Sunday, April 3, 2016
THERE'S NO CON LIKE A NEOCON
There's leprechauns, pecans and neocons. Only one is dangerous to your health and freedom. There's is nothing new about the neocons. And the last three letters of their name is the only accurate part of the appellation.
A good number of those who resent Trump and his bid for the White Shack in Washington are neocon Republicans. But neocons are not exclusive to Republicans. There's more than enough in the Donkey Party to go around. One of the neocons' favorite cons is NATO, an over-expensive, over-budgeted archaic 19th century relic that should have had Taps played over it a score and five years ago.
The idea that the U.S. taxpayer should still be paying for the cost of protecting Europe after all this time would be hilarious if it weren't so pathetically stupid and so pitifully costly. It's part and package of the industrial-military complex neocons love.
At a time when heavyweights like billionaire Stanley Druckenmiller of hedge fund fame is attacking entitlement programs like social security and such complaining that a disaster looms by 2030, there are some questions here. We don't know Druckenmiller, we respect his well-known track record and we followed his career long before he became a household name in the investing world.
The man worked for years for George Soros. Though some might disagree, we find it difficult to believe one can have worked for so long for another without sharing some of that other person's political,social and economic views. He was present during the doing-in of the British pound many years ago. No crime, just a statement of fact.
Who made all these entitlement promises, Democrats or Republicans or both? Or was it just the now dead ones? The other larger question here is U.S. foreign policy or the lack thereof a coherent one. And where does responsibility for this looming mess get placed? There was supposed to be peace dividend when the Berlin Wall crumbled.
Keeping troops billeted half way around the world in numerous far-flung places is costly. And just whose retirement assets are they protecting: yours or those of Goldman Sachs, Blackrock and your friendly Congress person? A recent blurb out says one retiring Congress lady will receive around $800,000 annually in retirement.
This is what this election is all about, the failed two party system. One presidential candidate in this miasma was recently on television pointing her finger at the crowd saying if she gives her word, she will keep it. That sounds like a promise to us ensconced therein more entitlements..
Neocons love also to pound the war drums. Jingoistic is their middle name. One of the first Republican neocons was Teddy "Rough Rider" Roosevelt. He was a guy who believed there wasn't anything the government couldn't do including starting wars. And there still at it. Good ole Teddy.
Everyday people don't need the Stanley Druckenmillers to tell them a disaster awaits. And telling them they need to plan for their own retirement, though true, is the Big Lie. The first Keogh plan for self-employed if memory serves appeared in the early 1970s. Since then IRAs of numerous stripes have been created from individual SEPs to Roth ones, all government concocted.
But the same government in their greed has made them so complicated with regulations and arbitrary changes that financial planners have a hard time keeping up.When 49 of the 52 state attorneys generals several years ago stuck a portable rocket launcher in the ribs of tobacco companies, evil or not evil in your eyes, and collected billions of dollars none of that lucre found its way into many severely underfunded state run retirement funds.
Just recently until the governor there changed his mind, ( That should tell you about the power of high people in high places.), the state of Connecticut threatened to tax Yale's rich endowment plan. Endowment is about planning for the future just like your retirement plan. Trouble is, you have don't have any heavyweights fighting to keep yours from from thaose octopi in Washington and state capitols.
If you want to know about underfunded state retirement funds, just ask the mayor of Chicago or the governor of California. The greedy governments, federal and state, can't wait for their cut until the retiree dies, so they cooked up RMD, required minimum distribution. It awaits you in the future, should you be lucky or privileged enough to get there.
Look it up if you want to know more. Meanwhile, your ever so prescient central bankers have made it next to impossible to live on whatever funds retirees have, in their zeal to playoff the immediate against your future with their insane policies. We don't know about you, but that sounds like more folks, not fewer, will be looking at the government for help.
Now back to the neocons. There is a place for them. It's the same place you might want to look if you're trying to find one of Ford Motors greatest mistakes, the Edsel.
SCAN THE SCANNERS
Here's a story you might want to pay attention to, that is, if you value your security and privacy.
WASHINGTON--The Federal Bureau of Investigation told law enforcement agencies around the country Friday it would try to help them open locked phones or other devices as much as "legal and policy constraints" allow.
The guidance from the nation's top law-enforcement agency is in response to a surge of interest from state and local authorities in how the agency was able to open a locked iPhone seized in the probe of a terror attack in San Bernardino, Calif., in December.
There are some keys words in this story, "legal and policy constraints." Legal and policy constraints are about in today's society as changeable as the weather. Where does the FBI come off stating it will help local police break into cell phones? These phones are the property of privates citizens, criminal accusations or not. This issue if politicians who say they care about public opinion, though we know they really don't, should be put to a national vote.
Trumped up charges are hardly new in our system. And the onslaught of private property and private property rights of all sorts is an ongoing matter most often carried out under the guise of getting the bad folks in order to help or to protect the not so bad folks.
Now before you start to roll out your list of epithets, wait a few years when you have no cash just a plastic card in your wallet like the one 40 million Americans on food stamps have that dictate what and where you can buy and how much you paid for it. Then you can call people paranoid.
This is about collecting data. Data that can be leaked or abused, irrespective of motive or inadvertent mistakes. HIPPA laws are designed to protect one's medical records. It could be something as simple as taking anti-angiolytics for stress. If you're naive enough to think employers want to hire stress-prone employees, be one of the first to volunteer your cell phone to local authorities.
Such things can not only effect your employment but even your ability to secure a loan or get credit. Once again you have a national domestic organization interfering in local problems, local business, preempting personal privacy and liberty. For those who sing the song about you must have something to hide or you would not object obviously have never been falsely accused or caught up in such situations. We admire your naiveté. But isn't always the other guy such things happen to.
They said most iPhone users have more to fear from criminals than from countries, and few crooks can afford anything like what it costs to break into a fully up-to-date iPhone.
Breaking into phones isn't the problem. And neither is criminals. This is an information or data fishing expedition easily applied to ordinary citizens with no history of any criminal activity except based on suspicion if even that.
The federal government already uses airplanes that can fly over areas and collect all cell phone numbers active as they scan. And, yes, they can even listen in on conversations, though they claim they don't. What they don't claim is they never have. It was used to scan phone activity after the horrible San Bernardino tragedy where they flew repeatedly, criss crossing a large area that covered miles.
This is a government supposedly reluctant to monitor a few known hostile mosques but is more than
willing to spy on its people. When do you get to scan the scanners or, for that matter, read the e-mails of every government employee irrespective of rank, pay grade or office.
We're willing to bet not anytime soon.
t
Saturday, April 2, 2016
ALL IN ALL IT'S MORE OF THE SAME
Next week is a busy one if you're a central banker. Minneapolis Fed President Neel Kashkari kicks off the week jawboning it at a town hall meeting on "too big to fail," as if we need more discussion on that. Boston Fed President Eric Rosengren discusses cyber security and financial stability. We didn't know central bankers were "hacking" experts. What a surprise.
Tuesday, Chicago Fed President Charles Evans enlightens us on current economic conditions and monetary policy from old Hong Kong. Seems like a far piece to go, but maybe it was his turn to reap the Hong Kong perk. The same day Magic Man ECB President Mario Draghi reveals all about Europe's economic and financial situation.
On Wednesday, Cleveland Fed President Loretta Mester describes the U.S. and it's regional and economic outlook. Cleveland has one? But you have to hold your breathe until Thursday when the big guns--past and present--capture the cynosure with Janet Yellen, her comrade and predecessor, Ben Bernanke, Alan Greenspan and Paul Volcker on the marquee in New York. Not to be outdone, Thursday the IMF releases it analytical mumbo jumble on World Economic Outlook. Kansas City Fed President Ester George wraps up the week Friday speaking about--get this--the economy.
Being a bureaucrat seems to be a pretty good gig if one can get it. But at this level it's a perk-laden privilege. Tax payers might want to start asking what they're getting for their bucks with these folks.
Just to pile on the already mountains of economic data for the week, the ISM non manufacturing index for March is set for public consumption Tuesday. The Senate-Banking committee views the effects of consumer-finance regulations. Wednesday, Christine Legarde of IMF fame talks at the Women in the World Summit. Who'd a even thought there were actual women in the world. When did that happen? Thursday, those all-life changing jobless claims the Yellen crowd pay so much heed to are out. Factory orders for February are set for Monday. Tuesday it's international trade. And Wednesday those coveted minutes from the Fed's last meeting get released.
So all in all, it's a full week of reporting what many already know.
Thursday, March 31, 2016
OVERNIGHT
Two key gauges of Chinese factory output registered a pickup in March on signs that policies aimed at boosting growth were having some impact.
China’s official manufacturing purchasing managers index increased to 50.2 last month month from 49.0 in February, according to the National Bureau of Statistics. This is the first time in eight months the figure has been at or above 50, the level dividing expansion from contraction. A separate indicator, the private Caixin manufacturing PMI, rose to 49.7 in March from 48.0 in February. The statistics agency also said the official nonmanufacturing PMI rose to 53.8 in March from 52.7 in February.
Economists said optimism in March among manufacturers was boosted by greater stability in the yuan after a volatile start to 2016, a boost in Chinese stock markets and signaling at China’s annual legislative session earlier in the month that growth will remain a priority.
Policy pronouncements included a higher target for the nation’s fiscal deficit this year, set at 3% of gross domestic product compared with last year’s 2.3%. And China cut required bank reserves in late February by 0.5 percentage point to 17%, releasing an estimated $108 billion into the financial system.
But the Nikkei dropped to a one-month low as further dollar weakness against the yen didn't help investor mood. Down nearly 3% to 16,271.86 in morning trading, after coming off a low of 16,262.68, the volatility index shot up 18% to 26.86, the highest since March 15, Reuters reported.
A BOJ survey released also added to concerns: Traders said the survey outcome heightened calls for more stimulus but that the Bank Of Japan is running out of ammunition amid concerns about the stronger yen's impact on exporters' earnings. The bad news on corporate sentiment from the domestic market accelerated investors' risk-aversion, which is already driven by a slowdown in the Chinese economy and the prospect of U.S. rate hikes.
The dollar is down 6% against the yen for the first quarter and fell 0.4% in trading this morning to 112.09. Worries about the effectiveness of "Abenomics" continue as investors exect more stimulus.
BRING ON THE NUMBERS
The March jobs report is out tomorrow but we think the number is already in and the giveaway was in part the reason Fed Chairwoman Yellen's abrupt and strange about face Tuesday when she gave her talk in New York.
There were several things strange about it not the least is how much and how often she told those who would listen that the Fed pretty much stuck to its mandate, jobs and inflation. In fact, she specifically noted that the Fed doesn't pay much attention in their decision making process to global economic factors.
The bond market, specifically TIPS and now some recent junk bond offerings, are saying there's some possible overlooked inflation around, given the Fed's track record of not being the most prescient group in the crowded corridor of bureaucrats charged with running things.
We know some of the higher yielding bonds are in the recently beaten down tech sector and the size of the offerings, both excuses offered by some to explain away the higher yields. Third Avenue is behind us and with the threat of higher interest rates on the table for now, investors are throwing money into high-yield funds.
There's a lot of noise in the oil market, most of it owing to concerns about over supple with the threat of more coming on board. Bettors are replacing their short positions again after having to close them a few weeks ago. Cheap oil brought out energy consuming drivers who lifted U.S. gasoline demand in March to record levels. In some areas pump prices fell to level not seen since 2004. In 2015 U.S. drivers recorded 3.1 trillion miles and the DOE expects that number this year to increase to 3.2 trillion.
Toss that in with the fact she was upbeat about earlier job numbers just a short a time before her speech. But there's more. The jobs numbers on Friday only cover through March 12th. She made her speech on Tuesday the 29th, giving her plenty of time for a warning from her close associate and fellow traveler at the Bureau of Labor Statistics, Erica L. Groshen.
Impossible, you say. Well, these are indeed strange times and strange things happen in strange times. Not to mention there's much at stake here. Central bankers the globe over probably have less margin for error now than ever. In a short few months, we go from being told expect four or five rate hikes this year to a sudden concern about a global slowdown. One would also like to know what deal was hammered out at the last G20 meeting.
There were several things strange about it not the least is how much and how often she told those who would listen that the Fed pretty much stuck to its mandate, jobs and inflation. In fact, she specifically noted that the Fed doesn't pay much attention in their decision making process to global economic factors.
The bond market, specifically TIPS and now some recent junk bond offerings, are saying there's some possible overlooked inflation around, given the Fed's track record of not being the most prescient group in the crowded corridor of bureaucrats charged with running things.
We know some of the higher yielding bonds are in the recently beaten down tech sector and the size of the offerings, both excuses offered by some to explain away the higher yields. Third Avenue is behind us and with the threat of higher interest rates on the table for now, investors are throwing money into high-yield funds.
There's a lot of noise in the oil market, most of it owing to concerns about over supple with the threat of more coming on board. Bettors are replacing their short positions again after having to close them a few weeks ago. Cheap oil brought out energy consuming drivers who lifted U.S. gasoline demand in March to record levels. In some areas pump prices fell to level not seen since 2004. In 2015 U.S. drivers recorded 3.1 trillion miles and the DOE expects that number this year to increase to 3.2 trillion.
Toss that in with the fact she was upbeat about earlier job numbers just a short a time before her speech. But there's more. The jobs numbers on Friday only cover through March 12th. She made her speech on Tuesday the 29th, giving her plenty of time for a warning from her close associate and fellow traveler at the Bureau of Labor Statistics, Erica L. Groshen.
Impossible, you say. Well, these are indeed strange times and strange things happen in strange times. Not to mention there's much at stake here. Central bankers the globe over probably have less margin for error now than ever. In a short few months, we go from being told expect four or five rate hikes this year to a sudden concern about a global slowdown. One would also like to know what deal was hammered out at the last G20 meeting.
Wednesday, March 30, 2016
OVERNIGHT
Thursday was an up day for most Asian markets as investors took their lead from Wall Street and concerns about rising interests rates moved to the back burner at least for now.
The Nikkei was up 0.7%, the Australian markets tacked on 1.3% and MSCI's broadest index of Asian-Pacific shares outside Japan eked up 0.4%
The U.S. dollar languished near seven-week lows against the euro as the greenback, many believe, has become the fall guy to help offset all the negatives interest rates afloat at other central banks and help revive China. Higher U.S. rates would only complicate China's attempt to stifle capital outflows and put further pressure on their currency reserves. Most likely as concerns about a global recession grew with China at the center of it some deal was cut at the last G20 meeting.
We've written about risk appetites before. Reuters reported: Investor risk appetite has increased since Fed Chair Yellen said on Tuesday that the U.S. central bank should proceed cautiously as it looks to hike rates, pushing back against some colleagues who have suggested another move may be just around the corner. Yellen's views were echoed by Chicago Fed President Charles Evans, who said on Wednesday there was a high hurdle to raising rates in April, given low inflation. Following such cautious views from top Fed officials, the Dow .DJI climbed 0.5 percent and the S&P 500 .SPX rose 0.4 percent overnight. The CBOE Market Volatility Index .VIX, Wall Street's "fear gauge", ended down 1.9 percent at its lowest level since August.
The Nikkei was up 0.7%, the Australian markets tacked on 1.3% and MSCI's broadest index of Asian-Pacific shares outside Japan eked up 0.4%
The U.S. dollar languished near seven-week lows against the euro as the greenback, many believe, has become the fall guy to help offset all the negatives interest rates afloat at other central banks and help revive China. Higher U.S. rates would only complicate China's attempt to stifle capital outflows and put further pressure on their currency reserves. Most likely as concerns about a global recession grew with China at the center of it some deal was cut at the last G20 meeting.
We've written about risk appetites before. Reuters reported: Investor risk appetite has increased since Fed Chair Yellen said on Tuesday that the U.S. central bank should proceed cautiously as it looks to hike rates, pushing back against some colleagues who have suggested another move may be just around the corner. Yellen's views were echoed by Chicago Fed President Charles Evans, who said on Wednesday there was a high hurdle to raising rates in April, given low inflation. Following such cautious views from top Fed officials, the Dow .DJI climbed 0.5 percent and the S&P 500 .SPX rose 0.4 percent overnight. The CBOE Market Volatility Index .VIX, Wall Street's "fear gauge", ended down 1.9 percent at its lowest level since August.
SO WHICH IS IT?
When you're hot you're hot and when you're not.... So which is it Ms Yellen?
Well, if you're a member of MSM's useful idiots society, you follow your orders. And apparently the new orders call for living with a ongoing hot economy. But one not hot enough to cause a piddling 25 basis point rate hike. At least not now.
If that's sounds like a flip from a recent flop about hiking interest rates, you're hot on the trail. This is the same woman backed by her bureaucratic henchmen at the Fed who told us just a few months ago to expect four or five rate hikes this year.
The WSJ headline after Chairwoman Yellen's speech in New York yesterday was "Market Applauds the Fed." She went on to say the global and economic horizon looks more threatening than before, this so close after her celebrating what many know are phony job numbers. Once upon a time this same lady claimed the Fed didn't put much emphasis in their decision making on global numbers.
So, Ms Yellen, play your fake more transparency game and tell the American people what really happened at the recent G20 meeting. For what economy are you now sacrificing the people of America's economic future, China, Japan, The EU or all three?
There's clearly a lot of confusion in the House of Eccles. But that's no longer the question. At what point, Ms Yellen, does that confusion surpass just misinformation and become outright lying to the American public?
There's a reason Ms Yellen omitted negative interest rates from the Fed's monetary toolbox. Several other central banks are already playing that flute. Someone has to play the foil to balance that balancing act. Okay! But the American people whose economic future and well being you and your cronies hold in your bureaucratic little hands have a right to know.
So which is it?
Tuesday, March 29, 2016
OVERNIGHT
Gold was up almost 2% overnight trading at $1236.40. Last night we wrote about whether the dove or the hawk would show up at Yellen's talk Tuesday and the price of gold should tell you something to answer that point.
Asian shares rallied overnight partly at least based on Yellen's dovish or cautious tone as she mentioned global dangers to growth and inflation. Translation: go slow on tightening, at least that's how the market read it with the Dow and S&P 500 closing at thier 2016 highs. Her dovish comments were just what the market needed to give it another, although modest, upward boost, a literal put option. Forget the fundamentals, investors seem to be saying, they're still addicted to the juice.
The Korean Kospi hit a high for the year while Japanese shares were the rare losers as the yen rallied against the dollar. Weaker dollar stronger gold. The Shanghai Composite Index was up nearly 2%. The MSCI index of Asian-Pacific shares outside Japan shrugged off a four-day losing streak rising 1.4%. In the currency markets, the Australian dollar along with the yen, as noted, moved higher,just above 76 cents, not far off it recent peak of $0.7681. The dollar not only fell against the yen, it also faded against the euro trading at $1.1300.
U.S. government bond prices rallied pushing the yield of 10-year Treasury note to a one month low at 1.814% while oil prices languished below $40 a barrel, a level that seems to be the magic resistance point for now.
Asian shares rallied overnight partly at least based on Yellen's dovish or cautious tone as she mentioned global dangers to growth and inflation. Translation: go slow on tightening, at least that's how the market read it with the Dow and S&P 500 closing at thier 2016 highs. Her dovish comments were just what the market needed to give it another, although modest, upward boost, a literal put option. Forget the fundamentals, investors seem to be saying, they're still addicted to the juice.
The Korean Kospi hit a high for the year while Japanese shares were the rare losers as the yen rallied against the dollar. Weaker dollar stronger gold. The Shanghai Composite Index was up nearly 2%. The MSCI index of Asian-Pacific shares outside Japan shrugged off a four-day losing streak rising 1.4%. In the currency markets, the Australian dollar along with the yen, as noted, moved higher,just above 76 cents, not far off it recent peak of $0.7681. The dollar not only fell against the yen, it also faded against the euro trading at $1.1300.
U.S. government bond prices rallied pushing the yield of 10-year Treasury note to a one month low at 1.814% while oil prices languished below $40 a barrel, a level that seems to be the magic resistance point for now.
THAT UTOPIAN LEVEL PLAYING FIELD
Fear and greed, safe assets versus riskier ones are considered polar opposites and, as some would say, that's the usual. One problem with "that's the usual" is its linear as in thinking. If you think such is superior, take a look at U.S. foreign policy over that last two or so decades. The other is it's usual until it isn't
Traders talk risk-on, risk-off jargon. See Japan or China earlier when officials there did what officials officially do--intervene. Usually, there's that word again, they intervene under some guise--false or otherwise--of helping things or making them better. Better for whom? There's two choices here. Pick one. You and me or them.
Fear remains. Those who lose site of it can lose more than that when markets turn. There are enough concerns in the world today without compiling a huge list. That's the province of bureaucrats and officials. One of them is the "muddle through" meme that if successful invalidates a basic market principle--blame or ownership. It's every bureaucrat's dream.
With the pale rise in commodities of late, inflation-assets swung into the picture after being lodged in the investment orphanage for years. Say hello to junk bonds, emerging markets and a sector that's been DOA for longer than the list of lies most politicians tell, mining firms. They have a couple of ugly birthmarks: They're polluters and their cyclical.
Linear thinking said at the end of 2015, with the Fed's threat of higher and more frequent interest rate hikes, the utility sector was toast. And it has been, with peanut butter and jelly on top, leading the market so far this year. Like mining stocks they too are polluters and cyclical. We're most likely at the point now where bureaucrats and central bankers the globe over are secretly hoping for a little of both. We'd say praying but that might get us in trouble.
Back in the dark ages of the 1950s there was another presidential election going on for those who bother with their history that featured a campaign button: "We Like Ike." Collectors might well know about that. In this another mindless presidential year, it seems few people like anybody. Some think this is unhealthy.We beg to disagree.
The stock market has its own history, not much different from presidential elections. At the start of 2016 and well before that: We liked utilities. It was just our anti-linear thinking sort of sick way of assessing things rather than a high IQ. We're still trying to find our IQ, if we actually have one. It's been accepted wisdom most people usually do.
Way back in the dark ages of the early 1980s utility stocks were yielding around 13-14 percent and 30-year Treasury bonds the same. By our feeble calculation those bonds matured for the most part at the end of the last decade. During those intervening years there was a raft of mergers and acquisitions of those utility firms to add to the spicy yield of those that survived. Just ask a fellow name Buffett.
So what's the theme here? Anything you want it to be. From our perspective, attempts, however well intentioned, to eradicate fear and greed successfully means eradicating the species, something those who are always seeking to establish that utopian level playing field never get.
It also means eradicating any pretense of open and even semi-free markets.
Monday, March 28, 2016
OVERNIGHT
The Nikkei was up 0.8% and the Shamghai Composite Index was down 0.7% in early, light trading overnight as investors await who will show up, the hawks or the doves later today when Fed Chair Janet Yellen is scheduled to speak in New York.
As the WSJ reported, in later trading many Asian markets declined ahead of Yellen's talk.
As the WSJ reported, in later trading many Asian markets declined ahead of Yellen's talk.
Japan’s Nikkei Stock Average NIK, -0.27% was down 0.2%, Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 XJO, -1.67% was down 0.8% and Korea’s Kospi SEU, +0.27% was up 0.2%. In China, the Shanghai Composite Index SHCOMP, -1.14% was down 0.1%, while Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index HSI, -0.26% was little changed.
Investors were being cautious before U.S. Federal Reserve Chairwoman Janet Yellen was scheduled to speak Tuesday in New York on her views of the U.S. economy and monetary policy. Her comments could offer hints to when the Fed expects to raise rates, a move that Fed official James Bullard recently said could be as soon as April or June.
Many money managers are also expected to adjust portfolios before the first quarter ends Thursday. Large Asian stock markets, including Japan, China and Hong Kong, are down for the three months ending March. Smaller markets in Thailand, Indonesia and the Philippines, look set to book gains for the quarter. Japan shares fell despite data showing consumer spending in February gained from a year earlier. Employment also rose slightly to 3.3% in February from 3.2% the previous month.
Gold traded lower, down 0.2% at $1,218.70 apparently owing to weaker U.S.data. The dollar held steady at $113.90 against the yen amid a game some are calling "Guess what's left in the toolbox of Japanese officials." It's a reference to negative interest rates and concern more might be coming.
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