time to speak with us today.



Dirk: The pleasure was mine.Like Outside the Box?

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PAST RESULTS ARE NOT INDICATIVE OF FUTURE RESULTS. THERE IS RISK OF LOSS AS WELL AS THE OPPORTUNITY FOR GAIN WHEN INVESTING IN MANAGED FUNDS. WHEN CONSIDERING ALTERNATIVE INVESTMENTS, INCLUDING HEDGE FUNDS, YOU SHOULD CONSIDER VARIOUS RISKS INCLUDING THE FACT THAT SOME PRODUCTS: OFTEN ENGAGE IN LEVERAGING AND OTHER SPECULATIVE INVESTMENT PRACTICES THAT MAY INCREASE THE RISK OF INVESTMENT LOSS, CAN BE ILLIQUID, ARE NOT REQUIRED TO PROVIDE PERIODIC PRICING OR VALUATION INFORMATION TO INVESTORS, MAY INVOLVE COMPLEX TAX STRUCTURES AND DELAYS IN DISTRIBUTING IMPORTANT TAX INFORMATION, ARE NOT SUBJECT TO THE SAME REGULATORY REQUIREMENTS AS MUTUAL FUNDS, OFTEN CHARGE HIGH FEES, AND IN MANY CASES THE UNDERLYING INVESTMENTS ARE NOT TRANSPARENT AND ARE KNOWN ONLY TO THE INVESTMENT MANAGER. Alternative investment performance can be volatile. An investor could lose all or a substantial amount of his or her investment. Often, alternative investment fund and account managers have total trading authority over their funds or accounts; the use of a single advisor applying generally similar trading programs could mean lack of diversification and, consequently, higher risk. There is often no secondary market for an investor̢۪s interest in alternative investments, and none is expected to develop.





The article Outside the Box: World Money Analyst Update on Europe was originally published at mauldineconomics.com.




by InformedTrades via InformedTrades

Secret Service Reportedly Investigating Possible Data Breach At Sears


The retail world is still feeling the aftershocks that rumbled through the industry after Target revealed it was hit in a hack attack that exposed credit card info and personal data of up to 110 million customers. As such, inside sources are whispering that Sears is the focus of a new probe from the U.S. Secret Service to see whether it was the victim of a possible security breach.


Bloomberg News cites a person familiar with the investigation who says the Secret Service is looking into things at Sears, but didn’t explain any other details like how big the breach might be, if it exists, or when it might’ve happened.


Sears is staying relatively mum as well, admitting that it’s got the same concerns everyone else does after the Target attack, but stopping short of confirming a particular incident at the company.


“There have been rumors and reports throughout the retail industry of security incidents at various retailers, and we are actively reviewing our systems to determine if we have been a victim of a breach,” said Howard Riefs, a Sears spokesman. “We have found no information based on our review of our systems to date indicating a breach.”


So basically, they’re not sure anything has happened, but they’re also not sure something hasn’t happened.


Meanwhile, the Secret Service is continuing to investigate the hack attacks on Target and Neiman Marcus, which put the credit card data of millions of consumers at risk at the end of 2013.


Sears, Secret Service Said to Probe Possible Data Breach [Bloomberg News]




by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

Where’s that tech IPO bubble we were promised?

The long anticipated 2014 tech IPO bubble is having some problems getting inflated. So far this year, there’s been almost no activity – one small deal for babysitter web site Care.com

by via Yahoo! Finance: Top Stories

[text] Bank of Ukraine imposes currency controls, restricts currency conversion out of Ukraine

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"Ukraine's national bank has imposed temporary limits to withdraw money from foreign currency deposits to sums equivalent to no more than 15,000 hryvnias (about $1,500) a day, without any limits for hryvnia deposits, National Bank Chief Stepan Kubiv told a press conference."For hryvnia deposits you may take as much as a million or two. Banks have liquidity," Kubiv said."



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USDA Report: We’re Wasting 141 Trillion Calories Of Food Every Year


The next meal where you fail to join The Clean Plate Club, just remember this number: 141 trillion calories. That’s how much food the United States Department of Agriculture says Americans are wasting every year — about 1,249 calories per person, per day.

And a lot of wasted food could be going to feed people who need it, points out NPR’s The Salt blog in its coverage of the repot.


Researchers at the USDA’s Economic Research Service reached that hefty number by crunching the numbers from 2010, the most recent year with data available. Any edible food that’s available for consumption was included, stuff that’s spoiled, thrown out by retailers for blemishes or deemed unworthy, and whatever food you leave on the plate (or forget in your doggy bag left in the back of a cab, sigh).


A total of 133 billion pounds of food was lost in 2010, or to put it another way, 31% of the total food supply, worth about $161.6 billion.


What are we wasting the most? Surely there aren’t large number of Kobe beef steaks sitting in Dumpsters. We’re most likely to waste dairy products, vegetables and grain products, say USDA researchers.


“So what if I don’t finish my burrito? Why should I care?” a hypothetical version of an uncaring person might say. But you should care, say researchers — not only are we losing food, there’s money going into the trash along with nonrenewable resources like fuel and water.


And when you dump food at a landfill or let it decompose, it emits greenhouse gases which are harmful to the planet. Not to mention all the empty stomachs at home and around the world that would welcome a good meal.


These reasons could give us a collective kick in the pants to cut down on food waste, and it’s up to us, say researchers: “Economic incentives and consumer behavior will be paramount in reducing food loss.”


Even better? Your grocery bills could get smaller, maybe.


“If food loss is prevented or reduced to the extent that less food is needed to feed people (i.e., the demand for food decreases), then this would likely reduce food prices in the United States and the rest of the world.”


The Clean Plate Club, everybody. Remember: Your eyes are always bigger than your stomach.


U.S. Lets 141 Trillion Calories Of Food Go To Waste Each Year [The Salt]




by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

Truck Carrying 6,000 Gallons Of Milk Crashes Into House, Homeowner Probably Cries


A couple near Pittsburgh were just minding their own business and getting ready for dinner when they heard a sound like an earthquake. There was not an earthquake in Pittsburgh: there was a tanker truck full of milk on a collision course with their house.


A massive milk spill is bad enough when it takes place on the highway, but things get pretty scary when you combine huge amounts of milk, sub-freezing temperatures, and what’s supposed to be the property where someone lives.


Fortunately, no one was injured: not the occupants of the house, and not even the driver. The truck ended up upside down, crushing part of the house and filling both the yard and the house with milk. A fully-loaded tanker truck weighs more than 75,000 pounds.


In an interview with TV station KDKA, the couple’s adult son “Everything’s soggy, every step you take is just milk.” He noted that even the carpets were soaked with milk, concluding, “I don’t know that they’ll ever live in this house again if you ask me.”


That is definitely something to feel sad about. The state Department of Environmental Conservation may have to weigh in on the possible environmental impact of that much milk soaking into the ground, since it didn’t all go into the house’s carpets and furniture.


The cause of the accident is still under investigation.


Milk Truck Overturns, Crashes Into Hempfield Twp. Home [CBS Pittsburgh]




by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

IMF's Lagarde says no need to panic on Ukraine aid request

* Premature to assess Kiev's needs, Lagarde says WASHINGTON, Feb 28 (Reuters) - The head of the International Monetary Fund said on Friday that there was no need to "panic" in terms of delivering economic aid to Ukraine, as she cast doubt the nation would need as much immediate help as its new leaders claim. "We do not see anything that is critical, that is worthy of panic at the moment," IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde told reporters. Ukraine's government coffers have been depleted by huge debt repayments, efforts to protect its currency and high energy costs.

by via Yahoo! Finance: Top Stories

Mattel Strikes Mega $460 Million Deal To Buy Mega Bloks Manufacturer

mega bloks Could construction be underway for a new Barbie dream house? Mattel certainly has the building Bloks on hand after announcing plans to takeover a Canadian toy maker.


On Friday, Mattel, the company behind Barbie dolls and Hot Wheels, announced it would buy Mega Brands, Inc., the manufacturer of Mega Bloks, in a deal valued at $460 million, the Los Angeles Times reports.


The building sets were the largest category that Mattel was missing from their toy arsenal and puts the company in position to compete with LEGO. Currently LEGO is the world’s number one line of construction sets, while Mega Bloks sits at the number two spot.


Mattel CEO Bryan Stockton says the purchase of Mega Brands is a growth driver for the company has been looking for.


“The acquisition will allow us to enter the construction category quickly and gives us a solid foundation to strengthen our business in the category,” he tells the Times.


Mattel has seen demand for its core products diminish in recent years. Although, Barbie was recently featured on Sports Illustrated’s swimsuit cover and one creative consumer is snatching up Hot Wheels to avoid ATM fees. Meanwhile, Mega has enjoyed more than $300 million in revenue from the construction set sector.


Officials with Mattel say they have no plans to shut down Mega’s Montreal headquarters.


Mattel to compete with Lego with $460 million Mega acquisition [Los Angeles Times]




by Ashlee Kieler via Consumerist

RANsquawk Weekly Wrap - 28th February 2014




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Alamos Ready to Deal In '14 But There Has To Be Good Value: CEO McCluskey | BMO Conference (Kitco NEWS)




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58.com sees Q1 revenue $43M-$45M, consensus $40.75M

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Total upgraded to Buy from Neutral at UBS

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Commerzbank upgraded to Neutral from Reduce at Nomura

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HubSpot to launch IPO this year, WSJ reports

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Northrop Grumman does not see acquisition of Qantas Defense material to FY14

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Aqua America reports Q4 adjusted EPS 26c, consensus 25c

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Aqua America raises quarterly dividend 9% to 15.2c per share

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Aqua America announces five-for-four stock split, effective in September

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Aqua America prepared to invest in strategic ventures

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Gulf Island Fabrication reports Q4 EPS (22c), may not compare to consensus 24c

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China Financial Collapse, Bitcoin Black Eye, Ukraine-Russia War and Bernanke Memoirs (Greg Hunter)

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Thursday, February 27, 2014

Week of 3/3 Money Supply to be released at 16:30

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Week of 3/12 Fed Balance Sheet to be released at 16:30

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Big cut in U.S. fourth-quarter GDP growth looms

The U.S. government is set to slash its estimate of fourth-quarter growth as exports and restocking by businesses were less robust than previously thought, leaving the economy on a more familiar path of modest expansion. That could be lowered to a pace of about 3 percent.

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Japan's factory output jumps, inflation up but anxiety lingers

Japan's factory output rose in January at the fastest pace in more than two years and core inflation hovered at five-year highs, suggesting the economy has enough momentum to withstand an expected hit from a sales tax hike scheduled for April. Other data were equally upbeat, with labor demand improving and household spending rising in a sign the world's third-biggest economy is on course to shaking off two decades of stagnation even as it steers through some speed bumps. Domestic consumption is seen supporting activity as shoppers brought forward purchases, but the recent debate in markets has centered around an expected chill in demand after the tax hike and the risks that it may take the wind out of the government's growth strategy. "I'm not that confident about the economy after the sales tax hike," said Norio Miyagawa, senior economist at Mizuho Securities Research & Consulting Co.

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The Break-Even Stop = Controversy - Week 137 - 4-Minute Drill for Traders (DisciplinedTrader)

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Asian stocks advance, take comfort from Yellen's comments

Asian stocks managed to shrug off early losses on Friday and push higher, inspired by gains on Wall Street after U.S. Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen's comments underscored her confidence in the U.S. economy. Yellen's testimony to a Senate committee helped the S&P 500 (.SPX) shrug off fears of rising tension in Ukraine and Russia and close at a record high. MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan rose 0.2 percent, on track for a weekly gain, while Tokyo's Nikkei stock average (NIK:^9452) erased most losses and ended the morning session just a few ticks shy of flat. Tokyo got some help from data showing Japanese factory output rose in January at the fastest pace in more than two years and core inflation stood close to a five-year high.

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EBay founder rejects Icahn's call for PayPal spinoff

Omidyar, who is the largest shareholder in eBay with a stake of 8.37 percent, said separating PayPal from eBay was not a new idea and the board had evaluated the option but decided to keep the businesses together. Icahn, who disclosed a 2.15 percent stake in the e-commerce company last week, had also accused two long-time eBay board members, Marc Andreessen and Scott Cook, of having business interests that directly competed with eBay.

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[video] Forex: EURUSD Breakout Potential Extreme, But Unlikely for Friday (Forex News by DailyFX)




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Pros Perspective: Where The Markets Are Headed (InTheMoneyStocks)




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[video] candlestick forum market direction February 27, 2014 (Stephen Bigalow)




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[video] Forex Strategy Video: Why Trade AUDJPY over CADJPY and USDCHF over EURUSD? (Forex News by DailyFX)




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Weather seems to blame for U.S. slowdown, Fed's Yellen says

Testifying to the Senate Banking Committee, Yellen said the Fed would watch carefully to ensure weather was indeed the culprit, but she reiterated that it would take a "significant change" to the economy's prospects for the Fed to put plans to wind down its bond-buying program on hold. Some investors think the Fed could alter its plans if a report on February hiring next week shows similar weakness. I think it's clear that ... unseasonably cold weather has played some role in much of that," Yellen, the Fed's former vice chair who took the reins on February 1, told lawmakers. After more than five years of ultra easy monetary policy in the wake of the 2007-2009 recession, the Fed is taking the first small steps towards a more normal footing.

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U.S. core capital goods order up, but worries linger

Underlying strength in the economy, however, remains less than stellar at the start of the year," said Diane Swonk, chief economist at Mesirow Financial in Chicago. The Commerce Department said durable goods orders excluding transportation rose 1.1 percent, the largest increase since May, after falling 1.9 percent in December. Durable goods are items from toasters to aircraft meant to last three years or more. The increase last month, which beat economists' expectations for a 0.3 percent fall, reflected a surge in orders for computers and electronic products, fabricated metal products and defense capital goods.

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Could this be the key to success on Wall Street? Ray Dalio thinks so

A string of recent deaths within the banking world have brought global attention to the stressful conditions that financiers work in and around.

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10 Things You Should Never Buy At The Dollar Store


A few weeks ago, we presented you with a list of 15 things that you should buy at the dollar store. Okay, great, but it’s a big store: there must be something that you should avoid, either because of crappy quality or because paying a dollar isn’t such a good deal. Right?


Over at Wisebread, they wrote up a list and also flipped it around, detailing ten items you should buy at the dollar store and then that you should avoid.


1. Electric Appliances


If it has an electric plug, don’t buy it. Counterfeit Underwriters Laboratories seals are a thing, so that’s no guarantee of quality. Just stay away.


2. Plastic food storage bags, plastic wrap, aluminum foil wrap


Offerings at your dollar store may vary, but the quantity and quality of these offerings just doesn’t measure up.


3. Kitchen utensils


It might seem like a good idea at the time, and it’s only after you’re dealing with a melted spatula or shattered paring knife that you rethink your choices.


4. Vitamins


Now experts say that maybe we shouldn’t be taking so many vitamin supplements in the first place. You’re better off visiting a health food or drug store for your supplements if you do want to take them, though.


5. Toys


This depends on the age of your kids, but the toys available in dollar stores might just be flimsy junk, or could be dangerous.


6. Medicine


By the time they hit the dollar store, meds could be expired, stored in sketchy circumstances, or they might be counterfeit to begin with. Stay away.


7. Oven Mitts and Potholders


You might question this until the day when your cheap potholder melts. Buy something made of, you know, cotton.


8. Soda


Usually not such a great deal in dollar stores – watch for deals in grocery and big-box stores, if you’re going to drink soda at all.


9. Tools


You buy a $1 hammer, you’re going to get $1 of use out of it.


10. Chewing Gum


Like soda, the deals at the dollar store aren’t great. Watch for deals elsewhere.


10 Things You Should Never Buy at the Dollar Store (and 10 You Should) [WiseBread]




by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

Woman Spends Harrowing 45 Minutes Locked Inside Department Store, Live-Tweets The Experience

#FreeEmily

#FreeEmily



When you try to leave a store only to discover that you’ve been locked inside and no one is around to help, many thoughts may cross your mind. “I’ve got to tweet this” probably won’t be one of them, but you’re not the Canadian writer who spent a harrowing 45 minutes or so locked inside a Hudson’s Bay store in Toronto.


The nightmare began shortly before 8 P.M., when employees thoughtlessly locked the doors without letting Emily Keeler out.



Her dispatches came complete with photographic proof:









Being alone in an empty store is creepy when the radio won’t stop.




CTV confirmed that the police did receive a non-emergency call around 8:30 from someone stuck in a department store.


Finally, at 8:32 PM, sweet freedom.




Ms. Keeler has refused interviews, saying, “I think I’ve already embarrassed myself enough.” That’s okay: the tweets tell the story.


Toronto woman trapped in The Bay live-tweets ‘terrifying’ ordeal [CTV]


Laura spent a harrowing five minutes locked inside a Sears last week, but failed to tweet about it. You should follow her anyway.




by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

US consumer bureau sues college chain ITT over student loans

The U.S. consumer watchdog said on Wednesday it has sued ITT Educational Services Inc for what the agency says are predatory student lending practices that could lead borrowers to default on their loans.

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[video] Organic Growth? (CNBC)




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9 Federal Laws That Companies Can Skirt By Using Forced Arbitration


There are numerous federal laws that explicitly give wronged consumers the right to file a lawsuit against the company that harmed them, but all those statutory rights are being taken away by companies that insert arbitration clauses into their terms of service.

A new report [PDF] from Public Citizen examines the current state of forced arbitration and how it is increasingly being used to allow companies to skirt or possibly break the law.


For example, the federal Credit Repair Organization Act specifically states that credit/debt repair companies must include statements in their disclosures that state, “You have a right to sue a credit repair organization that violates the Credit Repair Organization Act.”


But in 2012, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in 2012′s CompuCredit Corp. v. Greenwood that this “right to sue” isn’t really a right to file a lawsuit and have your case heard in a court of law, but merely a statement saying the consumer will have some forum in which to resolve the dispute.


So if a sketchy credit repair company (which is not hard to find) violates the CROA but includes a forced arbitration clause in its contract, your complaint will never be heard in court.


Then there’s the Telephone Consumer Protection Act, which also explicitly grants consumers who allege violations of that law to bring action against the company “in an appropriate court.”


But in Dec. 2013, when a Florida man alleged that Sallie Mae had violated the TCPA, he found that he was stuck having to arbitrate the case because of an arbitration clause in the promissory note he signed. So his case would not be heard in a court of law, but in arbitration.


Other laws that can be skirted in similar ways include the Electronic Funds Transfer Act, the Fair Credit Reporting Act, the Equal Credit Opportunity Act, the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act, the Right to Financial Privacy Act, the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act, the Truth-in-Lending Act.


Each of these laws give consumers the statutory right to seek legal redress, but forced arbitration clauses can be used to force any attempt at resolution out of the courtroom and into a private arbitration process that is weighted heavily in favor of the company that wrote the contract.


“As these provisions indicate, proper enforcement of consumer protection laws depends not only on state and federal enforcement but also on consumers’

ability to act on their own, which forced arbitration substantially impairs,” writes Public Citizen in its report.


THE SNAKE BITING ITS OWN TAIL

While some wronged consumers attempt to get around arbitration clauses by claiming they are unconscionable and therefore not legally enforceable, companies merely get around this potential pitfall by including a stipulation in the clause that leaves it up to the arbitrator to determine whether the terms of a contract are fair or not. In 2010, the Supreme Court signed off on such circular clauses in its ruling in Rent-A-Center, West, Inc. v. Jackson.


“With companies’ widespread use of forced arbitration in contracts, our only option as consumers is to challenge the validity of the arbitration clause itself in court,” explained a plaintiff whose case against Citibank was forced into arbitration. “But that option is also gone.”


CAN ANYTHING BE DONE?

A recent preliminary report on forced arbitration from the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau confirmed that an increasing number of banks and credit card companies are using arbitration clauses to avoid litigation and put bans on class actions.


Forced arbitration clauses are now found in everything from wireless contracts to loan agreements to video game consoles. While the CFPB doesn’t have oversight over many of these companies, the Public Citizen report calls on the Bureau to use its authority to create a rule barring these clauses from contracts of those businesses it does oversee — banking, lending, credit, debt collection.


“[T]hese terms allow companies to escape accountability while engaging in illegal and predatory practices that harm the financial marketplace,” concludes the report. “The Bureau can and should act to restore consumers’ legal rights in all financial sectors by issuing a rule that eliminates forced arbitration in their contracts.”




by Chris Morran via Consumerist

NBC Says It Stopped 45,000 Instances Of Video Piracy During Sochi Olympics


When there’s a $775 million broadcasting investment on the line, you better believe that a network like NBC is going to go after video pirates just like Peter Pan and his gang in Neverland. In this case, Neverland was the Winter Olympics in Sochi, an event that NBC says it protected its rights by busting 45,000 instances of illegally posted videos or pirated streams.


NBC paid a huge chunk of change to the International Olympic Committee in order to be the sole, exclusive TV and streaming rights holder, notes the Associated Press. So it’s not surprising that it would unleash its full force of sword-wielding boys — or more likely, technological tools — to stop as much piracy during the games as it could.


The network said it worked with Olympic officials to nip about 20,000 videos of the competitions from YouTube using filtering technology that prevents them from going up in the first place, or finds them shortly after posting and scraps them.


A further 20,000 were bumped from distribution on similar sites around the world, NBC said.


An additional 5,000 or so illegal streams of Sochi material were also kept off the Web, many of those posted on for-profit websites trying to make a buck off consumers who wanted to watch a live feed, which wasn’t available legally.


Those sites are often where consumers turn if they couldn’t access NBC’s live feeds without proving they had a cable or satellite TV subscription. And further provoking consumers to seek other means, perhaps, could’ve come from NBC’s decision to not stream some events live at all, like the Opening Ceremonies, and instead show edited highlights later.


It sounds like a hefty number of crackdowns, but NBC couldn’t offer up any figures to compare it with from the London Summer Olympics in 2012 or the Vancouver Winter games in 2010, but the network insists that 99% of this year’s viewing took place on legal channels.


“When all the players in the digital ecosystem cooperate and work together, it is possible to create an online environment in which legitimate commerce thrives, jobs are created and consumers receive content how, when and where they want it,” said John McKay, NBC spokesman.


NBC says thousands of illegal video stopped [Associated Press]




by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

Stocks to Watch: Salesforce.com, Gap, Ross are stocks to watch

Among the companies whose shares are expected to see active trade in Friday’s session are Salesforce.com, Gap, and Ross Stores.



by via MarketWatch.com - Stocks to Watch

The Pop-Up Hot Dog And Bun Toaster Is A Thing

hotdogtoaster

Live from the store-closing sale of yet another Kmart, reader Amanda sent us this strange unitasking appliance that we were not previously aware existed.


What if you say to yourself, “that’s good, but I really wish that it had cross-branding for some kind of fizzy sugar water.” You’re in luck!



While checking to make sure this was a real product and Amanda wasn’t just messing with us, we discovered that the company is real. They also make cotton candy and snow-cone makers, and popcorn machines, if you’re into that kind of thing.






Amazon reviews on this product are mixed, by the way. “This toaster is poorly made and I’m taking it back! I’ll stick to the microwave or boiling water!” wrote one reviewer. Poor quality is a recurring theme, as is the fact that the hot dogs barely cook. Maybe you’re better off microwaving, after all.




by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

Will weed be the best investment of the next decade?

Call it a drug trade for investors. Todd Harrison, CEO and founder of Internet-based financial media company MInyanville, thinks cannabis "will be the single best investment idea for the next ten years."

by via Yahoo! Finance: Top Stories

[video] Mad Money on Demand (CNBC)




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Markets Attempt Key Breakout: What It Means? (InTheMoneyStocks)




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Domino’s Driver Sent To Deliver 20 Unwanted Pizzas To Man’s Ex Isn’t Amused By The Prank


On the one hand, there’s the flabbergasted look on someone’s face when 20 pizzas she didn’t order arrive at her door. On the other, she’s not going to eat all those and she certainly isn’t going to pay for it, and now the Domino’s delivery driver made a trip with all those darn pizzas for nothing and seriously, guy who pranked his ex-girlfriend? You just caused a pricy headache.


It’s all fun and games and revenge until there’s a $297 bill to be paid and a backup on deliveries, which is what happened in a small Minnesota town when cops say a man ordered up 20 pizza and had them delivered to his ex-girlfriend as a prank.


But that prank could turn into a criminal charge if the guy doesn’t pay the tab, police say. Not to mention that the order caused a slowdown at the Domino’s, which results in pizzas going out later to other customers and perhaps, a smaller tip for the hardworking drivers.


“It’s not a victimless crime. There’s a lot of people who work hard at their job to make that food,” a police officer explains.


Indeed, the delivery driver who tried to bring the pies to the unwitting customer says it’s already hard out there for a Domino’s worker.


“You know, I go out on the road and put myself out there to deliver these pizzas and make a living,” she explains. “People joke around about this. It’s not fun. All I want out there is respect.”


Her manager agrees — keep other people out of your personal beefs, okay?


“She’s carrying four different bags. Running to her car with two and then another trip… hustling to get the pizzas there,” the manager points out.


The Domino’s in question says it didn’t waste those unwanted pizzas, and instead brought them to the police, fire department, and local ambulance service in town.




Follow MBQ on Twitter because all she writes about these days is pizza, apparently: @marybethquirk


Pizza Prank in Fergus Falls Leads to $400 Dollar Citation for One Man [Valley News Live]




by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

Tech Speaking: Turnaround In Raw Commodity Sector Good For Gold (Kitco NEWS)




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