Post-Turkish “Shock And Awe”, Pre-FOMC Market Summary

The Fed tightens by a little (sorry, tapering – flow – is and always will be tightening): markets soar; Turkey tightens by a lot: markets soar. If only it was that easy everyone would tighten. Only it never is. Which is why as we just reported, the initial euphoria in Turkey is long gone and the Turkish Lira is basically at pre-announcement levels, only now the government has a furious, and loan-challenged population to deal with, not to mention an economy which has just ground to a halt. Anyway, good luck – other EMs already faded, including the ZAR which many are speculating could be the next Turkey, and certainly the USDJPY which sent futures soaring last night, only to fade all gains as well and bring equities down with it.

Following the CBRT’s actions last night, the central bank focus turns to the Fed where the second day of the January FOMC and Bernanke’s final policy meeting, will be held today. The overwhelming consensus is that the Fed will deliver another $10bn taper at this month’s meeting, so any deviation from that view could bring substantial volatility to markets. The turbulence in EM financial markets is probably not seen as widespread or intense enough to warrant special recognition by the Committee. Given that the negative spillover to US financial markets has been relatively modest so far, and given that the dollar overall has actually declined a bit, consensus sees no reason for them to signal any potential change in US policy. Deutsche Bank adds that on the question of forward guidance, with the unemployment rate now sitting just above the 6.5% threshold for considering an increase in short-term rates, the question about reducing that threshold will arise again. There was not much sentiment in favor of such a reduction in December, and it seems unlikely there would be this time either. More likely they will be shifting their focus increasingly toward the low rate of core inflation as a reason to hold off raising rates for some time to come.

Recall that the voting rolls will change at the January meeting, with a shift moderately in a hawkish direction. Presidents Rosengren (dissenting dove), Evans (dove), Bullard (center left) and George (dissenting hawk), will be replaced by Presidents Plossser and Fisher (both potentially dissenting hawks), Pianalto (center right) and Kocherlakota (potentially dissenting dove).

Also of note: today the Treasury sells its first $15 billion in 2 Year Floating Rate Notes, and there is no POMO.

Quick Market from RanSquawk

Focus this morning was yet again on EM after the Turkish central bank hiked rates late yesterday in order to suppress fears of further capital flight from the country. However after opening up over 2%, the domestic Turkish stock index gradually moved into negative territory, while the spot TRY rate has reversed almost half of the aggressive move lower observed following the rate hike, as market participants questioned the implications that higher interest rates will have on future growth prospects.

Nevertheless, heading into the North American open, stocks in Europe have closed the opening gap higher but remain in positive territory, with basic materials outperforming following the release of better than expected earnings by Anglo American and Antofagasta. In terms of other notable equity movers, Fiat shares plunged after the company failed to meet trading profit expectations, while Sainsbury’s shares in London fell over 6% after it was reported that CEO Justin King to step down.

In terms of macroeconomic release, the latest Eurozone M3 data showed that lending to the private sector declined by 2.3% in December, matching November, thus underpinning the view that the ECB will likely need to act in the near future. Going forward, focus will now turn to the FOMC decision at 1900GMT/1300CST, as well as earning by Facebook and Boeing.

US Event Calendar

  • 7:00am: MBA Mortgage Applications, Jan. 24 (prior 4.7%) Central Banks
  • 2:00pm: FOMC Rate Decision, Jan. 29, est. 0%-0.25% (prior 0%-0.25%); Fed pace of QE, est. $65b/mo. (prior $75b/mo.)
  • 3:00pm: Reserve Bank of New Zealand cash rate seen remaining at 2.5%
  • Today at 11:30 am, the Treasury sells its first $15b in 2Y FRN

Overnight headline bulletin from Bloomberg and Ran:

  • Spot TRY rate reversed over a half of the spike post the rate decision and the Turkish stock market gradually moved into negative territory as questions are raised over growth prospects in EM.
  • Bunds reversed the opening gap lower and edged into minor positive territory, supported by touted monthend buying and also the release of the latest Eurozone M3 data.
  • Treasuries
    fall for a third day, led by 7Y and 10Y notes, as week’s auctions
    continue with inaugural offering of 2Y FRNs and before Fed meeting
    concludes; FOMC widely expected to reduce asset purchases by another
    $10b.
  • Economists remain divided on how the central bank will
    react to any future shocks that threaten financial stability as U.S.
    economy improves
  • Turkey’s central bank resisted government pressure and raised all of its main interest rates at an emergency late- night meeting in an effort to shore up the lira; the overnight lending rate went to 12% from 7.75%
  • Investors in Asia overseeing more than $650b plan to shun the Treasury’s floater auction today, raising concern that demand  may prove underwhelming
  • U.K. house prices rose for a 13th month in January to their highest level in almost six years as the economy gained momentum, Nationwide Building Society said
  • German consumer confidence index will rise to 8.2 in February, GfK says in report; sentiment to reach highest level since Aug. 2007
  • China Credit Trust Co. has repaid the principal to some investors of its 3b yuan ($496m) high-yield product that faced default, according to investors who accepted the bailout offer
  • India central bank Governor Raghuram Rajan signaled he’s preparing to follow through on proposals to make inflation the bank’s top priority even at the risk of friction with Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s government
  • Deutsche Bank AG cut total compensation for employees at its investment bank 23 percent in the fourth quarter as a slide in revenue contributed to a loss for the period
  • Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych failed to quell nationwide street protests calling for his resignation after days of concessions culminated in the departure of his loyalist prime minister
  • Obama’s State of the Union message centered on economic  inequalities, a theme echoed by Democrats on Capitol Hill; political strategists say it may not be as potent as when Obama ran against multimillionaire Mitt Romney
  • Edward Snowden was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize by Norwegian politicians, including a former government minister, for contributing to transparency and global stability by exposing a U.S. surveillance program
  • Sovereign yields mostly higher; EU peripheral spreads narrow. Asian and European equity markets, U.S. stock-index futures gain. WTI crude and gold lower, copper higher

Asian Headlines

Asian equity markets settled higher, with the Nikkei 225 gaining over 2%, with sentiment across the region lifted after the Turkish central bank aggressively hiked interest rates to stabilize the domestic currency amid the recent EM worries.

EU & UK Headlines

After gaping lower at the open, Bunds have edged into minor positive territory, supported by touted monthend buying and also the release of the latest Eurozone M3 data.
Eurozone M3 Money Supply (Dec) Y/Y 1.0% vs Exp. 1.7% (Prev. 1.5%)
– Eurozone M3 3-month average (Dec) 3M 1.3% vs Exp. 1.5% (Prev. 1.7%)
– Eurozone (Dec) annual growth loans to private sector at -2.3%, according to the ECB

Barclays preliminary pan-Euro agg month-end extensions: +0.13y (12m avg. +0.07y)

Barclays preliminary Sterling month-end extensions:+0.19y (12m avg. +0.06y)

US Headlines

US President Obama delivered the annual State of the Union Address and urged Congress to raise the national minimum wage to USD 10.10 per hour. Obama reiterated his veto threat on possible new Iranian sanctions if it threatens to derail talks. (BBG)

Barclays preliminary US Tsys month-end extensions:+0.06y (12m avg. +0.07y)

Equities

Stocks in Europe have failed to sustain upward price action observed at the open and have gradually closed the gap as market participants positioned for the release of the FOMC rate decision and also questioned the implications that higher rates will have on growth prospects in Turkey and other EM. Nevertheless, stocks in Europe have managed to hold onto marginal gains, supported by basic materials sector following consensus beating earnings by Anglo American and Antofagasta, while financials also gained on the back of consequent credit and bond yield spread tightening.

FX

The Turkish Central Bank hiked the overnight lending rate by 425bps to 12.00% from 7.75%, raised the overnight borrowing rate by 450bps to 8.00% from 3.50%, and raised the benchmark repurchase rate by 550bps to 10.00% from 4.50%.

Safe haven currencies such as CHF and JPY were supported, as market participants questioned the implications that higher interest rates will have on future growth prospects.

Press conference by the South African central bank due at 1300GMT and the rate decision due shortly at approximately 1320GMT.

Commodities

Libya’s deputy oil minister has said crude exports are down by 60% due to the shutdown of major ports in the country. (MENA)
US API Crude Oil Inventories (Jan 24) W/W 4750k vs. Prev. 4860k
– Cushing Crude Inventories (Jan 24) W/W 221k vs. Prev. 772k
– Gasoline Inventories (Jan 24) W/W 363k vs. Prev. 1110k
– Distillate Inventories (Jan 24) W/W -1790k vs. Prev. -2290k

CME increased NYMEX natural gas margins 20% to USD 3,960 per contract. (BBG)

South African AMCU has said the 3 companies involved with the current strikes at platinum mines have made proposals to resolve the dispute, with talks set to continue today. (BBG)

* * *

Finally, here is Jim Reid’s overnight recap of all the market news that’s fit to highlight

EM investors hoping for the Central Bank of Turkey to deliver “shock and awe” policy were not disappointed after the CBRT delivered a dramatic tightening across all main interest rates at the stroke of midnight local time. At its emergency meeting last night, the CBRT hiked the benchmark one-week repo rate by 550bp from 4.50% to 10%, the overnight lending rate by 425bp from 7.75% to 12% and the overnight borrowing rate by 450bp from 3.5% to 8%. This was against expectations were that the central bank would hike the overnight lending rate by around 225bp, and last night’s announcement has effectively reversed years of policy easing in the CBRT’s bid to ensure price stability and support the lira. In addition to the rate hikes, the central bank also said that markets should treat the one-week repo as the main policy rate with liquidity to be provided via this benchmark, and that it will also seek to simplify the CBRT’s “operational framework”. The announcement saw USDTRY rally back below the 2.20 mark (2.16 as we type), now almost 7% lower since reaching record highs late last week. Meanwhile the Turkish 10yr bond gapped tighter by around 40bp in late European trading.

The CBRT’s policy move adds to the actions from a number of EM central banks over the past few days to shore up sentiment, including the Reserve Bank of India who delivered a surprise 25bp rate hike yesterday to address sticky inflation, the People’s Bank of China who has been active in injecting liquidity into the Chinese banking system over the past week, and the Central bank of Argentina who hiked rates earlier this week. The question remains whether the actions are sufficient enough to stabilize sentiment which has deteriorated sharply in recent weeks. Along the same vein, the South African Reserve Bank meets today, though it can be argued that the CBRT’s decision last night does take some pressure off the SARB to act today. Indeed, the South African rand has rallied 1.2% against the USD already this morning and consensus is that the SARB will hold fire on policy today.

Looking at Asian markets this morning, the CRBT’s decision has provided a timely boost to equity and credit markets across the region particularly for higher beta EMs. In terms of equities, there are sold gains being recorded in a number of EM indices including the HSCEI (+1.8%), Jakarta Composite (+1.8%) and KOSPI (+1.2%). The CBRT’s decision has provided a boost to USDJPY which is up more than 0.5% in the last 24 hours taking it firmly back above the 103 mark. This has buoyed the Nikkei (+2.2%) and the TOPIX (+2.3%) which are both leading the region’s gains. Asian EMFX are about a quarter of a percent firmer against the USD. On the credit side, EM sovereigns are having a strong day highlighted by Indonesia (5yr CDS 12bp tighter) and Philippines (5yr CDS -4bp) though both are off the tights. S&P500 futures gained around 8 points higher following the Turkish announcement and are trading 0.6% firmer as we type. Firmer risk sentiment has seen UST 10yr yields add 3bp to 2.78% in Asian trading.

Following the CBRT’s actions last night, the central bank focus turns to the Fed where the second day of the January FOMC and Bernanke’s final policy meeting, will be held today. The overwhelming consensus is that the Fed will deliver another $10bn taper at this month’s meeting, so any deviation from that view could bring substantial volatility to markets. For the record, our Chief Economist Peter Hooper thinks that the Fed will indeed deliver an uneventful meeting. The turbulence in EM financial markets is probably not seen as widespread or intense enough to warrant special recognition by the Committee. Given that the negative spillover to US financial markets has been relatively modest so far, and given that the dollar overall has actually declined a bit, Peter sees no reason for them to signal any potential change in US policy. And the US economic picture is improving enough to allow them to continue their current pace of tapering—another $10 bn cut in purchases at this meeting with no dissent. On the question of forward guidance, with the unemployment rate now sitting just above the 6.5% threshold for considering an increase in short-term rates, the question about reducing that threshold will arise again. There was not much sentiment in favor of such a reduction in December, and it seems unlikely there would be this time either. More likely they will be shifting their focus increasingly toward the low rate of core inflation as a reason to hold off raising rates for some time to come. Peter also highlights that the voting rolls will change at the January meeting, with a shift moderately in a hawkish direction. Presidents Rosengren (dissenting dove), Evans (dove), Bullard (center left) and George (dissenting hawk), will be replaced by Presidents Plossser and Fisher (both potentially dissenting hawks), Pianalto (center right) and Kocherlakota (potentially dissenting dove). Peter does not expect any dissents at the January meeting.

Even before the Turkish central bank decision, there were signs that sentiment was improving which allowed the S&P500 (+0.61%) and the MSCI EM (+0.26%) indices to record their first gains in four sessions. Yesterday’s US equities performance had a cyclical element to it with financials (+1.4%), industrials (+0.85%) and construction (+1.3%) leading the way higher. We wrote yesterday that Apple’s post-market results on Monday had the potential the weigh on Tuesday’s US market open, but this proved short-lived, with equities soon reaching an intraday high of 1794. Nonetheless, Apple stock did lose 8% yesterday. A couple of solid earnings reports from the likes of Pfizer and Ford helped set a positive tone, and erased any Apple-inspired weakness at the open. Another positive earnings anecdote came from US home-builder D.R. Horton Inc which soared almost 10% after it announced that January home sales were fairly strong and that the Spring selling season had got off to a good start. This helped offset some concern that home sales were slowing following a weaker-than-expected new home sales report on Monday. There was further good housing news with the US Case-Shiller home price index rising 0.9% in November (vs 0.8% expected), which pushed the year-on-year rate of change to a post-recession high of +13.7%. Credit outperformed on both sides of the Atlantic (CDX IG and Eur iTraxx both – 4bp) and the feedback seemed to suggest that long credit positioning had cleared out substantially during the selloff over last week/early this week.

Stocks and treasuries seemed to get another boost following the disappointing durable goods orders print which prompted a 4bp rally in 10yr UST yields. December durable goods declined 4.3% on the headline (+1.8% expected) and the prior month was revised down -0.8% to +2.6%. Ex-transportation orders fell -1.6% (+0.5% exp) after a -1.1% downward revision last month to +0.1%. Additionally, core orders, which consist of non-defence capital goods exaircraft, dropped 1.3% (+0.3% exp) following a -1.9% downward revision to November to +2.6%. DB’s Joe LaVorgna thinks that while durable goods orders were disappointing, more forward looking indicators such as the ISM new orders index remain firmly in positive territory and suggest that business spending will not significantly deteriorate in the current quarter. In other US data, the US consumer confidence index rose to 80.7 (78.0 expected).

Wrapping up some of the headlines, President Obama’s State of the Union address last night focused heavily the economy and income inequality. To that end, the President proposed raising the minimum wage through Executive Order from $7.25 to $10.10 per hour for Federal contract workers by 2015, creating a new government-backed private retirement savings plan and speeding up the implementation of a previously announced program to connect schools to broadband wireless (Washington Post). Obama also reiterated his call for a comprehensive bill that includes a path to citizenship for the country’s 11 to 12 million undocumented immigrants. Elsewhere in Europe the UK Telegraph reported that a verdict from the German Constitutional Court’s decision on the ECB’s OMT program has been delayed until April due to the complexity of the case and “intense differences of opinion” among the eight judges, citing a report in Frankfurter Rundschau newspaper. The Frankfurter Rundschau said it would be a “spectacular” reversal of prior rulings if the court agreed to any arrangement that eroded ECB’s independence, especially its seminal ruling on the Maastricht Treaty in the 1990s (UK Telegraph).

Aside from today’s FOMC, the other interesting macro events to look for today are the Euroarea money supply report and a speech from Mark Carney in Edinburgh. Today’s earnings calendar is highlighted by Dow Chemical and Boeing who report before the opening bell. The always-interesting Facebook earnings will be announced after the US market close. But all eyes will be on Bernanke’s final FOMC.


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1mX1pjq Tyler Durden

Turkey Central Bank Intervention Halflife 12 Hours As USDTRY Roundtrips

So much for the credibility of the CBRT? After the Lira soared, and the USDTRY plummeted by just under 1000 pips yesterday when the Turkish Central Bank announced its “shock and awe” intervention, it has since pared back virtually all gains, and at last check was just over 2.24 having nearly roundtripped in 12 hours. Why the loss faith? Two reasons: First, as we pointed out yesterday, suddenly the domestic situation in Turkey takes front stage again, with 4.25% added elements of instability, causing the political instability to soar, leading to an even higher probability of a social and political overhaul. Second, as Goldman pointed out overnight, “the CBRT stated that liquidity “… will be provided primarily from one-week repo rate instead of the marginal funding rate in the forthcoming period”. This implies that the effective rate hike is 225bp (to 10.00%; the 1-week repo rate), as the Non-PD lending rate was 7.75% prior to the announcement.”

In other words, when looked at on a corridor basis, the CBRT hiked not by a shocking and awing 425 bps but by precisely the predicted 225 bps! Which means the central bankers merely went along consensus, and not a basis point above it, which is the worst of all worlds – giving the impression of massive tightening (for domestic political purposes), while in reality not doing all that much.

The end result, well – see for yourselves:


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/L8uxrK Tyler Durden

Jacob Sullum on the Bipartisan Appeal of Marijuana Federalism

President Obama says he opposes marijuana
legalization but thinks Colorado and Washington should be able to
try it. Texas Gov. Rick Perry, who sought to run against Obama in
2012 as a Republican presidential contender, takes the same
position. Senior Editor Jacob Sullum says we seem to have the
makings of a national consensus on this issue: We do not need a
national consensus. 

View this article.

from Hit & Run
via IFTTT

Brickbat: Long Arm of the Law

Lake County,
Florida, sheriff’s deputy Matthew Donnelly has been charged with
sexual battery. After a night of partying a man flagged down
Donnelly because his girlfriend had passed out. Donnelly allegedly
put the boyfriend in his patrol car and groped
the woman
 and made inappropriate remarks to her.
Donnelly’s dashboard camera was turned off for 22 minutes when the
assault is supposed to have taken place. But officials say that a
sexual examination supported the woman’s claims, and they found her
DNA on the steering wheel and gear-shift knob of Donnelly’s car as
well as on his flashlight.

from Hit & Run
via IFTTT

Midnight on The Independents: Live Reaction to the State of the Union Address!

Tonight’s live episode of Fox Business Network’s The
Independents
 will come at you midnight eastern, 9
pm Pacific, and will include ex-Reasoner Michael C.
Moynihan
Vice magazine co-founder Gavin McInnes, FreedomWorks
President/CEO
Matt Kibbe
, and Democratic political strategist Basil Smikle, along with
some hoo-larious historical footage, demonstrations of foolish
laws, and other hijinks. Tweet it out at @IndependentsFBN!

from Hit & Run
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Obama Introduces MyRA: The "No Risk, Guaranteed Return" Retirement Savings Bond

Earlier today we hinted at what was coming in “Obama To Unveil Treasury IRAs.” Well, here it is, and it even has a catchy name. Presenting: the MyRA, and since it offers “guaranteed return and no risk” we now know where all the Fed’s bond trades will go to work once QE ends.

From the president:

Let’s do more to help Americans save for retirement. Today, most workers don’t have a pension. A Social Security check often isn’t enough on its own. And while the stock market has doubled over the last five years, that doesn’t help folks who don’t have 401ks. That’s why, tomorrow, I will direct the Treasury to create a new way for working Americans to start their own retirement savings: MyRA. It’s a new savings bond that encourages folks to build a nest egg. MyRA guarantees a decent return with no risk of losing what you put in. And if this Congress wants to help, work with me to fix an upside-down tax code that gives big tax breaks to help the wealthy save, but does little to nothing for middle-class Americans. Offer every American access to an automatic IRA on the job, so they can save at work just like everyone in this chamber can

And just like that, the “automatic” continuity to the Fed’s Quantitative Easing is ensured.

One final point: in the aftermath of the demonstration that the market is run by absolute idiots, courtesy of TWTRQ and NEST, we fully expect that tomorrow Myriad Entertainment & Resorts, stock ticker MYRA, trading at a lofty price of $0.00, will soar tomorrow to, what else, Obama’s target price of $10.10.


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1b31D6A Tyler Durden

Obama Introduces MyRA: The “No Risk, Guaranteed Return” Retirement Savings Bond

Earlier today we hinted at what was coming in “Obama To Unveil Treasury IRAs.” Well, here it is, and it even has a catchy name. Presenting: the MyRA, and since it offers “guaranteed return and no risk” we now know where all the Fed’s bond trades will go to work once QE ends.

From the president:

Let’s do more to help Americans save for retirement. Today, most workers don’t have a pension. A Social Security check often isn’t enough on its own. And while the stock market has doubled over the last five years, that doesn’t help folks who don’t have 401ks. That’s why, tomorrow, I will direct the Treasury to create a new way for working Americans to start their own retirement savings: MyRA. It’s a new savings bond that encourages folks to build a nest egg. MyRA guarantees a decent return with no risk of losing what you put in. And if this Congress wants to help, work with me to fix an upside-down tax code that gives big tax breaks to help the wealthy save, but does little to nothing for middle-class Americans. Offer every American access to an automatic IRA on the job, so they can save at work just like everyone in this chamber can

And just like that, the “automatic” continuity to the Fed’s Quantitative Easing is ensured.

One final point: in the aftermath of the demonstration that the market is run by absolute idiots, courtesy of TWTRQ and NEST, we fully expect that tomorrow Myriad Entertainment & Resorts, stock ticker MYRA, trading at a lofty price of $0.00, will soar tomorrow to, what else, Obama’s target price of $10.10.


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1b31D6A Tyler Durden

The Less 'Hoping & Dreaming', More 'Believing' State Of The Union Post-Mortem

President Obama unveiled 12 key executive actions in his 6,778 word tome this evening at a reading level that was lower than the average of George W. Bush’s SOTUs and the same as Clinton’s (Flesch-Kincaid 9.8). From ‘raising the minimum wage’ to ‘myRA’ savings plans (“a guaranteed return with no risk”?) and from redesigned high schools to teach real-world skills (like EBT-card-usage?) to increasing college opportunities (blowing that bubble even bigger), it was a corporate-bashing, hopeful-job-creating manifesto that had less “hopes” and “dreams” than MLK’s speech, but more “believing.”

 

Joe Biden loved it…


 

The speech summarized…in words…

for a quick comparison –  

  • MLK’s “I have a dream” speech had 3 “believes”, 4 “hopes”, and 11 “dreams”…
  • Tonight’s SOTU had 10 “believes”, only 1 “hope”, and a disappointing 9 “dreams”
  • Priorities for the Fed – Jobs 39 – 2 Stocks
  • So much for inequality – Rich 1 – 1 Poor

 

in pictures…

 

and in headlines…

  • *OBAMA URGES CONGRESS TO RAISE NATIONAL MINIMUM WAGE TO $10.10
  • *OBAMA SEEKS TO LIMIT RETIREMENT TAX BREAKS FOR WEALTHIEST
  • *OBAMA TO START 4 NEW MANUFACTURING INSTITUTES IN 2014
  • *OBAMA TO MEET CEOS THIS WEEK ON HIRING LONG-TERM UNEMPLOYED
  • *OBAMA REITERATES CALL TO END FANNIE, FREDDIE `AS WE KNOW THEM’
  • *OBAMA ANNOUNCES 12 EXECUTIVE ACTIONS IN STATE OF UNION SPEECH
  • *OBAMA TO RAISE FEDERAL CONTRACTOR MINIMUM WAGE TO $10.10/HR
  • *OBAMA PROPOSES NEW INCENTIVES FOR ALTERNATIVE-FUEL TRUCKS
  • *OBAMA SEEKS TO REVIVE EXPIRED TAX CREDIT FOR BIOFUELS
  • *OBAMA SAYS IN STATE OF UNION `GIVE AMERICA A RAISE’
  • *OBAMA PLANS INFRASTRUCTURE TAX CREDIT FOR ALTERNATIVE FUELS
  • *OBAMA SEEKS TO CREATE BUSINESS ZONES AROUND FRACKING
  • *OBAMA SAYS 2014 CAN BE `BREAKTHROUGH YEAR’ FOR U.S.
  • *OBAMA REITERATES VETO THREAT ON POSSIBLE NEW IRAN SANCTIONS

 

The 12 Key Executive actions…

The President’s top priority remains ensuring middle class Americans feel secure in their jobs, homes and budgets. To build real, lasting economic security the President will work with Congress and act on his own to expand opportunity for all so that every American can get ahead and have a shot at creating a better life for their kids.

Middle Class Security & Opportunity at Work

Raising the Minimum Wage through Executive Order to $10.10 for Federal Contract Workers. The President will also continue to urge Congress to raise the minimum wage to $10.10 across the nation because no one who works full-time should have to raise their family in poverty.

Creating “myRA” – A New Starter Savings Account to Help Millions Save for Retirement. The President will take executive action to create a simple, safe and affordable “starter” retirement savings account available through employers to help millions of Americans save for retirement. This savings account would be offered through a familiar Roth IRA account and, like savings bonds, would be backed by the U.S. government.

Building a 21st Century Workplace for America’s Working Families. The President will host a summit on Working Families to highlight the policies that will ensure America’s global economic competitiveness by supporting working families; showcase companies doing exemplary work in this space; and highlight model laws and policies from cities and states across the country in areas such as discrimination, flexibility and paid leave.

Jobs & Economic Opportunity

Launching Four New Manufacturing Institutes in 2014. American manufacturers are adding jobs for the first time in over a decade. To build on this progress, the President will launch four new institutes through executive action this year. These institutes will build on the four the President has already announced.

Government-wide Review of Federal Training Programs to Help Americans Get Skills in Demand for Good Jobs. The President is directing the Vice President to conduct a full review of our federal job-training system to make sure programs are higher performing and driven by the needs of employers which are hiring so that they lead to well-paying jobs. In the coming months, we will help community colleges build partnerships with businesses so that as industries’ skills needs change community colleges can quickly adapt.

Partnering With Many of America’s Leading CEOs to Help the Long-Term Unemployed. Later this week, as part of an ongoing effort that the Administration began several months ago, the President will convene a group of CEOs and other leaders around supporting best practices for hiring the long-term unemployed.

Expanding Apprenticeships by Mobilizing Business, Community Colleges and Labor. This year the President will mobilize business leaders, community colleges, Mayors and Governors, and labor leaders to increase the number of innovative apprenticeships in America.

Increasing Fuel Efficiency for Trucks. The President will propose new incentives for medium- and heavy-duty trucks that run on alternative fuels like natural gas and the infrastructure needed to deploy them, and the Administration will set new fuel efficiency standards for heavy duty vehicles.

Partnering with States, Cities and Tribes to Move to Energy Efficiency and Cleaner Power. The President has directed his Administration to work to cut carbon pollution through clean energy and energy efficiency.

Schools & Education Opportunity

Connecting 20 Million Students in 15,000 Schools to the Best Technology to Enrich K-12 Education. The FCC is making a major down-payment on the President’s ConnectED goal of connecting 99% of students to next-generation broadband and wireless technology within five years. In the coming weeks the President will announce new philanthropic partnerships – including by companies like Apple, Microsoft, Sprint and Verizon.

Redesigning High Schools to Teach the Real-World Skills That Kids Need. This year, the Administration will announce the winners of a $100 million competition supporting redesigned high schools that give high school students access to real-world education and skills.

Increasing College Opportunity and Graduation. Building on the success of the President and First Lady’s College Opportunity Summit, in the coming months the President is asking colleges and universities, nonprofits and businesses to work with him on ways to improve students’ access to and completion of higher education.

 

And a key paragraph for all (even Tom Perkins?)…

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Today, after four years of economic growth, corporate profits and stock prices have rarely been higher, and those at the top have never done better. But average wages have barely budged. Inequality has deepened. Upward mobility has stalled. The cold, hard fact is that even in the midst of recovery, too many Americans are working more than ever just to get by – let alone get ahead. And too many still aren’t working at all.

 

Our job is to reverse these tides. It won’t happen right away, and we won’t agree on everything. But what I offer tonight is a set of concrete, practical proposals to speed up growth, strengthen the middle class, and build new ladders of opportunity into the middle class. Some require Congressional action, and I’m eager to work with all of you. But America does not stand still – and neither will I. So wherever and whenever I can take steps without legislation to expand opportunity for more American families, that’s what I’m going to do.

 

Ron Paul sums it up…


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1b31AYl Tyler Durden

The Less ‘Hoping & Dreaming’, More ‘Believing’ State Of The Union Post-Mortem

President Obama unveiled 12 key executive actions in his 6,778 word tome this evening at a reading level that was lower than the average of George W. Bush’s SOTUs and the same as Clinton’s (Flesch-Kincaid 9.8). From ‘raising the minimum wage’ to ‘myRA’ savings plans (“a guaranteed return with no risk”?) and from redesigned high schools to teach real-world skills (like EBT-card-usage?) to increasing college opportunities (blowing that bubble even bigger), it was a corporate-bashing, hopeful-job-creating manifesto that had less “hopes” and “dreams” than MLK’s speech, but more “believing.”

 

Joe Biden loved it…


 

The speech summarized…in words…

for a quick comparison –  

  • MLK’s “I have a dream” speech had 3 “believes”, 4 “hopes”, and 11 “dreams”…
  • Tonight’s SOTU had 10 “believes”, only 1 “hope”, and a disappointing 9 “dreams”
  • Priorities for the Fed – Jobs 39 – 2 Stocks
  • So much for inequality – Rich 1 – 1 Poor

 

in pictures…

 

and in headlines…

  • *OBAMA URGES CONGRESS TO RAISE NATIONAL MINIMUM WAGE TO $10.10
  • *OBAMA SEEKS TO LIMIT RETIREMENT TAX BREAKS FOR WEALTHIEST
  • *OBAMA TO START 4 NEW MANUFACTURING INSTITUTES IN 2014
  • *OBAMA TO MEET CEOS THIS WEEK ON HIRING LONG-TERM UNEMPLOYED
  • *OBAMA REITERATES CALL TO END FANNIE, FREDDIE `AS WE KNOW THEM’
  • *OBAMA ANNOUNCES 12 EXECUTIVE ACTIONS IN STATE OF UNION SPEECH
  • *OBAMA TO RAISE FEDERAL CONTRACTOR MINIMUM WAGE TO $10.10/HR
  • *OBAMA PROPOSES NEW INCENTIVES FOR ALTERNATIVE-FUEL TRUCKS
  • *OBAMA SEEKS TO REVIVE EXPIRED TAX CREDIT FOR BIOFUELS
  • *OBAMA SAYS IN STATE OF UNION `GIVE AMERICA A RAISE’
  • *OBAMA PLANS INFRASTRUCTURE TAX CREDIT FOR ALTERNATIVE FUELS
  • *OBAMA SEEKS TO CREATE BUSINESS ZONES AROUND FRACKING
  • *OBAMA SAYS 2014 CAN BE `BREAKTHROUGH YEAR’ FOR U.S.
  • *OBAMA REITERATES VETO THREAT ON POSSIBLE NEW IRAN SANCTIONS

 

The 12 Key Executive actions…

The President’s top priority remains ensuring middle class Americans feel secure in their jobs, homes and budgets. To build real, lasting economic security the President will work with Congress and act on his own to expand opportunity for all so that every American can get ahead and have a shot at creating a better life for their kids.

Middle Class Security & Opportunity at Work

Raising the Minimum Wage through Executive Order to $10.10 for Federal Contract Workers. The President will also continue to urge Congress to raise the minimum wage to $10.10 across the nation because no one who works full-time should have to raise their family in poverty.

Creating “myRA” – A New Starter Savings Account to Help Millions Save for Retirement. The President will take executive action to create a simple, safe and affordable “starter” retirement savings account available through employers to help millions of Americans save for retirement. This savings account would be offered through a familiar Roth IRA account and, like savings bonds, would be backed by the U.S. government.

Building a 21st Century Workplace for America’s Working Families. The President will host a summit on Working Families to highlight the policies that will ensure America’s global economic competitiveness by supporting working families; showcase companies doing exemplary work in this space; and highlight model laws and policies from cities and states across the country in areas such as discrimination, flexibility and paid leave.

Jobs & Economic Opportunity

Launching Four New Manufacturing Institutes in 2014. American manufacturers are adding jobs for the first time in over a decade. To build on this progress, the President will launch four new institutes through executive action this year. These institutes will build on the four the President has already announced.

Government-wide Review of Federal Training Programs to Help Americans Get Skills in Demand for Good Jobs. The President is directing the Vice President to conduct a full review of our federal job-training system to make sure programs are higher performing and driven by the needs of employers which are hiring so that they lead to well-paying jobs. In the coming months, we will help community colleges build partnerships with businesses so that as industries’ skills needs change community colleges can quickly adapt.

Partnering With Many of America’s Leading CEOs to Help the Long-Term Unemployed. Later this week, as part of an ongoing effort that the Administration began several months ago, the President will convene a group of CEOs and other leaders around supporting best practices for hiring the long-term unemployed.

Expanding Apprenticeships by Mobilizing Business, Community Colleges and Labor. This year the President will mobilize business leaders, community colleges, Mayors and Governors, and labor leaders to increase the number of innovative apprenticeships in America.

Increasing Fuel Efficiency for Trucks. The President will propose new incentives for medium- and heavy-duty trucks that run on alternative fuels like natural gas and the infrastructure needed to deploy them, and the Administration will set new fuel efficiency standards for heavy duty vehicles.

Partnering with States, Cities and Tribes to Move to Energy Efficiency and Cleaner Power. The President has directed his Administration to work to cut carbon pollution through clean energy and energy efficiency.

Schools & Education Opportunity

Connecting 20 Million Students in 15,000 Schools to the Best Technology to Enrich K-12 Education. The FCC is making a major down-payment on the President’s ConnectED goal of connecting 99% of students to next-generation broadband and wireless technology within five years. In the coming weeks the President will announce new philanthropic partnerships – including by companies like Apple, Microsoft, Sprint and Verizon.

Redesigning High Schools to Teach the Real-World Skills That Kids Need. This year, the Administration will announce the winners of a $100 million competition supporting redesigned high schools that give high school students access to real-world education and skills.

Increasing College Opportunity and Graduation. Building on the success of the President and First Lady’s College Opportunity Summit, in the coming months the President is asking colleges and universities, nonprofits and businesses to work with him on ways to improve students’ access to and completion of higher education.

 

And a key paragraph for all (even Tom Perkins?)…

Today, after four years of economic growth, corporate profits and stock prices have rarely been higher, and those at the top have never done better. But average wages have barely budged. Inequality has deepened. Upward mobility has stalled. The cold, hard fact is that even in the midst of recovery, too many Americans are working more than ever just to get by – let alone get ahead. And too many still aren’t working at all.

 

Our job is to reverse these tides. It won’t happen right away, and we won’t agree on everything. But what I offer tonight is a set of concrete, practical proposals to speed up growth, strengthen the middle class, and build new ladders of opportunity into the middle class. Some require Congressional action, and I’m eager to work with all of you. But America does not stand still – and neither will I. So wherever and whenever I can take steps without legislation to expand opportunity for more American families, that’s what I’m going to do.

 

Ron Paul sums it up…


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1b31AYl Tyler Durden