Thursday Humor: GDP – Grossly Dubious Projections

In the middle of the last great financial crisis, the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) proclaimed that Q1 2008 was the US economy grow at a modest 0.6%. This was met with hockey-stick prognosticators looking to the heavens for the next few quarters and bleeting about transitory factors affecting the economy. However, as the following chart shows, five years later (and after numerous adjustments) the +0.6% growth for Q1 2008 had somehow morphed into a clench-worthy 2.7% collapse in the economy

Trade accordingly…

 

h/t @Reinman_MT




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Stephen Roach Warns “The US Is Trapped In Perils Of Linear Thinking”

Authored by Stephen Roach – former Chairman of Morgan Stanley Asia, originally posted at JewishBusinessNews,

The temptations of extrapolation are hard to resist. The trend exerts a powerful influence on markets, policymakers, households, and businesses. But discerning observers understand the limits of linear thinking, because they know that lines bend, or sometimes even break. That is the case today in assessing two key factors shaping the global economy: the risks associated with America’s policy gambit and the state of the Chinese economy.

Quantitative easing, or QE (the Federal Reserve’s program of monthly purchases of long-term assets), began as a noble endeavor – well timed and well articulated as the Fed’s desperate antidote to a wrenching crisis. Counterfactuals are always tricky, but it is hard to argue that the liquidity injections of late 2008 and early 2009 did not play an important role in saving the world from something far worse than the Great Recession.

The combination of product-specific funding facilities and the first round of quantitative easing sent the Fed’s balance sheet soaring to $2.3 trillion by March 2009, from its pre-crisis level of $900 billion in the summer of 2008. And the deep freeze in crisis-ravaged markets thawed.

The Fed’s mistake was to extrapolate – that is, to believe that shock therapy could not only save the patient but also foster sustained recovery. Two further rounds of QE expanded the Fed’s balance sheet by another $2.1 trillion between late 2009 and today, but yielded little in terms of jump-starting the real economy.

This becomes clear when the Fed’s liquidity injections are compared with increases in nominal GDP. From late 2008 to May 2014, the Fed’s balance sheet increased by a total of $3.4 trillion, well in excess of the $2.6 trillion increase in nominal GDP over the same period. This is hardly “Mission accomplished,” as QE supporters claim. Every dollar of QE generated only 76 cents of nominal GDP.

Unlike the United States, which relied largely on its central bank’s efforts to cushion the crisis and foster recovery, China deployed a CN¥4 trillion fiscal stimulus (about 12% of its 2008 GDP) to jump-start its sagging economy in the depths of the crisis. Whereas the US fiscal stimulus of $787 billion (5.5% of its 2009 GDP) gained limited traction, at best, on the real economy, the Chinese effort produced an immediate and sharp increase in “shovel-ready” infrastructure projects that boosted the fixed-investment share of GDP from 44% in 2008 to 47% in 2009.

To be sure, China also eased monetary policy. But such efforts fell well short of those of the Fed, with no zero-interest-rate or quantitative-easing gambits – only standard reductions in policy rates (five cuts in late 2008) and reserve requirements (four adjustments).

The most important thing to note is that there was no extrapolation mania in Beijing. Chinese officials viewed their actions in 2008-2009 as one-off measures, and they have been much quicker than their US counterparts to face up to the perils of policies initiated in the depths of the crisis. In America, denial runs deep.

Unlike the Fed, which continues to dismiss the potential negative repercussions of QE on asset markets and the real economy – both at home and abroad – China’s authorities have been far more cognizant of new risks incurred during and after the crisis. They have moved swiftly to address many of them, especially those posed by excess leverage, shadow banking, and property markets.

The jury is out on whether Chinese officials have done enough. I think that they have, though I concede that mine is a minority view today. In the face of the current growth slowdown, China might well have reverted to its earlier, crisis-tested approach; that it did not is another example of the willingness of its leaders to resist extrapolation and chart a different course.

China has already delivered on that front by abandoning a growth model that had successfully guided the country’s economic development for more than 30 years. It recognized the need to switch from a model that focused mainly on export- and investment-led production (via manufacturing) to one led by private consumption (via services). That change will give China a much better chance of avoiding the dreaded “middle-income trap,” which ensnares most developing economies, precisely because their policymakers mistakenly believe that the recipe for early-stage takeoff growth is sufficient to achieve developed-country status.

The US and Chinese cases do not exist in a vacuum. As I stress in my new book, the codependency of China and America ties them together inextricably. The question then arises as to the consequences of two different policy strategies – American stasis and Chinese rebalancing.

The outcome is likely to be an “asymmetrical rebalancing.” As China changes its economic model, it will shift from surplus saving to saving absorption – deploying its assets to fund a social safety net and thereby temper fear-driven precautionary household saving. Conversely, America seems intent on maintaining its current course – believing that the low-saving, excess-consumption model that worked so well in the past will continue to operate smoothly in the future.

There will be consequences in reconciling these two approaches. As China redirects its surplus saving to support its own citizens, it will have less left over to support saving-short Americans. And that is likely to affect the terms on which the US attracts foreign funding, leading to a weaker dollar, higher interest rates, rising inflation, or some combination of all three. In response, America’s economic headwinds will stiffen all the more.

It is often said that a crisis should never be wasted: Politicians, policymakers, and regulators should embrace the moment of deep distress and take on the heavy burden of structural repair. China seems to be doing that; America is not. Codependency points to an unavoidable conclusion: The US is about to become trapped in the perils of linear thinking.




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As Primary Dealers And Banks Bash Treasurys, Here Is What They Are Really Doing

While stocks continue to levitate to record highs day after day in a market where selling is seemingly prohibited, there remains one major fly in the ointment – the same fly that as we described yesterday has managed to “paralyze” asset managers – namely plunging bond yields, i.e. surging bond prices, both in the US and in Europe. The problem is that since stocks are supposedly “pricing in” a recovery, it makes no sense that bonds are concurrently pricing in accelerating deflation and a global economic slowdown.

This is further compounded by the fact that all major banks are, at least superficially, extremely bearish on bonds: at the beginning of the year, when the 10Y had just hit 3.0%, there was barely a sellside research report that expected the 10 Year to be below 3.5% in 2014, let alone touch 2.4% as it did today.

This is a glaring disconnect and is the reason why pundit after pundit on CNBC is screaming to ignore bonds, and better yet, sell or short them (ignoring record short interest and the ongoing squeeze), while focusing only on stocks, also ignoring that in several decades of market history bonds always end up right compared to stocks (then again, this is “market” history, not the centrally-planned, New Normal Greenspan-Bernanke-Yellen Frankenstein monster market) sooner or later.

But going back to the question about this same “smartest money” which in report after report can’t find bad enough words to say about bonds, is there more here than meets the eye.

As it turns out yet.

A quick look at the Fed’s Primary Dealer database shows that while banks have been actively dumping their holdings in the near-belly end of the curve, namely paper in the 3-6 year range, they have been buying up bonds in the 11 year + maturity bucket.

As the chart below shows, while Dealer holdings of bonds in the 3 – 6 Year bucket are down to -$12.6 billion as of the latest week of May 16, or the lowest position since June 2011, they have just taken their holdings in the 11Y+ long end to $11.9 billion: the most long they have been in the farthest part of the curve since June of 2013.

 

So if one were to net these two buckets out, by subtracting net exposure in the 3-6 Year bucket from the 11 Year bucket, one would see just how “flat” or “steep” dealers are positioned. The result is shown below: it shows that a rough estimation of curve positioning has Primary Dealers positioned for the flattest bond market (long the long end, short the short end) the most since November 2011 when, as many will recall, Europe was on the verge of complete collapse and only yet another Fed-backed global bailout prevented the all out disintegration of the Eurozone!

 

Bottom line: while dealers are telling their clients to dump the long end immediately due to everyone mispricing economic growth and inflation prospects, and to expect the long awaited curve steepening any minute now, what are they doing? They are the flattest they have been in two and a half years! In other words, buying.

And one other observation: if one expands the universe of bond holders from just Primary Dealers to all commercial banks operating in the US (as reported by the Fed’s weekly H.8 statement), what does one get?

One gets the following total Treasury exposure. It needs no explanation.

Source: New York Fed, H.8




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Calif. Supreme Court Orders Officials to Name Names When Police Shoot People

Don't do it! You still have so much to live for!Police departments in
California cannot simply refuse to release the names of police
officers involved in shootings. So ruled the California Supreme
Court today, six to one.

I
wrote
about the case back in March. Long Beach officials had
refused to give the Los Angeles Times the names of police
officers involved in a fatal shooting after they mistook a garden
hose nozzle held by Douglas Zerby, 35, for a gun and killed him.
The Los Angeles Times
reports the ruling
:

The state’s highest court, in a 6-1 vote, rejected blanket
policies by a growing number of police agencies against
disclosure. The court said officers’ names can be withheld
only if there is specific evidence that their safety would be
imperiled.

“If it is essential to protect an officer’s anonymity for safety
reasons or for reasons peculiar to the officer’s duties — as, for
example, in the case of an undercover officer — then the public
interest in disclosure of the officer’s name may need to give way,”
Justice Joyce L. Kennard wrote for the majority.

“That determination, however, would need to be based on a
particularized showing.”

The decision is likely to make it much more difficult for police
agencies to withhold the names of officers involved in on-duty
shootings.

“Vague safety concerns that apply to all officers involved in
shootings are insufficient to tip the balance against disclosure of
officer names,” Kennard wrote.

I cynically expect local law enforcement agencies to continue to
invoke vague safety concerns anyway until a media outlet actually
goes through the motions to sue them for the information. Then they
will relent.

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3 WTF Charts

Bad breadth, flaccid flow, and bonds bid – what could possibly go wrong?

 

The negative divergences are mounting…

Breadth is not at all supportive…

h/t Brad Wishak of NewEdge

 

“Smart money” Flow is decidely the wrong way…

 

And bonds are well bid…

 

BTFWTF – it could only be a non-economic indiscriminate buyer of last resort… the desperate to shrink their float and flatter EPS – corporate buybacks.




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When Will Millennials Start to Realize a College Degree Is Not Enough?

a cardboard sign that says "will work for loan payments"A
recent poll
from the conservative youth organization Young
America’s Foundation found that over half of
graduating seniors are “nervous” about what their future holds, and
39 percent say they are not optimistic at all that they will be
able to find a job in the first few months after graduation.

As a rising senior at the University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill, I have (anecdotally) noticed a pattern: Many of the
people who complain about their job prospects are the same ones
that graduate with nothing on their resume other than their major
and their GPA.

There is a myth on campuses that being in possession of a
college degree is the only validation a person needs to be handed a
job. Many college students feel that sitting in classrooms and
listening to lectures for four years will somehow teach them the
skills that are necessary to get ahead professionally. This
misguided sense of entitlement falls right in line with the
increasing demand for political correctness that is sheltering
college students during one of the most crucial developmental
periods in their lives, creating a dangerous disconnect
between their current college experience and the real world
experience that awaits them.

As student
debt
, currently tipping the scales at $1 trillion nationally,
continues to pile up and more college graduates move back in
with their parents, a cultural shift in the way we view higher
education is necessary. The college experience should move away
from credential acquisition and pure learning in lecture halls and
libraries towards real world experience, skills acquisition, and
helping students develop interests and passions that transcend the
classroom experience.

Lazlo Bock, the head of H.R. for Google, articulated this
well in an
interview
with Thomas L. Friedman
of The New York Times earlier
this year. He told the columnist that “when you look at people
who don’t go to school and make their way in the world, those are
exceptional human beings. And we should do everything we can to
find those people.” Far too often, colleges “don’t deliver on what
they promise. You generate a ton of debt, you don’t learn the most
useful things for your life. It’s [just] an extended
adolescence.”

Watch “The Case Against College Entitlements” with Rep. Paul
Ryan (R-Wisc.):

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We Shouldn’t Be Shocked By This New Proposal… But We Are

Submitted by Simon Black of Sovereign Man blog,

Prof. Ken Rogoff’s book ‘This Time is Different: Eight Centuries of Financial Folly; is one of the best researched public works on the subject of sovereign debt.

And Rogoff’s conclusions (though hotly contested due to an ‘Excel error’) were that, sensibly, governments which accumulate too much debt get into serious trouble.

Duh. Not exactly a radical idea.

But in an article published yesterday afternoon on the Financial Times website (based on a recently published academic paper), Rogoff did propose a new idea that is radical: ban cash. All of it.

Rogoff begins asking the question: “Has the time come to consider phasing out anonymous paper currency, starting with large-denomination notes?”

He goes on to explain that getting rid of paper currency would provide two critical benefits:

1) It would reduce crime and tax evasion;

2) It would allow central banks to drop interest rates BELOW ZERO.

I was stunned. Though given the status quo thinking we have to put up with today, I really shouldn’t have been.

In fairness, Mr. Rogoff is an academic. It’s his job to dispassionately analyze data and render conclusions, whatever they may be. What’s scary is that some dim-witted politician will likely jump all over this.

People have been deluded into believing that only criminals and tax cheats hold cash in large denominations. And the conclusion is that if we ban cash, criminals will simply quit their craft because they’ll no longer have an officially-sanctioned medium of exchange.

This is total baloney, obviously. Banning cash doesn’t eliminate crime. It just creates a new cottage industry for cash alternatives.

Drug deals can just as easily go down swapping share certificate of Apple. Or title to a new car. Any number of things.

Perhaps the more important point, however, is the notion that eliminating cash frees up central bankers to force interest rates into negative territory.

The contention is that the official data tells us that inflation is tame. Consequently, central banks should be free to expand the money supply and ratchet down interest rates even more.

There’s just one problem: interest rates are basically at zero already.

Technically a central banker could drop interest rates to below zero.

But if they did that, who in his/her right mind would hold their savings at a bank where they would have to PAY THE BANK to make wild bets with their money?

People would just go to physical cash instead.

Solution? Eliminate cash! Then people would be forced to suffer NEGATIVE interest rates… and thus have a HUGE INCENTIVE to spend as much as they can as quickly as they can. Forget about putting something aside for a rainy day.

But hey, at least the stock market would probably rise.

Now, I highly doubt that physical cash is going to be sucked out of the system… tomorrow. But the War on Cash is very real indeed.

As I travel around the world, I’ve seen with my own eyes– CASH has become the #1 hot button item for customs agents everywhere. They even have highly trained cash sniffing dogs now.

It’s becoming more and more obvious that people should divorce themselves from this system and consider holding at least a portion of their savings in something other than fiat currency.

And of all the options out there, it’s hard to beat the convenience and tradition of precious metals.

Even if you’re looking to move large sums of money, it’s possible to buy a rare coin and walk out of the country with a single nickel worth $50,000 in your pocket. More on that another time.




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The U.S. Job Market is Gaining Traction

By EconMatters  

 

 

Claims Data

 

The Jobless claims data came out on Thursday and the trend is still in place and bodes well for the May Employment Report coming out next Friday as jobless claims fell sharply in the May 24 week, down 27,000 to 300,000. The 4-week average is down a significant 11,250 to a new recovery low of 311,500. Continuing claims are also down, falling 17,000 in data for the May 17 week to a new recovery low of 2.631 million. The 4-week average is down 33,000 to 2.655 million, also a recovery low. The unemployment rate for insured workers, also at a recovery low, came in at 2.0 percent. Notice a pattern here, new recovery low, new recovery low, and new recovery low. 

 

Headhunters Buzzing Right Now

 

I can tell the job market is really on fire through a couple of the measures I interact with in my daily life which shows a couple of things, first that wages are going up, and second that headhunters are really calling a bunch of my colleagues in Corporate America with multiple job opportunities. 

 

But it is just not corporate jobs as the businesses in my area post job openings along with wage info on their billboards when they really need people, like cashiers, installers, and Car Wash Sales positions and going by the rise in wages posted on these billboards the job market is tightening for workers at this level as well. 

 

Albeit we reside in an area that outperforms the overall economy, and in some cases economies are subject to local pressures, but this area has always outperformed, and the level of increased activity is quite noticeable, which means business is picking up relative to previous levels. 

 

Strong Employment Report

 

We expect a strong Employment report next week for another new recovery record for consecutive months of jobs added at these levels of 200k plus, and we expect the unemployment rate to drop below 6% sooner than most believe at this pace. 

 

I know the doom and gloom crowd will focus on those who have left the workforce, and sure that is an area for improvement, but it starts by employing as many people who are in the workforce first, and then as conditions tighten further in the job market, enticing people to work and come back into the job market. This is related to a tightening job market where employers lower some of their standards and wages rise, both of which we anticipate coming down the pike over the next six months as the job market continues to strengthen.

 

 

Wage Pressures & Inflation

 

But from an inflation standpoint if those workers never come back to the workforce for various reasons, the pool of talent available who are looking for a job is fought over by employers needing to fill positions, and in some cases attracting workers to switch jobs or companies, we also have seen an uptick in this area in the Corporate world. 

 

Consequently what really matters for jobs is the pool who are in the market looking for work, and if this is shrinking that is bullish for workers’ opportunities and salaries, bad for inflation and companies needing to fill those positions, but overall leads to a tightening job market where the Fed will need to start normalizing interest rates to avoid runaway inflation. 

 

Elevated inflation would be fueled by wages rising substantially all along the wage continuum for the first time in the post recovery world, and the inflation numbers start trending well above the Fed`s target, we anticipate this occurring once these wage pressures start showing up in the data set.

 

 

Labor Starting to Gain Negotiating Power

 

Tightening in the job market carries over to all types of positions, if an employer who used to get away with hiring contract workers to lower costs, now has to change these positions to full-time hires and raise the salaries to attract the talent they need to complete projects, contract salaries end up going higher as well. 

 

This is the area we haven`t seen a significant spike since the recession, and we feel the entire market and employers are behind the curve on and have become too complacent with the status quo. Employers and HR are in for a real shock when they need to start refining their budgets and raising wages to fill positions, they are used to always negotiating from a position of strength, we see the tables turning in this area as the labor market continues to tighten.

 

The Employment Trend is Bullish

 

Despite all the doom and gloom in the market, we would have loved to have these employment numbers three years ago, jobs and the economy are trending higher, and better times are ahead for those looking for work, and those not looking for work, don`t be surprised if you find your services in demand once again, as companies reach out of their comfort zone to fill positions.

 

© EconMatters All Rights Reserved | Facebook | Twitter | Post Alert | Kindleese positions to full-time hires and raise the salaries to attract the talent they need to complete projects, contract salaries end up going higher as well. 

 

This is the area we haven`t seen a significant spike since the recession, and we feel the entire market and employers are behind the curve on and have become too complacent with the status quo. Employers and HR are in for a real shock when they need to start refining their budgets and raising wages to fill positions, they are used to always negotiating from a position of strength, we see the tables turning in this area as the labor market continues to tighten.

 

The Employment Trend is Bullish

 

Despite all the doom and gloom in the market, we would have loved to have these employment numbers three years ago, jobs and the economy are trending higher, and better times are ahead for those looking for work, and those not looking for work, don`t be surprised if you find your services in demand once again, as companies reach out of their comfort zone to fill positions.

 

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The Incredible Shrinking Economy, White House Juggles CIA Bungle, Cuomo Has an Offer You Can’t Refuse: P.M. Links

Follow Reason and Reason 24/7 on
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Come to Free State Project’s PorcFest with Nick Gillespie!

I’m excited to say that I’ll be
attending and speaking at this year’s PorcFest, the annual
celebration of the beautiful mad dreamers of the Free State Project
up in New Hampshire.

Here’s how the organizers talk about PorcFest:

The Porcupine Freedom Festival is the flagship annual event
of the Free State Project. It is a week long celebration of liberty
at Roger’s Campground in Northern New Hampshire. Over 1,500 people
are expected to attend this unique camping event which includes
activities for all ages. Camp fires, panel discussions,
presentations, movies, live talk shows, dancing, singing, music,
food, parties, all around liberty-loving good times, and more are
to be found at the most exciting liberty event of the year.
PorcFest is a showcase of some of New Hampshire’s finest in the
scenic view of the White Mountains.

Check out the schedule here for
a sense of the wide-ranging and sounds-great events, panels,
discussions, and speakers (including the great Patrick Byrne of
Overstock.com, who wrote a Ph.D. philosophy dissertation on Robert
Nozick!).

PorcFest runs from June 22
through June 29 and a special discount on tickets runs ends on
Saturday, May 31st.

Go here for more
info.

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