August 15th – The Date Which Will Live In Monetary Infamy

Authored by 720Global's Michael Lebowitz via RealInvestmentAdvice.com,

Before reading this article we highly recommend reading “The Death of the Virtuous Cycle” to provide better context.

July 4th – June 6th – September 11th August 15th

You likely associated the first three dates above with transformative events in U.S. history. August 15th, however, may have you scratching your head.

August 15, 1971 was the date that President Richard Nixon shocked the world when he closed the gold window, thus eliminating free convertibility of the U.S. dollar to gold. This infamous ‘new economic policy’, or “Nixon Shock”, thereby removed the requirement that the U.S. dollar be backed by gold reserves. From that fateful day forward, constraints were removed that previously hindered the Federal Reserve’s (Fed) ability to manage the U.S. money supply. Decades later, slowing economic growth, nonexistent wage growth, growing wealth disparity, deteriorating productivity growth and other economic ills lay in the wake of Nixon’s verdict.

The Transformation of the Federal Reserve and Alan Greenspan

With the stroke of President Nixon’s pen a new standard of economic policy was imposed upon the American people and with it came promises of increased economic growth, high levels of employment and general prosperity. What we know now, almost 50 years later, is that unshackling the U.S. monetary system from the discipline of a gold standard, allowed the Fed to play a leading role in replacing the Virtuous Cycle with an Un-Virtuous Cycle. Eliminating the risk of global redemption of U.S. dollars for gold also eliminated the discipline, the checks and balances, on deficit spending by the government and its citizens. As the debt accumulated, the requirement on the Fed to drive interest rates lower became mandatory to enable the economic system to service that debt.

In this new post-1971 era, the Fed approached monetary policy in a pre-emptive fashion with increasing aggression. In other words, the Fed, more often than not, forced interest rates below levels that would likely have been prevalent if determined by the free market. The strategy was to unnaturally mitigate even minor and healthy economic corrections and to encourage more public and private borrowing to drive consumption, indirectly discouraging savings. The purpose was to create more economic growth than there would otherwise have been.

This new and aggressive form of monetary policy is epitomized by the transformation of Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan. Greenspan came into office in 1987 as an Ayn Rand disciple, a vocal supporter of free-markets. Beginning with the October 19, 1987 “Black Monday” stock market crash, however, he began to fully appreciate his ability to control interest rates, the money supply and ultimately economic activity. He was able to stem the undesirable effects of various financial crises, and spur economic growth when he believed it to be warranted. Greenspan converted from a free market activist, preaching that markets should naturally set their own interest rates, to one promoting the Fed’s role in determining “appropriate” levels of interest rates and economic growth.

In 2006, after 18 years as Chairman of the Federal Reserve and nicknamed “The Maestro”, he retired and handed the baton to Ben Bernanke and Janet Yellen, both of whom have followed in his active and aggressive monetary policy ways.

Proof

The Fed’s powerful effect on interest rates made it cheaper for households and government to borrow and spend, and therefore debt was made more attractive to citizens and politicians. Personal consumption and government spending are the largest components of economic activity, accounting for approximately 70% and 20% of GDP respectively.

The following graph illustrates the degree to which interest rates across the maturity curve became progressively more appealing to borrowers over time. The graph below shows inflation-adjusted or “real” U.S. Treasury interest rates (yields) to provide a clear comparison of interest rates through various inflationary and economic periods. Since 2003, many of the data points in the graph are negative, creating an environment which outright penalizes savers and benefits borrowers.

720Global-Chart1-062916

The next graph tells the same story but in a different light. It compares the Federal Funds rate (the Fed controlled interest rate that banks charge each other for overnight borrowing) to the growth rate of economic output (GDP). This comparison is based on a theory proposed by Knut Wicksell, a 19th century economist. In the Theory of Interest (1898) he proposes that there is an optimal interest rate. Any interest rate other than that rate would have negative consequences for long term economic growth. When rates are too high and above the optimal rate, the economy would languish. Conversely, lower than optimal rates lead to over-borrowing, capital misallocation and speculation eventually resulting in economic hardships. To calculate the optimal rate, Wicksell used market rates of interest as compared to GDP.

720Global-Chart2-062916

In order to gauge the direct influence the Fed exerted on interest rates within Wicksell’s framework we compare the Fed Funds rate to GDP.  Like the prior graph, notice the declining trend pointing to “easier” borrowing conditions. Additionally, note that since 2000 the spread between Fed Funds and GDP has largely been negative. As the spread declined, borrowers were further lead to speculation and misallocated capital, exactly what Wicksell theorized would occur with rates below the optimal level. The tech bubble, real-estate bubble and many other asset bubbles provide supporting evidence to his theory.

The Smoking Gun

The graphs above make a good case that the Fed has been overly-aggressive in their use of interest rate policy to increase the desire to borrow and ultimately drive consumption. We fortify this claim by comparing the Fed’s monetary policy actions to their congressionally set mandate to erase any doubt you may still have. The following is the 1977 amended Federal Reserve Act stating the monetary objectives of the Fed.  This is often referred to as the dual mandate.

“The Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System and the Federal Open Market Committee shall maintain long run growth of the monetary and credit aggregates commensurate with the economy’s long run potential to increase production, so as to promote effectively the goals of maximum employment, stable prices and moderate long-term interest rates.”

To paraphrase – the Fed should allow the money supply and debt outstanding to grow at a rate matching the potential economic growth rate in order to help achieve their mandated goals.

Since 1977, the year the mandate was issued, the annualized growth rate of credit and the monetary base increased at over twice the rate of the economy’s potential growth rate (productivity + population growth).  The two measures rose annually 42% and 65% respectively faster than actual economic growth.

Commensurate is not a word we would use to describe the relationships of those growth rates to that of the economy’s potential growth rate!

The Hangover

In a Virtuous Cycle, saving and investment lead to productivity gains, increased production growth and ultimately growing prosperity which then further perpetuates the cycle. In the Un-Virtuous Cycle, debt leads to consumption which leads to more debt and more consumption in a vicious self-fulfilling spiral.  In the Un-Virtuous Cycle, savings, investment and productivity are neglected. Declining productivity growth causes a decline in the potential economic growth rate, thus requiring ever-greater levels of debt to maintain current levels of economic growth. This debt trap also requires ever lower interest rates to allow the growing mountain of debt to be serviced.

With almost 50 years of history there is sufficient data to judge the effects of the Fed’s monetary policy experiment. The first graph below highlights the exponential growth in debt (black line) which coincided with the decline in the personal savings rate (orange) and the Fed Funds rate (green).

720Global-Chart3-062916

As the savings rate slowed, investment naturally followed suit and, as the Virtuous Cycle dictates, productivity growth declined. The graph below highlights the decline in the productivity growth rate. The dotted black line allows one to compare the productivity growth rate prior to the removal of the gold standard to the period afterwards. The 10-year average growth rate (green) also highlights the stark difference in productivity growth rates before and after the early 1970’s. Please note, the green line denotes a ten-year average growth rate. Recent readings over the prior two years and other measures of productivity are very close to zero.

720Global-Chart4-062916

Over the long term, economic growth is largely a function of productivity growth. The graph below compares GDP to what it might have looked like had the productivity growth trend of pre-1971 continued.  Clearly, the unrealized productive output would have gone a long way toward keeping today’s debt levels manageable, incomes more balanced across the population and the standard of living rising for the country as a whole.

720Global-Chart5-062916

The graphs below show the secular trend in economic growth and the lack of real income growth over the last 20 years.

720Global-Chart6-062916

720Global-Chart7-062916

A Feeble Rebuttal

Some may contend that debt was not only employed to satisfy immediate consumption needs but also used for investment purposes. While some debt was certainly allocated toward productive investment, the data clearly argues that a large majority of the debt was either used for consumptive purposes or was poorly invested in investments that were unsuccessful in increasing productivity. Had debt been employed successfully in productivity enhancing investments, GDP and productivity would have increased at a similar or greater pace than the rise in debt.  In the 1970’s $1.66 of new debt created $1.00 of economic growth. Since that time, debt has grown at three times the rate of economic activity and it now takes $4.47 of new debt to create the same $1.00 of economic growth.

 

Summary

August 15, 2016 will mark the 45th anniversary of President Nixon’s decision to close the gold window. U.S. citizens and the government are now beholden to the consequences of years of accumulated debt and weak productivity growth that have occurred since that day. Now, seven years after the end of the financial crisis and recession, these consequences are in plain sight. The Fed finds themselves crippled under an imprudent zero interest rate policy and unable to raise interest rates due fear of stoking another crisis.  Worse, other central banks, in a similar quest to keep prior debt serviceable and generate even more debt induced economic growth, have pushed beyond the realm of reality into negative interest rates. In fact, an astonishing $10 trillion worth of sovereign bonds now trade with a negative yield.

The evidence of these failed policies is apparent. However one must consider the basic facts and peer beyond the narrative being fed to the public by the central bankers, Wall Street, and politicians. There is nothing normal about any of this. It therefore goes without saying, but we will say it anyway – investment strategies based on historic norms should be carefully reconsidered.

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Michael Lebowitz of 720 Global Research is an investment consultant, specializing in macroeconomic research, valuations, asset allocation, and risk management. 

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Meet Donald Zuckerberg – Facebook Founder Builds ‘Oppressive’ Wall Around $100 Million Hawaii Property

Screen Shot 2016-06-29 at 2.19.54 PM

Just in case you’re still wondering why the world’s so-called “elites” are losing credibility and respect faster than Mario Draghi can say “whatever it takes…”

New York Magazine reports:

In April, Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg told a crowd of developers that he heard “fearful voices calling for building walls.” At the time it was widely assumed he was talking about Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump. But perhaps he was just hearing the voices echoing across his enormous Hawaiian estate?

continue reading

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From Brexit Wounds To Buying Panic (In Bonds & Stocks)

Record low bond yields, Brexit uncertainty, and the biggest crash in home sales in 6 years… BTFD you idiot!!

But "we're halfway there…"

 

Since the Brexit vote, UK's FTSE 100 is now positive and by far the world's best performing stock market since Thursday's close…

 

Volume has been non-existent during the bounce…

 

US equities have retraced almost two-thirds of their losses (near Fib61.8% retrace in Dow and S&P…notice that both are now perfectly back to the Brexit bounce highs from Monday

 

Leaving Trannies and Small Caps worst since pre-Brexit still but bouncing back…

 

With futures showing better the bounce to some supportive levels…

 

And US equities completely decoupled from bonds, bullion, and cable…

 

Amid a massive short squeeze…biggest since 2011

 

VIX has collapsed in the last 3 days – holding support around the 50- and 100-day moving averages…

 

With the VIX hedge unwinds driving the fear index below its pre-Brexit lows…

 

Just in case you were not conmpletely convinved of what fucking farce this market is – here is NKE, which had a dismal report last night just had its best day in 4 months – swinging from down over 6% to up almost 3% (as index buyers lifted The Dow member)…

 

But while bank stocks have bounced ahead of CCAR, they remain down notably post-Brexit…

 

Treasury yields were mixed today… as 2Y continued to underperform the rest of the curve… but note that the longer-end underperformed late on today as chatter of rate-locks hitting the market ahead of a heavy calendar expected…

 

Driving 2s30s to its flattest since Jan 2008 (recession) but bank stocks didn't care…

 

But 10Y and 30Y neared record low closes…before bouncing late on (with 10Y >1.50%)

 

The USD Index slipped lower again…

 

As the post-Brexit Cable bounce continues…Despite being down hard from the 1.50 pre-Brexit level – the bounce has been imporessive off the 1.31 lows…seems like 1.40 brexit bounce may be target but today seemed to run out of steam quickly..

 

Against the weaker USD, commodities all rose on the day with PMs doing well early and then crude melting up later on…

 

Silver topped Brexit highs…

 

Following API last night and DOE today, the machines had only one thing in mind… on yet another NYMEX close ramp

 

Charts: Bloomberg

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For Those Who Still Care About Fundamentals, A Troubling Chart

We realize that fundamental analysis, especially in light of recent events, is dead and buried, but for those few who still keep track, here is a troubling chart showing how fast the S&P’s cash flow is sinking relative to its debt load. As Bank of America helpfully points out, the USA is now trading at 13x EV/EBITDA, a 90th percentile since 1995.

And for those equity analysts who have not encountered such arcane concepts as cash flow and EBITDA, here is a table from Goldman showing that the median stock is currently trading in the 99th percentile of historical valuations.

The good news, as we noted up top, is that when it comes to momentum ignition higher (thanks to HFTs) and multiple expansion (thanks to central banks) none of this actually matters.

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Is This Where All Those Companies “Leaving England” Will Go

Several years ago, Hollande tried – and failed – to make French socialism that much better by instituting a 75% tax on millionaires. It didn’t last long.

Now in the aftermath of Brexit, the French leader is pushing to make Paris into the capital that will benefit the most as companies may (or may not) seek to depart from London as part of the UK’s separation from the UK. To do this Les Echos is reporting that the French leader is proposing new tax cuts for the middle class worth up to €2 billion, as well as adapting rules “to make Paris a more attractive financial center.”

  • FRANCE’S HOLLANDE SAYS WE MUST ADAPT OUR RULES, INCLUDING ON TAXES, TO MAKE PARIS A MORE ATTRACTIVE FINANCIAL CENTRE – LES ECHOS
  • FRANCE’S HOLLANDE SAYS CONSIDERING NEW TAX CUTS FOR MIDDLE CLASSES WORTH A MAXIMUM OF 2 BLN EUROS
  • FRANCE’S HOLLANDE WILL USE CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT TO PUSH THROUGH CONTESTED LABOUR LAW IF NEEDED

It is unclear how the French proposal will pass EU regulations which have found the French fiscal situation to already be in dire straits.

Furthermore, as companies evaluate whether to depart the UK for France, they may want to consider scenes such as the following showing relentless local protests, now stretching for months, against the much maligned anti-labor reform.

Finally, the entire premise whther anyone will leave the UK may have to be reevaluated. Earlier, both Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley denied speculation they are poised to shift London-based staff and operations to Frankfurt as soon as Britain’s divorce proceedings from the European Union formally begin. “We have not made any changes to our real estate requirements in Frankfurt as a result of the referendum result,” Goldman said in a statement issued on Wednesday.  Morgan Stanley also moved to quell chatter it was planning to relocate to the German financial hub when the UK government evokes Article 50 — the first official step in its disentanglement from the 28-nation bloc.

And then moments ago, General Motors chief economist Mustafa Mohataram said the automaker sees no significant impact to the U.S. auto market from UK voters’ recent decision to exit the European Union. In fact, he added, GM may increase UK auto production if the British pound remains devalued over the longer term.

Was all that fearmongering for nothing?

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UK Police Call Emergency Meetings After Explosion In Hate Crimes After Brexit

Submitted by Michaella Whitton via TheAntiMedia.org,

U.K. police chiefs have called emergency meetings following an explosion in hate crimes across the country. The horrifying spike in racist attacks, which have come in the wake of Britain’s vote to leave the European Union, has prompted police to call for enhanced sentencing for those convicted of such disorder.

Scores of incidents of hate crime and racial abuse have been recorded since last week’s Brexit vote. Attacks have included the verbal targeting of those on the street who appear visibly different, an increase in immigration rhetoric, violent assaults, and vandalism on buildings. A startling Facebook album called “Worrying Signs” has been created to document incidents in which people have allegedly been targeted with racist assaults and xenophobic comments. It includes details of attacks on Polish community centres, as well as instances of people being called “Paki’s” and told to “f*ck off back to your own country.”

Earlier this week, a man was injured when a petrol bomb was thrown into a Halal food store in Walsall. The following day, three people were arrested in connection with an incident on a tram in Manchester. The incident provoked horror from the public after a video that showed the men telling another passenger to “get back to Africa” while throwing beer on him was shared widely on social media.

Baroness Warsi, the first Muslim woman to be elected as a cabinet minister in the U.K., said earlier in the week the atmosphere on the street is not good. Some might argue her comments were an understatement, but the former government minister called on those in charge of the Leave campaign to admit the campaign has been “divisive” and “xenophobic.” Claiming some of those being abused have been in Britain for up to five generations, she added:

“I’ve spent most of the weekend talking to organisations, individuals and activists who work in the area of race hate crime, who monitor hate crime, and they have shown some really disturbing early results from people being stopped in the street and saying ‘Look, we voted Leave, it’s time for you to leave.’”

Although racist assaults since Friday have soared, hate crime in the U.K. is nothing new. Last year, a report by anti-Muslim hate monitoring group, Tell Mama, showed there was a 326% increase in hate crimes in 2015. That said, in four days, the number of crimes reported to police has escalated 57% and prompted accusations the Brexit vote simply legitimised the prejudices of people. Similarly, former deputy leader of the Labour party, Harriet Harman, said the leaders of the Brexit campaign have engendered an atmosphere where some people believe it is now open season for racism and xenophobia.

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School Calls Cops, Cops Call Child Services on Boy Who Made Harmless ‘Brownies’ Remark

BrowniesThis might be the most absurd case of a school mishandling a disciplinary issue yet: an elementary school in Collingswood, New Jersey, called the police because a nine-year-old male student allegedly made a racist remark. As a result, the state’s child services division has opened a wholly unnecessary investigation into the boy’s parents.

It isn’t cleared what he actually said—the school, William P. Tatem Elementary, has not returned my request for comment. But a local news story suggests that he did not use the word “brownies” to refer to persons of color. He was actually referring to the chocolate baked good, according to his parents. Given that he made the statement during a class party—it was the last day of school—this explanation makes sense. (His last name sounds Hispanic, if that matters.)

In either case, the school had absolutely no reason to involve the police. Administrators should be perfectly capable of dealing with this sort of thing on their own. His teacher, or principal, could have asked the boy and his accuser about the incident and rendered some verdict. They could have punished him, if punishment was called for.

Instead, a young boy was interrogated by an officer about a harmless comment he made while in school.

It’s just never necessary to involve the police in perfectly routine, non-violent, non-criminal disputes between children. The school’s decision to do so is indefensible.

But according to Philly.com, these kinds of automatic appeals to police authority are common:

The incident, which has sparked outrage among some parents, was one of several in the last month when Collingswood police have been called to look into school incidents that parents think hardly merit criminal investigation.

Superintendent Scott Oswald estimated that on some occasions over the last month, officers may have been called to as many as five incidents per day in the district of 1,875 students.

This has created concern among parents in the 14,000-resident borough, who have phoned their elected officials, met with Mayor James Maley, blasted social-media message boards, and even launched a petition calling on the Camden County Prosecutor’s Office to “stop mandated criminal investigation of elementary school students.”

It gets worse. Philly.com is also reporting that “the incident had been referred to the New Jersey Division of Child Protection and Permanency.” I will be following up with this agency, the police, and the school.

The school turned a non-issue into a police issues, and the cops turned a police issue into a child services issue. All because school officials think it’s a police officer’s job to tell students to behave themselves, rather than the students’ teachers. Truly, it’s incidents like these that confirm the suspicions of many Americans (and many Donald Trump supporters) that their country is too politically correct.

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Banks Are Spending Billions On Stress Test Preparation

Just days ago we reported that the Federal Reserve trumpeted the fact that all 33 participating banks passed the latest stress test. Banks also spent a lot of money on consultants in preparation for the stress tests as well.

After failing the Federal Reserve's annual stress tests in March 2014, the WSJ reports that Citigroup hired multiple consulting firms, and spent about $180 million on stress tests during the second half of 2014 in order to address regulator's concerns. It turns out that banks are spending tens of billions in order to prepare for stress tests, creating quite a lucrative business for consultants.

Globally, banks spent about $29 billion on consultants in 2015, much of that expense went for stress tests in the United States and elsewhere according to ALM Intelligence. The $29 billion is a 77% increase from the $16.35 billion that banks spent in 2007, growing significantly each year since the financial crisis. While banks continue to dramatically cut costs in other areas of the business, consulting fees is not an area that is taking a hit.

The industry has blossomed because if banks fail stress tests, the ability to raise dividends and buy back shares are limited – and how else can that EPS be maintained and lower revenue if shares can't be purchased? Accounting firms and consulting firms have all built specific practices around stress test consulting, and even BlackRock sold forecasting help to about two-thirds of the banks taking the tests. Not surprisingly, there are even consultants offering advice on how to use other stress-test consultants: "Kick out the consultants" Novantas advertised recently, telling banks it can help them cut back.

Stress tests require the banks to quantify precisely how much money would be lost under different scenarios, which is a difficult task for some banks with large global footprints. Being that banks generally under invested in the ability to perform such an analysis before the financial crisis, money is now being spent in order to catch up.

JPMorgan last year had about 550 people working solely on the Fed Stress tests, with more than 2,000 employees contributing indirectly the WSJ notes. "It's like a whole new department at the bank" said Joe Sullivan, president of International Market Recruiters, who helps banks fill stress-testing jobs.

The test submissions include a "narrative" document the size of a thick paperback, describing what the firm has done, accompanied by thousands of pages of documentation. Some banks employ professional writers to write the narratives so the Fed will have fewer questions later on. According to the WSJ, building a stress-test program can cost banks $150 million to $250 million a piece.

Financial firms globally will spend $4 billion on stress-test IT this year according to Chartist Research, which is up from $3 billion in 2014 and is expected to incresae 15% in 2017. Forecasting models alone generally range from $100,000 to $1 million depending on complexity – "We offer customized and off-the-shelf models to help you calculate the stressed probability of defaults" reads a 'Stress Testing Suites' brochure from Moody's Analytics.

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With all of this expense that banks are taking to prepare for stress tests, one would imagine that a slightly higher degree of focus would be put on the legal expenses that are being incurred – then again, those may just be "one-time" expenses that can be adjusted out of earnings in order to beat low analyst expectations each quarter, so perhaps the cost benefit isn't worth it… it's easier just to continue to fire people instead.

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Hillary Clinton Wanted to Keep Up Appearances Regarding Private Email Server as Early as 2009

What, me fundamentally honest?Newly revealed emails, released via a court order in relation to a public records lawsuit filed by the conservative legal watchdog group Judicial Watch, cast yet more doubts on Hillary Clinton’s claim that she used a private email server while serving as secretary of state merely “for convenience.” 

Among the 165 pages of emails released Monday, the Associated Press notes one particularly telling exchange from March 2009 between Clinton (who had been in office barely two months) and aide Huma Abedin: 

“I have just realized I have no idea how my papers are treated at State,” Clinton wrote to Abedin and a second aide. “Who manages both my personal and official files? … I think we need to get on this asap to be sure we know and design the system we want.”

You can’t have it both ways, Madame Secretary. Either you didn’t know the rules or you thought you were above the rules. 

The AP adds, “In a blistering audit released last month, the State Department’s inspector general concluded Clinton and her team ignored clear internal guidance that her email setup violated federal records-keeping standards and could have left sensitive material vulnerable to hackers.” Reason‘s Peter Suderman wrote after the report’s release, “It makes clear that [Clinton] refused to play by the rules while acting as Secretary of State—ignoring them as a point of personal privilege, and creating both security vulnerabilities and transparency and accountability problems in the process.”

Yesterday the Washington Post‘s Chris Cillizza wrote that Clinton’s exchange with Abedin “reads to me as though Clinton is both far more aware of the email setup and far more engaged in how it should look than she generally lets on publicly,” which he describes as “deeply problematic” for a candidate so widely distrusted (but not by former New York Times editor Jill Abramson, who inexplicably declared Clinton “fundamentally honest” in a recent Guardian column). 

Vanquished Democratic presidential also-ran Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) famously said at an early debate that he would not make an issue out of Clinton’s “damn emails,” which many Democratic loyalists appreciated as a civil gesture from the insurgent candidate. Sanders later reiterated that he wouldn’t make Clinton’s character an issue, but would not shy away from critiquing her judgment. Yet, with each new batch of emails released — thanks to over 30 lawsuits filed by news organizations and legal activists, not through any willingness to be transparent on Clinton’s part — Sanders’ decision to lay off the emails seems like a missed opportunity.

As the FBI investigation into Clinton continues with no clear end in sight, emails like the one noted here further erode Clinton’s claim to superior judgment and her willful doublespeak reinforces the impression held by many (not all of whom are fire-breathing conservatives) that she is far from “fundamentally honest.” 

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Scathing New Report Shows Just How Bankrupt Social Security Really Is

Submitted by Simon Black via SovereignMan.com,

Last week, a group of analysts published an astonishing report about the future of Social Security in the United States, and their remarks were nothing short of damning.

According to their calculations, for example, these analysts claim that Social Security is already running a huge deficit to the tune of tens of billions of dollars each year.

In fact, this Social Security funding deficit has been taking place for several years now, and it’s actually accelerating. So the problem worsens each year.

According to the analysis, the astounding rise in Social Security recipients vastly outpaces any growth in tax revenue received into the program. And this trend will continue for decades.

The report goes on to describe Social Security’s two main trust funds, OASI (for ‘Old Age Survivors Insurance’) and DI (‘Disability Insurance’).

They tell us that DI actually went bust several months ago.

But rather than attack the root cause of the problem and restructure the program, Congress quietly slapped a band-aid on DI by simply diverting funds from OASI, just enough for DI to limp along for a few more years.

So in other words, they robbed from OASI to pay DI, and keep it afloat through the next presidential election. It’s incredibly short-sighted.

Among the other programs slammed in this report, the Hospital Insurance (HI) fund, one of Medicare’s major trust funds, is of particular concern.

Their brutal analysis shows HI is going to completely run out of money in 2028, just twelve years from now (when President Clinton finishes her third term).

2028 is actually two years earlier than they had originally projected.

And they project the entire Social Security program will be fully depleted six years later in 2034.

Like I said, this report is incredibly damning.

But it raises an important question– just who are these crazy, fringe analysts predicting all of this doom and gloom?

After all, the political establishment has been telling everyone for years that Social Security is going to be just fine. And they seem to have a solid grip on the situation, right?

Well, the report was actually published by the Social Security Administration itself, signed by (among other cabinet officials) the Treasury Secretary of the United States of America.

It’s absolutely incredible. The government is publishing this data in black and white.

They’re telling anyone who’s willing to listen that Social Security has dug itself into an impossible hole.

More importantly, they’re telling us there’s a 0% chance that the government will be able to honor its existing commitments.

They’ll either have to radically raise taxes, or simply reduce (or eliminate) the Social Security benefits that they’ve been promising taxpayers for decades.

The younger you are, the steeper the price you’ll pay.

If you’re in your 60s, for example, you may likely see your benefits cut. If you’re in your 40s or 50s, you can count on it.

And if you’re in your 30s or younger, you can not only forget about Social Security, but you can expect to pay more and more taxes to bail out a program that won’t be there for you when it comes time for you to collect.

This is what happens when nations go bankrupt.

History is full of so many examples of dominant powers who think their wealth will last forever… and so they make far too many promises to far too many people for far too many years.

But eventually the reality of simple arithmetic catches up.

(As we discussed yesterday, arithmetic is slowly dying off in the Land of the Free, so perhaps this explains a thing or two).

We’re seeing this now in the US, and we’ll continue to see this problem worsen in the coming years until it becomes a full-blown emergency and people cry out, “Why didn’t anyone see this coming?!?”

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