Guest Post: Ukraine Is The Wrong Fight To Pick With Russia

Submitted by L Todd Wood via LToddWood.com,

The United States’ rapport with the Russian Federation is one of the world’s most important bilateral relationships.  Russia maintains a large nuclear arsenal and is a resurgent player in world affairs.  One only has to look at Russia’s recent role in the Syrian civil war and the Iranian nuclear problem to see Putin’s desire for ensuring Russia remains a powerful player on the global chessboard.  Bashar al-Assad staying in power after murdering thousands of civilians with weapons of mass destruction, and the possibility of the Iranian Islamic state acquiring nuclear weapons have very real consequences to American security.  Americans would be wise to understand the rich history of the Ukrainian region before interfering in its internal affairs and angering Moscow when there are more important issues with which to take a stand.

Ukraine was the heartland of the old kingdom of Kievan Rus.  At one point the most powerful kingdom in all of Europe, the state included modern day Ukraine as well as Belarus (White Russia) and parts of modern day Russia.  In the thirteen century, Ukraine was overrun by the Mongol Invasion and many of the Slavic peoples moved to the northern cities of Moscow and surrounding areas.  Northern Slavic power developed into the Russian Federation we know today.  For the last eight centuries, Ukraine has been ruled by many outside entities including Lithuania, Poland, and the Soviet Union.  Ukraine finally became independent in 1991. 

Russia has considered Ukraine to be a vassal for the last five hundred years.  Russian President Putin has routinely referred to Ukraine as a Russian state rather than a free and independent country.  Putin has whipped up anti-American sentiment in order to keep the threat of American trickery on the top of the ordinary Russian’s mind.   The bottom line is that Russia considers the Ukraine to be in its sphere of influence and theoretically a part of Russia. 

The result of all this history is that I believe it’s impossible for the West to unilaterally pull Ukraine away from Russian control.  Actually it may be dangerous to attempt to do so and that effort my carry long term global consequences.  Ukraine should be left to sort out its own problems.  This view may be harsh but it is also realpolitik.  The United States should stay out of this possible brewing civil war.  The visit from John McCain and American State Department officials carried a very high media profile and needlessly inflamed U.S.-Russian relations.  These types of efforts only serve to give the Russian government ammunition to excite anti-American sentiment within Russia and foster coercive measures by the Ukrainian government against the opposition and for Putin do to the same against the opposition in Moscow.  Fifty-four percent of recently polled Russians consider America to be the number one threat to world peace compared to twenty-four percent of the rest of the world.  The Kremlin’s propaganda has worked well.  Sending American officials to Kiev only fosters this view.

Iran obtaining nuclear weapons however, is a different story all-together.  Here we have a state that has actively called repeatedly for the destruction of the state of Israel.  Iran has recently used weapons of mass destruction via its vassal in Damascus against the Syrian opposition.  We are on the brink of a major arms race and nuclear escalation in the Middle East.  Saudi Arabia is rumored to be acquiring a nuclear capability to oppose the Iranian threat.  This region of the globe has been a flash-point for the world throughout history.  In my humble opinion, this would be an area to take a stand.  This would be an issue on which to confront Putin and anger the Russia bear.  The consequences of not doing so are horrific. 

How would the United States react if Moscow was able to exert influence over Mexico and install a pro-Russian government?  What if Mexico was to consider joining the Customs Union of Belarus, Kazakhstan, and Russia?  What if Mexico openly talked of joining a Russian military alliance against the United States?  One only needs to look to the Cuban Missile Crisis to discover the American reaction. 

America needs to take off her rose colored glasses and look at the world with a Machiavellian view.  We should decide to intervene in centuries old conflicts only when there are clear American security interests involved.  Unfortunately for the idealistic leaders of American foreign policy, Ukraine does not meet this test.  The Ukrainian people have shown an ability over the two decades to have a natural ability to take matters into their own hands and are quite capable of deciding this issue among themselves.  

 

L. Todd Wood is a former special operations helicopter pilot and bond trader.  His first of many thriller novels, Currency was published in 2012.  He is a contributor to The Moscow Times and splits his time between NYC and Moscow.  LToddWood.com


    



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Japanese Stocks Tumble – Down 10% In 2014 Following Record Low China Services PMI

USDJPY opened the evening under 102 with JPY holding its losses until aroun 1700ET when it broke back above the crucial level. S&P futures and USDJPY recoupled for a few hours but are now decoupling faster than the Seahawks and Broncos (S&P -1pt, USDJPY +30 pips). The catalyst for the disconnect (which Japan's Nikkei is also following) was weakness in Chinese data. Following Aussie PMI's lowest print in 5 months, China's Services PMI printed at its lowest on record and it sbiggest 3 month slide in 16 months. Japan's Nikkei 225 is now down 10% in 2014 and 7 of the last 8 days and 20Y JGB yields are testing 9-month lows.

 

China Services PMI at its lowest on record…

 

with the biggest 3-month slide in 16 months…

 

Which triggered a disconnect between stocks and carry…in US futures…

 

and the Japanese stocks are now down 10% on the year….

 

and 20Y yields are testing 9 month lows…

 

Charts: Bloomberg


    



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"Clients Are Stretching To Find Reasons Not To Cut"

Citi's Tobias Levkovich sums up the hope… "we have received a fair amount of questions from clients over the last couple of weeks about the effect of share buybacks supporting earnings in the coming year, almost as if they are stretching to find reasons not to cut their numbers." The following charts suggest we are stretched indeed…

 

The Panic/Euphoria Model went into Euphoria 11 weeks ago and is still suggesting a better than 80% chance of a down market even from current levels…

 

The 4Q13 rally driven by liquidity and momentum had left investors feeling emboldened. Earnings estimate revision trends not support the run up in the S&P 500 last year as earnings and markets somewhat delinked

 

Investors were bullish and had bought into bottom-up annual Street consensus estimates in a way we had not seen before

 

despite the sharp spike in negative-to-positive pre-announcements late last year…

 

Even the bad earnings recession times of 2001-02 and 2008-09 did not show such a sharp takedown of numbers via preannouncements – and yet total ignorance by investors of that reality… The critical dynamic though has been guidance which has to be characterized as soft. The guidance numbers that we have collated show a clear downtrend

 

and the expected bottom-up consensus growth expectation are crumbling…

 

 

Perhaps Citi's Tobias Levkovich sums it up best…

"Interestingly, we have received a fair amount of questions from clients over the last couple of weeks about the effect of share buybacks supporting earnings in the coming year, almost as if they are stretching to find reasons not to cut their numbers."

But a glance at the following 3 charts should clarify that…

The average American is in trouble…

 

And appears unable to use the Keynesian wet-dream of credit expansion to to fix his ability to spend

 

And even corporates are not spending

 

On anything but buybacks…

Of course – what really matters is USDJPY 102…

 

As John Hussman noted this week, the problem is always that historical outcomes are easy to observe in hindsight, but the outcome of the present instance is still unseen – even if the underlying conditions are the same. As we saw in 2000 and again in 2007, until unseen risks become observable reality in hindsight (and by then, it’s too late), all of these concerns are quickly dismissed and ignored by investors.

Quantitative easing has distorted not only financial markets, but financial memory. The awakening is not likely to be gentle.

 

Charts: Bloomberg, Barclays, Citi, and @Not_Jim_Cramer


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1kBasr1 Tyler Durden

“Clients Are Stretching To Find Reasons Not To Cut”

Citi's Tobias Levkovich sums up the hope… "we have received a fair amount of questions from clients over the last couple of weeks about the effect of share buybacks supporting earnings in the coming year, almost as if they are stretching to find reasons not to cut their numbers." The following charts suggest we are stretched indeed…

 

The Panic/Euphoria Model went into Euphoria 11 weeks ago and is still suggesting a better than 80% chance of a down market even from current levels…

 

The 4Q13 rally driven by liquidity and momentum had left investors feeling emboldened. Earnings estimate revision trends not support the run up in the S&P 500 last year as earnings and markets somewhat delinked

 

Investors were bullish and had bought into bottom-up annual Street consensus estimates in a way we had not seen before

 

despite the sharp spike in negative-to-positive pre-announcements late last year…

 

Even the bad earnings recession times of 2001-02 and 2008-09 did not show such a sharp takedown of numbers via preannouncements – and yet total ignorance by investors of that reality… The critical dynamic though has been guidance which has to be characterized as soft. The guidance numbers that we have collated show a clear downtrend

 

and the expected bottom-up consensus growth expectation are crumbling…

 

 

Perhaps Citi's Tobias Levkovich sums it up best…

"Interestingly, we have received a fair amount of questions from clients over the last couple of weeks about the effect of share buybacks supporting earnings in the coming year, almost as if they are stretching to find reasons not to cut their numbers."

But a glance at the following 3 charts should clarify that…

The average American is in trouble…

 

And appears unable to use the Keynesian wet-dream of credit expansion to to fix his ability to spend

 

And even corporates are not spending

 

On anything but buybacks…

Of course – what really matters is USDJPY 102…

 

As John Hussman noted this week, the problem is always that historical outcomes are easy to observe in hindsight, but the outcome of the present instance is still unseen – even if the underlying conditions are the same. As we saw in 2000 and again in 2007, until unseen risks become observable reality in hindsight (and by then, it’s too late), all of these concerns are quickly dismissed and ignored by investors.

Quantitative easing has distorted not only financial markets, but financial memory. The awakening is not likely to be gentle.

 

Charts: Bloomberg, Barclays, Citi, and @Not_Jim_Cramer


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1kBasr1 Tyler Durden

I love having gym junkie friends for conversations like these. "Real friends" just don't understand the #fitlife and the underwear struggles that come with it. cc: @theisaacblakemore

@hooper_fit

I love having gym junkie friends for conversations like these. "Real friends" just don’t understand the #fitlife and the underwear struggles that come with it. cc: @theisaacblakemore

LIKES: 3  COMMENTS:8

tags#fitpeopleproblems,#underwear,#wedgie,#gymlife,#fitfam,#squats,#godeep,#chickswholift,#asstograss,#fitlife,#legday,#muscle,

»WEBSTAGRAM

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via IFTTT

I love having gym junkie friends for conversations like these. “Real friends” just don’t understand the #fitlife and the underwear struggles that come with it. cc: @theisaacblakemore

@hooper_fit

I love having gym junkie friends for conversations like these. "Real friends" just don’t understand the #fitlife and the underwear struggles that come with it. cc: @theisaacblakemore

LIKES: 3  COMMENTS:8

tags#fitpeopleproblems,#underwear,#wedgie,#gymlife,#fitfam,#squats,#godeep,#chickswholift,#asstograss,#fitlife,#legday,#muscle,

»WEBSTAGRAM

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Great Depression Deja Vu – "A Chicken In Every Pot And A Maserati In Every Garage"

In 1928, just as income inequality was surging, stocks were soaring and monetary distortions were rearing their ugly head, the now infamous words "a chicken in every pot and a car in every garage" were integral to Herbert Hoover's 1928 presidential run and a "vote for prosperity," all before the market's epic collapse. Fast forward 86 years and income inequality is at those same heady levels, stocks are at recorderer highs, the President is promising to hike the minimum wage to a "living wage" capable of filling every house with McChicken sandwiches and now… to top it all off – Maserati unveils their (apparent) "everyone should own a Maserati" commercial. It would seem that chart analogs are not the only reminder of the pre-crash era exuberance and its recovery mirage and massive monetary distortions.

 

Income inequality – check

The last time the top 10% of the US income distribution had such a large proportion of the entire nation's income was the 1920s – a period that culminated in the Great Depression and a collapse in that exuberance.

 

"Wealth effect" – check

 

 

Monetary distrortions – check

"Today there is a tremendous amount of monetary distortion, on par with the 1929 stock market and certainly the peak of 2007, and many others," warns Universa's Mark Spitznagel.

 

 

and "a Maserati in every garage"

 

 

It's a great looking car and emotionally imploring but… did they really just suggest (subliminally of course) that such luxury is to be had by all?

Perhaps a gentle reminder of the reality for 99.99% of Americans…compared to the Maserati buyer…

 

As Mark Spitznagel warned:

The reality is, when distortion is created, the only way out is to let the natural homeostasis take over. The purge that occurs after massive distortion is painful, but ultimately, it’s far better and healthier for the system.

 

While that may sound rather heartless, it’s actually the best and least destructive in the long run.

 

Look what happened in the 1930s, when the actions of the government prolonged what should have been a quick purge. Instead, the government prevented the natural rebuilding process from working, which made matters so much worse.


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1nG8KqY Tyler Durden

Great Depression Deja Vu – “A Chicken In Every Pot And A Maserati In Every Garage”

In 1928, just as income inequality was surging, stocks were soaring and monetary distortions were rearing their ugly head, the now infamous words "a chicken in every pot and a car in every garage" were integral to Herbert Hoover's 1928 presidential run and a "vote for prosperity," all before the market's epic collapse. Fast forward 86 years and income inequality is at those same heady levels, stocks are at recorderer highs, the President is promising to hike the minimum wage to a "living wage" capable of filling every house with McChicken sandwiches and now… to top it all off – Maserati unveils their (apparent) "everyone should own a Maserati" commercial. It would seem that chart analogs are not the only reminder of the pre-crash era exuberance and its recovery mirage and massive monetary distortions.

 

Income inequality – check

The last time the top 10% of the US income distribution had such a large proportion of the entire nation's income was the 1920s – a period that culminated in the Great Depression and a collapse in that exuberance.

 

"Wealth effect" – check

 

 

Monetary distrortions – check

"Today there is a tremendous amount of monetary distortion, on par with the 1929 stock market and certainly the peak of 2007, and many others," warns Universa's Mark Spitznagel.

 

 

and "a Maserati in every garage"

 

 

It's a great looking car and emotionally imploring but… did they really just suggest (subliminally of course) that such luxury is to be had by all?

Perhaps a gentle reminder of the reality for 99.99% of Americans…compared to the Maserati buyer…

 

As Mark Spitznagel warned:

The reality is, when distortion is created, the only way out is to let the natural homeostasis take over. The purge that occurs after massive distortion is painful, but ultimately, it’s far better and healthier for the system.

 

While that may sound rather heartless, it’s actually the best and least destructive in the long run.

 

Look what happened in the 1930s, when the actions of the government prolonged what should have been a quick purge. Instead, the government prevented the natural rebuilding process from working, which made matters so much worse.


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1nG8KqY Tyler Durden

Guest Post: Bitcoin – Revolution Or Trap?

Excerpted from The Money Bubble by James Turk and John Rubino,

In the Internet’s early days there was general agreement that one of the first killer apps would be some form of cyber-currency. Since money was already largely non-corporeal, existing as entries in bank accounts and ready to spend with plastic cards, the next logical step would be to move the whole thing online and dispense with paper and coins and their costly and burdensome infrastructure of banks, regulators and printing presses. The emergence of such currencies would, in this optimistic scenario, consign relics like the dollar and the Fed to history’s circular file and usher in an era of trust, stability, and growth similar to what occurred under the classical gold standard.

But the digital liberation of money turned out to be easier said than done, as the first wave of cyber-currencies came and went without much of an impact. eCash, for instance, was an encrypted, anonymous payment system that allowed anyone anywhere to send and receive instant payments. But it relied on the existing banking infrastructure, and because “anonymous” meant “money laundering” to the police, it faced extreme pushback from authorities who viewed such currencies as primarily empowering drug dealers – and from banks that saw no point in encouraging the competition. Only one small bank ever accepted eCash, and the currency died a quiet death a few years after its introduction.

A larger impact was made by e-gold, which offered accounts denominated in grams of gold from which owners could make and receive payments. It generated some buzz, peaking at five million users and $2 million of transactions in 2009. But here again, the fact that much of this action was apparently money laundering by parties with good reason to stay anonymous led to legal pressure that eventually led to its failure.

James’ company, GoldMoney, was originally designed to operate as a gold-based payment system based on several digital currency patents. It avoided the money laundering stigma by requiring users to register under their own names, and also met with early enthusiasm. But other logistical and legal barriers proved to be insurmountable, and GoldMoney’s payment system was deemphasized in favor of offshore gold storage. By the late 2000s, purely digital currencies looked, to most observers, like a near-impossibility in a world where governments and banks had the power to prevent such competition.

ENTER BITCOIN

In 2008, a mysterious person or group using the apparent pseudonym Satoshi Nakamoto unveiled a new digital currency called Bitcoin that appeared to solve some of its predecessors’ problems. Without going too deeply into the technical details, the Bitcoin system tracks each piece of currency from buyer to seller, eliminating the possibility of one person spending the same piece of currency multiple times before the counterparties catch on. The network is distributed, with no central clearinghouse or bank holding everyone’s money and imposing rules. “Miners” create more Bitcoins by solving complex algorithms to add more Bitcoin to the system, with the difficulty of the number crunching increasing as the quantity of Bitcoin grows, thus keeping their supply rising at a steady, predetermined rate until it reaches is a preordained limit of 21 million a century or so hence.

Bitcoins, which are a long string of alphanumeric characters, can be stored in a variety of places, from a digital “wallet” on a desktop computer to a centralized service in the cloud, or even completely off-grid by being printed on a piece of paper. And because it operates over peer-to-peer networks similar to those used by techies and teens to download music and videos, it bypasses the established banking/regulatory system, making it, at least initially, free of government oversight.

Nakamoto, whoever he (or she, they) was, disappeared in 2010. But by then the Bitcoin community had taken on a life of its own. Hundreds of users began to mine Bitcoins with increasingly sophisticated computers, and the number of merchants and individuals willing to accept, store, and transact in the currency rose steadily.

As the buzz grew louder, the small community of techie/libertarian early adopters was joined by traders sensing a serious momentum play. The dollar price of a Bitcoin rose from 5 cents in early 2010 to 36 cents in November. In February 2011 it briefly achieved parity with the dollar, and when a Forbes Magazine ran a favorable story that called it a “crypto currency,” the price went parabolic, to nearly $9. More breathless press ensued, sending the price to $27 and putting the market value of Bitcoins in circulation at $130 million.

On the Internet’s black market – the network of sites only accessible to computers running anonymizing software such as Tor – Bitcoin was rapidly becoming the preferred form of money. This drew the ire of the establishment, with US Senator Charles Schumer demanding the closure of online drug emporium Silk Road and describing Bitcoin as “an online form of money-laundering.”

At about the same time, Bitcoin’s Achilles heel became apparent, which is that it has to be stored somewhere, and no place is 100 percent secure. Bitcoins stored on a desktop can be wiped out by a crashed hard drive. Backed up on other storage media, they’re vulnerable to hackers. Kept in an online storage service – which sounds like a bank but has no deposit insurance or even physical reality – they can disappear without a trace. Traded on an online exchange they can likewise simply disappear, with no recourse to former owners.

As Bitcoin rose in value the number of high-profile crimes and crashes rose apace. A Tokyo-based exchange was hacked and lost numerous client accounts. A Poland-based storage service accidentally overwrote its customer records. A West Indian storage service simply shut down, and its owner disappeared. And viruses aimed at Bitcoin caches proliferated. Newcomers, meanwhile, discovered that working with Bitcoin required skills not yet common among the non-techie 99 percent. The press turned scornful, and a consensus formed that the concept was fatally flawed and without much of a future.

The Comeback

Throughout that boom and bust, Bitcoin retained a core user base that saw its possibilities and worked to overcome its flaws by developing point-of-sale hardware and online merchant services while lessening its dependence on a small number of exchanges.

And then, just when the outside world had stopped paying attention, Bitcoin recovered. From under $20 at the beginning of 2013 it rose to $240, crashed to below $100, and then in one dramatic arc soared to more than $1,000. In early 2014 Bitcoin’s market value exceeded $10 billion and the number of merchants willing to accept it was soaring.

 

The market appears to have spoken: Bitcoin is for real.


    



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