Tuesday, December 8, 2015
OUR VIEW
We don't like to get into politics specifically because both of these bankrupt entities, left and right, have nothing substantially to offer, but this MSM war against The Donald should tell you everything you want to ever know about MSM.
Our only interest here is economic. Make no mistake: Economics is politics and politics is economics. And there's much riding on this one if you make any pretense whatsoever of giving a big banjo player's butt about your liberty and freedom and economic future.
CNN Money is running a story today with the headline "Donald Trump gets cut off "Morning Joe." First of all, getting cut off from CNN is probably one of the highest distinctions or commendations one could ever achieve in this dimension this time around.
The headline itself is deceiving, a traditional forte of MSM. But we'll let you decide. The trouble MSM has with Trump and anyone else who might be like him is they detest on the one hand and can't accept on the other he simply is saying much that resonates with people who are hardly bigots, hateful or stupid.
A recent example is one so-called journalist at The Fiscal Times wrote that nearly 68 percent of current Trump supporters are not college educated and only around 16 percent, young or old, have been officially baptized in those academic propaganda cauldrons. The essence of the article was to convince these people this guy can't win so why waste your time.
Forget the numbers here; they don't matter. It's the intent. Intent is all with MSM and with MSM all is intent.
Here's another example from the CNN piece. Trump is known among the political press for ignoring questions and instead using them as a springboard. Apparently, the poor soul who penned this is either woefully ignorant of political history or one of the useful idiots crowd. His sentence is the classic Webster's definition of politicians and bureaucrats the globe over.
Why single Trump out for it? The simple answer is: Trump is hitting a major nerve, one these MSM elitists who want to interpret and dictate what's good for the rest of us hatefully detest. Some lady we read about daily with a long track record of avoiding answers and jumping onto that springboard, has MSM cut her off yet?
Know what you have here. That's your only chance. We don't know Trump, never met Trump, don't support Trump. The truth is not so much what he has been saying, offensive or otherwise. Trump presents MSM and the current establishment with three biggies, three major problems, they absolutely abhor. He's unpredictable, uncontrollable and, with a little good fortune for all the rest of us, probably un-buyable.
The threat is palpable. And if it gets any worse you'll see MSM with an even bigger problem: Trying to figure out which leg their crap is running down the faster. You can tell how threatened these folks are by how many stories on the man they lead with daily. Ones like he wants to kill the Internet or he made millions in Muslim countries.
This goes way beyond character assassination. That's our view. We hope you know yours.
money.cnn.com/2015/12/08/media/donald-trump-morning-joe
KISS OF DEATH?
CNBC is reporting an interview with U.S. Energy Secretary Ernst Moniz that despite all the bleakness, U.S. Energy production is just fine.
Is it the kiss of death or just another government official sent out to sooth for now the ruffled feathers of an industry feeling the pain of falling prices and too much regulation from an administration that's pushed regulation and caused much pain?
Despite the ongoing weekly closures of U.S. oil rigs, spending cuts and the cancellation of drilling projects in the U.S. shale oil industry amid slumping oil prices, the U.S. energy secretary told CNBC that the country's oil production will recover.
"Oil production in the U.S. has not dramatically dropped, it has gone down a little bit but it's up by four million barrels a day from a few years ago," U.S. Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz told CNBC.
"Our Energy Information Administration (EIA) expects that the average production this year will still be above 9 million barrels a day so the drop-off is not viewed as precipitous. Presumably, the expectations are over time that we'll see a slow reversal of that drop-off and that production will be restored."
"We are certainly not resource limited," Moniz added, noting as well that the country's natural gas production was continuing to rise despite lower gas prices. He said the country's first liquefied natural gas (LNG) exports would come onto the market early next year. More:
.cnbc.com/2015/12/08/us-shale-oil-industry-will-recover-us-energy-sec.
"We are certainly not resource limited," Moniz added, noting as well that the country's natural gas production was continuing to rise despite lower gas prices. He said the country's first liquefied natural gas (LNG) exports would come onto the market early next year. More:
.cnbc.com/2015/12/08/us-shale-oil-industry-will-recover-us-energy-sec.
MAGNETS
Magnets in their time have been used for many things. So this should hardly come as a surprise. One wonders, however, should this research hold up, if there's not some use for them on bureaucrats and politicians to decrease their cravings for greed, power and corruption.
Stefano, a 46-year-old cocaine addict from Padua, Italy, had all but accepted that he might die from his habit. He’d just relapsed after a seven-month stay at a rehab facility, his third failed attempt at getting clean. Stefano (who asked that his last name not be used) couldn’t go more than two days without the drug.
So when he read a magazine article about an unusual new method to treat drug addicts, he figured he didn’t have much to lose. The study described how local researchers were using a technique called transcranial magnetic stimulation to counteract cravings. He would have to sit in a chair while doctors waved a figure-8-shaped wand over his head to fire magnetic waves into his prefrontal cortex. “So almost like a joke, a little bit just to make my family happy, I said I would try,” Stefano says.
Now the results of the study, involving 29 cocaine addicts seeking treatment at a Padua clinic, are out. They suggest that the magnetic stimulation treatment significantly reduced both cocaine use and cravings. Stefano says his desire for cocaine diminished dramatically after several sessions under the magnet. “I can’t explain it,” he says. “It happened very quickly. Read more:
http://www.technologyreview.com/news/544081/for-cocaine-addicts-treatment-with-magnets-may-stop-craving/?
Monday, December 7, 2015
MORE ON OIL
What happened the last time oil fell this low?
Well, here's an interesting chart that gives you one possibility. We're not saying that this is ahead, but with the Fed cocksure on raising interest rates soon the timing could be exactly right for the Fed to do precisely the wrong thing.
Recall the ECB was still hiking interest rates while the U.S. was lowering them before the last recession became the news of the day .Check out action in the oil patch bond market on Monday as the WSJ reports.
A fresh wave of selling hit energy-company bonds, reflecting a growing consensus that slumping commodity prices will push many heavily indebted firms into default.
Bonds from Chesapeake Energy Corp. , which is looking to restructure some of its debt through an exchange offer, traded at 32.8 cents, a decline of 17%, according to data from MarketAxess Holdings Inc. Oasis Petroleum Inc. bonds shed roughly 6% and traded at 79 cents. A bond from EP Energy LLC traded at 80 cents, down about 5%.
The selloff marks a sharp shift in Wall Street sentiment from earlier in the year, when investors piled into energy-company debt and firms sold new bonds as the price of oil appeared to stage a comeback.
But with oil prices plunging anew after the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries decided Friday to keep pumping crude at near-record levels, many firms’ bonds have begun trading at levels that suggest a reckoning is at hand. Crude fell $2.32, or 5.8%, to $37.65 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
Maintaining the ability to borrow money at reasonable terms is crucial to many low-rated energy firms, which need to raise cash to retire debt and pay for new infrastructure. Analysts say losing access to the capital markets could accelerate some firms’ slide into bankruptcy, though a wave of defaults wouldn’t necessarily provide immediate relief for the industry’s supply glut.
Recessions bring on unrest and unrest begets conflict. And conflict could be just what the doctor ordered.
OVERNIGHT
Water, water, every where,
And all the boards did shrink
Water, water, every where
Nor any drop to drink
The world seems awash in oil. But unfortunately it's apparently awash in "Whatever!" when it comes to demand. Samuel Taylor Coleridge's line from his famous poem, Rhyme of the Ancient Mariner, pretty much applies to today's oil patch. There's plenty of it around but few takers. And the implications seemingly spread with each decline in prices as the WSJ reports about the Asian markets overnight.
HONG KONG—Asian markets tumbled Tuesday after global oil benchmarks hit the lowest levels in almost seven years in U.S. trading, sending energy stocks and raw materials producers sharply lower.
While oil prices stabilized somewhat during Asia market hours, both West Texas Intermediate and Brent crude had earlier hit their lowest levels since 2009 in the wake of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries’ failure at their meeting last week to take any steps to cut supply.
WTI futures edged up 0.4% to $37.79 a barrel on Tuesday, while Brent advanced 0.7% to $41.03 a barrel.
Oil isn’t the only commodity slumping. Spot iron ore fell for a seventh consecutive session on Monday, to a fresh decade low, amid further signs of weak demand from steelmakers.
Commodity producers and energy stocks tumbled, sending the Australian S&P/ASX 200 down 0.6% as mining giants BHP BillitonLtd fell 5.3% and Rio Tinto Ltd sank 4%. Both companies rely on iron—a key steelmaking ingredient—for a large portion of their earnings.
Investors are capitulating as the outlook for commodities prices dims further.
“It is quite spectacular, really,” said Tim Schroeders, a Melbourne, Australia-based resources fund manager at Pengana Capital. “We haven’t just seen low commodity prices, but continued falls in commodity prices,” he said. “Now, we are getting to a point where people have been so wrong for so long, they are having to address the situation and sell.”
While Tuesday’s slide follows another oil price collapse, it is also rooted in expectations that the U.S. Federal Reserve will soon raise rates, which could further weaken commodities demand, Mr. Schroeders said.
Chinese stocks fell, even as trade data for November pointed to a slower pace of decline compared with the previous month. Exports fell 3.7% year-over-year in yuan terms and imports fell 5.6%. Both declines were smaller than the drop expected by economists.
And Reuters noted the outlook for China remains nearly as mysterious to many as the Chinese language itself.
Underlining the cautious outlook for China, a Reuters poll of Japanese firms showed deep pessimism about near-term Chinese growth prospects, with 79 percent saying they do not expect to expand business there next year.
Tuesday's data showed China's imports fell for the 13th consecutive month with a 8.7 percent decline in November compared to a year earlier, indicating concerns about China's economic outlook will dog investors next year.
"Investors will remain quite sceptical about the true growth conditions of China which will mean that sentiment will remain quite fragile going into 2016," Kinger Lau, chief China strategist at Goldman Sachs, told a briefing in Hong Kong.
China is expected to eventually report growth of about 7 percent for this year, which would be the weakest pace in a quarter of a century. But according to an index used by Goldman Sachs, actual 2015 growth may be as much as 2 percentage points weaker.
Investors are capitulating as the outlook for commodities prices dims further.
“It is quite spectacular, really,” said Tim Schroeders, a Melbourne, Australia-based resources fund manager at Pengana Capital. “We haven’t just seen low commodity prices, but continued falls in commodity prices,” he said. “Now, we are getting to a point where people have been so wrong for so long, they are having to address the situation and sell.”
While Tuesday’s slide follows another oil price collapse, it is also rooted in expectations that the U.S. Federal Reserve will soon raise rates, which could further weaken commodities demand, Mr. Schroeders said.
Chinese stocks fell, even as trade data for November pointed to a slower pace of decline compared with the previous month. Exports fell 3.7% year-over-year in yuan terms and imports fell 5.6%. Both declines were smaller than the drop expected by economists.
And Reuters noted the outlook for China remains nearly as mysterious to many as the Chinese language itself.
Underlining the cautious outlook for China, a Reuters poll of Japanese firms showed deep pessimism about near-term Chinese growth prospects, with 79 percent saying they do not expect to expand business there next year.
Tuesday's data showed China's imports fell for the 13th consecutive month with a 8.7 percent decline in November compared to a year earlier, indicating concerns about China's economic outlook will dog investors next year.
"Investors will remain quite sceptical about the true growth conditions of China which will mean that sentiment will remain quite fragile going into 2016," Kinger Lau, chief China strategist at Goldman Sachs, told a briefing in Hong Kong.
China is expected to eventually report growth of about 7 percent for this year, which would be the weakest pace in a quarter of a century. But according to an index used by Goldman Sachs, actual 2015 growth may be as much as 2 percentage points weaker.
PUSHBACK BANKING
Last week the WSJ ran a story, "Rules Stifle Lending To Risky Borrowers," about federal regulators clamping down on banks that make leveraged loans to companies deeply in debt.
As you might expect these loans are money makers for banks, so the restraints didn't go down easily with bankers. Here's a few paragraphs from that story.
Banks also objected because their primary role in leveraged loans is as middlemen who arrange a loan and sell it in pieces to outside investors. The banks bear less risk if the borrower defaults than if they held on to the loans.
Leveraged loans generate hefty profits for banks such as Credit Suisse Group AG and J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. Borrowers include Wendy’s International Inc., SeaWorld Entertainment Inc. and PetSmart Inc.
Most of us try to avoid middle men because they take a slice of the pie. Here you have the banks apparently wanting to take advantage of both worlds, booking hefty profits but getting to unload the responsibilities before the fat lady sings.
Here's a few paragraphs from the other side.
While leveraged loans didn’t cause the financial crisis, their post crisis boom alarmed regulators who saw an eerie parallel to the mortgage bonds that battered investors world-wide during the foreclosure epidemic.
Here's a few paragraphs from the other side.
While leveraged loans didn’t cause the financial crisis, their post crisis boom alarmed regulators who saw an eerie parallel to the mortgage bonds that battered investors world-wide during the foreclosure epidemic.
“Our banks are completely tied to the broader financial system in some form or fashion, so if there is weakness in one part of the system, it is likely going to have negative consequences for the banks,” says Darrin Benhart, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency’s deputy comptroller for supervision risk management.
In response, the Fed, OCC and Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.strong-armed U.S. banks for the first time ever to comply with minimum underwriting standards on leveraged loans no matter who shoulders the credit risk.
The heightened scrutiny has included monthly reviews of individual banks’ leveraged loan portfolios. Regulators also have lowered the boom on some lenders in so-called private letters, for which failure to comply can lead to fines or curbs on lending, dividends and other activities. From the regulator side it's about sustaining financial stability, but that comes with severe concerns, one of which is how much should bureaucrats interfere with open markets. There are others like over-regulatory zeal to rule out any and all risks. After all, one of the inherent fundamentals of markets is risk.
But like any water-filled balloon, push on it one place and it will bulge in another. And that's just what these lenders are confirming as they take their business elsewhere to firms not regulated by the Fed and other government overseers.
Now some might call that normal human behavior, albeit many don't believe bankers inherently fall into that category: Push on me here and I will push back somewhere else. It could turn into a huge stalemate, otherwise known in more crude circles as a pissing contest. And we all know how good stalemates are for the economy.
WHATEVER CONVICTION?
That is not what happened last week. Of course, the ECB did provide additional stimulus, in the form of another deposit cut and an extension of the QE program. It is also possible that thin liquidity exaggerated market moves, such that the spike in EUR/$ overstates the degree of disappointment to the market. But in the end, what mattered last week was whether the ECB sent a message consistent with President Draghi’s speech in Frankfurt on November 20, one that signalled a sense of urgency over the need to confront low inflation. It did not.
Our best read is that the Governing Council is conflicted over the use of unconventional policies and therefore resisted more aggressive action. Given that – at the zero lower bound – so much rides on a central bank’s willingness to send strong signals in order to influence expectations, last week’s performance likely compounded the damage from the summer, rather than fixing it. In short, our conviction in regime change is down, and we worry that the ECB is starting to lag relative to the BoJ under Governor Kuroda.
zerohedge.com/news/2015-12-07/eur-slides-below-108-after-goldman-raises-eur-forecast
FRANKFURT--German industrial output rose in October, although by less than expected as gains in manufacturing and construction were capped by a slump in energy production.
zerohedge.com/news/2015-12-07/eur-slides-below-108-after-goldman-raises-eur-forecast
FRANKFURT--German industrial output rose in October, although by less than expected as gains in manufacturing and construction were capped by a slump in energy production.
Industrial output, adjusted for seasonal swings and calendar effects, expanded 0.2% in October from the previous month, the economics ministry said Monday. Economists polled by The Wall Street Journal had forecast a 0.5% increase.
"The trend in industrial production was slightly negative of late," the ministry said, but added that rising output at the start of the fourth quarter was "a first step to overcome the weakness of the previous months."
Manufacturing output and construction each increased 0.7% from September, but energy production slumped 5.9%. "Ample wind and sun during the summer had previously led to a noticeable expansion in renewable-energy production," the ministry said.
The industrial output data are the latest in a series of rising economic indicators, that point to a pick-up in German economic activity following a slack third quarter.
The ministry said Friday that manufacturing orders rose 1.8% in October from the previous month, propelled by a 2.4% rise in eurozone demand. Germany's Ifo business sentiment measure hit its highest level in 17 months in November.
CURRENCY RESERVES DOWN
BEIJING--China's foreign-exchange reserves in November fell to their lowest level in more than two years, reigniting concerns about Beijing's ability to stem the outflow of capital from the world's second-largest economy.
Read more: http://www.nasdaq.com/article/china-nov-foreignexchange-reserves-down-to-lowest-level-in-more-than-two-years
Sunday, December 6, 2015
OVERNIGHT
Reuters's reports that Asian
share markets bounced on Monday after Wall Street welcomed an upbeat
U.S. jobs report that suggested the world's biggest economy was well
placed to handle an expected first increase in interest rates in almost a
decade.
Oil prices
were near their lowest since 2009 in the wake of the Organization of
the Petroleum Exporting Countries' decision to keep production high
despite depressed demand.
Equity investors in Asia were also wary
ahead of a bevy of Chinese data which are expected to show a still
sluggish economy. Trade figures are due on Tuesday, followed by
inflation on Wednesday and industrial output and retail sales on
Saturday.
Japan's Nikkei .N225 led the way with a 1.2 percent gain, while Australian stocks managed only 0.1 percent. The CSI300 index .CSI300 of the largest listed companies in Shanghai and
Shenzhen started soft before inching up 0.2 percent.
The WSJ is reporting Investors are taking positions ahead of gauges of Chinese inflation, trade, retail sales and industrial production within the next week.
After a shaky start, Chinese markets advanced later in the morning, with the Shanghai
Composite up 0.4% and the smaller Shenzhen market jumping 1.2%.
The Hang Seng China Enterprises Index, which tracks Chinese companies with offshore listings, was last up 0.3% after briefly turning negative in the morning.
Reuters' is reporting these results fron Sunday's Venezuelan elections.
Venezuela's opposition won control of the legislature from the ruling Socialists for the first time in 16 years on Sunday, giving them a long-sought platform to challenge President Nicolas Maduro.Election board head Tibisay Lucena said the opposition Democratic Unity coalition won 99 seats to the Socialists' 46 in the 167-national National Assembly with some districts still to be counted.When she finished speaking, fireworks went off in pro-opposition districts of Caracas.
Japan's Nikkei .N225 led the way with a 1.2 percent gain, while Australian stocks managed only 0.1 percent. The CSI300 index .CSI300 of the largest listed companies in Shanghai and
Shenzhen started soft before inching up 0.2 percent.
The WSJ is reporting Investors are taking positions ahead of gauges of Chinese inflation, trade, retail sales and industrial production within the next week.
After a shaky start, Chinese markets advanced later in the morning, with the Shanghai
Composite up 0.4% and the smaller Shenzhen market jumping 1.2%.
The Hang Seng China Enterprises Index, which tracks Chinese companies with offshore listings, was last up 0.3% after briefly turning negative in the morning.
Reuters' is reporting these results fron Sunday's Venezuelan elections.
Venezuela's opposition won control of the legislature from the ruling Socialists for the first time in 16 years on Sunday, giving them a long-sought platform to challenge President Nicolas Maduro.Election board head Tibisay Lucena said the opposition Democratic Unity coalition won 99 seats to the Socialists' 46 in the 167-national National Assembly with some districts still to be counted.When she finished speaking, fireworks went off in pro-opposition districts of Caracas.
Maduro, 53, quickly acknowledged the defeat, the worst for the ruling "Chavismo" movement since its founder Hugo Chavez took power in the South American OPEC nation in 1999.
INVESTMENT GURU
What he now says he didn't do is recommend what has long been attributed to him as a simplification of his investment philosophy, investing in "what you know." Now 71 he still follows the market, but notes the market is different today if for no other reason than ETFs weren't around back then, a fact he comments on below.
Contrary to today, Lynch was one of the guys of his era (and there were others) who proved individual money managers could and did beat the market averages regularly or, in Wall Street parlance, add alpha. Lynch was also known for his attention to fundamental research.
Here are some excerpts from a recent WSJ piece.wsj.com/articles/peter-lynch-25-years-later-its-not-just-invest-in-what-you-know.
Use your specialized knowledge to home in on stocks you can analyze, study them and then decide if they’re worth owning. The best way to invest is to look at companies competing in the field where you work. Someone with deep restaurant-industry experience would have predicted the success of Panera Bread Co. and Chipotle Mexican Grill Inc., he says: “If you’re in the steel industry and it ever turns around, you’ll see it before I do.”
Speaking of restaurants which have an average life span of about five years, Lynch once warned about those eateries that depend on liquor sales for a good portion of their revenue, saying the food better be good because liquor tastes the same everywhere.
The market is different than in 1990. One of the biggest changes: exchange-traded funds. Mr. Lynch credits their rise with a distrust of mutual-fund managers, which he says is unwarranted. “People accept that active managers can’t beat the market and it’s just not true,” he says. (A Fidelity spokesman says about three-quarters of its 49 equity funds managed by the same portfolio manager for at least five years were beating their benchmark over the manager’s tenure as of Sept. 30.) Mr. Lynch’s advice for small investors: Picking individual stocks is hard even for the professionals. So “if you can’t understand the balance sheet, you probably shouldn’t own it.”
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