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Europe’s industrial is in a bad way

Posted by goldielocks @ 4:08 on September 12, 2022  

If they use sugar they better stock up including toilet paper. Now farms being attacked by these lunatics. This could be a outright depression. They don’t need to go to war to trash the country and good.
Where are they going to get there green cars and solar from since they can’t make them there? China??? Even if they did who’s going to buy them? You will own nothing!! How’s this going to curb inflation when they’ll destroy their euro and hyper inflate basic food and supply’s.

By Joe Wallace, David Uberti, Georgi Kantchev and William Boston
Russian gasEuropean industry thrived for decades on a steady supply of cheap Russian gas, which flowed uninterrupted throughout the Cold War and other times of tension between Moscow and the West.invading UkraineSince weaponizedinvading Ukraine, Russian President Vladimir Putin has turned off the tapsweaponized the country’s vast stores of energy to undermine support for Kyiv. He Nord Streamturned off the taps to the biggest natural-gas pipeline, Nord Stream, completely this month. brink of recessionThe impact has pushed Europe to the brink of recession and threatens to inflict lasting harm on its manufacturing businesses. Unlike the U.S., Europe leaned on manufacturing and heavy industry to keep its economy chugging in recent decades. A bigger chunk of its economy comes from the likes of steelmakers, chemicals producers and car makers.energy crisisEurope’s energy crisis has left few businesses untouched, from steel and aluminum to cars, glass, ceramics, sugar and toilet-paper makers. Some industries, such as the energy-intensive metals sector, are shutting factories that analysts and executives say might never reopen, imperiling thousands of jobs.The question is whether the current pain is temporary, or marks the start of a new era of deindustrialization in Europe. The bloc has scoured the world for alternative gas supplies, striking deals to buy gas from the U.S., Qatar and elsewhere. But the continent might never again have access to the cheap Russian gas that helped it compete with the resource-rich U.S. and offset high labor costs, rigid employment rules and stringent environmental regulations.In the city of Žiar nad Hronom, Slovakia, built around a 70-year-old aluminum factory that supplies car-part makers across the continent, some fear for their financial future. ‘This is probably the end of metal production in Europe,’ said Milan Veselý, who has worked at Slovalco, majority owned by Norway’s Norsk Hydro ASA, all his adult life, following in his parents’ footsteps.Slovalco is among the companies hit by volatility in electricity prices across Europe caused by low Russian supplies of power-generating gas. For years the factory was by far the biggest buyer of power in Slovakia, consuming 9% of the country’s electricity, most of it from nuclear energy. Before energy prices started rising last year, Slovalco paid about €45 (about $45) for each megawatt-hour of power. In 2022 so far it has paid €75, in a deal locked in last year. In late August, prices hit €1,000 across Europe.Slovalco didn’t renew its power contract for 2023, which would have cost €2.5 billion euros at the recent peak in power markets. Mr. Veselý, the plant’s manager, is winding down primary-metals production, leaving a small recycling operation. He is also dismissing 300 of 450 workers. ‘The volatility of the price of electricity these days—it’s crazy,’ he said. ‘This is the way we are actually killing industry.’Factory curtailments and closures have saved fuel in Europe’s quest to reduce demand. Along with the hunt for non-Russian supplies, that’s enabled the European Union to sock away enough gas to fill over 80% of its storage capacity, probably enough to get to spring without government-enforced quotas even if Mr. Putin cuts supplies to zero, analysts say.The judgment most governments have made is that slowing and shutting factories now is preferable to cutting off power to hospitals and schools over winter. Europe consumed 10% less gas than the average for the time of year in August, according to commodities-data firm ICIS. The EU is aiming for demand reductions of 15%.The factory closures come at a ruinous cost. Companies in energy-intensive industries say they face going bust this winter without government support. Complex supply chains in sectors such as the auto and food industries are getting gummed up, adding to inflationary pressures just as pandemic snarl-ups show signs of easing.Norwegian fertilizer giant Yara International ASA, which uses gas as an ingredient, has cut crop-boosting ammonia production by 65% across its European factories. ‘We think about things we wouldn’t dare to think about a year ago,’ said Michael Schlaug, general director of Yara’s Sluiskil facility in the Netherlands, which stopped the second of three ammonia plants in late August. Engineers are rejigging machinery to accommodate imported ammonia with higher water content as the facility turns to shipments from the U.S., Trinidad and elsewhere to replace products it previously made.Dutch fertilizer company OCI NV is importing more ammonia through Rotterdam. It plans to triple its capacity at the port by next year and is expanding its Beaumont, Texas, facility to produce ammonia that can be transported to Europe and Asia.’It really tips the scales in the U.S.’s favor,’ Chief Executive Ahmed El-Hoshy said of energy costs.A reduction of Europe’s industrial capacity would deepen the reliance on materials and parts made overseas at a time when governments are striving to bring supply chains for renewable energy, electric vehicles and military arms closer to home. Metals producers, which require significant power to break down and form chemical bonds, are at the front of the crisis. Electricity prices have more than doubled this year, propelled by high gas prices, trouble in France’s nuclear fleet of power plants and low hydropower generation.ArcelorMittal SA, one of the world’s largest steelmakers, will close a blast furnace in Bremen and a so-called direct reduction plant in Hamburg that produces sponge iron, used to create crude steel. In Germany, ArcelorMittal had already reduced gas demand by about 40%, compared with what it planned to consume at the start of the year.’We have never had such upheavals in the energy prices,’ said Reiner Blaschek, chief executive of the company’s German business. ‘Everything that is associated with enormous volatility in the short term is for us as a commercial enterprise, to put it mildly, pure poison.”You have to reinvent the whole energy supply chain on the go,’ Mr. Blaschek added.ArcelorMittal Germany has been buying sponge iron externally from the U.S. instead of making it locally using gas. Zinc stockpiles have almost run out in the EU, leading customers to import metal from China, according to metals industry lobby group Eurométaux. Analysts say European output of primary aluminum is dying out, leaving the continent with recycling operations that produce metal suitable for industries such as packaging, but not for wheel hubs, brakes or parts for airplanes.Aluminum smelters are finding themselves not able to renew their power contracts. Companies need 15 megawatt-hours of power to produce a metric ton of primary aluminum, costing €9,000 at recent electricity prices, while a metric ton can be sold for less than €2,500, according to Germany’s metal association, WV Metalle.’We need immediate emergency aid now, otherwise we are threatened with deindustrialization in Germany,’ said Franziska Erdle, WV Metalle’s general manager.Alcoa Corp.’s San Ciprián aluminum plant in Spain, Glencore PLC’s Portovesme zinc smelter in Italy and Trafigura Group’s zinc factories in the Netherlands, France and Belgium have curbed or closed production. Half of the EU’s aluminum and zinc capacity is offline, on top of curtailments in silicon and alloys of iron, Eurométaux said in a letter to EU officials this month.Tom Price, head of commodities strategy at Liberum, likens the shock to the surge in energy prices that killed off Japan’s aluminum industry in the 1970s. ‘This is such a severe event and Europe’s industrial base has become very heavily dependent on Russia for cheap energy inputs,’ he said. ‘It may not be able to come back.’Lower output from Europe’s factories threatens to cascade through supply chains. Auto makers have been hit both in their own dependence on gas for power and heat and indirectly through supply issues. Volkswagen AG said it has been stockpiling glass products, such as windows and windshields, fearing a shortage of gas could hit glassmakers.A spokeswoman for Safran SA, a French maker of aircraft engines and defense-related equipment, said a fragile supply chain had limited the company’s ability to raise production. So far it has been able to buy metal from existing suppliers but the company is monitoring the situation, she added.In food production, sugar factories are powered by natural gas. Germany’s federal competition authority said this month the country’s four producers would be allowed to cooperate if supplies are cut off, for example by making capacity available to each other. If the sugar plants stop, large parts of the beet harvest would likely rot and prices would rise for consumers already dealing with food inflation.The companies are racing to find alternative energy supplies to maintain the sugar output. Securing them is difficult because it requires new logistics and storage facilities, said Südzucker AG, one of the four companies.Some factories, such as zinc manufacturers, can restart quickly when the economics add up again. For others, including glass and aluminum makers, reopening is a lengthy and expensive process that may never make financial sense.Even toilet-paper makers are feeling the crunch. Hakle GmbH, a German toilet-paper and hygiene-product maker this month declared itself insolvent and sought protection from creditors because it could no longer raise prices enough to offset higher paper costs due to energy prices.At Slovalco in Slovakia, Mr. Veselý sold the electricity the company had bought for the rest of the year, netting €160 million to spend on taxes and a possible restart in the future. Operators set about disconnecting podlike metal cells that turn white alumina powder into molten aluminum in the vast hall that is the factory’s nerve center. The hangar is also the factory’s biggest vulnerability, because the cells depend on a 285,000-amp current. Ten of the 226 cells remain in action, but are due to wind down by the end of the year. Firing the factory up again would require replacing their electrical connections—a process that would take a year and cost up to €90 million, Mr. Veselý said.’Everyone is concerned,’ said Tomáš Chrien, who has worked at Slovalco since 1993 and is an operator in the building next door, where molten aluminum is fashioned into solid cylinders. Marián Hárezník, a processes expert, said the job brings a good, stable salary and a sense of camaraderie. ‘No one expected we would be in a situation like this—ever,’ he said.Municipal official Martin Baláž said his big worry is the 2,500 jobs at companies that supply and service Slovalco. At one local firm, Remeslo Strojal, s.r.o., 50 employees whose job was to maintain the factory’s cells are looking for new work, he added.Branislav Strýček, chief executive of utility Slovenské Elektrárne, A.S., which supplied power to Slovalco, worries many more Slovak firms will shut down because he estimates more than half haven’t procured power for 2023. ‘These electricity prices are sick,’ he said, adding that he is in the odd position of running a utility and wanting the government and EU to take measures to limit prices. ‘Your customers will not survive so you’ll have no one to deliver [to].’Joe.Wallace@wsj.comWrite to Joe Wallace at david.uberti@wsj.com Joe.Wallace@wsj.com, David Uberti at

Sng 20:40

Posted by goldielocks @ 3:02 on September 12, 2022  

People have their own preference on what it is there looking at as far as research goes. Some till they get burnt anyways listen to profits selling books others may listen to some of what they say. Some only look locally not globally.
Some just look at charts. Some it’s fundamentals and their balance sheets. Others who probably do better do both.
Jesus once said there will be false profits, saying here’s the way or there’s the way but don’t go.
Right now Im averaging 25-27 per share a year on dividends and will look at this downturn to buy more shares and some out of the country case things get shaky here.
Anything else is just a charting hobby.
I do watch Greg once in awhile but in that one he didn’t seem interested much as hard as the poor guy was tolerating his constant interruptions trying to get back on track. Did he sell a book at the end of it?
Ps I’m guessing if you added them all up then add up every prediction and see how they differ. But to be open minded you have to be careful purposely seeking out those who you only agree with even though the charts, fundamentals, financial sheets, sector, economy might differ. Sometimes you can just get too much information.

goldielocks @ 20:40…. you asked why would I bother doing that?

Posted by silverngold @ 0:56 on September 12, 2022  

I know why I would bother doing that!  If I am interested in something I try to look at all I can find, both positive and negative, on that subject, so when I make a decision on that subject I Know my decision is based on my own thorough research and most likely to be the right decision. If I turn out to have been wrong in my decision I have no one to blame but myself.

By the way, has anyone heard from Mr Copper? It seems kind of out of character for him to be missing for so long.

Gold Train

Posted by Maya @ 23:55 on September 11, 2022  

All shiny and new…
https://railpictures.net/photo/800623/

 

SNG 16:29

Posted by goldielocks @ 20:40 on September 11, 2022  

Why would I bother doing that lol
If I were to listen to those who predict would they wouldn’t be selling something in the process? Not saying that’s what’s going on because I don’t follow them. Kunstler and a few others I will listen to though in a general way.
That would be a good for people who base their decisions on what they say. They get paid for going YouTube for instance.
I found out a long time ago I would do better if I don’t listen to whomever and do dmodd as far as comparing As far as the Bible, I figure I’m in enough trouble without angering the heavens with picking out quotes and comparing it to the market. The future maybe, but that’s just me.

Are You Ready For The anti-Christ? (center-click to watch on a new tab)

Posted by silverngold @ 20:10 on September 11, 2022  

See any global leaders you don’t  recognize?

https://fb.watch/ftHvscpWw-/

 

USD getting hit a little out of the gates tonight

Posted by Buygold @ 18:30 on September 11, 2022  

Never know what gifts will come our way…

Addendum..

Posted by old-timer @ 16:48 on September 11, 2022  

And thanks too for the Kunstler interview.

I’ve read his Monday and Friday posts for years, but never

heard/saw him before.

Good info from that source too.

Thanks…

Posted by old-timer @ 16:39 on September 11, 2022  

Just wanted to say thank you for all the wonderful posts.

You know I really love the trainpics.

The Bo Polny and Greg Hunter video is worth listening to, as annoying as Greg is,

Bo’s message comes thru.

Finally, I found a TF Metals report interview with Jim Willie, only a couple days old.

https://www.tfmetalsreport.com/podcast/11721/tfmr-podcast-friday-september-8-jim-willie

goldielocks @ 14:52 and 15:19……. Best to DYODD. Much of his current predictions are from now to end of this year.

Posted by silverngold @ 16:29 on September 11, 2022  

Who copies who is hard to say. They feed off of each other and take the credit when they think they can. Armstrong says his computer told him but I never saw his computer say it. Rickards says September and Bo gives scriptures that say September but who copied who??? Icke has been warning for years and things seem to be falling into place.

Here’s an idea: Mark the stuff for this year on your calendar, who predicted it, and see if it proves to be correct. Bo quotes much scriptures which can be easily verified but like you say, that’s past and did Bo predict it first, or did the Bible say it and Bo’s knowledge of the Bible allow him to use it to prove his point?? It’s hard to say unless you keep records on this stuff, which I don’t, but with all that is to happen from now for the rest of the year,  here’s your chance to prove or disprove their claims. Keep track and DYODD! I just post things I think may be of interest, especially if they might save others from making mistakes, but we all have to make up our own minds, make our decisions, and live (or die) with them. I just want people to do what they do with their eyes wide open.

SNG

Posted by goldielocks @ 15:19 on September 11, 2022  

Ps Track record before or after meaning the ones that come along after the fact.
I listened to someone quoting BO and how it slowly starts to change but all after the fact. Like Armstrong said we could have a market drop in September which seemed to be heading that way plus the Fed imo, per his computer. Then others start saying it then others wait till it happens saying it was predicted “ no really” then throw in some other off the wall opinions.
Since were in a rinse repeat but worse with debt,food and energy best to prepare and the younger ones have money on the side lines to go long.
I think rinse repeat seems to be what attracts some commodity traders instead of the invest and forget about it with longer intervals in between the next correction. Or used to be anyways. Seems like the only sector that’s heavily manipulated without them having people chase them down with pitchforks because the gov is in on it. Also about the only ones that can’t improve their product or business although they should think more about environmental as a upgrade and to keep the greenies off their backs.

Sng ,05

Posted by goldielocks @ 14:52 on September 11, 2022  

I tried to listen to guy Bo but I had to go to another site without the interruptions because Greg wouldn’t shut up long enough as they tend to want to draw attention to themselves to what some call Lazer focus away from any point their trying to make. It was interesting but seemed like a recap of different opinions from economists but maybe with exaggeration. What is his track record, before hand not after?

2 minute video that should wake you up. Pause and read as you go through it! Please pass it on! Thanks.

Posted by silverngold @ 11:34 on September 11, 2022  

If he walks his talk Canada still has a chance!

Posted by silverngold @ 11:10 on September 11, 2022  

First time in a long time I have hope for Canada’s future! I pray for his safety because I think he has a target on his back!

clark campbell adair

Posted by overton @ 11:01 on September 11, 2022  

https://www.howestreet.com/2022/09/silver-usd-oil-real-estate-victor-adair-robert-campbell-ross-clark-this-week-in-money/

  • Ross Clark –  Stock Markets, USD, Silver
  • Victor Adair – (8:11) US Dollar, Europe, Crude Oil
  • Robert Campbell –  (31:14) US Real Estate, Exodus from California, Mental Fitness

 

Gold Train

Posted by Maya @ 0:29 on September 11, 2022  

The new ‘bullet’
https://railpictures.net/photo/800555/

 

Shocking I must say.

Posted by goldielocks @ 0:16 on September 11, 2022  

The now King Charles was actually the one who created the great reset in the name of climate change. That’s just jolly for the UK and Europe already struggling with power and next food shortages. His video was downloaded that now can’t be accessed as his site is currently under maintenance.

USA Watchdog with Greg Hunter and Bo Polny. Lots of important world changing events to happen starting this month and for the rest of the year. Best not to close your eyes!

Posted by silverngold @ 0:05 on September 11, 2022  

Biden Crash will mean Death of America – Bo Polny

One picture equals 1000 words! Probably closer to the truth!!

Posted by silverngold @ 21:24 on September 10, 2022  

Could use him now

Posted by ipso facto @ 19:46 on September 10, 2022  

https://twitter.com/WallStreetSilv/status/1568711180146860034

Posted by ipso facto @ 19:39 on September 10, 2022  

“The economy of imaginary wealth is being inevitably replaced by the economy of real and hard assets”
– Vladimir Putin, September 2022

9 minutes of truth from Canada’s Prime POS Traitor. Worth every moment of exposure IMO! Yes, it’s a spoof but nonetheless the truth IMO!

Posted by silverngold @ 18:29 on September 10, 2022  

How the Prime Minister Stole Freedom!

 

Who Was Behind Operation Warp Speed? Congress, Biden & Obama Plotted Mass Bioweapon Scheme Years Ago.

Posted by silverngold @ 16:21 on September 10, 2022  

Please do NOT pass this up. It actually goes all the way back to GW Bush. Only 15 minutes and exposes lots!

Truth Leak

Posted by Maya @ 15:44 on September 10, 2022  

“Nothing To Do With Man” – Astrophysicist Says Climate-Cultists “Are On A Gravy Train” To Make Money

https://www.zerohedge.com/weather/nothing-do-man-astrophysicist-says-climate-cultists-are-gravy-train-make-money

 

BUYGOLD–OK, got it.

Posted by Richard640 @ 13:27 on September 10, 2022  
$HUI Count Update. If 144.13 is taken out , then this count is invalidated. Breeze

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Post by the Golden Rule. Oasis not responsible for content/accuracy of posts. DYODD.