City Council Tells Cops To ‘Tank the Tank’ In Davis, California

More of this, please! In Davis, California, the
city council has given local police 60 days to kindly dispose of
the military tank it was gifted from the federal government.
According to CBS Sacramento,
the Davis City Council acted
 Tuesday under pressure from
residents who had been circulating a petition against the
mine-resistant, ambush-protected (MRAP) vehicle and demanding the
local police department “tank the tank”, as one protestor’s shirt
read.

From CBS: 

The vehicle, worth nearly $700,000 didn’t cost the Davis Police
Department a dime, as it was acquired through a federal government
surplus program. The MRAP was developed by the military for
the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. After Pentagon budget cuts, the
vehicle has been making its way to local law enforcement.

Davis Police Chief Landry Black made the department’s case for
the acquisition, showing high-power weapons his officers have
confiscated this year.

A big concern for protesters is the vehicle could be used to
quash peaceful protests and demonstrations, especially in light of
clashes between heavily-armored police and protesters in Ferguson,
Missouri, following the shooting death of Michael Brown.

And here’s the money quote of the story, for it’s perfect
cop-ness: 

“We enjoy a certain quality of life but none the less the real
world intrudes upon us from time to time,” Black said. 

You hear that? It’s all soccer practices and yard sales until
what? What could possibly require the police in Davis,
California—population 65,622—to possess their own army-grade tank?
I’m glad the residents of Davis don’t seem too convinced of its
necessity, either. 

For more on military gear the Department of Defense is giving to
small-town cops—along with bouncy castles and French horns—see
this post
from Reason Foundation’s Lauren Galik. 

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Russia Hardly Even Trying to Disguise ‘Stealth’ Invasion of Ukraine

So much for those peace talks.
Russia’s military launched another attack in Ukraine, according to
Kiev.

From
The New York Times
:

Tanks, artillery and infantry have crossed from Russia into an
unbreached part of eastern Ukraine in recent days, attacking
Ukrainian forces and causing panic and wholesale retreat not only
in this small border town but a wide swath of territory, in what
Ukrainian and Western military officials described on Wednesday as
a stealth invasion.

The attacks outside this city and in an area to the north
essentially have opened a new, third front in the war in eastern
Ukraine between government forces and pro-Russian separatists,
along with the fighting outside the cities of Donetsk and
Luhansk.

Exhausted, filthy and dismayed, Ukrainian soldiers staggering
out of Novoazovsk for safer territory said Tuesday they were cannon
fodder for the forces coming from Russia. As they spoke, tank
shells whistled in from the east and exploded nearby.

State Department Spokeswoman Jen Psaki describes it
as a likely “Russian-directed counteroffensive.” 

For what it’s worth, the self-designed leader of the so-called
People’s Republic of Donetsk assured last
week that something
like the current scenario would happen soon
.

The Associated Press (AP) suggests
that “the bold offensive along a new southeastern front” indicates
that “separatists are seeking to create a land link between Russia
and Crimea, which also would give them control over the entire Azov
Sea.” Logistically, it would be near impossible for fighters in the
separatist-held cities of Donetsk and Luhansk to have reached this
front on their own, the mayor of the newly-embattled city of
Novoazovsk told AP. The fighters would have to cross a large amount
of Ukrainian-controlled territory, whereas Russia could easily send
troops from just across the border.

Although Russian regular soldiers were captured in Ukraine on
Monday and
admitted
that they are, in fact, Russian soldiers, the Kremlin
continues to deny any involvement, and claims it can’t really help
the situation. Says President
Vladimir Putin:

We, Russia, cannot talk about any cease-fire conditions
whatsoever, or possible agreements between Kiev, Donetsk and
Luhansk. We can only facilitate the creation of an environment of
trust in the course of this possible and much needed, in my
opinion, negotiation process.

Putin does admit that sometimes soldiers
accidentally
cross the border.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, who
insists
that the war is a “domestic armed conflict,”
says that he intends to send another humanitarian aid convoy
into Ukraine, despite objections from the international community
and the fact that the last one brought little aid (but
did bring plenty of armored vehicles
) and
stole
Ukrainian military equipment on its way out. 

About
400 Russian mothers have just told Russian media that it’s their
Russian soldier sons coming home to Russia in Russian body bags, or
you know, sometimes just disappearing without a word

Read more Reason coverage of Ukraine here

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Russia Sanctions Hit German Consumers, “Economic Expectations Completely Collapse”

It starts out un-alarmingly. The optimism of German consumers weakens somewhat, according to the forward-looking Gfk survey, conducted on a monthly basis for the European Commission. So the overall index fell to 8.6 for September, from 8.9 in August. It was the first decline since January 2013.

The index bottomed in late 2008 below 2, after a breathtaking crash during the financial crisis. In late 2007, it had hovered above 9. Early 2014 was the first time since the prior bubble that the index broke above 8. And August’s level of 8.9 represented an “extremely optimistic economic outlook,” as Gfk calls it. German consumers have been feeling good, and according to the headline index, they’re still feeling good up there somewhere in the rarefied air above 8.

But beneath the surface, there is serious trouble. Gfk reports that the sub-index of economic expectations, “in light of the intensified state of international affairs, completely collapses.”

It plunged 35.5 points to 10.4. The worst monthly plunge since the beginning of the survey in 1980. In a single month, it nearly wiped out all the gains of the boom of the last 12 months. Gfk cites the escalation of the situation in Iraq, Israel, the Eastern Ukraine, and particularly “the faster rotating sanctions spiral with Russia.”

Since there appears to be no sustainable solution to any of the trouble spots, consumers are showing increased uncertainty about the possible consequences for the German economy, Gfk reports. “Particularly the sanctions against Russia, which have already hit exports noticeably, could become a real danger for the German economy.”

The two sub-indices for income expectations and propensity to spend have been spared so far this type of brutal collapse, though they both fell from their lofty perches. Income expectations hit an all-time record in August. But for September, the index dropped 4.6 points to 50.1. The propensity to spend dropped 1.7 points to 49.3. At these levels, both are  still “relatively robust.”

Gfk credits “the continued stable domestic conditions, stable employment levels, good income development, and low inflation” for limiting so far the impact of collapsing economic expectations on income expectations and the propensity to spend.

ECB President Mario Draghi, along with inflation mongers in the new French government, at the Fed, on Wall Street, and elsewhere should take note: inflation, as the report points out repeatedly, is important to Germans. Watch what happens to German consumer attitudes – and spending – if you steal their income and scarce savings one bite at a time.

But dark clouds have already appeared over German consumer spending: Gfk cites the increase in the propensity to save in August as “the first indicator that the consumer will be more careful in the future and that the impulses for the propensity to consume could decline.”

For this still “relatively robust” propensity to spend to continue, “it is necessary from the consumer’s point of view, that the situation in the crisis regions does not escalate further, but that sustainable solutions are found.” Gfk then warns: “If domestic conditions deteriorate significantly in the wake of a possible further escalation, difficult times loom ahead for the economy.”

Given the new economic malaise in Germany [Sanctions Are Eating their Lunch: Russian CEO Begs for Bailout, German Economy Swoons], any decline in consumer spending, which grew at a measly 0.9% last year, could wreak real havoc, not just in Germany, but also in its most critical trading partner France, in Italy, and other struggling economies in the Eurozone. German consumers are infamous for closing their wallets. And if they do it again, after they finally started spending more, they’d quickly prick any remaining hopes for a “recovery” in the Eurozone.

Even the folks at the German Ministry of Finance very belatedly admit that the sanctions spiral caused Germany’s current economic swoon, as if they’d finally found my site where I’ve been explaining this to them with utmost patience for months. Hilarity ensued. Read….  This Is what Happens when otherwise Competent, Diligent, and Hard-Nosed Bureaucrats Fail to Read my Stuff




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Saxo Bank CIO Warns “It’s Time To Be Defensive… Very Defensive”

Via Saxo Bank's Steen Jakobsen of TradingFloor.com,

Lee Iacocca, one of the true greats of the motor industry and a prolific author on leadership and management, once noted: "What is wrong with changing your mind because the facts change? But you have to be able to say why you changed your mind and how the facts changed."

My biggest call all year has been for lower rates globally, and in particular lower core country (Germany, Denmark and US) yields led by this magic trinity of factors:

1. China and Asia rebalancing growth away from nominal to quality growth

 

2. US current account deficit reduced by 50% (see chart below)

 

3. A Europe where Germany will pay the price for the first two factors with a lag of six to nine months.

The headline call was and remains that Germany will be close to recession by Q4-2014 or Q1-2015 setting up a desperate European Central Bank and an anemic Europe once again close to zero growth instead of the “escape velocity” everyone and their dog promised you and me in December and January.

US current account and the missing $400bn worth of exports:

current account

Source: St. Louis Fed

This past week we went through the important floor of 1% on the 10-year German Bund yield and I took profit on my long-held position :

 
 
10/yr

Source: Bloomberg

This was a position I established back in Q4-2013. Feeling “naked” I did some additional work and heavily supported by our Saxo JABA model we have changed the asset mix and also our yield call:

Highest conviction call remains for lower global yields (low in Q1-2015), but for the rest of 2014 I see US yields falling more than their European equivalents – this will lead to bunds underperforming the 10-year Treasury and will set up the second call:

 

USD will weaken significantly from mid-Q3 into Q1-2015. The market remains overexposed to the dollar and US equities relative to the norm. Furthermore, with mid-term elections on November 4 the coming budget talks will have a hard time producing the convincing and long-term results needed.

 

Bunds will not be able to follow the Fed's repricing (away from early 2015 hike) and growth in the US (it’s not the weather) as Q2 gets revised back down to 2.25-2.50%. Another difficulty for Bunds will be geopolitical risk and a lag of global earnings for S&P- 500 companies which reduces margins and cash-flow. Average GDP in the US for the last five years has been 2.0%……

am at present almost square in fixed income – alpha model – from very long, but will use any correction in US bonds to activate medium-term long. (Again, that Bund yields will continue to fall but by less than US rates remains the new call…) hedging any US dollar exposure back into JPY and EUR. The pair EURUSD could trade 1.4000+ and USDJPY below 97.00.

 
333

Source: Bloomberg

Global growth is slowing down – World Growth in 2014 was expected in January to be higher than 3.1%. Today, my learned colleagues have revised their “guesstimates” down to 2.53% – a “small” drop of 0.6% – which is not only worrying but also puts at risk the coming budget talks – certainly in Europe but also in the US.

 
World gdp

Source: Bloomberg

These are, of course, relatively bold calls considering the market and the consensus have short EURUSD, long USDJPY and overweight US stocks as their main risk vehicles when VaR (value at risk) is allocated.

It’s important to underline that major US investment houses, and certainly every single sales person I talk to, believe US is about to accelerate in growth not slow down. Q3 could be ok but the real damage will come in Q4 as the lead-lag factor of geopolitical risk, lack of reforms and excess global supply leads to low inflation. Despite recent Fed optimism about an exit strategy the fact remains that few institutions are worse than the Fed in projections as even its simple target goals show :

Fed forecasts
 

The Fed is simply terrible at predicting……here is its “score” on inflation target:

 
pce ^ cpi
 

Why would they be right this time? They won't. Q2 will be revised down to 2.5-ish in a third correction – the standard correction is 1.5% from the first to the third reading:

gdp revisions
 

….and largely ignored they US consumer remains on strike despite “lower” unemployment:

retail sales

Source: St. Louis Fed

No hope and a distinct lack of alternatives is ruling the markets. Our major call is:

short the US dollar index and long commodities soon as well as the weak dollar and US yields (which will soon fall) set up great value trades .

999
 
cry index

Source Bloomberg, Saxo Bank

 

Yes, it’s time to be defensive…very defensive.




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Confidence In Central Planning Saved With Last Second All Time High Ramp

Once Europe closed, US equity markets rolled over on what is a new 'lowest-volume-day-of-the-year' led by recent winner Russell 2000. The Dow is now red on the week and the Nasdaq up 11 days in a row. Today was not about stocks though (aside from the close). While CAD saw its best gain in over 2 years, it was US Treasuries (as EUR weakened and Bund yields plunged) that made the flashing red headlines with 30Y back at 15-month lows (at 3.10%) and 10Y -3.5bps at 2.36% as the yield curve flattened even further. 2s30s dropped below 260bps – its flattest since Dec 2012. Un-de-escalation concerns evident in TSYs and credit finally started to bleed into VIX and stocks. Gold, silver, and oil limped higher as US weakened (and copper fell). A desperate buying panic into the close smashing S&P futures to VWAP magically enabled the S&P to close at the confidence-inspiring centrally-planned 'wealth effect' level of 2000.07!!

 

Come on…

 

all thanks to the machines driving S&P 500 e-mini futures back perfectly to VWAP…

 

Seriously…

 

Treasuries were once again heavily bid…

 

And the divergence grows…

 

leaving the Dow red on the week…

 

and Utes heavily bid into the close – not exactly risk on!!

 

The yield curve is utterly collapsing…which bodes very badly for P/E multiple expansion

 

Credit markets widened once again…

 

FX markets saw USD weakness as EUR strength (QU unlikely) and CAD strength (technicals and tax inversions) dragged it lower

 

Commodities trod water (copper dropped) despite the USD weakness

 

Charts: Bloomberg




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Putting Ferguson in Context – New Jersey Man Faced 5 Years in Jail Before Dashcam Video Proved Police Abuse

*Note: While the following incident happened in 2012, it helps put the recent events in Ferguson in context, particularly for privileged white people who don’t have to deal with police abuse on a daily basis. Marcus Jeter was only cleared in February 2014, once the dashcam video surfaced.

Sarah Wallace: “If this tape hadn’t surfaced?”

Marcus: “I’d be in jail.”

This video was only turned over by Bloomfield police after Jeter’s attorney filed a request for records; at the time prosecutors were insistent that Jeter do prison time.

“The first plea was 5 years,” said Jeter.

Sarah: “Your hands are up.” 

Jeter: “My hands are up.” 

Jeter: “As soon as they opened the door, one officer reached in an punched me in my face.” He adds, “As he’s trying to take off my seatbelt, I’m thinking something is going to go wrong…”


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Russia Conducting ‘Stealth Invasion’ of Ukraine, IMF Chief Christine Lagarde Under Investigation, Will ‘Full House’ Return? P.M. Links

  • Christine LagardeRussian troops and tanks have
    entered Ukrainian territory
    as part of a “stealth invasion,”
    according to The New York Times.
  • French officials have placed Christine Lagarde
    under investigation
    . Lagarde is head of the International
    Monetary Fund, but her previous stint as finance minister under
    French President Nicolas Sarkozy has landed her in hot water.
  • The NFL decided to leave Josh Gordon’s
    one-year suspension for substance abuse
    in place.
  • Joe Scarborough of MSNBC’s Morning Joe said the
    Constitution
    doesn’t apply to kids
    , because one time something bad happened
    with a gun.
  • Rick Perry has opted to
    pay his own legal fees
    rather than ask taxpayers to foot the
    bill for the curious ethics investigation of which he is the
    target.
  • Sweet Zombie Jesus: the TV show “Full House” may be
    revived
    .

Follow Reason and Reason 24/7 on
Twitter, and like us on Facebook. You
can also get the top stories mailed to you—sign up
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Tonight on The Independents: Red Meat Wednesday, With John Stossel, Katherine Mangu-Ward, Geraldo Rivera, and Two Minutes Hate!

Theo Curtis |||Tonight’s episode of The
Independents
(Fox Business Network, 9 p.m. ET, 6 p.m. PT,
with re-airs three hours later) will once again bat around the many
policy issues raised by the advent of the Islamic State, and
America’s increasingly aggressive reaction toward it.

Fox News mainstay Geraldo Rivera will tackle
the thorny question of whether families or countries should (or
should be able to) pay cash dollar bills to free hostages held by
Islamic terrorists. And Party Panelists Katherine
Mangu-Ward
(your friendly neighborhood managing editor) and
Paul Mecurio (Wall
Street lawyer-turned comedian) will discuss the new estimate of

300 U.S. passport-holders
fighting with ISIL, and also whether
the
floated U.S. bombing in Syria
is either legal or advisable.
(The duo will come back later to weigh in on the important issue of
Al Sharpton’s
fat-shaming
.)

Eponymous Fox Business
Network
host, Reason.com
columnist, and American hero John Stossel will tease his
upcoming show on how the Environmental Protection Agency has
run
amok
. The co-hosts will critique President Barack Obama’s
attempts to circumvent the United States Congress while forging a

kinda-sorta climate change treaty
, and then will sit stoically
and suffer your abuse, relayed by Fox Human Resources scold

Bernie Maxsmith
.

Follow The Independents on Facebook at http://ift.tt/QYHXdB,
follow on Twitter @ independentsFBN, and
click on this page
for more video of past segments.

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Robby Soave on the Wild and Crazy Summer of Criminalizing Campus Sex

SexStudents returning to class this fall, consider
yourselves warned: This was the summer that federal regulators,
state lawmakers, and college administrators got together for a
threesome—incidentally criminalizing campus sex in the process.

The debate over campus sexual assault—how much it happens, and
how to handle it when it does—has been heating up for a while now
thanks to increasing federal intervention, reports Robby Soave, but
the latest round of action kicked off at the end of spring, when
the Office of Civil Rights at the Department of Education
identified 55 colleges under investigation for failing to report
and handle rape allegations. The message to colleges from the
federal government was do something, or else.

Caroline Kitchens, a senior research associate at the American
Enterprise Institute who frequently writes about the travesty of
campus sexual assault trials, told Reason that colleges,
at the federal government’s insistence, are codifying “a sexual
double standard whereby all men are presumed rapists.”

“In an effort to address sexual assault, college campuses are on
the verge of entering into an Orwellian nightmare in which all
sexual encounters are policed and students accused of misconduct
are guilty until proven innocent,” she said.

View this article.

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Sometimes 0% Is Better Than -82%

The Best Investment Article Ever Written:

The Winners of the World

February 29, 2000…

 

You want winners? You want me to put my Cramer Berkowitz hedge fund hat on and just discuss what my fund is buying today to try to make money tomorrow and the next day and the next? You want my top 10 stocks for who is going to make it in the New World? You know what? I am going to give them to you. Right here. Right now.

 

OK. Here goes. Write them down — no handouts here!: 724 Solutions (SVNX), Ariba (ARBA), Digital Island (ISLD), Exodus (EXDS), InfoSpace.com (INSP), Inktomi (INKT), Mercury Interactive (MERQ), Sonera (SNRA), VeriSign (VRSN) and Veritas Software (VRTS).

 

We are buying some of every one of these this morning as I give this speech.

And then this…

 

*  *  *

Sometimes – it would appear – 0% is better than -82%

*  *  *

h/t @RudyHavenstein




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