
Payrolls in U.S. Climb More Than Forecast Unemployment Rate Holds at 8.3%
  http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-03-09/payrolls-in-u-s-climb-more-than-forecast-unemployment-rate-holds-at-8-3-.html
 
- For as long as prices stay above the uptrend line, the long term uptrend is still intact.
- Key support at 2,875, which is the last significant low confluence with 200MA. 2,912 could be a good support too.
- If the correction terminates at 2,875 and rebound from here. The correction since Feb 21 fulfills Elliott Wave corrective count of A, B, C. This is provided IF it terminates here. Elliott Wave is accurate often at hindsight. As the market unfolds, recount is often necessary. Which is why I always have reservation relying too much on Elliott Wave.
By BRADLEY KLAPPER, Associated Press 3 hours ago 
WASHINGTON (AP) Peace talks with the Palestinians dominated President Barack Obama's meeting last year with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu but will barely warrant a mention at their White House session Monday or in speeches to a powerful pro-Israeli lobby. Iran is now the issue commanding urgent attention.
The United States, Israel and much of the world are trying to figure out how to deal with Iran and its nuclear program. While all sides insist a resolution to the long-running Israeli-Palestinian conflict is critical to Israel's security, the Israelis have come to believe that Iran may be on the threshold of developing atomic weapons and is the primary existential threat to the Jewish state.
The Palestinians probably will not get much more than a passing reference by the U.S. and Israeli officials, lawmakers, GOP presidential hopefuls and others at the America Israel Public Affairs Committee's annual policy conference, where Obama was scheduled to speak Sunday, a day before Netanyahu.
Nor is the peace process at the top of the agenda for Netanyahu's meeting with Obama at the Oval Office on Monday and his talks with congressional leaders on Tuesday.
But the Israeli-Palestinian conflict " is not going to just go away," said Maen Rashid Areikat, the Palestinian envoy in Washington. He said Netanyahu " can focus on Iran, but he can only bring peace to his country by making peace with the Palestinians and his Arab neighbors."
Shifting focus from the seemingly intractable Mideast conflict has political advantages for both Obama and Netanyahu, even if they also don't see eye to eye on the preferred tactics to prevent Iran from being a nuclear-armed state.
For one, no politician in an election year has ever suffered from being tough on Iran. Pressing Israel on the need to make concessions to the Palestinians can be a political minefield.
That is what happened last year when Obama declared that the need for a two-state solution was " more urgent than ever." He challenged Israel to make concessions on borders and security that have hindered an agreement for six decades.
The immediate result was public confrontation with Netanyahu, and fodder for a Republican Party eager to cast Obama as a weak partner to Israel.
Israel is an ally whose wishes are key to the Democratic-leaning Jewish vote and to the evangelical Christians who make up a large chunk of the Republican base. A year of balky peace negotiations, an acrimonious Palestinian campaign to win U.N. recognition and continued Israeli settlement construction in disputed territories have hardly validated Obama's public call for a speedy resolution.
But as America's pro-Israel advocates gather again, the call for peace with the Palestinians has succumbed to fever-pitched talk of military action against Iran. Tehran insists its nuclear program is for peaceful purposes.
The U.S. and Israeli leaders' differences on Iran are significantly narrower, but no less tense.
Israel believes the time to strike is before Iran has a nuclear weapon. The US position is to wait until it is certain Iran has one, and allow more time for sanctions to succeed in pressuring Iran back into negotiations.
" Putting the peace process on the back burner has not solved any of the underlying tension and mistrust between the Obama administration and Netanyahu government," said Haim Malka, a senior fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. " If anything, tension over the Palestinian issue has been eclipsed by bilateral tension over how to address Iran's nuclear program."
In his most expansive remarks on Iran, Obama on Friday appeared to address Netanyahu' concern that Iran's uranium enrichment activity be presented as the world's problem, not just Israel's, and that U.S. military options are expressly on the table. In an interview with The Atlantic magazine, the president said he is not bluffing about attacking Iran if it builds a nuclear weapon, while cautioning Israel against a premature attack.
Netanyahu, too, seems to have little to gain from an open clash with Obama now.
Should Israel attack Iran, it will count on the United States to offer maximum diplomatic cover. Israel also will need the U.S. for a coordinated strategy in the event of retaliation by Iran or its proxies Hezbollah in Lebanon and Hamas in the Gaza Strip.
Relegating the peace process to the background is a coup for Netanyahu. His government has brushed aside American criticism of Jewish settlement expansion in lands the Palestinians want for their future state, and has insisted on Palestinian concessions, notably their endorsement of Israel's Jewish character, before any talk of granting Palestinian independence.
- AIPAC: http://www.aipac.org
Gold dealers seeing a brisk business
Gold has been on a wild ride this week and is selling briskly despite the price gyrations, South Florida dealers said Friday.
" People are definitely coming in they're both buying and selling," said Nathan Johnson, owner of Florida Gold Exchange that has stores in Fort Lauderdale and Sunrise.
" Gold sales are pretty solid," agreed Gary Tancer, who just opened a second Coin and Jewelry Gallery in Boca Raton. Some customers are buying weekly or monthly, he said. Most are opting for the gold coins rather than the more expensive and heavier gold bullion, Tancer said.
Fears of inflation and the continued uncertainty of the economy is causing people to buy gold as a safeguard despite it plummeting in value 5 percent on Wednesday, both he and Johnson said.
The continued boom is also causing more people to become gold dealers, said Fred Levin, owner of Lake Worth Gold Mine. About a half dozen new businesses buying and selling gold have opened near him just since the new year began, Levin said. That's on top of hundreds of new gold dealers beginning operations in Palm Beach County from 2009 to 2011, he said.
People are always predicting the gold bubble will burst just like the housing market did but so far the precious commodity has recovered from temporary downturns, said investor Damon Vickers, author of, " The Day after the Dollar Crashes."
Unlike stocks, gold has had 11 years of growth, jumping in 2001 from its ending price of $276.50 up to 2011's final price of $1,574.50.
" Gold is still on the upturn," Vickers said. People are still seeking a safe haven for at least some of their assets, he said.
But lately some South Floridians have been selling their gold collectibles because they have to, said Russell Chamberlain, owner of Gold-N-Stuff Inc. in Pembroke Pines.
" They are short of cash," he said. " They need to pay a phone bill or mortgage. They don't want to but they do what they need to do."
Other gold owners, with more cash on hand, are holding out until the prices go up even more, said Levin, the Lake Worth dealer.
Investing in gold does have its detractors such as billionaire Warren Buffett who recently dismissed it as a valueless asset in his annual Berkshire Hathaway report to shareholders.
Stocks have actually done better than gold over several decades, said Plantation certified financial planner, Matt Saneholtz.
Some customers are always looking to swoop in and buy gold when the prices drop dramatically like it did on Wednesday after Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke testified before Congress that inflation seemed subdued.
" Gold is a perfect investment for people who think the world is coming to an end," added South Florida certified financial planner Evensky. " It's a hedge against disaster."
dgehrke@tribune.com, 954-356-4404 or Twitter @donnagehrke
Here are some points to consider before you sell:
The price of gold changes daily. Check the price by going to kitco.com or other websites.
Plan to visit at least three places for appraisals.
Because the price of gold fluctuates, get your appraisals done on the same day you sell.
Count the number of your gold pieces before and immediately after an appraisal.
Remember, a jeweler might make you a better offer if you are selling a large quantity.
South Florida News Service
  NEW YORK, March 2 (Reuters) - Moody's Investors Service on Friday cut Greece's sovereign debt rating to the lowest possible level after a debt-restructuring deal that imposes hefty economic losses for private creditors.
  Moody's lowered Greece's local and foreign-currency bond ratings a notch to C from Ca, becoming the third credit rating agency to downgrade the country following the announcement of the swap deal to lighten its debt burden.
  Moody's says that bonds rated C " are the lowest rated class and are typically in default, with little prospect for recovery of principal or interest." The rating agency added that it did not assign any future outlook.
  " The announced debt exchange proposal," the credit rating agency said in a statement, " implies that private creditors that participate will incur substantial economic losses on their holdings of the Greek government debt."
  On Monday, Standard & Poor's cut Greece's long-term ratings to " selective default," the second ratings agency to proceed with a widely expected downgrade after the country announced the bond swap. Fitch had announced a cut to its lowest rating above default last week.
  Greece formally launched the bond swap a week ago.
  Under the deal, which is part of a second 130-billion-euro rescue package to claw Greece back from the brink of a disorderly default, bondholders will take losses of 53.5 percent on the nominal value of their Greek holdings, with actual losses put at around 74 percent.
  According to Moody's, " the announced proposal for private sector involvement, a precondition for the provision of further financial assistance from the euro area, would constitute a distressed exchange, and hence a default, on Greek government bonds."
  The rating agency makes a distinction between a distressed exchange - where investors are losing money - and an outright default that is likely to happen when the exchange does not take place.
  " Both these conditions are met in this case," Moody's said.
  When the Eurogroup's assessment has been finalized and debt exchanges have been completed, Moody's will re-assess the credit risk profile and ratings of any outstanding or new securities issued by the Greek government.
  Moodys' concludes that " the risk of default even after the debt exchange has been completed remains high," and any upward movements in Greece's sovereign ratings after the debt exchange are likely to be small.
  (Reporting By Tiziana Barghini Editing by Andrew Hay and Jan Paschal)
  TEHRAN (Reuters) - Iran, under intense Western pressure over its disputed nuclear programme, on Saturday declared an initial turnout of 64 percent in a parliamentary election shunned by most reformists as a sham.
  Iran's Islamic clerical leadership is eager to restore the damage to its legitimacy caused by the violent crushing of eight months of street protests after President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was re-elected in a 2009 vote his opponents said was rigged.
  Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who endorsed the 2009 result, has since turned sharply against Ahmadinejad. Some early results from Friday's vote suggested the divisive president's supporters were losing ground in the 290-seat parliament.
  His sister, Parvin Ahmadinejad, failed to win a seat in their hometown of Garmsar, the semi-official Mehr news agency said. Elsewhere, Khamenei loyalists appeared to be doing well.
  Interior Minister Mostafa Mohammad Najjar put the turnout at 64 percent after more than 26 million votes had been counted, telling state television the Iranian nation had disappointed its enemies by voting in such numbers.
  The figure was close to the 65 percent predicted for weeks by hardline conservative leaders and media.
  Najjar said 135 seats had been won outright so far, with 10 going to a run-off. Final results were not expected on Saturday.
  According to a Reuters tally of the results announced in 126 seats, 81 went to Khamenei supporters, 9 to Ahmadinejad's faction, 7 to reformists and 7 to independents, with the allegiance of the remaining winners unclear.
  The results are hard to compare with the outgoing parliament because hardline Khamenei and Ahmadinejad loyalists were united in the 2008 elections, taking about 70 percent of seats.
  Results declared so far were mostly from rural areas, Ahmadinejad's traditional strongholds. Khamenei's candidates were expected to do well in Tehran and other big cities.
  Khamenei, 72, had called for a high turnout to send a message of defiance to " the arrogant powers bullying us."
  British Foreign Secretary William Hague said Iran's election was not free or fair. " The regime has presented the vote as a test of loyalty, rather than an opportunity for people freely to choose their own representatives," he said.
  No independent observers were on hand to monitor the voting or check the official turnout figures. An unelected Guardian Council, which vets all candidates, barred 35 sitting MPs from seeking re-election and nearly 2,000 other would-be candidates.
  The vote took place without the two main opposition leaders. Mirhossein Mousavi and Mehdi Karoubi, who ran for president in 2009, have been under house arrest for more than a year.
  BEATING WAR DRUMS
  Iran has been hard hit by Western sanctions over its refusal to halt sensitive nuclear activity and be transparent with U.N. nuclear inspectors. Israel, whose leader meets U.S. President Barack Obama on Monday, has talked of war.
  Obama also said military action was among the options to prevent Iran acquiring nuclear weapons. " As president of the United States, I don't bluff," he told Atlantic Magazine. But he also argued against a pre-emptive Israeli strike.
  The dispute over Iran's uranium enrichment programme, which Tehran says is purely peaceful, barely featured in an election dominated by debates over soaring prices and scarce jobs.
  The vote will have scant impact on Iran's foreign or nuclear policies, in which Khamenei already has the final say, but could strengthen the Supreme Leader's hand before a presidential vote next year. Ahmadinejad, 56, cannot run for a third term.
  The outgoing parliament has summoned him to answer questions next week about his handling of the economy in unprecedented hearings that could hamstring him for the rest of his term.
  But the combative Ahmadinejad may try to turn the tables on his critics, some of whom say he has inflicted higher inflation on Iranians by slashing food and fuel subsidies and replacing them with cash handouts of about $38 a month per person.
  Global oil prices have spiked to 10-month highs on tensions between the West and Iran, OPEC's second biggest crude producer.
  Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Friday global powers would be falling into a trap if they pursued talks with Iran, saying Tehran would use dialogue to deceive the world and buy time to advance its nuclear programme.
  Netanyahu will press Obama, who is facing a presidential election in November, to stress publicly the nuclear " red lines" that Iran must not cross, Israeli officials say.
  (Additional reporting by Zahra Hosseinian and Ramin Mostafavi in Tehran, Matt Spetalnick in Washington Writing by Alistair Lyon Editing by Mark Heinrich)
  The reason was soft demand for services after the early Spring Festival, the National Bureau of Statistics said in a statement on its website.
  The sub-index of new orders fell to 46.1 in February from 48.5 the previous month.
  The services PMI index is intended to provide a snapshot of conditions in the services sector, which accounts for less than 45 percent of China's economy, a much smaller share than in developed countries.
  China's factories grew more than expected in February as export orders for big firms bounced back, a government survey showed, while a private-sector report portrayed a different picture of smaller firms lagging behind the rebound.
  Still, China's economy faces formidable headwinds as exports falter due to weakening demand in the United States and Europe, alongside a downturn in the once red-hot property sector in response to tightening steps by Beijing.
  China's annual economic growth is widely expected to slow to just over 8 percent in the first quarter from 8.9 percent in the previous quarter, the fifth consecutive quarter of slowdown.
  Many analysts expect the central bank to continue its steady policy easing by cutting the amount of cash that banks must hold in reserve to crank up credit to ward off sharper growth slowdown.
  China announced a cut in its reserve requirement ratio by 50 basis points to 20.5 percent on Feb 18, releasing about 400 billion yuan ($63 billion) that could be used for bank lending. It was the second 50-bp cut in the RRR in three months.
  CFLP non-manufacturing PMI index: ---------------------------------------------------------------
  Feb Jan Dec Nov Oct Sep Aug Jul Jun May
  48.4 52.9 56.0 49.7 57.7 59.3 57.6 59.6 57.0 61.9 ---------------------------------------------------------------
  (Reporting by Melanie Lee Writing by Kevin Yao)
  NEW YORK, March 2 (Reuters) - Stocks have proven the naysayers wrong so far in 2012. And the February jobs report could be just the ticket to keep the bulls going next week.
  The five-month stock rally has been built on a string of improving economic data that suggests U.S. corporate profit growth will remain intact, according to some analysts.
  Job growth is a big part of that picture. It has lagged most other parts of the U.S. economy, a point frequently raised by Republican presidential hopefuls.
  But strategists have been calling for a pullback, especially since indexes are hitting new milestones and the fourth-quarter reporting period is winding down.
  The Standard & Poor's 500 is up for eight of the last nine weeks. This week, the Dow closed above the 13,000 mark for the first time since May 2008, and the S& P 500 twice closed above 1,370, a closely watched technical resistance level. The Nasdaq at one point crossed the 3,000 level this week and is trading at its highest since 2000.
  Some say staying on this path may be possible with further supportive news on the economy.
  " The rally will continue as long as better economic information continues. The question is, 'Are we seeing some sustainable improvement in the economy?' I think the answer is 'yes,' so I think there is going to be some continuation in the rally," said Bryant Evans, investment advisor and portfolio manager at Cozad Asset Management, in Champaign, Illinois.
  The government's jobs report for February, due on Friday, is expected to show non-farm payrolls added 210,000 jobs last month, according to economists polled by Reuters, after gaining 243,000 in January.
  That would mark three straight months of solid job gains.
  The U.S. unemployment rate is seen steady at a three-year low of 8.3 percent.
  It would also be further proof the economy is on the upswing. Among recent upbeat data was this week's report showing gross domestic product expanded in last year's fourth quarter at an annual rate of 3 percent - the quickest pace since the second quarter of 2010.
 
  OIL RAISES A RED FLAG
  Investors are focusing more on economic data lately, with a bailout package for Greece in the works and U.S. earnings news winding down.
  But rising oil prices could create some anxiety.
  Concern about supply disruptions from Middle Eastern oil producers has kept Brent crude oil above $120 a barrel, and analysts said that could affect the longevity of the stock market's rally.
  " The economy has a pretty good head of steam, and a few data points here or there isn't going to derail that. But if you have some exogenous shock from oil, all bets are off. Things can and do change in the short run," said Doug Foreman, director of equities at Kayne Anderson Rudnick in Los Angeles.
  Higher oil prices mean higher costs for consumers and businesses, and an even tougher time for Europe, which appears headed for a recession.
  Greece's second bailout from the euro-zone countries will be in place once conditions are finalized. The first of the money can be paid out after the completion of a bond swap between Athens and private investors, which is to be concluded by March 9.
  Those concerns aside, stocks' gains year to date could be reason enough for investors to pull back. The S& P 500 has risen 9 percent for the year so far.
  " Once you start hitting targets, that tells you something," said John Kosar, director of research with Asbury Research in Chicago.
  " From a pure money-management standpoint, the S& P didn't make any money last year. If you're a manager and sitting on almost 10 percent profit as of March 1st, wouldn't you want to take a little bit off the table?"
  The S& P 500 ended 2011 virtually unchanged.
 
  THE ECONOMY IN THE DRIVER'S SEAT
  But it's hard to argue with economic data.
  A stronger U.S. economy will create jobs and improve profits. That is seen as the key driver for the stock market's gains.
  Even though the percentage of companies beating analysts' profit expectations is down from recent quarters, earnings growth for the fourth quarter is still at 9.4 percent, above a Jan. 3 growth estimate of 7.9 percent.
  Earnings growth is down from recent quarters as well, but analysts said an improving economy will keep that growth from slowing too quickly, and will help offset any negative effects from Europe's fiscal troubles.
  " In our view, so long as the employment situation continues to improve, we're on the right trajectory," said Thomas Villalta, portfolio manager for Jones Villalta Asset Management in Austin, Texas.
  Besides Friday's jobs report, next week brings a private- sector employment report from ADP on Wednesday.
  On Monday, Wall Street will get a snapshot of the U.S. services sector for February from the Institute for Supply Management.
  The U.S. international trade deficit for January will be released on Friday, at the same time as the non-farm payrolls report. Economists polled by Reuters expect the country's international trade deficit to have edged up to $49 billion for January from December's $48.8 billion.
  Among the remaining S& P 500 companies to report results, tax preparation company H & R Block Inc is on next week's agenda as well as filtration equipment maker Pall Corp (Reporting by Caroline Valetkevitch Additional reporting by Lucia Mutikani and Chuck Mikolajczak Editing by Jan Paschal)
  By Peter Kennedy
  VANCOUVER, March 2 (Reuters) - St. Louis Federal Reserve Bank President James Bullard said on Friday the U.S. economic outlook is brighter and household confidence has improved , suggesting he sees no need for further steps to ease financial conditions.
  " I think the data is coming stronger on the U.S. economy. I think it's a good time to wait and see and gather more data, get a better read on what's going on in Europe, and see what is going to happen next," he told reporters after a speech at Simon Fraser University.
  Bond buying would be a potent tool, and it would have important effects on the economy, Bullard said.
  " But we already have a lot of things on the table," he said.
  However, Bullard said he would have reservations about any further Fed bond buying because it could accelerate an already sharp recent climb in energy prices.
  Some Fed officials believe high unemployment and sluggish growth demand another round of quantitative easing to kick the recovery into higher gear, while others, including Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke, have suggested renewed bond buying remains an option should the recovery lose steam.
  " I would be concerned that we not undertake a policy move like QE that would possibly feed into a global increase in oil prices," he told reporters after a speech at Simon Fraser University.
  After the Fed announced its second round of quantitative easing in November 2010, commodity prices around the world rose, in part because as the dollar's value fell, other assets rose in price.
 
  SEES U.S. JOBLESS RATE FALLING
  Bernanke told Congress this week there are reasons to question whether recent steep declines in the unemployment rate, which has tumbled from 9.1 percent in August to 8.3 percent in January, will continue because growth is slow and incomes have increased only modestly.
  But Bullard said he expects unemployment to continue to edge lower, and sees no inconsistency with modest growth and steady labor market gains.
  " I think unemployment will continue to get better," he said, in response to questions after a speech at Simon Fraser University. " I don't really have in my mind the idea that you've got to get the rapid growth in order to get the unemployment rate to come down."
  Bullard, who is not a voter on the Fed's policy-setting panel this year, said he expects unemployment to decline to 7.8 percent by the end of the year.
 
  A WARNING ON HOUSING
  While Bullard has in the past been seen as a centrist among Fed policymakers, he favors raising benchmark overnight rates in 2013, earlier than the consensus view that tightening will happen in late 2014.
  The Fed cut rates to near zero in December 2008, and it has bought $2.3 trillion in bonds to stimulate growth. At its January meeting, the Fed said the sluggish pace of growth and a high unemployment rate suggest the central bank won't begin to raise rates until almost three years from now.
  The Fed's next meeting is March 13. At that meeting, officials will have to weigh signs that the recovery is exceeding expectations against worries that rising oil prices will deal another setback to growth.
  Bullard warned against trying to prop up struggling housing markets. Several Fed officials have said taking steps to prevent home foreclosures and clear a backlog of unsold homes could stimulate faster growth.
  " It is not feasible or desirable to attempt to re-inflate the bubble," he said.
  Discussing the Federal Reserve's monetary policy tools, Bullard said that should the central bank determine it needs further monetary accommodation, it could decide to push back the date it expects to raise rates for the first time.
  Contributing to the more positive outlook, recent actions by the European Central Bank to provide liquidity to stressed financial markets through long-term financing appear to have calmed European markets, Bullard said. (Reporting by Peter Kennedy, writing by Mark Felsenthal Editing by Jan Paschal)
In my personal view, I think Putin is one of the greatest president of Russia. Smart.  he essentially transformed Russia to what it is today.
Russian would be fortunate to have him as their President once again :)
krisluke ( Date: 03-Mar-2012 05:51) Posted:
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21 Things You Need To Know About Vladimir Putin
 
But what do we really know about Putin, an ex-KGB spy who has had a murky rise to power and has been accused of huge crimes?
As Russia goes to the polls on Sunday, we thought it time to take a closer look at Putin, a man who may just be both the most important, and most secretive, in the world.
Putin is widely expected to win the elections on Sunday.
 
If he wins, he may end up being ruler of Russia until 2024

AP
 
That would mean he effectively spends 24 years in power.
Putin claimed today that he had not made a decision if he would run in 2018, the New York Times reports.
Overall, Russians have appeared happy with Putin. He won 53% of the vote in 2000, 73% in 2004, and his ally Medvedev won 70% in 2008.
GDP per capita has grown from $2,400 in 2000 to $12,000 last year.
Critics, however, say he has quashed the opposition and ended debate within the country.
 
Last year Russia ranked 143rd, joint with Nigeria and Uganda, on Transparency International's annual list of the 182 most corrupt nations.
Reports suggest that Putin himself may have as much as $40 billion in assets.
He's even said to have built, via a network of corruption, this $1 billion house on the Black Sea
This is a long way from his humble beginnings. He grew up in a shared apartment in Leningrad, now St Petersburg, the Russian city ravaged by World War Two.
As a child, Putin was reportedly a thug. Putin likes to say he was a " bully, not a pioneer" .
 
After a stint at law school, he joined the KGB and was later posted to East Germany.
East German intelligence described him as a 'philanderer and a wife-beater' during his time

AP
 
In recent years there have been a variety of rumors about his infidelities, and allegations that his wife has been committed to a mental hospital.
After the Soviet Union fell, he went to work for Anatoly Sobchak, who would become the mayor of St Petersburg.

Kseniya Sobchak
Francois Durand / Getty
 
The St Petersburg mayor was later forced to flee Russia after a criminal investigation was launched against him in 1997. Sobchak later returned to Russia and became an early political supporter of Putin, but he died in 2000 in an incident many consider to be suspicious.
Sobchak's daughter Kseniya, often referred to as Russia's " Paris Hilton" , has become a stern critic of Putin.
CONSPIRACY THEORY 1: Putin was planted with Sobchak by the KGB

A bust of Putin sits next to a bust of Felix Dzerzhinsky, the founder of the KGB
AP
 
In her new book, the Man Without A Face, Russian journalist Masha Gessen talks to one former KGB agent who alleges that a senior KGB officer visited Putin before he left East Germany. Why would a KGB officer travel to visit a relatively minor like Putin? Perhaps to give him a new mission.
After St Petersburg, Putin moved to Moscow to begin working in central government

AP
CONSPIRACY THEORY 2: A series of apartment bombings organized by Russia's secret service swept Putin into the president's office.

The aftermath of one bombing in 1999
AP
 
Putin, then prime minister, pledged direct action against the Chechen rebels who were thought to be behind the attacks, pledging to wipe them out even " in the outhouse" . He was soon in the president's office with 53 percent of the vote.
However, one event made many reconsider the attacks.
On 22nd September 2009 the city of Ryazan, an attack was apparently halted by an eagle-eyed member of the public, who was also able to give descriptions of two people who appeared planted to have planted explosives. A bomb squad came in and found tested the substances planted, declaring them explosives and defusing them.
Two days later the FSB (the successor to the KGB) announced that the explosives were in fact sugar and that the bombing attempt was an exercise committed by the agency.
One person who claimed this was a plot was murdered in 2006
 
Litvenchenko's book, Blowing Up Russia, was one of the most complete investigations on the apartment bombings (it is banned in Russia).
The British police are still trying to get the two men suspected of poisoning him extradited, but Russian authorities have been uncooperative.
In the west, much of Putin's reputation is built upon his frequent publicity stunts, apparently designed to show off his masculine strength.

 
(For a full list of stunts, check FP's Passport blog)
The US Embassy in Russia, however, noted in private diplomatic cables released by Wikileaks, that he seemed kind of lazy and always " worked from home"
A recent documentary reportedly shows a more tender side of him.

AP
 
" It also took me a while to gradually understand what makes him tick. Still, I can't say that I disliked him as a human being."
Its unclear right now whether he will respond to the growing opposition movement with liberalization or restriction.

AP
 
Will Russia change after March 4?
CHART OF THE DAY: Yelp's Difficult Path To Profitability
Yelp finally made its debut as a publicly-traded company today.  It's trading well above its IPO price of $15, ending the day at $24.58.
But Yelp faces a difficult path to becoming a profitable company.  For now, the company has no clear path to profitability, according to Business Insider Intelligence research.
 
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The Army Is Eyeing These Cool New Camouflage Patterns
 
  Five camouflage design teams have been chosen to move onto the next stage of the Army's selection and testing process of  Phase IV Camouflage Improvement Effort.
The designers have to prove that their patterns of desert, woodland, and transitional camouflage stand up to  scientific analysis and field trials over the next nine months.
The Army is also interested in a  pattern for equipment and gear to cross over all three environment color schemes.  This means soldiers won't have to switch their equipment to match  what they're wearing in different environments.
One of the elite teams vying for a possible Army contract is a small, yet formidable company named Kryptek, founded by two combat veterans who served together in Iraq. They're competing against respected firms ADS (teamed with Hyperstealth Biotechnology), Brookwood Companies, Crye Precision, and a Government team from the U.S. Army Natick Soldier Systems Center.
Some of the new patterns in the running look so cool, you have to remind yourself that you're not supposed to be visually intrigued. The whole idea of camouflage is to disappear and enhance tactical effectiveness. Up close, the blend of colors and odd shapes can be pretty stunning, but at a distance, the human eye is often tricked into sending a different message to the brain. That's just a big rock, move on.
Click here to see how camo works >
Look closely. |
You just see the big picture
 
Color schemes are chosen to mimic natural surroundings. 
It's best that colors are contrasted with dark and light shades so that the wearer blends into the natural reflections and shadows we're used to seeing.
Pixels disrupt what you see
 
Pixels break up the fabric into a macropattern and a micropattern, so the design doesn't appear as a solid block. Even when picked up by infrared technology, the human form is broken up and its movements are masked.
3-D Layering tricks your brain
 
ADS  explains that the brain is deceived into regarding the fabric as part of the natural environment, rather than a solid flat surface. 
Science and shadows
 
A light-reflecting gradient helps creates a three-dimensional illusion that blends into natural terrain.
Designers have combat experience
 
Kryptek says their designs are made for the battlefield and the backcountry alike, so troops and civilians can both take note. 
Always ahead of the game

STOCKS FALL: Here's What You Need To Know
It couldn't have been a quieter day.
First, the scoreboard:
Dow: 12,971.6, -8.7, -0.0%
S& P 500: 1,369.5, -4.5, -0.3%
NASDAQ: 2,976.6, -12.0, +0.7%
And now, the top stories:
- We have yet to see a major sell-off in stocks.  Since the beginning of the year, we have seen no declines of 1 percent or worse.  The last time we saw a trend like this was 1995 when stocks surged 34 percent for the year. Yesterday, stock market guru Laszlo Birninyi wrote that similar patterns were good reason to expect the S& P 500 to surge to 1,700 sometime this year.
- Oil prices pulled back today after yesterday's surge.  Reports of an explosion in Saudi Arabia, which caused oil to spike, were denied.  Nevertheless, prices are still above $100 per barrel.
- But elevated oil prices may be bullish for stocks.  UBS's Jonathan Golub argues as much.  Elevated oil prices was one of four reasons that caused Golub to raise his S& P 500 EPS estimate and boost his year-end price target to 1,475 from 1,325.
- The number of housing contracts that are getting cancelled because people can't get a mortgage is rising.  12 States Where Homeowners Are Sinking Deeper Into Negative Equity >
- One of the ongoing controversies related to the declining unemployment rate has been the fact that the civilian labor force participation rate has been falling.  Many naysayers have argued that this has been occurring because the unemployed have just given up on the idea of getting back to work.  Barclays' economics team led by Dean Maki published some interesting research shedding light on this claim.  According to their research, the majority of the jobless who " no longer want a job" actually fall into the 55+ age bracket.  As such, it seems that most people are actually leaving the workforce because they're retiring, not because they are of prime working age and giving up. US Auto Industry Hiring Has Been On A Tear >
- There was definitely an optimistic slant to today's economics research report.  High Frequency Economics' Ian Shepherdson managed to put a positive spin on yesterday's disappointing personal income & spending, construction, and ISM manufacturing data.  Deutsche Bank published a report arguing that improving municipal finances could translate to more jobs in the public sector, which could provide a big upside surprise to upcoming jobs data. TREASURY: Here's Everything You Need To Know About The US Economy In 13 Slides >
- There was some very bizarre news related to Wynn Resorts today.  First, the shares were halted pending news.  Then news broke via a Wynn 8-K filing that the company won approval to build a grand resort in Macau's Cotai strip.  Shares surged 6 percent on the news.  Minutes later, Wynn shares were halted yet again pending more news.  An amended 8-K saying that the previous 8-K was " filed by mistake."   This had everyone scratching their heads.  Nevertheless, shares jumped anyways.
- The IPO of Yelp, the online review site, were priced at $15 per share.  However, they opened this morning at $22, surging as high as $26. Hey, People Buying YELP At $25 A Share, What On Earth Are You Thinking?
Hey, People Buying YELP At $25 A Share, What On Earth Are You Thinking?

Yelp CEO Jeremy Stoppelman. Yes, he's brilliant and charming. But $1.5 billion?
 
Its stock is now trading at $25 a share, ~70 percent above the price institutional investors paid for it last night.
That gives the company a valuation of ~$1.5 billion.
So, we have a simple question for the people scarfing up Yelp at $25 a share:
What on earth are you thinking?
We don't mean to be rude. We're actually curious.
Because here's what we see when we look at Yelp:
- A cool company that we like and use
- A business with $80 million of revenue that is losing a boatload of money
- A business that is growing about 4050 percent a yeara snail's pace relative to other hot online companies like Groupon, LinkedIn, and so forth
- A business that will have a tough time generating meaningful profits on account of the enormous number of local salespeople required to sell its ads
At $25, Yelp is currently trading at almost 20X last year's revenue.
That is a huge revenue multiple for a company with Yelp's growth rate and likely future profit margin.
Digital media companies like Yelp generally trade in a range of 3X-8X revenue, sometimes hitting 10X for really hot properties. And that's for profitable digital media companies, not companies that are hemorrhaging money.
We realize that investors are starved for growth stories. But wouldn't they prefer to wait for an opportunity to buy these growth stories at a cheaper price?  Look what happened to Groupon's stock after the IPO. Look what happened to Demand Media (Yelp's a much better business than Demand Media, but investors were initially pretty jazzed about Demand Media, too. Then they woke up).
So, at this price, what Yelp investors appear to be thinking is:
- Yelp's growth will accelerate massively
- Yelp will figure out a way to coin money
And that's cool. We admire people who think different. And anything's possible.
But we'd be grateful if someone who is buying Yelp at $25 could explain why they think it's worth that.
Because otherwise we're just going to conclude that you're all nuts.
  WASHINGTON/OTTAWA (Reuters) - President Barack Obama issued his most direct threat yet of U.S. military action against Iran if it builds a nuclear weapon, but in a message to Israel's leader ahead of White House talks he also cautioned against a pre-emptive Israeli strike.
  " As president of the United States, I don't bluff," Obama warned Iran in an magazine interview published on Friday, three days before he will host Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Washington.
  With the meeting expected to be dominated by stark differences over what Washington fears could be an Israeli attack on Tehran's nuclear sites, Netanyahu said he wanted to preserve the " freedom of action of the State of Israel in the face of threats to wipe us off the map."
  Monday's talks are shaping up as the most consequential encounter of U.S. and Israeli leaders in years, with tensions further magnified by Republican presidential candidates slamming Obama over his Middle East policy.
  Further complicating the talks is a trust deficit between the two men, who have had a rocky relationship.
  There is mounting speculation that Israel, which fears that time is running out to stop Iran's nuclear advance, could act militarily on its own in coming months unless it receives stronger reassurances from Washington.
  Netanyahu is trying to convince Obama to more forcefully define the nuclear threshold that Iran must not cross, while the U.S. president wants to convince Israel to hold off on any unilateral strike and give sanctions and diplomacy more time to work.
  Both leaders talked tough ahead of their meeting.
  " I think both the Iranian and the Israeli governments recognize that when the United States says it is unacceptable for Iran to have a nuclear weapon, we mean what we say," Obama said in an interview with the Atlantic magazine.
  Obama repeated the U.S. refrain that " all options are on the table" but spoke in his most direct terms yet of a possible U.S. military response if sanctions and diplomacy fail to curb Tehran's nuclear ambitions.
  " It includes a military component. And I think people understand that," Obama said when asked about U.S. intentions on Iran, which insists it is not trying to develop nuclear weapons.
  While acknowledging Netanyahu's " profound responsibility" to protect the Israeli people, Obama cited " potential unintended consequences" as he made clear that it would be unwise for Israel to go ahead with any attack on Iran.
  " At a time when there is not a lot of sympathy for Iran and its only real ally, (Syria) is on the ropes, do we want a distraction in which suddenly Iran can portray itself as a victim?"
  Obama cannot afford to be too tough on Netanyahu, with Republican presidential candidates ready to pounce on any sign of a rift with close U.S. ally Israel. But Obama's aides are also worried that a new war in the Middle East could sow chaos and bring further spikes in global oil prices.
  It was unclear, however, whether Obama's sharpened rhetoric on Iran would be enough to placate Netanyahu, who was visiting Canada on Friday before flying to Washington on Sunday.
  Netanyahu on Friday ruled out the idea of international talks to prevent Iran from gaining nuclear weapons, a possibility has raised in recent weeks as sanctions have started to take a heavier toll.
  " I think the international community should not fall into this trap," he told reporters in Ottawa after talks with Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper.
  (Additional reporting by Caren Bohan Editing by Anthony Boadle)
SIA, SilkAir to raise fuel surcharge from Mar 8
Singapore Airlines and SilkAir will increase its fuel surcharge for tickets issued on or after Mar 8 as a result of continued high fuel prices.
Jet fuel prices have been increasing and fuel now accounts for 40% of SIA group expenditure, the company says in an SGX press release.
They represent an increase of between US$2 ($2.50) and US$28 per sector, depending on the distance and class of travel.
For example, SIA says a surcharge of US$36 to US$52 for Economy Class to Business Class respectively, will be charged for flights between Singapore and South East Asian gateways.
As for gateways between Singapore and America, SIA will impose a surcharge of US$278 to US$ 305 for Economy Class to Business Class respectively.
  BERLIN, March 2 (Reuters) - Having convinced Europe to embrace Berlin-style fiscal discipline, Germany still needs to get its 16 federal states on board or it could risk slipping the debt brake it has pressed on its EU peers.
  Germany has had a commitment to reduce new debt anchored in its constitution since 2009 and the European version, which Berlin insisted on as part of a fiscal pact which all but two European Union leaders signed in Brussels on Friday, is modelled on that law.
  However, under the German version of the law, states were given until 2020 to get their finances in order. The new European rule has target dates for Germany's combined federal and state budgets which kick in four years earlier and, for some aspects, as soon as next year.
  Either the states will have to ramp up their savings efforts or Berlin - which has no direct power over state finances - will have to compensate for regional shortfalls to meet the new European goal.
  The dilemma has already triggered a blame game between Berlin and the states, or " Laender" .
  " It's embarrassing that the states constantly hide behind the federation, even though together with the communities, they have more tax income than the federal government," said Otto Fricke, an MP and budget expert in the junior coalition party, the Free Democrats. " The reduction of the deficit is a task for Germany as a whole."
  How did Germany get itself into this bind? After all the EU debt-brake law, approved by Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble in December, was essentially German-made.
  Some officials say the federal government, frustrated with lack of progress made by the Laender to fix their balance sheets, intended to raise the pressure on them with a more ambitious European law.
  One said Schaeuble simply miscalculated, forgetting that the German law set different target dates for federal and state budgets, while the EU law combines the two.
 
  SCHADENFREUDE
  The two-year-old euro zone sovereign debt crisis has highlighted a split between northern European countries focused on budget discipline and austerity and peripheral peers, such as Greece, which struggle to survive under their debt piles.
  Germany, the paymaster of the euro zone, with its conservative Chancellor Angela Merkel has pursued a relentless drive to get all countries to adhere to the traditional German goal of fiscal discipline, leading to reforms that have gone straight to the bone of ordinary people across Europe.
  That has made her a target for many seeking a scapegoat, so Germany's potential struggle to stick to the EU debt brake could be greeted with 'Schadenfreude' elsewhere in the bloc.
  For now, Germany has little to worry about. A strong economy helped its 16 states to a deficit of just 9.4 billion euros in 2011, much less than a projected 23.7 billion.
  And the overall German structural deficit - that part which exists regardless of the economic cycle and which includes the 16 states, communities, social insurance and federal budgets - came in at 0.8 percent of gross domestic product last year.
  It is expected to shrink further to 0.5 percent this year.
  So far, a slowdown at the end of 2011 appears to have been just a blip and analysts expect Europe's largest economy to return to healthy growth in the second half of this year, though concerns remain that it could take a hit from a prolonged euro zone crisis.
  The trouble is that even though Berlin's federal government has no legal sway over the states' budgets, for EU purposes the overall budget is what counts.
  The German federal government has until 2016 to cut its structural deficit to no more than 0.35 percent - a line it plans to cross two years early - but its Laender have until 2020 to present balanced budgets.
  The EU's existing Stability and Growth Pact as well as the new fiscal compact also dictate that the overall structural deficit should not rise above 0.5 percent of GDP by 2013 in case of the former and by a so far unspecified deadline in case of the latter treaty. If it does rise above the threshold, sanctions await.
  " In order for Germany as a whole to fulfill the debt brake of the fiscal compact, the Laender and communities also have to reduce their structural deficits," Norbert Barthle, a budget expert in Merkel's conservatives, told Reuters.
 
  MIXED PICTURE
  Some Laender are already doing well and carry most of the 16 states' weight on their shoulders.
  Last year, Bavaria had a budget surplus of 950 million euros and the eastern state of Saxony a surplus of 2 billion euros.
  But in the city-state of Berlin the deficit was 1.1 billion euros, Lower Saxony's gap was at 2.4 billion euros and Germany's most populous state of North-Rhine Westphalia (NRW) posted a deficit of 2.9 billion last year.
  That, however, does not bother some states. NRW finance minister Norbert Walter-Borjans, whose state represents the finance ministers in the Bundesrat upper chamber of parliament this year, says he sees no need for the Laender to act.
  " Germany's rules on the limitation of new debt go far beyond what the other EU member states have fixed so far," Borjans told Reuters. " Therefore the Laender see no changed need to act."
  Others, such as the northern state of Schleswig-Holstein, look to the federal government, saying it has to do more to ease their pain.
  Schleswig-Holstein's finance ministry would like the federal government to come up with a fund to redeem old debt or the option of joint federal and state bonds that would allow the states to benefit from cheap rates the federation can get on international bond markets, a concept similar to common euro zone bonds which Merkel has long opposed.
  Opposition parliamentarian Gerhard Schick, finance expert for the Greens in the lower house, or Bundestag, also sees the ball in the court of the government.
  " I don't see how the Laender can achieve this without an improvement of their income situation," said Schick.
  Yet the federal government's budget can only go so far. Finance Minister Schaeuble already needs to fill a hole of 2 billion euros a year expected income from a financial transaction tax, which has been budgeted for but not yet agreed.
  He also has to adjust for about 4 billion euros less income from planned tax cuts in 2013 and 2014 and 4.8 billion euros that are meant to be saved from 2014. (Writing by Annika Breidthardt, editing by Noah Barkin/Gareth Jones)