Russian Platoon Withdrawing From Ukrainian Border, Russian Defense Ministry Says

Overnight, AFP reported that Russian forces have begun a gradual withdrawal from the Ukrainian border, citing a Russian defense ministry official. “In recent days, the Russian forces have been gradually withdrawing from the border,” the Ukrainian defence ministry’s general staff spokesman Oleksiy Dmytrashkivskiy said in a telephone interview. Moments ago, Reuters confirmed this story:

  • RUSSIAN DEFENCE MINISTRY SAYS ONE INFANTRY BATTALION IS WITHDRAWING FROM REGION NEAR UKRAINIAN BORDER – RUSSIAN STATE NEWS AGENCIES

And Bloomberg added:

  • RUSSIA: PLATOON HEADING BACK TO SAMARA REGION FROM ROSTOV: RIA
  • RUSSIAN PLATOON RELOCATING AFTER DRILL IN ROSTOV REGION: RIA

So is Putin de-escalating, and now merely biding his time until the Ukraine elections when the population, suddenly facing 100% price increases in heating costs, capital controls, and a collapsed economy will have to empower the current government to continue the status quo? Or just another headfake to show that even Putin is malleable to “negotiations”? Or, as the official explanation says, it was merely the end of a drill, and the platoon will now be stationed elsewhere along the border?

Stay tuned to find out.


    



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Stocks Surge As Yellen Goes Uber-Dovish, Says “Fed Short Of Reaching Employment And Inflation Goals”

As if there was any surprise that Yellen was fundamentally an uber dove, she just confirmed it. Here are the key highlights from her speech from Bloomberg.

  • YELLEN SEES `CONSIDERABLE SLACK’ IN ECONOMY, LABOR MARKET
  • YELLEN SAYS QE TAPER DOESN’T MEAN REDUCED STIMULUS COMMITMENT
  • YELLEN SAYS ECONOMY, JOB MARKET `ARE NOT BACK TO NORMAL HEALTH
  • YELLEN SAYS FED SHORT OF REACHING EMPLOYMENT, INFLATION GOALS
  • YELLEN SAYS POST-CRISIS LABOR MARKET STRENGTHENED CONSIDERABLY
  • YELLEN SAYS FED TAKES ITS 2% INFLATION GOAL `VERY SERIOUSLY’
  • YELLEN SAYS DECLINE IN JOBLESS `GRADUAL BUT REMARKABLY STEADY’
  • YELLEN SAYS ECONOMY NEEDS EXTRAORDINARY SUPPORT FOR `SOME TIME’

And more from BBG:

  • Yellen says that despite steady progress, there’s no doubt “that the economy and the job market are not back to normal health.”
  • Fed’s “extraordinary commitment” to help economy recover “is still needed and will be for some time,” Yellen said in a speech at 8:55am local time in Chicago; “I believe that view is widely shared by my fellow policymakers at the Fed”
  • Tapering is “not a lessening of this commitment”
  • Fed is “still considerably short” of full employment and price stability
  • FOMC estimates unemployment rate consistent with full employment is 5.2%-5.6%, well below 6.7% unemployment rate for Feb.
  • Inflation is well below 2% long-term goal
  • It’s appropriate for Fed to continue providing “substantial help” to labor market, without adding to inflation risks, because of signs of considerable slack in economy
  • Decline in unemployment rate hasn’t helped raise wages for workers
  • Job market is in some ways tougher now than in any recession
  • Long-term unemployed face big challenges; research shows employers are less willing to hire them
  • There’s hope significant share of long-term unemployed will benefit from stronger labor market
  • Significant amount of decline in participation during recovery appears to be due to slack, a sign that Fed’s help can still be effective
  • Surveys show consumers and owners of small- and medium-sized businesses remain cautious about strength, durability of recovery

And the punchlines:

  • Numbers of people trying to find work for more than 6 mos. or a yr are higher now than any time since records began
  • Lower participation rate may mean 6.7% unemployment rate is overstating progress made in labor market
  • Pool of 7m people who work part time and want full-time jobs is much larger than should be expected at 6.7% unemployment rate; this is sign that labor conditions are worse than unemployment rate indicates  

Gee: who would have thought that the employment data used for Obama propganda purposes does not suddenly suit the Fed, whose Russell 200,000 target is in jeopardy of falling short.

And sure enough, the only thing that matters for algos is that their interpretation of Yellen’s rehash of the same comments heard thousands of times already, is that more stimulus from the Fed, i.e., the long-awaited untaper, may be just around the corner. And stocks surge because the Chairmanwoman just admitted the economy is, gasp, weaker than expected.


    



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A Pre-Marked Voter Registration Card? It’s All in the Overrated Tradition of Democracy.

Pre-marked voter registrationIt’s fair to say that never has an ambitious
government program been passed without an eye to buying votes or
even—what the hell—buying voters outright. From a politicians’
perspective, what’s the point of expending time and effort on
legislation if it’s not going to win a little ballot box love? So
it’s little surprise that a couple in La Mesa, California, not only
received a voter registration packet from Covered California, the state’s
health insurance exchange charged with implementing Obamacare in
California, but that the form was helpfully pre-marked for the
Democratic Party.

From
ABC10 News
:

A local couple called 10News concerned after they received an
envelope from the state’s Obamacare website, Covered California.
Inside was a letter discussing voter registration and a
registration card pre-marked with an “x” in the box next to
Democratic Party.

The couple–who did not want their identity revealed–received the
letter and voter registration card from their health insurance
provider Covered California, the state-run agency that implements
President Obama’s Affordable Care Act.

They have lived in La Mesa for years and they have always been
registered to vote Republican. Now, they are perplexed as to how
the voter registration card pre-marked Democrat ended up in their
mailbox.

Why is Covered California sending out voter registration forms
to nearly four million enrollees? Well, it has a big database, and
voter rights groups threatened legal action unless that database
was put to good use.

It’s not a terrible stretch to assume that a health program
closely associated with a Democratic president and his political
party might attract more potential donkey voters than fans of the
competition, but pre-marking the registration card with that choice
is a tad presumptuous. Even so, Covered California claims
astonishment, and refers inquiries to the Secretary of State’s
office. The San Diego County Registrar of Voters sends people with
questions to Covered California.

It’s a mystery!

Assuming the worst (and not an unfortunate error on some
low-level somebody’s part), this is small potatoes compared to how
voting used to be handled. Writing for The New Yorker a
few years ago, Jill Lepore
told the tale of a somewhat vigorous election day in 1859
:

On the morning of November 2, 1859—Election Day—George Kyle, a
merchant with the Baltimore firm of Dinsmore & Kyle, left his
house with a bundle of ballots tucked under his arm. Kyle was a
Democrat. As he neared the polls in the city’s Fifteenth Ward,
which was heavily dominated by the American Party, a ruffian tried
to snatch his ballots. Kyle dodged and wheeled, and heard a cry:
his brother, just behind him, had been struck. Next, someone
clobbered Kyle, who drew a knife, but didn’t have a chance to use
it. “I felt a pistol put to my head,” he said. Grazed by a bullet,
he fell. When he rose, he drew his own pistol, hidden in his
pocket. He spied his brother lying in the street. Someone else
fired a shot, hitting Kyle in the arm. A man carrying a musket
rushed at him. Another threw a brick, knocking him off his feet.
George Kyle picked himself up and ran. He never did cast his vote.
Nor did his brother, who died of his wounds. The Democratic
candidate for Congress, William Harrison, lost to the American
Party’s Henry Winter Davis. Three months later, when the House of
Representatives convened hearings into the election, whose result
Harrison contested, Davis’s victory was upheld on the ground that
any “man of ordinary courage” could have made his way to the
polls.

Political factions have always tried to put as much pressure on
the voting process as possible and, in the process, render the
whole thing as bogus as can be imagined (assuming that you think 50
percent plus one has some special significance to begin with).
Compared to a bloody gauntlet, pre-marked voter registration cards
are mild stuff.

But we can use an occasional reminder that politicians expect a
return for their efforts, and they’re willing to put a thumb on the
scale to get it.

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Judge Rejects Drug Court Judge’s 1.5 Year Plea Deal, Demands 2 Years Instead

benefited from drug war till it ensnared himLast May, Michael Cook, a drug
court judge in St. Clair County, Illinois, was
charged
with possession of heroin and having a gun while using
an illegal controlled substance. He eventually plead guilty in
exchange for an 18 month prison sentence. But then, earlier this
year,
according to KMOV
:

A federal judge rejected the deal, saying it wasn’t
enough hard time for the ex-judge.

Judge Joe Billy McDade said regarding his sentence there are a
number of things to consider, including the number of cases Cook
presided over as judge of the county drug
court. McDade is also looking into the amount of time
Cook was using heroin before he sought treatment.

Since his arrest, several of Cook’s cases have been thrown out,
overturned or have to be retried.

Sentencing was on Friday, and Cook was
instead given
a “long” 2-year term because, according to Judge
McDade, Cook “undermined the rule of law.” He will also have to pay
for the cost of his confinement and subsequent 3-year supervised
release, as well as a $10,000 fine.

The drug court judge initially came under scrutiny by law
enforcement officials after another St. Clair County judge, Joe
Christ, overdosed on cocaine at Cook’s family cabin just a week
after being sworn in as judge. And there’s more, via KMOV
again:

St. Clair County probation worker James Fogarty later
told investigators he snorted cocaine with the two judges and
repeatedly sold them the drug, including on the eve of the trip to
the hunting cabin. Fogarty later pleaded guilty in
federal court to possession with intent to distribute cocaine
and unlawful possession of a firearm.

A federal judge later said he won’t accept Fogarty’s deal to serve
five years in prison if testing shows the man’s drugs were the ones
that killed a Christ. 

“Enhanced” sentences for non-violent drug possession (or sale)
that include possession of a firearm are common around the country,
even though so long as the drug trade remains within the black
market, firearms are needed to prevent fraud, enforce contracts,
and support other business practices for which an attorney would
suffice in non-criminalized industries.

In fact, Cook’s possession charge was a misdemeanor; he admitted
to possessing about a gram of heroin when arrested in front of his
alleged drug dealer’s house. Cook’s felony charge was mere
possession of a firearm while using heroin. Illinois sentencing
guidelines
call for up to 15 additional years if a
firearm is used while committing a drug or other offense. 

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Veronique de Rugy on the French Implosion

While commentators remain captivated by the bleak
saga of such Eurozone basket cases as Greece, Portugal, Spain, and
Italy, another European Union member is quietly slipping into
economic despair. After years of fiscal mismanagement, France is in
a bad, bad place warns Veronique de Rugy.

View this article.

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Study: Soda Tax Support Low Overall; Higher Among Millennials, College Grads, Democrats

A new study published in the journal Preventive
Medicine
 finds
predictably low support for soda taxes
or soda size
restrictions among Americans. Less than a quarter (22 percent) of
U.S. adults favor soda taxes and just over a quarter (26 percent)
favor portion size restrictions.

“Examining several determinants of support simultaneously,
Democrats and those with negative views of soda companies are more
likely to support these policies,” states the study, funded by
the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation’s Healthy Eating Research
program. That’s unsurprising. But more surprising—or at least
disappointing—is that millennials overall also showed greater
support for sugary drink taxes. 

For the study, researchers surveyed a nationally-representative
sample of 18- to 64-year-olds on a several public health policy
proposals. They found greater public support for adding
front-of-package nutrition labels to sugary drinks (65 percent),
barring soda and sugary drink sales from public schools (62
percent), and prohibiting advertisements for sugary drinks to air
during children’s TV programming (50 percent).

“I think these findings reflect public enthusiasm for regulation
that maintains a value on consumer choice in the marketplace rather
than government intervention,” said lead author Sarah Gollust, a
professor at the University of Minnesota School of Public Health.
But they show tolerance for “more paternalism in restricting the
choices available to children,” she noted. 

Interestingly, parents of children under 18 showed similar
levels of support for school beverage bans as those without younger
children. The study also found similar attitudes among
overweight/obese individuals and those classified as normal
weight.

But
differences emerged
when age, gender, income, and education
level came into play. College-educated adults were more likely to
support most of the proposed policies, with the exception of soda
size restrictions and requiring TV stations to provide free air
time for health propaganda (a measure supported by a disturbing 51
percent of all respondents). 

Women overall were more in favor of sugary drink size
restrictions and restricting soda advertising to children. Support
didn’t generally differ among age groups, except that 18- to
29-year-olds were 57 percent more likely to support soda taxes than
older respondents. Those with higher incomes were the least likely
to support such taxes. 

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Chicago PMI Plunges To 7-Month Lows, Misses By Most In A Year

“But it must be the weather”, we are sure, will be the cry of a thousand economists whose meterologist forecasts just got torn up. Chicago PMI just missed expectations by the most in a year and tumbled to its lowest since August as it appears knowing what the weather was like in March did nothing for analysts’ ability to comprehend the awful reality of the underlying economy. The business barmoter has been falling since October (pre-weather) but this month saw the employment sub-index collapsed to 50 (from 59.3), prices paid dropped, and new orders tumbled to the lowest since August.

 

 

Commenting on the MNI Chicago Report, Philip Uglow, Chief Economist of MNI Indicators said, “March saw a significant weakening in activity following a five month spell of firm growth. It’s too early to tell, though, if this is the start of a sustained slowdown or just a blip.”
 
“Panellists, though, were optimistic about the future. Asked about the outlook for demand over the next three months, the majority of businesses said they expected to see a pick-up.” he added.


    



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European Inflation Slides To Lowest Since 2009

Back in October, when European inflation shocked market observers after it tumbled to a then (revised)low of 0.7%, the reaction by the ECB was to shock everyone and lower rates by 25 bps – a completely unexpected move. Earlier today, Europe shocked everyone once again after it reported that annual Eurozone consumer inflation in March tumbled from 0.7% to a paltry 0.5%, the lowest level since November 2009, below already the depressingly low 0.6% forecast, driven primarily by energy costs which tumbled 2.1% courtesy of Japan continuing to export deflation (where are energy costs soaring? Look at the price of natgas in Japan for a hint).

Reuters has more:

Inflation has now been in the ECB’s “danger zone” of below 1 percent for six consecutive months, and the flash reading increases the chances the ECB will cut interest rates when its Governing Council meets on Thursday. Speculation has also grown that it may employ other easing measures such as a negative deposit rate or even U.S.-style bond-buying.

 

But this year’s late Easter, which has delayed the impact of rising travel and hotel prices at a time when many people go away in Europe, could encourage the euro zone’s central bank to wait until its June meeting to act.

 

“This will keep the possibility of further monetary policy easing very much alive,” said Nick Kounis, head of economic research at ABN AMRO in Amsterdam. “Nevertheless, the central bank has shown quite some tolerance for low inflation recently.” ECB President Mario Draghi suggested after the ECB’s March meeting that the bank will either do nothing or take bold action should the outlook deteriorate.

 

He has also said the bank has been preparing additional policy steps to guard against possible deflation, and that the longer inflation remained low, the higher was the probability of deflationary risks emerging.

 

The relentless weakening trend may focus minds, especially after the head of Germany’s powerful central bank came out to discuss some of the bolder options in more detail, for example pumping more money into the economy via a bond-buying programme.

 

“There’s still a case for easing, but we don’t think there’s going to be enough agreement within the Governing Council members to ease on Thursday,” said Guillaume Menuet, an economist at Citigroup in London.

Not only that, but considering the relentless barrage of ‘hints” at the ECB joining the Fed and BOJ at QEing, even by Buba’s Weidmann, one can be absolutely certain that the ECB will do at most a token act, if anything, in its upcoming meetings. After all the ECB is now convinced, after Draghi’s “whatever it takes” comments, that it can talk not only FX but inflation (and deflation) up and down. Alas, while Draghi may have fooled investors into buying Greek bonds two years after the country’s default with nothing having been fixed, he will have a more difficult time halting the deflation-exporting juggernaut that is Japan. And furthermore, the last thing the collateral-starved world needs now, is to further impair the shadow banking machinery consisting of repo, margin and rehypothecation, all of which needs unencumbrable assets to operate. Assets which can not be in the possession of the central bank, as the Fed, which now owns 35% of all 10 Year equivalents, has found out the hard way.


    



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Day 10 Of Pre-Open Gold Dump, Stock Pump

Behold: the “8:30 am” risk repricing catalyst, because sometimes you just have to laugh… of course we also know how this has ended for 10 days in a row too.

“Normal”

And stocks…

 

“Fun-durr-mentals”

Of course, only one thing matters today – closing the S&P green to end the quarter… let algo battle commence…

Charts: Bloomberg


    



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A.M. Links: North Korea and South Korea Fire Shells Across Sea Border, Obamacare Site Pages Undergoing Maintenance, GOP Hawks Preparing Anti-Rand Paul Campaign

  • South Korea returned fire
    after North Korean shells landed in its waters during live fire
    exercises. According to a South Korean Defense Ministry spokesman
    hundreds of shells were fired in the exchange.
  • This morning some pages on
    Healthcare.gov
    were down for maintenance. Today is the
    enrollment deadline.
  • Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott says that the he’s not
    putting a time limit on the hunt for
    MH370
    . Dozens of objects have been spotted in the search area
    west of Australia, but none have been definitely linked to the
    missing plane.
  • Secretary of State
    John Kerry
    met with his Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov
    yesterday to discuss the ongoing crisis in Ukraine. Kerry said that
    any resolution to the situation must include pulling back the
    buildup of Russian military forces on Ukraine’s eastern
    border.
  • Republican donors who don’t agree with the non-interventionist
    foreign policy advocated by Sen.
    Rand Paul (R-Ky.)
    are reportedly preparing for a
    counter-campaign aimed at preventing Paul from securing the GOP’s
    2016 presidential nomination.
  • French
    socialists have suffered losses
    in local elections. The
    center-right Union for a Popular Movement and the nationalist
    National Front made gains.

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