Apr 30 2009

Bound to Burn

Published by Marc under Life, Musings

The following Article is long but it is the best synthesis of the carbon problem that I have ever seen. The short answer is, as long as there are cheaper sources of energy in the world anything we do as a nation to convert to costlier energy will only lower the cost of those alternative fossil fuels for the 5 billion poor. This will actually create more additional carbon that we can ever save. That doesn’t mean we should stop trying, but we need to be aware of the cost to us as a nation and the additional cost to the planet of this additional carbon.

Please take the time to read the whole article and see if it doesn’t make solid sense to you. This article is being reprinted from John Mauldin’s newsletter “Outside the Box”. JohnMauldin@InvestorsInsight.com

Marc

“Humanity will keep spewing carbon into the atmosphere, but good policy can help sink it back into the earth”.
By Peter W. Huber

 Like medieval priests, today’s carbon brokers will sell you an indulgence that forgives your carbon sins. It will run you about $500 for 5 tons of forgiveness — about how much the typical American needs every year. Or about $2,000 a year for a typical four-person household. Your broker will spend the money on such things as reducing methane emissions from hog farms in Brazil.

But if you really want to make a difference, you must send a check large enough to forgive the carbon emitted by four poor Brazilian households, too — because they’re not going to do it themselves. To cover all five households, then, send $4,000. And you probably forgot to send in a check last year, and you might forget again in the future, so you’d best make it an even $40,000, to take care of a decade right now. If you decline to write your own check while insisting that to save the world we must ditch the carbon, you are just burdening your already sooty soul with another ton of self-righteous hypocrisy. And you can’t possibly afford what it will cost to forgive that.

If making carbon this personal seems rude, then think globally instead. During the presidential race, Barack Obama was heard to remark that he would bankrupt the coal industry. No one can doubt Washington’s power to bankrupt almost anything — in the United States. But China is adding 100 gigawatts of coal-fired electrical capacity a year. That’s another whole United States’ worth of coal consumption added every three years, with no stopping point in sight. Much of the rest of the developing world is on a similar path.

Cut to the chase. We rich people can’t stop the world’s 5 billion poor people from burning the couple of trillion tons of cheap carbon that they have within easy reach. We can’t even make any durable dent in global emissions — because emissions from the developing world are growing too fast, because the other 80 percent of humanity desperately needs cheap energy, and because we and they are now part of the same global economy. What we can do, if we’re foolish enough, is let carbon worries send our jobs and industries to their shores, making them grow even faster, and their carbon emissions faster still.

We don’t control the global supply of carbon.

Ten countries ruled by nasty people control 80 percent of the planet’s oil reserves — about 1 trillion barrels, currently worth about $40 trillion. If $40 trillion worth of gold were located where most of the oil is, one could only scoff at any suggestion that we might somehow persuade the nasty people to leave the wealth buried. They can lift most of their oil at a cost well under $10 a barrel. They will drill. They will pump. And they will find buyers. Oil is all they’ve got.

Poor countries all around the planet are sitting on a second, even bigger source of carbon — almost a trillion tons of cheap, easily accessible coal. They also control most of the planet’s third great carbon reservoir — the rain forests and soil. They will keep squeezing the carbon out of cheap coal, and cheap forest, and cheap soil, because that’s all they’ve got. Unless they can find something even cheaper. But they won’t — not any time in the foreseeable future.

We no longer control the demand for carbon, either. The 5 billion poor — the other 80 percent — are already the main problem, not us. Collectively, they emit 20 percent more greenhouse gas than we do. We burn a lot more carbon individually, but they have a lot more children. Their fecundity has eclipsed our gluttony, and the gap is now widening fast. China, not the United States, is now the planet’s largest emitter. Brazil, India, Indonesia, South Africa, and others are in hot pursuit. And these countries have all made it clear that they aren’t interested in spending what money they have on low-carb diets. It is idle to argue, as some have done, that global warming can be solved — decades hence — at a cost of 1 to 2 percent of the global economy. Eighty percent of the global population hasn’t signed on to pay more than 0 percent.

Accepting this last, self-evident fact, the Kyoto Protocol divides the world into two groups. The roughly 1.2 billion citizens of industrialized countries are expected to reduce their emissions. The other 5 billion — including both China and India, each of which is about as populous as the entire Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development — aren’t. These numbers alone guarantee that humanity isn’t going to reduce global emissions at any point in the foreseeable future — unless it does it the old-fashioned way, by getting poorer. But the current recession won’t last forever, and the long-term trend is clear. Their populations and per-capita emissions are rising far faster than ours could fall under any remotely plausible carbon-reduction scheme.

Might we simply buy their cooperation? Various plans have circulated for having the rich pay the poor to stop burning down rain forests and to lower greenhouse-gas emissions from primitive agricultural practices. But taking control of what belongs to someone else ultimately means buying it. Over the long term, we would in effect have to buy up a large fraction of all the world’s forests, soil, coal, and oil — and then post guards to make sure that poor people didn’t sneak in and grab all the carbon anyway. Buying off people just doesn’t fly when they outnumber you four to one.

Might we instead manage to give the world something cheaper than carbon? The moon-shot law of economics says yes, of course we can. If we just put our minds to it, it will happen. Atom bomb, moon landing, ultracheap energy — all it takes is a triumph of political will.

Really? For the very poorest, this would mean beating the price of the free rain forest that they burn down to clear land to plant a subsistence crop. For the slightly less poor, it would mean beating the price of coal used to generate electricity at under 3 cents per kilowatt-hour.

And with one important exception, which we will return to shortly, no carbon-free fuel or technology comes remotely close to being able to do that. Fossil fuels are extremely cheap because geological forces happen to have created large deposits of these dense forms of energy in accessible places. Find a mountain of coal, and you can just shovel gargantuan amounts of energy into the boxcars.

Shoveling wind and sun is much, much harder. Windmills are now 50-story skyscrapers. Yet one windmill generates a piddling 2 to 3 megawatts. A jumbo jet needs 100 megawatts to get off the ground; Google is building 100-megawatt server farms. Meeting New York City’s total energy demand would require 13,000 of those skyscrapers spinning at top speed, which would require scattering about 50,000 of them across the state, to make sure that you always hit enough windy spots. To answer the howls of green protest that inevitably greet realistic engineering estimates like these, note that real-world systems must be able to meet peak, not average, demand; that reserve margins are essential; and that converting electric power into liquid or gaseous fuels to power the existing transportation and heating systems would entail substantial losses. What was Mayor Bloomberg thinking when he suggested that he might just tuck windmills into Manhattan? Such thoughts betray a deep ignorance about how difficult it is to get a lot of energy out of sources as thin and dilute as wind and sun.

It’s often suggested that technology improvements and mass production will sharply lower the cost of wind and solar. But engineers have pursued these technologies for decades, and while costs of some components have fallen, there is no serious prospect of costs plummeting and performance soaring as they have in our laptops and cell phones. When you replace conventional with renewable energy, everything gets bigger, not smaller — and bigger costs more, not less. Even if solar cells themselves were free, solar power would remain very expensive because of the huge structures and support systems required to extract large amounts of electricity from a source so weak that it takes hours to deliver a tan.

This is why the (few) greens ready to accept engineering and economic reality have suddenly emerged as avid proponents of nuclear power. In the aftermath of the Three Mile Island accident — which didn’t harm anyone, and wouldn’t even have damaged the reactor core if the operators had simply kept their hands off the switches and let the automatic safety systems do their job — ostensibly green antinuclear activists unwittingly boosted U.S. coal consumption by about 400 million tons per year. The United States would be in compliance with the Kyoto Protocol today if we could simply undo their handiwork and conjure back into existence the nuclear plants that were in the pipeline in nuclear power’s heyday. Nuclear power is fantastically compact, and — as America’s nuclear navy, several commercial U.S. operators, France, Japan, and a handful of other countries have convincingly established — it’s both safe and cheap wherever engineers are allowed to get on with it.

But getting on with it briskly is essential, because costs hinge on the huge, up-front capital investment in the power plant. Years of delay between the capital investment and when it starts earning a return are ruinous. Most of the developed world has made nuclear power unaffordable by surrounding it with a regulatory process so sluggish and unpredictable that no one will pour a couple of billion dollars into a new plant, for the good reason that no one knows when (or even if) the investment will be allowed to start making money.

And countries that don’t trust nuclear power on their own soil must hesitate to share the technology with countries where you never know who will be in charge next year, or what he might decide to do with his nuclear toys. So much for the possibility that cheap nuclear power might replace carbon-spewing sources of energy in the developing world. Moreover, even India and China, which have mastered nuclear technologies, are deploying far more new coal capacity.

Remember, finally, that most of the cost of carbon-based energy resides not in the fuels but in the gigantic infrastructure of furnaces, turbines, and engines. Those costs are sunk, which means that carbon-free alternatives — with their own huge, attendant, front-end capital costs — must be cheap enough to beat carbon fuels that already have their infrastructure in place. That won’t happen in our lifetimes.

Another argument commonly advanced is that getting over carbon will, nevertheless, be comparatively cheap, because it will get us over oil, too — which will impoverish our enemies and save us a bundle at the Pentagon and the Department of Homeland Security. But uranium aside, the most economical substitute for oil is, in fact, electricity generated with coal. Cheap coal-fired electricity has been, is, and will continue to be a substitute for oil, or a substitute for natural gas, which can in turn substitute for oil. By sharply boosting the cost of coal electricity, the war on carbon will make us more dependent on oil, not less.

The first place where coal displaces oil is in the electric power plant itself. When oil prices spiked in the early 1980s, U.S. utilities quickly switched to other fuels, with coal leading the pack; the coal-fired plants now being built in China, India, and other developing countries are displacing diesel generators. More power plants burning coal to produce cheap electricity can also mean less natural gas used to generate electricity. And less used for industrial, commercial, and residential heating, welding, and chemical processing, as these users switch to electrically powered alternatives. The gas that’s freed up this way can then substitute for diesel fuel in heavy trucks, delivery vehicles, and buses. And coal-fired electricity will eventually begin displacing gasoline, too, as soon as plug-in hybrid cars start recharging their batteries directly from the grid.

To top it all, using electricity generated in large part by coal to power our passenger cars would lower carbon emissions — even in Indiana, which generates 75 percent of its electricity with coal. Big power plants are so much more efficient than the gasoline engines in our cars that a plug-in hybrid car running on electricity supplied by Indiana’s current grid still ends up more carbon-frugal than comparable cars burning gasoline in a conventional engine under the hood. Old-guard energy types have been saying this for decades. In a major report released last March, the World Wildlife Fund finally concluded that they were right all along.

But true carbon zealots won’t settle for modest reductions in carbon emissions when fat targets beckon. They see coal-fired electricity as the dragon to slay first. Huge, stationary sources can’t run or hide, and the cost of doing without them doesn’t get rung up in plain view at the gas pump. California, Pennsylvania, and other greener-than-thou states have made flatlining electricity consumption the linchpin of their war on carbon. That is the one certain way to halt the displacement of foreign oil by cheap, domestic electricity.

The oil-coal economics come down to this. Per unit of energy delivered, coal costs about one-fifth as much as oil — but contains one-third more carbon. High carbon taxes (or tradable permits, or any other economic equivalent) sharply narrow the price gap between oil and the one fuel that can displace it worldwide, here and now. The oil nasties will celebrate the green war on carbon as enthusiastically as the coal industry celebrated the green war on uranium 30 years ago.

The other 5 billion are too poor to deny these economic realities. For them, the price to beat is 3-cent coal-fired electricity. China and India won’t trade 3-cent coal for 15-cent wind or 30-cent solar. As for us, if we embrace those economically frivolous alternatives on our own, we will certainly end up doing more harm than good.

By pouring money into anything-but-carbon fuels, we will lower demand for carbon, making it even cheaper for the rest of the world to buy and burn. The rest will use cheaper energy to accelerate their own economic growth. Jobs will go where energy is cheap, just as they go where labor is cheap. Manufacturing and heavy industry require a great deal of energy, and in a global economy, no competitor can survive while paying substantially more for an essential input. The carbon police acknowledge the problem and talk vaguely of using tariffs and such to address it. But carbon is far too deeply embedded in the global economy, and materials, goods, and services move and intermingle far too freely, for the customs agents to track.

Consider your next Google search. As noted in a recent article in Harper’s, “Google . . . and its rivals now head abroad for cheaper, often dirtier power.” Google itself (the “don’t be evil” company) is looking to set up one of its electrically voracious server farms at a site in Lithuania, “disingenuously described as being near a hydroelectric dam.” But Lithuania’s grid is 0.5 percent hydroelectric and 78 percent nuclear. Perhaps the company’s next huge farm will be “near” the Three Gorges Dam in China, built to generate over three times as much power as our own Grand Coulee Dam in Washington State. China will be happy to play along, while it quietly plugs another coal plant into its grid a few pylons down the line. All the while, of course, Google will maintain its low-energy headquarters in California, a state that often boasts of the wise regulatory policies — centered, one is told, on efficiency and conservation — that have made it such a frugal energy user. But in fact, sky-high prices have played the key role, curbing internal demand and propelling the flight from California of power plants, heavy industries, chip fabs, server farms, and much else (see “California’s Potemkin Environmentalism,” Spring 2008).

So the suggestion that we can lift ourselves out of the economic doldrums by spending lavishly on exceptionally expensive new sources of energy is absurd. “Green jobs” means Americans paying other Americans to chase carbon while the rest of the world builds new power plants and factories. And the environmental consequences of outsourcing jobs, industries, and carbon to developing countries are beyond dispute. They use energy far less efficiently than we do, and they remain almost completely oblivious to environmental impacts, just as we were in our own first century of industrialization. A massive transfer of carbon, industry, and jobs from us to them will raise carbon emissions, not lower them.

The grand theory for how the developed world can unilaterally save the planet seems to run like this. We buy time for the planet by rapidly slashing our own emissions. We do so by developing carbon-free alternatives even cheaper than carbon. The rest of the world will then quickly adopt these alternatives, leaving most of its trillion barrels of oil and trillion tons of coal safely buried, most of the rain forests standing, and most of the planet’s carbon-rich soil undisturbed. From end to end, however, this vision strains credulity.

Perhaps it’s the recognition of that inconvenient truth that has made the anti-carbon rhetoric increasingly apocalyptic. Coal trains have been analogized to boxcars headed for Auschwitz. There is talk of the extinction of all humanity. But then, we have heard such things before. It is indeed quite routine, in environmental discourse, to frame choices as involving potentially infinite costs on the green side of the ledger. If they really are infinite, no reasonable person can quibble about spending mere billions, or even trillions, on the dollar side, to dodge the apocalyptic bullet.

Thirty years ago, the case against nuclear power was framed as the “Zero-Infinity Dilemma.” The risks of a meltdown might be vanishingly small, but if it happened, the costs would be infinitely large, so we should forget about uranium. Computer models demonstrated that meltdowns were highly unlikely and that the costs of a meltdown, should one occur, would be manageable — but greens scoffed: huge computer models couldn’t be trusted. So we ended up burning much more coal. The software shoe is on the other foot now; the machines that said nukes wouldn’t melt now say that the ice caps will. Warming skeptics scoff in turn, and can quite plausibly argue that a planet is harder to model than a nuclear reactor. But that’s a detail. From a rhetorical perspective, any claim that the infinite, the apocalypse, or the Almighty supports your side of the argument shuts down all further discussion.

To judge by actions rather than words, however, few people and almost no national governments actually believe in the infinite rewards of exorcising carbon from economic life. Kyoto has hurt the anti-carbon mission far more than carbon zealots seem to grasp. It has proved only that with carbon, governments will say and sign anything — and then do less than nothing. The United States should steer well clear of such treaties because they are unenforceable, routinely ignored, and therefore worthless.

If we’re truly worried about carbon, we must instead approach it as if the emissions originated in an annual eruption of Mount Krakatoa. Don’t try to persuade the volcano to sign a treaty promising to stop. Focus instead on what might be done to protect and promote the planet’s carbon sinks — the systems that suck carbon back out of the air and bury it. Green plants currently pump 15 to 20 times as much carbon out of the atmosphere as humanity releases into it — that’s the pump that put all that carbon underground in the first place, millions of years ago. At present, almost all of that plant-captured carbon is released back into the atmosphere within a year or so by animal consumers. North America, however, is currently sinking almost two-thirds of its carbon emissions back into prairies and forests that were originally leveled in the 1800s but are now recovering. For the next 50 years or so, we should focus on promoting better land use and reforestation worldwide. Beyond that, weather and the oceans naturally sink about one-fifth of total fossil-fuel emissions. We should also investigate large-scale options for accelerating the process of ocean sequestration.

Carbon zealots despise carbon-sinking schemes because, they insist, nobody can be sure that the sunk carbon will stay sunk. Yet everything they propose hinges on the assumption that carbon already sunk by nature in what are now hugely valuable deposits of oil and coal can be kept sunk by treaty and imaginary cheaper-than-carbon alternatives. This, yet again, gets things backward. We certainly know how to improve agriculture to protect soil, and how to grow new trees, and how to maintain existing forests, and we can almost certainly learn how to mummify carbon and bury it back in the earth or the depths of the oceans, in ways that neither man nor nature will disturb. It’s keeping nature’s black gold sequestered from humanity that’s impossible.

If we do need to do something serious about carbon, the sequestration of carbon after it’s burned is the one approach that accepts the growth of carbon emissions as an inescapable fact of the twenty-first century. And it’s the one approach that the rest of the world can embrace, too, here and now, because it begins with improving land use, which can lead directly and quickly to greater prosperity. If, on the other hand, we persist in building green bridges to nowhere, we will make things worse, not better. Good intentions aren’t enough. Turned into ineffectual action, they can cost the earth and accelerate its ruin at the same time.


 

 

 

  

 

          

 

 

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Mar 16 2009

Why I want to be a Teacher

Published by Marc under Family, Musings

As I look back on my life it seems obvious that I should have always been a teacher. I was on that track as a graduate student in Philosophy. What do you do with a degree in Philosophy? You teach…Philosophy!

marc-1973

Unfortunately for me, I woke up one day in 1975 and said to myself, “what could I do with a degree in Philosophy? Teach? Do I want to do that? I don’t think so.”

It seems simple enough until you realize, with a lifetime of experience, that you should have been a teacher.

I justify this decision by saying that I was a teacher for the last 22 years. I built my business by doing workshops at companies and adult education classes. I always liked getting up in front of people, even though I am private with most people.

As I have been making this transition from Financial Planner to Middle School Teacher I have begun to reflect on what I have to contribute.

  1. I love people. I am genuinely interested in who you are.
  2. I quickly adapt to my circumstances. I can assess and adjust to let people know that I am with them.
  3. I know that every person is unique, important and worthy. Everyone wants to excel at something.
  4. I know that people learn in different ways. Not everyone will understand.
  5. I know that it is more important to learn how to learn than learn to remember. Know that you can acquire any skill, learn any language, and achieve any goal if you know how to learn.
  6. I know that if I can reach just one child every year that I will have fulfilled on my destiny.

Like most of you, I want to make a difference. We all want to leave some kind of mark, some legacy, even if it is just with our family. We want to be remembered, as a way to keep ourselves alive a little longer.

If you’ve raised children you have already left a legacy. How will your children remember you? How will they relate to you? Whatever it is, you have left your imprint on them.

If you have built a business you have already left a legacy. How will the employees remember you? How will your customers remember you? How will your community remember you?

If you have worked in any profession that requires human contact you have left a legacy. How will you be remembered?

The larger personal goal, yet to be realized, is to know that you have made a difference, that you have made an impression, that you got through to someone, that you connect to people in a way that makes life better for you and them.

With your help I can accomplish this goal. I really would like your assistance in my endeavor by introducing me to any teachers or principals that you know in the Raleigh/Durham area. Any advice you have that you think would help me, please email me so we can set up a time to talk.

I know that I am needed and wanted out there and I look forward to stepping out.

Marc

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Feb 25 2009

I Sold My Business Today

Published by Marc under Musings

Today I sold my securities business to Ameriprise Financial. I also had a talk tonight with the Raleigh Industrial Engineering Society.

It was an interesting day.

I have been working as a financial planner for almost 22 years. I started out because I was unemployed. I was laid off from a job as an office manager for Patsy Aiken Designs. Patsy’s husband Joel ran the office and had designed his own accounting program in Microsoft Access.

I had some experience with Access and felt that I could master his “simple” program. I was there 60 days and I don’t think I got one weeks payroll right the whole time. The Aiken’s laid me and two other people, they had hired at the same time as me, off due to limited resources. In other words, they couldn’t afford us and we did not produce any revenue. . . . . .

But I digress!

I got started in this industry by going to a job fair. I don’t remember where it was, but I met some people with a company called Waddell and Reed Financial Services. I remember meeting Steve Stringberg. He was the district manager of the Raleigh office. It was a day that changed my life.

I remember coming home and declaring to my then wife, Karin, that I got a job that day. She said “great, how much are they going to pay you?” I said “nothing, it’s straight commission!”

You could probably fill in the ending to that story.

But I persisted and somehow I managed to make a living at it.

Along the way I met some wonderful people. Some of them I did business with and feel that I honestly helped. Others were great moments to get to know another life traveler and share a little bit of myself.

I just love helping people. I get joy out of doing little things that say “I love you.” Making that physical and psychic connection, even if it is just for a moment, can make a great day out of an OK day.

The many people that I met in seminars, at trade shows and through referrals will always be important to me. They were the basis of my life during this last quarter century.

I don’t mean to sound too “New Age” but I see life as an adventure, something to be enjoyed. I see myself as someone who likes people and likes life and I want people to like me.

The hardest thing for me to get to, in order to make this sale, was the idea that I was letting my clients down. Somehow I was falling short on a promise that I made to some of them, that I would never leave them.

In order to feel that I had done my best I had to find a suitable home for them, and I know that I have with the two planners I found at Ameriprise Financial, David and Adam.

I know that they will be in good hands and that I have done my duty so I can free myself from my own obligation.

I hope, if you are one of those people, that you will give David and Adam an opportunity to share their knowledge with you.

I also shared some of my knowledge tonight with the Raleigh Chapter of the International Industrial Engineering Society.

It is always fun to share my knowledge with people. I did this for my friend Becky Krier. She reminded me, tonight, that we had met at Martin Brossman’s Artists, Healers and Teachers party a few years ago.

They had a small group but there were some good questions and they added some good thoughts along the way. It was an appropriate way to end a day filled with more deep emotion than I have felt in a long time.

So now is a new beginning. I am freeing myself so that I can move forward to what is next.

Some of you know that I am looking at becoming a teacher. This is something I should have been doing my whole adult life. I was on that path at one time in my life, but then, it didn’t feel right.

I am signed up for the NC teach program and am looking at Middle School Social Studies right now.

I am apprehensive but whenever I mention it to anyone they all say “oh, you would be great at that” so I guess I am on the right path.

If you can help me progress in this endeavor in any way, or you just want to share an idea with me, I would love to hear from you. I am truly on a new adventure and will welcome every fellow traveler along the way.

Marc


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Oct 10 2008

From Bad to Worse

Published by Marc under Life, Money, Musings, Retirement

Wow! We keep asking ourselves, “Can it get any worse?”, and it appears that the answer to that is YES.

As I write this today at 10:00 am the Dow Jones is down over 200 points again and there doesn’t seem to be anything the government or business can do about it. The one consolation is that we will have a three day weekend for the markets with a banking holiday on Monday. It seems that progress can be made over days when the markets can’t react immediately.

I know that we will get through this as we have gotten through every other challenge our economy has faced over its history but when you are in it, it can really hurt. I know that we have all lost money and that it will take time to recover what is gone but there are a few things you can do right now to protect yourself.

First, you should already be in cash in your 401k plans. The market may fall still further and there will continue to be a lot of volatility until this credit crisis gets resolved. If you are concerned that you will miss some good days ahead know that you will also be missing some of the bad ones as well.

Next, you should look at some of the new investment vehicles out there that offer what are called “living benefits”. These plans, offered by insurance companies, guarantee a future income stream with a minimum return of 6 or 7% on your investment that you cannot outlive, even if your account value drops to zero. There are a number of good companies that offer these products and I would be happy to discuss them with you if you like.

If you are participating in plans where you are contributing on a monthly basis, do not stop. Even if you have moved the bulk of your 401k to cash your future investments should be invested in the market since you are buying shares at better and better prices. This will help when the market recovers as these shares that you bought on sale will recover faster.

Don’t pull your money out of the bank. No one has lost a dime yet and with the insured amounts lifted to $250,000 (there is even a proposal on the table to make this unlimited) your money is safe. The worst thing we could do to insure a depression would be for us to make it even harder for banks to make loans because there is less capital on deposit.

Talk to a professional about your money. I hear too many people say they don’t want to do anything for fear of doing the wrong thing. Doing nothing, however, may be the wrong thing. There are ways to protect your investments and provide future growth, so open those statements and then find out what you can do.

I know this is a scary time, but be assured that we will get through this and life will get better.

Let me know if I can help you.

Marc

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Sep 16 2008

Life on a Living Planet

Published by Marc under Family, Life, Musings

Do you sometimes feel like you are connected to something bigger than yourself?

We often go through our days oblivious to anything outside of ourselves and content to ignore the life that is all around us but sometimes life forces us to notice what is always there.

Last weekend Sandy and I took a short trip to the beach (one of the great joys of living in Central North Carolina is the ability to be at the beach or in the mountains within 2 ½ to 3 hours) and I was once again confronted with the majesty, beauty and power that is our living planet.

As we climbed over the bridge on the dunes to the beach I was awe struck at what lay before me. This gigantic body of living ocean lapping up on the shore with the power of untold gallons of water, salt and sand. With every wave crashing on the shore I could feel the very planet inhaling and exhaling life and vitality.

It has been some time since we have been to the ocean so I am sure that the impact of being in the presence of this massive body of water would not have struck me so profoundly had it been a more mundane experience.

What I was left with was a profound feeling of connectedness both with the planet but also to every living person, animal and plant that was present around me. The feeling was so profound that you might even call it a religious experience, a deep gratitude for the senses to experience such beauty, power and grace and the profound sense of my connection to it all.

If you have never had the opportunity to feel a connection like this, I encourage you to take the time to get out in nature, put your mind on hold and just get present to the planet that is alive all around you.

Regardless of what we create as humans there is nothing to compare to what God has created for us. It is free and available at each and every moment of each and every day.

I hope you can take a minute today to experience a little and give thanks for life you have been given.

I am thankful for mine.

Marc

Here is the video of our trip. I hope you enjoy it.

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Sep 09 2008

What Does the Takeover of Frannie and Freddie Mean to You?

Published by Marc under Family, Life, Money

Last Sunday it happened. The Treasury Department took over Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the two largest mortgage holders in the world. The combined mortgage holdings of these two giants is just north of $5.4 Trillion. That is a lot of money no matter what country you live in.

The good news is that the takeover will help to stabilize the markets that have been shaky for months, wondering if these two companies would survive the mortgage meltdown that is occurring here and around the world. The bad news is that it may make it more difficult to get a loan for a home or a business in the months ahead because the plan requires both entities to sharply reduce their mortgage holdings in the future.

The moves by Treasury and Congress a few months ago was designed to allow these companies to increase their lending in both dollars and the size of loans in order to provide some liquidity to the distressed mortgage markets. With the takeover and reduction in portfolios, money will now be exiting the markets instead.

There is also danger in the banking sector as most banks still have not disclosed the extent of the losses from bad mortgage loans on their books. I did notice in the paper this morning that mortgage rates dropped yesterday on the news of the takeover and may go still lower in the future but that is hollow news if the banks and lenders are still unwilling to make loans on any terms.

You see, banks can leverage every dollar deposited by ten times. If they have $1 million in assets they can lend out $10 million. For every dollar that a bank or lender writes off the books he must reduce his leverage or increase his deposits. Right now banks are in a squeeze and you and I are caught in the middle of it.

How did we get into this mess? The blame lies in two areas, from my perspective. First, Wall Street allowed the formation and sale of all of these loans as if they were all AAA credit worthy. Second, Congress took money, lots of it, from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to look the other way and make excuses for their risky actions and they are still making excuses today. It is probably high time that we start holding someone responsible for this mess since we, the taxpayers, will end up paying for all of it.

So what can you do? Stay liquid, keep your credit on solid ground and educate yourself about what your public representatives are actually doing.

We will come through this because we always do. We are the United States of America and we will survive and prosper but the time for taking undue risks is over and we should stand together in making the future more stable for future generations.

To your Prosperity

Marc


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Sep 06 2008

Beware of social network scams

Published by Marc under Announcements, Family, Money

I read an article in Forbes today and wanted to share it with you. It reinforced for me the need to be vigilent about what you find on your page and in your communication with others. Here is the text of the story and the link to the article.

Facebook Blows It

In a Nov. 26, 2007 column I praised Facebook, But I am now tempering my recommendation. The social networking Web site has become littered with scams that are not easy to spot. Here’s one I fell for: A scammer posing as a FORBES colleague posted a link on my Facebook wall. Clicking on the link handed my e-mail address and Facebook password to the scammer. Within days the scoundrel had posted promotional spams under my name to my 1,213 friends.

To my unsuspecting Facebook friends, I looked like a pest. To my Web-savvy friends, I looked like a rube who had fallen for a prank. This may astonish the kids and propeller heads who run Facebook, but business professionals do not seek either reputation.

A Facebook spokesman e-mailed: “While we believe we have one of the strongest security systems protecting users on the Internet, we face an ongoing ‘arms race’ with spammers and others who constantly develop ever more creative and sophisticated tools to trick Facebook users into sharing their passwords. They use this information to break into accounts and extend the cycle further. Facebook is currently in the midst of one particularly aggressive onslaught.”

Fine, but Facebook blew it by failing to warn its members of these scams. My advice: Tread cautiously on these broad-population social networks. Never use a password from one of your sensitive e-mail, banking or portfolio accounts.
Read Rich Karlgaard’s daily blog at http://blogs.forbes.com/digitalrules or visit his home page at www.karlgaard.com

http://www.forbes.com/forbes/2008/0915/031.html

I for one am changing my Facebook password.

I hope you are having a profitable day

Marc

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Aug 22 2008

As Summer Comes to a Close

Published by Marc under Family, Life

The children in our neighborhood will be heading back to school next week so I guess that signals the end of summer.

For me the signal for the end of summer is the waning produce from my garden. It has been a good summer and the garden produced some good crops of peas, beans, spinach, squash, peppers and tomatoes. I managed to freeze or can a lot of it and look forward to using it into the winter ahead.

Here is a picture of some of the squash.

Today I tilled the squash under and prepared the soil for a second crop of green beans. I hope to get one last good crop before it freezes so I can have some beans this winter.

I know that we will have many more days of warm weather ahead but it is always sad to see the end of the garden. It is a signal that things are changing, evolving and slowing down.

Life, however, never slows down. In fact, as we grow older it seems to move ever faster and we have to work at slowing it down. A garden, though, is a great way to slow time down because there is nothing you can do to make plants grow and produce any faster.

And when you are working in the garden you need to stop and take notice of every little aspect of it. What is new that you missed yesterday, what needs special attention, what needs to be harvested today? And if you have a particularly small crop (mine was a pepper called Tai Hot) that you need to get right down on to pick and that has hundreds of fruit, time can really slow down.


I’m lucky that my kids are grown and gone so that I can have the time to contemplate and work in my garden. If you have kids, especially young ones, your life is probably in a constant whirl of activity. I remember those days of after school activities and constant juggling of schedules to make it to the events.

But even if your life looks like this it might be a good idea to find something in your life to slow you down. To slow you down long enough to appreciate LIFE. Maybe it is yoga, or meditation, or a walk around the block or your garden.

With school back in session it might seem like things just got more hectic, that time just sped up a little more, but if you take some time to just consciously slow it down you might find that small piece of time where you can take notice of that most important thing just in front of you right now. A moment just to be present to life, your life and a chance to say “thank you”.

Here’s hoping that as your summer comes to a close you find a moment just for You.

Marc

———————————————————————–

Have you ever wanted to make a difference? Have you heard of the concept of Pay it Forward?

There are a group of people with just such a mission and you can join them.

http:/www.payitforward.name

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Aug 18 2008

Trying to stay ahead

Published by Marc under Family, Money

We are in a recession! There, somebody said it.

Everyone who wants the world to continue to move forward without a glitch has been denying this for months but anyone who has shopped for groceries or filled up their car with gas lately knows that things are costing more. That in itself is not enough to signal a recession but for most of us there have not been any proportionate income increases to go along with these increased cost and for us this spells trouble.

Will things get worse before they get better? No one knows for sure, but when I read things like the article I found in Barron’s last week I tend to think that they just might get worse before they get better. The title is enough to shake you in your boots, “Yes, That’s $2 Trillion of Debt Related Losses”. It is an interview with Nouriel Roubini, an economist who has been predicting for two years most of the problems we are now experiencing. Here is some of what he said in the interview.

Unfortunately for the rest of us, you have a pretty good track record. How much more misery lies ahead?

“We are in the second inning of a severe, protracted recession, which started in the first quarter of this year and is going to last at least 18 months, through the middle of next year. A systemic banking crisis will go on for awhile, with hundreds of banks going belly up.

So far, we have seen no recession in the technical sense: two consecutive quarters of negative growth in real GDP. Why not?

“Maybe the recession started in January; if you look at the data on gross domestic product on a monthly basis between February and April, GDP was falling. Saying this is not a recession is just a joke.

How long will it take for the collapse in the banking sector to play out?

“It is happening in real time. Many smaller banks are going bust already. More than 200 subprime-mortgage lenders have gone bust in the past year alone. And many community banks will go bankrupt. Community banks usually finance everything: the homes, the stores, the downtown, the commercial real estate, the shopping center. If you are in a town or a municipality where there is a housing bust, the bank is gone. Of three dozen or so medium-sized regional banks, a good third are in distress. That includes the Wachovias and Washington Mutuals of the world. Half of this group might go bankrupt. Even some of the majors could end up technically insolvent, though they might be deemed too big to fail.

My purpose is not to make you feel worse than you already do but to get you thinking about what you can do to stay ahead of all this. First, you should have some money in the bank (one that won’t fail, I hope). Having cash during a downturn can help you weather your own personal downturn and take advantage of opportunities that are sure to be there at the bottom.

Next, you should find new ways to conserve the resources you have. I have a garden and I freeze, can and dehydrate tomatoes, peppers, beans, squash and cucumbers to see me through the winter. You can find ways to drive less or drive using less gas. Start buying store brands instead of name brand products (most of the store brands are made by the national brands anyway).

Lastly, you can find new sources of income. How much stuff do you have in that storage room or in the attic? Have a garage sale of put it on Craig’s List or EBay. Start a side business doing something you already know and like to do. Can you play an instrument? Give lessons. Are you a computer geek? Sell your skills to help people who need it. Are you a great cook? Find someone who wants to eat what you make. There are lots of ways to stay ahead if you just put your mind to it.

A recession doesn’t have to hurt a lot if you just stay ahead of it by being prepared and by taking action. Now is not the time to pull the covers over your head. Get up and start moving and you will be one of the survivors.

Let me know if I can help you in any way.

Marc

Are you interested in helping people succeed? Do you understand the concept of Pay it Forward?

There is a group of people who want to help you pay it forward to just 4 people and help end poverty
in this country and around the world.

Check out this mission: http://payitforward.name


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Aug 13 2008

Welcome to Planning For Your Life

Published by Marc under Announcements

Thanks for checking this out. my intention here is to provide you with both information you can use and ideas and thoughts that will get you thinking about what is important in your life.

Feel free to comment on anything you find as I am interested in how things land and what is working both for you and for me.

I am always on the lookout for what’s new and useful so if you have something you think I should share, feel free to let me in on it.

Marc

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