NYU Professor Criticized Trigger Warnings. Now He’s on Leave for the Semester.

NYUNew York University liberal studies professor Michael Rectenwald is on paid leave for the rest of the semester, and his vociferous criticisms of trigger warnings and far-left social justice activism may have something to do with it.

Back in September, Rectenwald created a Twitter account—Deplorable NYU Prof—in order to anonymously tweet attacks on PC culture.

“Why don’t you go to a safe space and tend to your obvious psychic wounds?” he wrote, directing the question to “social justice warriors.”

“The scariest thing about Halloween today is now the liberal totalitarian costume surveillance,” he also observed (not incorrectly).

Last week, Rectenwald succumbed to temptation and outed himself in the pages of Washington Square News. He maintained that he was neither a sincere member of the alt-right, nor an actual Trump supporter. In fact, he described himself as a left communist:

I don’t support Trump at all. I hate him — I think he’s horrible. I’m hiding amongst the alt-right, alright? And the point is, this character is meant to exhibit and illustrate the notion that it’s this crazy social-justice-warrior-knee-jerk-reaction-triggered-happy-safe-space-seeking-blah, blah, blah, blah culture that it’s producing this alt-right. Now, I’m not dumb enough to go there. And my own politics are very strong — I’m a left communist. But I think that in fact, the crazier and crazier that this left gets, this version of the left, the more the more the alt-right is going to be laughing their asses off plus getting more pissed. Every time a speaker is booed off campus or shooed off campus because they might say something that bothers someone, that just feeds the notion that the left is totalitarian, and they have a point.

His comments quickly drew the attention of something called the Liberal Studies Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Working Group at NYU. The group published a letter critical of Rectenwald: it’s members contended that he was guilty of “illogic and incivility.”

And that’s fine. Rectenwald gets to say what he thinks, and his critic get to say what they think.

But according to The New York Post, Rectenwald was also summoned to appear before his department head and an HR representative. He told The Post that the administrators accused him of having mental health problems and gave him no choice but to take a leave of absence.

A spokesperson for the university denied Rectenwald’s account, telling the Gothamist that his leave was “voluntary.”

“We look forward to having him back when he’s ready,” said the spokesperson.

Rectenwald is a popular teacher, according to ratemyprofessor.com.

I don’t know whether Rectenwald embellished his tale of persecution, or whether NYU is being dishonest about punishing him. But it’s concerning to see an academic complaining about safe space culture one moment and run off campus the next. Perhaps Rectenwald’s exile is his own doing, but if the university permits no criticism of the regime of coddling its far-left students demand, it’s just as illiberal as he claims.

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Huma’s Lawyer Makes First Public Statement, Blames Weiner

In her first public statement since Friday’s FBI bombshell, the lawyer for top Hillary Clinton aide Huma Abedin, Karen Dunn of Boies, Schiller said Monday that Abedin did not know that her emails were on a computer that belonged to her estranged husband, disgraced former congressman Anthony Weiner.

In a statement on Monday night, Dunn, a former lawyer in the Obama White House and a former communications director for Clinton’s Senate office, said that Abedin “only learned for the first time on Friday, from press reports, of the possibility that a laptop belonging to Mr. Weiner could contain emails of hers.”

“She only learned for the first time on Friday, from press reports, of the possibility that a laptop belonging to Mr. Weiner could contain emails of hers. While the FBI has not contacted us about this, Ms. Abedin will continue to be, as she always has been, forthcoming and cooperative,” Dunn said in her statement.

“From the beginning, Ms. Abedin has complied fully and voluntarily with State Department and law enforcement requests, including sitting for hours-long interviews and providing her work-related and potentially work-related documents,” lawyer Karen Dunn said in a statement Monday night.

Dunn said that the FBI had not contacted them about the issue, though she added that “Ms. Abedin will continue to be, as she always has been, forthcoming and cooperative.”

“Ms. Abedin’s willing cooperation has been praised by Members of Congress and law enforcement officials alike,” Dunn said.

Meanwhile, as Hillary Clinton continues her last week campaign rounds across America, Huma is keeping a low profile. A campaign source told the Post Abedin has been seen at Clinton’s Brooklyn headquarters since the news broke, working as usual.

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Reuters Laying Off 2,000 To “Streamline Business”

In a moment of self-referential irony, moments ago Reuters reported that Thomson Reuters said on Tuesday it would eliminate about 2,000 jobs worldwide and take a fourth-quarter charge of $200 million to $250 million to “streamline its business” – translation: legacy media operations continue to lose money.

The restructuring across 39 countries and 150 locations would mainly affect the Financial & Risk business and the Enterprise, Technology & Operations Group, the news and information company said. It employs about 48,000 people globally, a spokesman said.

“We are taking these actions now because we see a real opportunity to break down internal silos, position ourselves closer to customers and become more agile,” Chief Executive Officer Jim Smith said.

Thomson Reuters is the parent of Reuters News. There will be no decline in headcount in the Reuters newsroom, according to a memo to employees. The company earlier reported lower third-quarter net earnings. Net income was $286 million or 36 cents per share, compared with $293 million or 36 cents per share, a year earlier. On a non-GAAP basis, earnings were 54 cents per share.

Reuters also lowered its 2016 forecast for underlying operating profit margin to between 16 percent to 17 percent, from 18.4 to 19.4 percent.

Revenue was up 1 percent at $2.74 billion before currency effects and was flat when they were factored in. The company reiterated its forecast of 2 percent to 3 percent revenue growth for the year.

In the Financial & Risk segment, which provides news and analytics to financial services companies, sales outpaced cancellations for the 10th straight quarter. Overall, unit revenue was flat at $1.52 billion.

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Frontrunning: November 1

  • There is a bubble in articles about China’s bubbles: Asset Bubbles Threaten China’s Economy (WSJ)
  • Hillary Clinton’s Wall Street Fundraising Benefited From Loophole In Federal Anti-Corruption Rule (IBT)
  • Clinton and Trump Prepare for Possibility of Election Overtime (BBG)
  • Trump Leads Clinton by 1 Point in New Poll as Enthusiasm Declines (ABC)
  • Investigating Donald Trump, F.B.I. Sees No Clear Link to Russia (NYT)
  • Democrats Say Pledge of Speedy Email Review Falls Short (WSJ)
  • In Ohio, a spelling error could cost you your vote (Reuters)
  • Donald Trump Used Legally Dubious Method to Avoid Paying Taxes (NYT)
  • Trump Amps Up Criticism of Clinton Amid Probe (WSJ)
  • Why Bank Stocks Have The Most to Lose in the U.S. Election (BBG)
  • Election Offers Stark Choices on Supreme Court’s Future (WSJ)
  • Oil prices rise from one-month lows after OPEC approves strategy (Reuters)
  • Three of Fed’s Own Primary Dealers Warn Hikes on Hold Until 2017 (BBG)
  • Standard Chartered Shares Fall After Profit Misses Estimates (BBG)
  • Bank of Japan Trims Inflation Forecasts (WSJ)
  • Russia says resumption of Syria peace talks delayed indefinitely (Reuters)
  • Turkish military chief heads to Russia for talks (Anadaolu)
  • Turkey pushed into coup process in planned way: opposition leader (Reuters)
  • Germany Cools to Chinese Investors After Record Year for Takeovers (WSJ)
  • Investors Set to Parse Fed Statement for Clues on Possible Rate Rise (WSJ)
  • Netflix, Amazon Take Divergent Paths to Reach Indian Audience (WSJ)
  • In rare move, China criticizes Trump plan to exit climate change pact (Reuters)
  • Goldman Sachs Said Outsourcing Dark Pool Operation to Nasdaq (BBG)
  • Turkey could draft ‘limited measure’ on death penalty, PM says (Reuters)
  • Ford Reaches Tentative Deal With Canadian Auto Workers’ Union (WSJ)

 

Overnight Media Digest

WSJ

– The contrasting approaches in India highlight fundamental differences in how the streaming giants – Netflix and Amazon – are pursuing international growth, as the U.S. market gradually matures. http://on.wsj.com/2fz2qpC

– Jeff Immelt, the chairman and chief executive of General Electric, said the purchase of Baker Hughes would help the industrial giant bulk up and weather a prolonged slump in the energy industry. http://on.wsj.com/2fz0rBL

– The Justice Department said in a letter to lawmakers Monday it would work with the FBI to resolve the Clinton email investigation as soon as possible, but the message appeared unlikely to tamp down the emotions surrounding the issue. http://on.wsj.com/2fyX7Gy

– Easy credit and fiscal stimulus are inflating prices and volatility across Chinese financial markets. Some Chinese leaders worry the investing binge has gone too far, producing hazardous economic side effects. http://on.wsj.com/2fz4AFU

– CenturyLink Inc. on Monday said it reached a cash-and-stock deal to buy Level 3 Communications Inc for roughly $25 billion, a marriage that would give the communications companies more heft to weather a competitive landscape. http://on.wsj.com/2fz1eTb

– Many companies doing business in the European Union could face big changes as the EU moves ahead with an effort to keep multinationals such as Apple Inc. from taking advantage of discrepancies in tax codes across the 28-nation bloc. http://on.wsj.com/2fz5LVu

– The Bank of Japan revised down its inflation forecasts Tuesday following a raft of poor data, but held off expanding stimulus in a sign that Gov. Haruhiko Kuroda has set the bar much higher for taking action. http://on.wsj.com/2fz1xxr

– Alibaba affiliate Ant Financial is forging partnerships in the U.S., Europe and Asia, building a global network of merchants that accept its payment-services mobile app. http://on.wsj.com/2fz1B09

– Colonial Pipeline Co shut down a major gasoline and diesel artery that runs through Shelby County, Ala. after a fire injured several workers in the area. http://on.wsj.com/2fz31ri

– Data-mining software firm Palantir Technologies Inc. prevailed in a lawsuit against the U.S. Army that means the company could be eligible for a $200 million contract. http://on.wsj.com/2fz2F3P

 

FT

Tesco Plc is facing a 100 million pound civil lawsuit brought by more than 125 institutional funds over alleged breaches of the Financial Services and Markets Act in relation to its overstatement of earnings.

HSBC holdings Plc has approached Clara Furse, a member of Bank of England’s Financial Policy Committee to chair the company’s UK business.

General Electric Co said it would merge its oil and gas division with Baker Hughes Inc and pay $7.4 billion to take a controlling stake in the enlarged company.

Bank of England Governor Mark Carney will extend his period in the job to June 2019, declining to serve a full eight-year term.

 

NYT

– Tech billionaire Peter Thiel, addressing journalists in Washington, denounced Donald Trump’s comments about women, and took aim at Silicon Valley, adding that he is voting for Trump due to the failure of the country’s leadership. http://nyti.ms/2f6z3bf

– The FBI began loading a trove of emails belonging to a top aide to Hillary Clinton into a special computer program that would allow bureau analysts to determine whether they contain classified information, law enforcement officials said. http://nyti.ms/2estfHL

– CNN has severed ties with Democratic strategist Donna Brazile, after hacked emails from WikiLeaks showed that she shared questions for CNN-sponsored candidate events in advance with friends on Hillary Clinton’s campaign. http://nyti.ms/2dX0vL1

– Viacom Inc on Monday named Robert Bakish its acting chief executive, effective November 15. Bakish, who started at Viacom in 1987, most recently served as chief executive of the company’s international unit. http://nyti.ms/2dWYlLr

– Bank of England Governor Mark Carney said on Monday that he would serve an additional year as head of the central bank and step down in June 2019. http://nyti.ms/2f7tSIs

– The $25 billion deal between CenturyLink Inc and Level 3 Communications Inc would make the combined company the second-largest provider of communications to business in the United States, after AT&T Inc. http://nyti.ms/2f3AyJq

 

Canada

THE GLOBE AND MAIL

** Ford Motor Co and the union representing its workers in Canada reached a last-minute agreement on a new contract, averting a strike. The automaker agreed to terms of a contract that Unifor signed earlier after negotiations with General Motors Co and Fiat Chrysler Automobiles NV . http://bit.ly/2f8c4fE

** Enbridge Inc remains committed to completing its purchase of a major stake in the Dakota Access pipeline, despite the high-profile confrontation between native American protesters and a would-be partner that is now building the $3.7-billion project, executives from the company’s U.S. subsidiary said on Monday. http://bit.ly/2f55XeM

** Struggling Second Cup Ltd has formed a special committee to review its strategic options – a move that can lead to the sale of a company – while acknowledging the café chain won’t be able to meet its three-year business goals. http://bit.ly/2ePE7Ct

NATIONAL POST

** Ontario universities face several financial pressures, among them pension solvency deficits, according to a new commentary by debt rating service DBRS Ltd. http://bit.ly/2f5ao99

** BlackBerry Ltd signed a deal with Ford Motor Co to expand the use of its QNX and security software in Ford’s vehicles, marking the first time the smartphone-turned-software company will work directly with an auto manufacturer instead of relying on a middleman. http://bit.ly/2fq0KiO

** Suncor Energy Inc is planning to sell all or parts of its Ontario wind power business following the C$1.13-billion ($844.23 million) divestiture of its lubricants business Monday. Suncor confirmed it planned to sell all or parts of its wind power assets in Ontario, but planned to hold onto its wind generating capacity in Alberta and Saskatchewan. http://bit.ly/2eicvpa

 

Britain

The Times

The Bank of England will concede this week that it was wrong to predict an immediate slowdown after the Brexit vote when it raises its growth forecasts for this year and next, but it will warn that the squeeze on households is set to intensify. http://bit.ly/2f6BwCl

TJX UK, which consists of TK Maxx, HomeSense and tkmaxx.com, lifted pre-tax profits by 11.2 percent to 142.3 million pounds in the year to January 30, on turnover up 10.9 percent to 2.4 billion pounds. http://bit.ly/2f6EzKV

The Guardian

Rolls-Royce Plc, Britain’s leading manufacturing multinational, hired a network of agents to help it land lucrative contracts in at least 12 different countries around the world, sometimes allegedly using bribes. http://bit.ly/2f6Dlzh

Mark Carney has ended weeks of speculation about his future by agreeing to stay on as governor of the Bank of England until Brexit negotiations with the EU have ended in 2019. http://bit.ly/2f6AshL

The Telegraph

Advertising giant WPP Plc has warned that the first signs of “Brexit uncertainties” are beginning to show as it reported slowing growth in the UK market. http://bit.ly/2f6Envh

The mining and metals industry has a “bright future”, the boss of Anglo American Plc has said, as the sector weighs up the future of China, the biggest consumer of raw materials. http://bit.ly/2f6DC5a

Sky News

Barclays Plc customers who were charged twice on their debit card payments have been refunded and the glitch to the system has been fixed, the bank said. http://bit.ly/2f6AnLi

HSBC Holdings Plc is turning to a former boss of the London Stock Exchange (LSE) to oversee the ring-fenced UK retail bank being created under far-reaching regulatory reforms to be introduced in 2019. http://bit.ly/2f6EIOy

The Independent

Tesco Plc is being sued for more than 100 million pounds by investors who say they lost money after the company inflated its profits by 326 million pounds in 2014. http://ind.pn/2f6InM3

Majestic Wine Plc’s decision to offer next day delivery and drop the six-bottle minimum online purchase had its fans talking about popping corks and raising glasses. http://ind.pn/2f6IQ13

 

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Gun Control is Tax-Subsidized Marketing for Illegal Submachine Guns: New at Reason

Ban a gun and people will find a way to manufacture it.

J.D. Tuccille writes:

Unsurprisingly, Brazil has a thriving market for Sten guns and the like made in car repair shops because it has a severely constrained legal market for firearms. Brazilians have to jump through hoops to get government permission to purchase guns, and even if they satisfy all requirements, police can say “no” on a whim. That leaves many residents of the country without a legal means to protect themselves from the country’s extremely busy criminal class (60,000 murders every year, according to some estimates). Those criminals are, of course, well-armed courtesy of that black market described above.

Some of the country’s lawmakers want to make it less-daunting to legally own the means of self-defense. But for now guns remain easily available only to those willing to break the law, which leaves opportunity for DIY manufacturers.

Australia also has famously restrictive gun laws of such exquisite legislative perfection that they bear emulation, according to leading presidential contender Hillary Clinton. Well, except that the Australian government is a tad upset about gun smuggling by outlaw gangs and the hundreds of thousands of illegal firearms in circulation. Officials plan yet another amnesty for owners to surrender the illegal weapons, although Sydney University gun policy analyst Philip Alpers told ABC News that he expects it to produce only “rubbish guns” that nobody values.

View this article.

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Trump Takes Lead In ABC/WaPo Poll That Gave Hillary 13 Point Advantage Just One Week Earlier

The first fully post-FBI shocker ABC/WaPo poll is out and it is a shocker: in a poll that saw Hillary lead by a dominating 13 points as recently as one week ago, moments ago ABC/WaPo/Langer Research announced that Trump has not only taken the lead from Hillary, but this is the first time he has done so since May.

As a reminder, this is the same poll that as we reported over the weekend, effectively confirmed to “poll tampering” which saw Hillary’s lead collapse from 12 points to just 2 several days ago.

While vote preferences have held essentially steady, Hillary is now a slim point behind Donald Trump,  a first since May, in the latest ABC News/Washington Post tracking poll. Forty-six percent of likely voters support Trump in the latest results, with 45 percent for Clinton. Taking it to the decimal for illustrative purposes, a mere .7 of a percentage point divides them. Third-party candidate Gary Johnson has 3 percent, a new low; Jill Stein, 2 percent. The reason: according to ABC, “strong enthusiasm for Hillary Clinton has ebbed since the renewal of the FBI’s email investigation.”

What is most stunning is that the Democrat oversampling in the poll has now grown to a whopping 10 points!

According to the poll, self-identified Democrats outnumber Republicans among likely voters by 10 points, 38 to 28 percent. There are three reasons why the race is so close despite the major overrepresentation of democrats:

  • One, this narrows to a 5-point gap, 48-43 percent, including independents who lean toward one party or the other.
  • The second is Trump’s advantage among pure independents, as noted –- even though they account for just 7 percent of all likely voters.
  • And the third is the fact that Trump wins 9 percent of Democrats and Democratic leaners, while Clinton is supported by 6 percent of Republicans and those who lean toward the GOP –- another slight difference, and not statistically significant.

But in contests this close, small differences add up. Vote preference results are essentially identical in 23 likely voter models produced for diagnostic purposes, with turnout estimates ranging from 43 to 81 percent of the voting-age population. Seventeen of the individual models produce a 45-46 percent Clinton-Trump race, as does the average of all 23.

As a result, Trump now leads Clinton by 8 points in the share of voters who are very enthusiastic about their choice as of Friday. But, compared to past elections it’s low for both of them –- 53 percent for Trump, 45 percent for Clinton.

Strong enthusiasm for Clinton has lost 7 points since the start of tracking, especially Friday through Sunday. This is possibly an after-effect of the renewed controversy over her use of a private email server while secretary of state. Trump’s strong enthusiasm has held steady in tracking, which started Oct. 20.

To be sure, the 1-point Clinton-Trump race overall is well within the survey’s margin of sampling error, and the notoriously goalseeked poll may have been merely constructed in a way to wake Democrats from their slumber and get them to vote in a race that was all but decided as recently as last week. Combining the last seven nights, across which results have been very stable, the results flip to 46-45 percent, Clinton-Trump, with .4 percentage point gap. Again, it is not a significant difference.

Either way, the results are exceedingly close. Trump’s +1 is a noteworthy result; he’s led Clinton numerically just once before, +2 in late May (among registered voters in a two-way test), after he clinched the GOP nomination while Clinton was still in a duel with Bernie Sanders in the Democratic race. Although the election is close at this point, vote preference results a week out are not necessarily predictive of the final result. Mitt Romney was +1 vs. Barack Obama in comparable tracking poll results in 2012, for example, and John Kerry was +1 vs. George Bush a week out in 2004.

Some more observations from ABC:

Clinton’s support rests in part on early voting: A fifth of those identified as likely voters (21 percent) say they’ve in fact already voted. While the sample isn’t large (thus an error margin of +/-7 percentage points), they divide by 55-39 percent, Clinton-Trump. That said, early voting estimates can change given state-level rules, turnout and sampling variability. Early voting estimates in the 2012 ABC/Post tracking poll ranged from +17 for Obama to +4 for Romney in four-night averages, settling at +3 for Obama.

The latest results, while steady for seven nights, reflect a sharp turnaround from a large Clinton lead in the first four nights of tracking, which were a particularly difficult news cycle for Trump.

Among other factors, there’s been consolidation for Trump among Republicans and GOP-leaning independents (86 percent now back him, up from 80 percent). He has also seen improvement among pure independents (i.e., those who don’t lean toward either party), up from an even split to a large Trump advantage, 25 percent Clinton to 54 percent Trump, across the past seven nights (combined for a larger samples size). Seventeen percent of pure independents pick someone else.

Among Democrats and Democratic leaners, meanwhile, Trump’s support has gone from 5 to 9 percent — a slight change, but a statistically significant one. Clinton’s support has been essentially steady.

* * *

Expect Trump to seize on this latest poll in all public announcements today as indication of a dramatic turnaround, while the Clinton Campaign will do everything it can to urge Democrats “to go out and vote”, and salvage an election that had been virtually assured for Hillary as recently as the last week of October.

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Goldman Warns Oil Headed To Low $40 On “Declining Probability Of OPEC Deal”

With oil finally sliding on the realization that an OPEC production cut (or even freeze) deal looks increasingly improbable (albeit having allowed Saudi Arabia to raise $17.5 billion in a record international bond deal as WTI briefly probed the mid-$50 range), one bank has been warning about the downside risks to the commodity over the past month: back in September, Goldman Sachs explicitly warned that “Not Even An OPEC Deal Will Stop Oil Going Lower, Goldman Warns.”

Overnight, Goldman’s Damien Courvalin released another note that will make oil bulls nervous, in which he reiterated his base case that “growing discord between OPEC producers suggests a declining probability of reaching a deal on November 30” and predicted that a “weakening oil fundamentals warrant oil prices in the low US$40s/bbl in our view if OPEC is unable to deliver a convincing agreement.

That said, when Goldman tells its clients to sell, it usually means its “flow” traders are accumulating a position so buyer, or rather seller, beware.

Here is Goldman’s full note.

Lower probability of a cut, even lower odds of success

The OPEC consultation in Vienna last weekend was only a technical meeting, but the lack of progress on implementing production quotas and the growing discord between OPEC producers suggests a declining probability of reaching a deal on November 30. A unilateral cut from GCC producers would be unacceptable to them and the lack of an agreement so far has pushed oil prices sharply lower, with weakening oil fundamentals warranting oil prices in the low US$40s/bbl in our view if OPEC is unable to deliver a convincing agreement.

Even if the fear of such low prices leads OPEC to deliver an agreement on November 30, we reiterate our view that the odds of it succeeding are low. Further, we believe that rising OPEC production in October, from both disrupted and GCC producers, and a faster ramp up of new non-OPEC projects into year-end have further reduced the odds that an OPEC agreement translates into a decent draw in inventories in 1H17. Net, both the probability of a cut being announced and the odds of it successfully reducing inventories have declined over the past week, in our view.

OPEC roundup: (1) Saudi Arabia and its Gulf OPEC allies (Kuwait, UAE, Qatar) proposed last week to cut 4.0% from their peak output levels vs. a 1.4% seasonal decline between 3Q and 4Q-1Q over the past four years and our 2.0% decline forecast (given the preliminary October production increase, our forecast implies a 2.6% sequential cut in Nov-Mar). (2) Recent comments from Russia, Brazil, Kazakhstan suggest these countries are not yet willing to freeze output at current production levels. And (3) Iraq and Iran remain committed on being exempt from a production quota (with their production under-counted in their view in the secondary data used to measure compliance).

  • At face value, these latest comments imply GCC output down 4% from September and the remaining OPEC members at our existing 2017 forecasts[2]: Total 2017 OPEC production of 33.2 mb/d and a combined Russian and OPEC output of 44.4 mb/d (if frozen at estimate October output of 11.2 mb/d). This compares to our pre-Algeria announcement production forecasts of 33.8 mb/d and 45.2 mb/d, respectively.
  • However, average October OPEC output is already up to 34.2 mb/d. As a result, a 4% cut from October output levels for the GCC producers and current Libya/Nigeria production (we estimate Nigeria production at 1.7 mb/d and Libya’s NOC puts production at 0.6 mb/d, 0.5 mb/d mom and 0.3 mb/d above our 2017 forecasts) would bring OPEC production to 33.6 mb/d. Given our base-case forecast for a rise in 2017 Russia production of 0.17 mb/d vs. October, this would bring combined OPEC and Russia production to 45.0 mb/d in 2017, just shy of our pre-Algiers forecasts.
  • Finally, Libya/Nigeria/Iran/Iraq are targeting another 0.6 mb/d increase from current production[3]. Further, Russia is ramping up production faster than we had expected, with our Russia oil equity analyst forecasting output of 11.7 mb/d in 2017 vs. our base case of 11.4 mb/d. As a result, at a 4% cut from October production level for core 4 Gulf producers, the targeted production from the “disrupted 4” and at our analysts’ higher Russia forecast, aggregate OPEC and Russia would reach 45.9 mb/d, 0.7 mb/d above our 2017 base case.

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Human Freedom Is Up, But Government Quality Is Deteriorating: New at Reason

Things are getting better despite the government.

Marian Tupy writes:

These are interesting times to be an American. The people’s trust in the U.S. institutions is plummeting and the outcome of the presidential election, however it ends, is unlikely to reverse that trend. Over at Human Progress, we have a whole section of the website devoted to “good governance” indicators. As you’ll see in the charts below, it is a mixed bag. People around the world appear to be growing freer, but their governments are getting less transparent and more corrupt. Could these diverging trends be the key to understanding of the people’s growing dissatisfaction with their ruling elites?

View this article.

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Global Bond Selloff Resumes; Stocks Rise Following Strong Chinese Data

With October, the worst month for stocks since January, now in the history books S&P futures are eager to telegraph that the streak of five consecutive declines – the longest since August 2015 – will end, with a modest gain of 0.3% in overnight trading after U.S. equities ended Monday little changed to cap a third straight monthly decline, coupled with mixed global markets as Asian stocks rose while Europe was pressured again on the back of poor Standard Chartered results which saw the bank miss earnings on a drop in revenue, as the global bond selloff returned after strong Chinese economic data prompted concerns about rising global inflation. Oil failed to rebound after a sharp drop in recent days as hopes of an OPEC deal unwind.

The recent selloff in global bonds resumed amid speculation that major central banks may be moving closer to scaling back their extraordinary stimulus measures as well as strong Chinese PMI reports overnight. Prospects for a pickup in inflation pushed the yield on 10-year Treasury notes to the highest since May relative to those on two-year securities.

Gasoline in New York jumped the most in almost eight years after an explosion and fire in Alabama shut the largest fuel pipeline in the U.S. The Stoxx Europe 600 Index of equities pared gains after banks slid. Australia’s currency strengthened after the central bank refrained from cutting interest rates.

In Overnight news we say both the BOJ and the RBA keep rates unchanged at -0.1% and 1.5% respectively, as expected. The BoJ also held off on expanding stimulus on Tuesday but once again pushed back the timing for hitting its inflation target. The dollar hovered around 104.80 yen. Traders focused on whether the Japanese central bank would keep its November purchases of bonds due in over 10 years at the same level to determine if Kuroda would signal an implicit taper. He did not when earlier today the BOJ announced plans to buy 110b yen of debt due in more than 25 years, and 190b yen for bonds with maturities of 10-to-25 years for its first operation in November, roughly the same as its last market operation in October, when it bought 110.7b yen of debt with more than 25-year maturity, and 191.4b yen for those in the 10-to-25-year bucket.

The Fed begins its two-day meeting today, however, markets see only a small chance that the U.S. Federal Reserve will raise rates when it concludes its meeting on Wednesday, but traders will be scouring its statement for clues on the timing of its next rate hike. Chances of a rate hike in December are around 78%.

The key economic update was China’s October PMI data, which smashed expectations as China’s official factory gauge rose to the highest since July 2014, led by new orders, suggesting the economy’s stabilization continued into the fourth quarter as robust consumption underpins demand driven largely by an unprecedented credit injection which has seen China unleash more than $4.5 trillion in debt in the past year .

  • Chinese Manufacturing PMI (Oct) M/M 51.2 vs. Exp. 50.3 (Prey. 50.4); 2-year high.
  • Chinese Non-Manufacturing PMI (Oct) M/M 54.0 (Prey. 53.7). 10-month high
  • Chinese Caixin Manufacturing PMI (Oct) M/M 51.2 vs. Exp. 50.1 (Prey. 50.1). 2-year high.

Goldman’s break down of the data:

China’s NBS October manufacturing PMI came in at 51.2, the highest level since August 2014. Most of the sub-indexes improved, with the new order sub-index showing a visible uptick to 52.8, from 50.9 in September. The production index was also higher at 53.3, vs 52.8 in September. Inventory indicators went up: Raw material inventory was up to 48.1 from 47.4 in September, and finished goods inventory increased to 46.9 from 46.4 in September. The employment index was higher at 48.8 vs 48.6 in September. The upward trend in inflation indicator continued in October: The input prices index increased to 62.6, the highest level since early 2011. Trade indicators were weaker on the other hand: The export orders index fell to 49.2 from 50.1 in September, and the import index declined to 49.9 from 50.4 previously. The suppliers’ delivery times were up to 50.2 vs. 49.9 in September.

 

The official non-manufacturing PMI (which covers the construction and service sectors) increased to 54.0 in October from 53.7 in September, supported by a strong service PMI. The service sector PMI improved to 52.6 from 52.3 in September. Construction PMI edged down to 61.8 from 61.9 in September.

 

The Caixin manufacturing PMI release showed a similar improvement as the official NBS one – the headline index increased to 51.2 in October from 50.1 in September, and both the production and new orders index rebounded strongly.

Economists cheered China’s manufacturing survey data, although some expressed caution that this is as good as it gets as the strong PMI’s will likely make the government more comfortable tightening monetary and property sector policies in Q4.

  • “We expect economic activity to pick up further in October thanks to the booming real estate sector and infrastructure projects,” Shen Jianguang, chief Asia economist at Mizuho Securities Asia Ltd. in Hong Kong, wrote in a note. “As the government has announced cooling measures to tame the overheated housing market, in addition to the return of inflationary pressure, we expect monetary policy tightening may slowly take place.”
  • “The unexpected rise in the manufacturing PMI and continued strength in the non-manufacturing PMI tell us that the Chinese economy is doing OK at the start of the December quarter,” said Shane Oliver, head of investment strategy at AMP Capital Investors in Sydney. “It means less pressure for further policy stimulus for now.”
  • “It’s a very strong reading,” Ding Shuang, head of Greater China economic research at Standard Chartered and a former economist at the International Monetary Fund, said in a Bloomberg Television interview. “Both current and forward-looking economic indicators bode well for growth in the fourth quarter.”
  • “The manufacturing reading is robust and is a bit of a surprise to us,” said Iris Pang, senior economist for Greater China at Natixis SA in Hong Kong. “Materials prices jumped a lot, which has contributed to the surge. Since PMI and PPI are co-related, the PPI will very likely be in positive territory.”

The UK economy continued to defy naysayers with October manufacturing PMI printing at 54.3, in line with expectations of 54.5, but still the second highest in the past 27 months and refusing to indicate that the post-Brexit economy has fallen off a cliff, supported by ongoing weakness in sterling, and as Markit said, “boding well for Q4 GDP.”

European shares were poised to fall for a seventh straight session while the dollar edged lower with investors largely holding back as the contentious U.S. presidential campaign entered its final week. Stronger-than-expected manufacturing data from China underpinned gains in Asian stocks and further stoked inflation expectations that drove a selloff in bonds in recent weeks.

Forecast-beating results from oil major Royal Dutch Shell initially provided a boost to Europe’s STOXX 600 index but those gains proved short-lived with weakness in banks, driven by poor Standard Chartered results, dragging the index 0.1 percent lower. The dollar was slightly weaker against a basket of currencies with the dollar index .DXY down 0.2 percent.

“We’re in limbo, unfortunately, ahead of the U.S. election,” said Bart Wakabayashi, head of Hong Kong FX sales at State Street Global Markets.

A global slump in government bonds resumed after the abovementioned PMI report showed an unexpected pickup in manufacturing in China, which fueled optimism about the outlook for the global economy and a rise in global inflation.

Treasury 10-year notes slid before the Federal Reserve’s latest interest-rate decision on Wednesday, with futures trading showing 71 percent odds of an increase before the year is out. Banks were among decliners in European stocks, reversing an earlier gain in the Stoxx Europe 600 Index. Australia’s currency strengthened after the central bank refrained from cutting interest rates. Italy’s borrowing costs hit fresh two-year highs on Tuesday with investors wary of political risks and banking sector reforms continuing to run into hurdles. Other euro zone bond yields also rose between 3-4 basis points on the day, with Ireland’s 10-year bond yields hitting its highest level since June, rising 4 bps to 0.69 percent. Treasury 10-year yields increased three basis points to 1.86 percent as of 9:11 a.m. London time, while those on German bunds with a similar due date increased four basis points to 0.20 percent.

The ramp-up in yields has been a central theme across markets over the past month, spurring turbulence in debt markets and sending global investors out of bonds and into cash on fears that a multi-decade bond bull run was coming to an end.

In commodity markets, oil prices rose from one-month lows after OPEC agreed on a long-term strategy that was seen as an indication the cartel was reaching a consensus on managing production. Emerging-market stocks rallied and Aluminum and copper both gained.

Investors will look Tuesday to data, including readings on manufacturing, for further indications of the health of the world’s biggest economy before this week’s Fed announcement.

* * *

Bulletin headline summary from RanSquawk

  • European equities enter the North American crossover lower as opening gains are trimmed by a downbeat update from Standard Chartered which has hampered the financial sector
  • The USD has seen a modest pullback from recent gains while the RBA and BoJ both kept policy unchanged overnight as expected
  • Looking ahead, highlights include Manufacturing PMIs from across the globe, API crude oil inventories and earnings from BP, Standard Chartered and Pfizer

Market Snapshot

  • S&P 500 futures up 0.2% to 2125
  • Stoxx 600 down 0.2% to 338
  • FTSE 100 down 0.2% to 6943
  • DAX down 0.1% to 10651
  • German 10Yr yield up 3bps to 0.2%
  • Italian 10Yr yield up 6bps to 1.72%
  • Spanish 10Yr yield up 7bps to 1.27%
  • S&P GSCI Index up 0.9% to 364.9
  • MSCI Asia Pacific up 0.3% to 139
  • Nikkei 225 up less than 0.1% to 17442
  • Hang Seng up 0.9% to 23147
  • Shanghai Composite up 0.7% to 3122
  • S&P/ASX 200 down 0.5% to 5290
  • US 10-yr yield up 3bps to 1.86%
  • Dollar Index down 0.21% to 98.24
  • WTI Crude futuresunchanged at 46.86
  • Brent Futures up 0.5% to $48.87
  • Gold spot up 0.3% to $1,281
  • Silver spot up 0.7% to $18.03

Top Headline Stories

  • Three of Fed’s Primary Dealers Warn Hikes on Hold Until 2017: HSBC, RBC, RBS say policy makers will choose to hold off
  • Shell Beats Estimates as BG Acquisition Drives Up Oil Output: Capital expenditure seen at lower end of guidance next year
  • BP Profit Slides on Weaker Refining, Oil-Production Loss: 49% decline in 3Q earnings as crude fell, refining margins shrank
  • Standard Chartered Profit Misses Estimates on Revenue Decline: reported third-quarter profit that fell short of analyst estimates as revenue fell at all four of its division
  • Sony Profit Falls Short of Estimates on Sale of Battery Unit: Impact from Kumamoto earthquake starting to recede
  • Whole Foods Facing Investor Skepticism That 365 Can Rescue Compa: Organic-food giant stuck in worst slump since at least 2009
  • Ienova Hits 17-Month High Following $1.5 Billion Equity Offering: Sempra’s Mexico unit issued additional shares Oct. 13
  • Goldman Sachs Said Outsourcing Dark Pool Operation to Nasdaq: Has been in talks with banks, brokers for service
  • Carney to Stay at BOE Until June 2019 to Help Address Brexit
  • Russian Manufacturing Unexpectedly Jumps to Four-Year High: Markit PMI index rose to 52.4, the highest reading since 2012

Looking at regional markets, we start in Asia where stocks traded mixed amid a slew of key risk events including BoJ and RBA policy decisions, while China outperformed on strong PMI data. Yesterday’s sell off in oil resulted to underperformance in the commodity heavy ASX 200 (-0.5%), while the Nikkei 225 (+0.1%) was indecisive following BoJ inaction and amid poor earnings with reports noting that net income of listed companies in the Q3 16 period in Japan decreased 25% Y/Y. Shanghai Comp. (+0.7%) and Hang Seng (+1.2%) were the outperformers as the they benefitted from the Caixin and Official Manufacturing PMI’s which both beat expectations and printed at 2-year highs. 10yr JGBs traded flat as an uneventful BoJ policy decision kept price action muted, while Australian bonds were pressured with yields higher across the curve on an unwinding of dovish bets post-RBA.

Top Asian News

  • BOJ stands pat even as it delays timing of inflation goal: CPI forecast for next fiscal year reduced to 1.5% from 1.7%
  • Yuan heads for first back-to-back gain in 6 weeks after data: Official manufacturing gauge jumps to highest since July 2014
  • China’s Oct. money demand sinks as PBOC seen curbing leverage: Repurchase contract turnover slips for second month in row
  • Park scandal investigators sought files from 8 Korean banks: President’s associate Choi Soon-sil detained for questioning
  • A-list bankers ensnared by one of their own in Hong Kong fiasco: Citi, Morgan Stanley bankers burned by cash-advance firm

In Europe, equities opened higher across the board this morning only to be thwarted by a poor trading update from Standard Chartered . This led STAN shares to trade lower by as much as 5.2%, dragging financial names lower with the broader move in equities possibly also exacerbated by thin volumes as a result of the All Saints Day Holiday. Elsewhere, in energy names Shell (RDSA LN) posted a beat on expectations to push the energy sector higher. Despite this BP group (BP/ LN) are amongst the worst performers in the FTSE 100 (-0.2%) after Co. lowered its Capital Expenditure forecast for this year. In European Fixed income markets supply is thin today with only the UK coming to market with a 2022 treasury gilt. Nonetheless, fixed income markets have failed to recover from their opening losses despite the recent downtick seen in equities with traders keeping an eye on upcoming risk events — notably the Fed and BoE rate decisions. Also of note, we have seen the US 2/10yr spread widen this morning, moving above 100bps which is the highest seen since May.

Top European News

  • Brexit Led $17 Billion Manager to Drop U.K. Assets Before Vote: Sold out stocks and bonds in financial, consumer industies
  • World’s Biggest Shipping Company Wants More Mergers After Japan: Maersk Line says mergers may help more than vessel sharing
  • U.K. Must Identify Best Ways of Taxing Wealthiest, Auditor Says: Probe pursuing as much as 1.9 billion pounds in unpaid tax
  • Japan Demands Talks With U.K. Government Over Brexit Strategy: Ambassador to London says his country is ‘major stakeholder’

In FX markets, commodities currencies have received a boost after Chinese PMI data came in ahead of expectations The Aussie strengthened 0.8 percent versus the greenback. Twenty-two of 28 economists surveyed by Bloomberg forecast the Reserve Bank of Australia would keep its benchmark interest rate at a record-low 1.5 percent, while the other six forecast a quarter-point reduction. Governor Philip Lowe expressed concern about rising property prices and said the economy is expanding at close to its potential rate with inflation seen picking up gradually over the next two years. “We think the RBA is likely on hold for the foreseeable future,” said David Forrester, a foreign-exchange strategist at Credit Agricole SA’s corporate and investment-banking unit in Hong Kong. “We don’t think they’ll cut in 2017.” The yen weakened 0.1 percent after the BOJ kept its monetary policy stance unchanged, as forecast by the vast majority of economists in a Bloomberg survey, and pushed back the projected timing for reaching its 2 percent inflation goal to the fiscal year starting April 2018. The central bank re-set its monetary program in September to target yields on Japanese government bonds following a comprehensive policy review. “It looks as though the least anticipated BOJ meeting of the year will quite rightly produce the least market impact,” said Sean Callow, a senior strategist at Westpac Banking Corp. in Sydney. “Six weeks after taking the big step to target JGB yields is not the time to make yet another change, but extending the likely time to reach 2 percent inflation is at least admitting reality.”

In commodities, the Bloomberg Commodity Index rose 0.5 percent, after ending the last session at its lowest level since Sept. 27. Copper headed for the highest close in almost three months in London, while aluminum held near its best close since June 2015 following the upbeat manufacturing figures for China, the world’s biggest user of industrial metals. Zinc was near a fresh five-year high as steel gained in Shanghai. Gasoline in New York jumped as much as 15 percent to the highest level since June after Colonial Pipeline Co., which carries oil products to New York Harbor from the U.S. refining center in Houston, shut mainlines on the pipe for the second time in two months. Crude oil fell 0.3 percent to $46.71 a barrel in New York, after tumbling 3.8 percent on Monday. The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries ended two days of talks on Saturday without any commitments being made to limit oil output by its members or major producers from outside of the group. Goldman Sachs Group Inc. said it looks increasingly unlikely that a deal will be agreed at an OPEC meeting this month, adding that failure would warrant crude prices in the low-$40s.

Looking at the day ahead, the highlight is the ISM manufacturing print for this month which is expected to show little change at 51.7. The final manufacturing PMI revision will also be made while construction spending, the IBD/TIPP economic optimism reading and finally October vehicle sales data are released this evening to round out the data. With no central bank speak to highlight the other focus will of course be earnings with 41 S&P 500 companies scheduled to release their latest quarterlies. The highlights include Pfizer and Kellogg both prior to the open. BP and Royal Dutch Shell headline releases in Europe.

* * *

US Event Calendar

  • 8:55am: Redbook weekly sales
  • 9:45am: Markit U.S. Manufacturing PMI, Oct. F, est. 53.2 (prior 53.2)
  • 10am: Construction Spending m/m, Sept., est. 0.5% (prior -0.7%)
  • 10am: ISM Manufacturing, Oct., est. 51.7 (prior 51.5)
  • 4:30pm: API weekly oil inventories

DB’s Jim Reid concludes the overnight wrap

Welcome to November. Indeed where has this year gone? It’s a cliché to say that time speeds up as you get older but as the first seeds of a mid life crisis permeate I’ve read a bit about this topic and apparently in scientific tests when a 20 and 70 year old count in their heads without a time piece, the 70 year old counts quicker. So time is perceived to be going quicker for the latter. Some have even suggested that the perception of time between the ages of 5-10 is the same as that between 40-80. Anyway at the end today we’ll go back in time a little and compile our usual monthly and annual performance review. Spoiler alert. It’s not a pretty sight for Sterling asset holders.

Before we get there though we’re jumping straight to the overnight news in Asia where it’s been a busy session with central bank meetings and more data out of China. Starting with the former, the BoJ has left its current policy unchanged as widely expected, however more notably has slightly tinkered with the inflation outlook. Acknowledging that momentum towards the price stability target is now ‘somewhat weaker than the previous outlook’, the BoJ has revised down its core CPI forecast for fiscal 2017 to 1.5% from 1.7% and also pushed back the 2% inflation target to ‘around fiscal 2018’. That hasn’t come as much of a surprise to the market though which was already sceptical about the BoJ’s timing for its price target. The Yen is little changed around the 104.80 area while Japanese equity markets have recovered slightly from earlier losses to trade flat as we go to print. All eyes on Kuroda now who is due to speak at 6.30am GMT and after we publish.

Meanwhile, in Australia the RBA has also left current policy unchanged which was also widely expected by the market. Our economists note that there wasn’t too much new in the statement although the RBA did acknowledge that house prices are rising ‘briskly’ in some markets. The Aussie Dollar is up about half a percent with the news while bond yields in the antipodeans are up a few basis points. The ASX is currently -0.70%.

Finally, in China the October PMI’s were generally supportive. The manufacturing PMI has increased 0.8pts to 51.2 (vs. 50.3 expected) and the non-manufacturing PMI is up to 54.0 from 53.7. That manufacturing print is in fact the highest level in 26 months with the details revealing that new orders, employment and raw materials were all higher. That data was also backed up by the private Caixin survey reading where the manufacturing print also came in at 51.2 (from 50.1 in September). Our China economists believe that the strong PMI’s will likely make the government more comfortable tightening monetary and property sector policies in Q4. The Shanghai Comp is +0.33% following the data while the Hang Seng is also up +1.14%

So while it’s fairly mixed across bourses in Asia this morning there’s still a constant theme and that’s the underperformance for energy names following the latest plummet for Oil. Following the disappointment of the lack of any material progress from the OPEC and non-OPEC meetings over the weekend, yesterday WTI plunged -3.78% and closed below $47/bbl for the first time since September 27th. After touching an intraday high of $51.93/bbl back on the 19th of October, WTI has now tumbled nearly -10% with the market questioning whether the cartel will actually be able to fill out the finer quota level details needed to follow through on a production curb. WTI is trading marginally firmer (+0.13%) this morning. As a reminder, OPEC are due to meet at the end of this month.

Unsurprisingly then it was energy names which suffered yesterday. European equities were in the red from the off and the Stoxx 600 eventually finished down -0.54% with the latest batch of earnings releases not really adding much momentum. Across the pond US equities actually kicked off with a relatively positive tone and put to rest any fears that the FBI/Clinton related headlines might have a further dampening effect. However a late dip into the close meant that the S&P 500 (-0.01%) finished marginally in the red for the fifth session in a row. That’s only the 3rd time this year that the index has fallen for five consecutive days however as we noted yesterday, the cumulative decline in that time is only -1.17% so it’s hardly been a big selloff. US credit indices did however underperform given the greater energy exposure. CDX IG ended 1bp wider and CDX HY was 3bps wider.

The other notable news yesterday was over at the BoE. After much speculation Mark Carney last night surprised everyone by announcing that he would step down in June 2019. Over the last few days press speculation had suggested that he may resign within days, next year, serve his 5 year term to 2018 or alternatively take up the option of an extension until 2021. With the announcement also meaning that Carney will guide the UK through the early stages of the departure from the EU, Sterling got a rare boost to close up +0.47% at $1.2242 although it was up as much as +0.90% from the early intraday lows at one stage. It’s -0.06% this morning. The news came after the London close so we didn’t get to see any impact on Gilts (10y yield 1.5bps lower at 1.241%) or the FTSE 100 (-0.60%).

Meanwhile, over at the ECB the latest weekly CSPP data was released yesterday. As at the 28th of October the ECB reported total holdings of €37.815bn. That implies that total net purchases settled last week were €1.929bn or an average daily run rate of €386m. That’s marginally ahead of the €378m run rate since the program and so suggestive of another steady week of purchases. It’ll be interesting to see if we see any slowdown in purchases as we start to approach the latter end of this month and into the holiday period.

Away from central banks, with the ISM manufacturing print looming this afternoon in the US, yesterday’s regional manufacturing surveys were seen as a bit disappointing leading into the data . The Chicago PMI declined 3.6pts this month to 50.6 (vs. 54.0 expected) which is the lowest reading since May. The Dallas Fed’s manufacturing survey followed that and while the index did improve 2.2pts to -1.5, it still trailed market expectations for a bounce back into positive territory at +2.0. Treasuries weren’t hugely moved by the data with the benchmark 10y yield ending the day 2.1bps lower at 1.826%. European Banks (-1.07%) moved lower in tow.

That wasn’t the only data out in the US however with the latest personal income and spending reports also released. September personal income was reported as rising a little less than expected at +0.3% mom (vs. +0.4% expected) although that was somewhat offset by a slightly bigger than expected increase in personal spending (+0.5% mom vs. +0.4% expected). That was in fact the strongest monthly gain for spending since June. Elsewhere the PCE deflator rose +0.2% mom in September which helped the YoY rate to nudge up to +1.2% from +1.0%. The PCE core rose +0.1% mom as expected and so keeping the YoY rate steady at +1.7%.

There was important data in Europe too. Despite some suggestion of upside risks to the data, Q3 GDP for the Euro area ended up printing in line at +0.3% qoq and so had the effect of keeping the YoY rate on hold at +1.6%. The latest inflation data was already released in the region with the October headline estimate coming in at +0.5% and also on line. Meanwhile, the highlight of the UK data was mortgage approvals data for September. Approvals were reported as increasing to 62.9k (vs. 61.5k expected) from 61.0k in the month prior. That’s the highest level since the referendum vote.

Staying in Europe, the latest referendum poll was released in Italy yesterday. According to the Demopolis Poll, 49.5% of voters would vote “Yes” in the constitutional referendum next month and 50.5% would reject the reforms. The poll didn’t take into the account the large undecided proportion which is said to stand at 27%. The last Demopolis Poll came in at 51% to 49% in favour of “Yes” so this suggests a small swing the other way. Still, voting is incredibly close and the proportion of undecided voters still remains very significant.

Looking at the day ahead it’s a fairly quiet morning as far as data is concerned in the European session with the only release scheduled being the UK manufacturing PMI for October (expected to fall to 54.5 from 55.4). In the US this afternoon the highlight is the ISM manufacturing print for this month which is expected to show little change at 51.7. The final manufacturing PMI revision will also be made while construction spending, the IBD/TIPP economic optimism reading and finally October vehicle sales data are released this evening to round out the data. With no central bank speak to highlight the other focus will of course be earnings with 41 S&P 500 companies scheduled to release their latest quarterlies. The highlights include Pfizer and Kellogg both prior to the open. BP and Royal Dutch Shell headline releases in Europe.

via http://ift.tt/2dXYOgq Tyler Durden

Seven World-Historical ‘Achievements’ Of The Iraq Invasion Of 2003

Authored by Gary Leupp, originally posted at Strategic-Culture.org,

Here is a list of the noteworthy, ongoing results of the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq beginning in March 2003. (Recall that invasion was denounced by the UN as illegal, based entirely on lies, and—given the U.S.’s hegemonic position in the world, allowing it to act with impunity—the crime’s architects have never punished.)

1) The principal achievement of the war and occupation was the dramatic expansion of the al-Qaeda network that had attacked the U.S. on January 11, 2001. An al-Qaeda franchise was established in Iraq for the first time, playing a key role in the Sunni “insurrection” against the occupiers and their Shiite allies, then expanding across the border into Syria where it split into the al-Nusra affiliate and its even more savage rival, ISIL. Iraq also served and serves as a training ground for jihadis now operating from Iraq to Libya and beyond.

2) The invasion and its consequences encouraged the cause of Kurdistan, an imagined state straddling Iran, Iraq, Syria and Turkey. The Kurds are the largest stateless people in the world, victims of British and French colonialists who divided the region between them after World War I. After the Gulf War of 1991, the U.S. established a “no-fly” zone over northern Iraq to discourage Baghdad from deploying troops in the region. Iraqi Kurdistan had already obtained a degree of autonomy before the invasion but the status became official under the occupation and a referendum for independence is likely to pass soon. This would infuriate Iraq and perhaps provoke Turkey’s intervention. As it is, the autonomous region is locked in struggle with Baghdad over territorial claims and control over oil fields.

3) The invasion destroyed the Iraqi state, causing it to fracture into three: Kurdistan, the Sunni zone in the west, and the Shiite-majority areas around Baghdad. The Baathist regime of Saddam Hussein had been extremely repressive and brutal. But it had maintained order; discouraged religion in politics; protected the Christian and other religious minorities; promoted women’s rights; imposed no dress code; enforced a criminal code modeled after the Napoleonic (not the Sharia); licensed rock n’ roll radio stations, allowed the brewing of beer and its sale etc. The Shiite-led regime boosted into power by the occupation has reversed much of this. (A bill to ban the production and sale of beer was just passed by Parliament last week.) But the regime’s power does not extend into much of Anbar Province, ISIL still governs Mosul, and again, Kurdistan has become autonomous.

4) Because Shiites are the majority in Iraq (60%), and dominate Iran next door; and because the leaders of Shiite parties have studied in Iran or lived their in exile and are sympathetic to Iran’s mullah-led regime; and because the U.S. was forced by peaceful mass protests to allow elections and the emergence of Shiites as the leaders of the country, Iran’s power and influence in the region has expanded dramatically.  (Apparently no one in the State Department thought about that.) Since Iran has not attacked another country in centuries — but was savagely attacked by Saddam Hussein in 1981, sparking a long war killing over half a million people — and since Iran’s friendliness to its neighbor, one of the few Arab countries in which its co-coreligionists hold power, is entirely natural, one can ask why anyone might be alarmed by this. But it does alarm some, the leaders of Saudi Arabia, that crucial U.S. Arab ally governed by Wahhabi Sunnis, most of all.

5) The invasion produced a regional power struggle between Sunni Islamists on the one hand, and their Shiite (and other) enemies on the other. This is often portrayed as a contest between Saudi Arabia (whose government-backed clerics condemn Shiites as heretics, and who fear the prospects for rebellion in Saudi Arabia’s own oppressed Shiite minority) and Iran, depicted as the protector of Shiites in Syria, Lebanon, Yemen etc. (The so-called “Shiite Crescent” extending from Iran to Hizbollah-controlled areas of Lebanon in fact embraces states and movements that have little in common with the Islamic Republic of Iran. But they are all targeted by the medieval regime in Riyadh which tars them all with the Iranian brush.) The Saudis were keen advocates for a U.S. strike on Iran (on the false pretext of a nuclear threat); are major supporters of al-Nusra in Syria and have funded ISIL as well, preferring such Islamist forces to the secular if Alawite-led Syrian regime; and are bombing the hell out of Yemen with active U.S. and British assistance under the false pretext that the Shiite Houthi “rebels” are agents for an expanding Iran. These things would not be happening, had the U.S. not ripped the lid off Pandora’s box in Iraq in March 2003.

6/ The invasion has produced friction between the U.S. and its important NATO ally Turkey (which has the second largest military in the alliance). Turkish war planes are bombing Kurdish YPG (People’s Protection Units) militia in Syria who constitute the U.S.’s most reliable allies, producing U.S. protests (which the Turks ignore, arguing straight-faced that the YPG are just as terrorist as ISIL). The Turks warned before the invasion of Iraq that it would likely produce regional instability. But Ankara would have allowed the U.S. to attack from Turkish soil if Turkish forces as part of the “coalition of the willing” could be stationed around Mosul, once part of Turkey—the idea being to contain Kurdish nationalism.

Fortunately the parliament rejected the deal. But the predicted instability has occurred. The Arab Spring of 2011 in Syria was not directly connected to the Iraq invasion, but gave the U.S. the opportunity to pontificate that “Assad has lost legitimacy,” demand his immediate resignation, and bankroll the armed opposition including the Kurds. The fact that U.S. efforts to find and recruit Syrian Arab forces as allies—who are not in bed with al-Nusra—to topple Assad have failed so dismally binds the Pentagon ever closer to forces that Turkey wants to wipe out. (The conflict and contradiction are embarrassing to Washington. Oh, by the way, did you notice that the Turkish foreign minister just announced that Turkey would invade Iraq if it “felt threatened”?)

Having declared in 2011 that Bashar al-Assad must go, the U.S. was faced in 2014 with the horrible embarrassment of ISIL (that toxic fruit of its Iraq invasion) winning lightening victories from Raqqa to Fallujah, obliterating the Sykes-Picot line dividing Syria and Iraq. The now-Syria based terrorists were approaching Baghdad. So now the U.S. having withdrawn all troops in Iraq was back in action, bombing to prevent such a disaster. And it started bombing ISIL positions in Syria (although with far less efficacy than the later Russian efforts) in league with a list of largely reluctant allies dragooned into formal membership in what Washington likes to call a “coalition” to make its unilateral program for the region sound like the will of what they like to call “the international community” regardless of how many key nations that imagined “community” includes.

The U.S. command that Assad step down was made in the summer of 2011. Turkey’s President Erdogan, hitherto a friend and even mentor of the Syrian leader, opportunistically took up the U.S. demand and demanded his resignation. And Ankara itself began to interfere big-time in the neighboring country it once dominated, targeting Kurds more than anyone else. Since the U.S. relies on these allies, how could there not be a sharp conflict here?

7/ The invasion of Iraq and aftermath resulted in four million Iraqi refugees fleeing the country as of 2007. Hundreds of thousands have poured into Europe, alongside people displaced by U.S. wars in Afghanistan and Libya, and by the turmoil in Syria exacerbated by U.S. actions, producing a massive continent-wide crisis. Many Europeans aptly blame the deluge on the U.S., pointing to the U.S.’s paltry record of admitting refugees from the Middle East and complaining of strained national resources to handle the humanitarian catastrophe. (Another embarrassment.)

* * *

This is all what Buddhists call “karmic retribution” for past acts. Or what the Hebrew prophet Hosea referred to when he said “Those who sow the wind reap the whirlwind.” Or what the CIA meant when it invented the term “blowback.” It’s all heading towards something, unless decent people stop it.

But when I watch people like Michael Moore line up behind the foremost advocate of war in U.S. politics, joining (consciously, philosophical) amoral thugs hell-bent on maintaining and expanding the empire when it’s in a stage of precipitous decline, I am not optimistic. Not only will she win, but she will rival Dick Cheney as a cold-blooded latter-day Cold Warrior, cynically exploiting fear and stupidity to try to bring Russia to its knees.

Hillary doesn’t recognize any of these seven points, which to recapitulate are:

  1. US actions have greatly strengthened al-Qaeda
  2. US actions have encouraged Kurdish nationalism (with unpredictable ramifications)
  3. The US through its vicious illegal actions has destroyed the modern Iraqi state
  4. US actions have solidified ties between Iran and Iraq’s majority Shiite community, strengthening a country still targeted for “regime change”
  5. The invasion of Iraq and the regime change there exacerbated the historical Sunni-Shiite divide, and encouraged Saudi Arabia as the ultra-Islamist protector of the shrines to redouble its efforts to support extremist Sunnis everywhere in the region
  6. The results of the invasion place Turkey and the U.S. at loggerheads over the question of Kurdish nationalist movements in both Iraq and Syria
  7. US interventions in the Middle East and North Africa since 2001 have produced a massive refugee crisis, inflicted mainly on Europe

She does not acknowledge that George W. Bush’s invasion (that she so passionately endorsed, fully exposing her Valkyrie soul, was criminaland not somebody’s well-meaning “mistake”). She doesn’t have any analysis of the Kurdish question. (She is not—as sometimes alleged by supporters—a “policy wonk” but a lazy intellect who doesn’t know jack-shit about the real world.)

She has never expressed regret for the horrific destruction of Iraq, nor given any attention to the plight of its women, who were (as she surely knows) much better off under Saddam Hussein. (To acknowledge that would be to suggest that sometimes U.S. imperialism favors misogynist Islamists over relatively progressive secularists, for its own pragmatic empire-building purposes. She can’t mention that publicly.)

She deals with the rise of Iran—made inevitable by the U.S. invasion of Iraq—by doubling down on her crude clueless Iran rhetoric, which rests on the assumption—repeatedly debunked by U.S. intelligence agencies—that Iran might pose a nuclear weapons threat. She doesn’t understand the history of the Sunni-Shiite divide; I believe she rolls her eyes in irritation that these people have these differences so hard to understand, impeding the Exceptional Nation’s ability to straighten everything out by bombing, and conquering, and making people die. She doesn’t understand anything about the history of the Kurds and their fate in the region.

She feels no guilt at all about her orchestration of the ruin of Libya. She sees no reason to link her own actions to the flooding of Europe with refugees fleeing terror. But she will probably be the next president, with fellow shieldmaidens Michele Flournoy (as “secretary of defense”) and Victoria Nuland or Samantha Power (as secretary of state).

Never acknowledging what happened yesterday, never able to absorb historical lessons, determined to maintain and expend its global hegemony (just as that becomes absolutely impossible to do, because other nations rise too, and great nations like Spain and Britain actually get humbled over time), the U.S. under Clinton will likely head methodically towards  a showdown with Russia. She wants so badly, to show she can do it. She’ll do it for women, everywhere, to show how strong a woman can be.

And then there will be a sudden strange change in your environment. As you wonder what’s going on you’ll be painlessly vaporized, on account of Hillary’s passion to topple Assad, or forcibly reintegrate the Donbass into Ukraine.

The brilliance of the 2003 invasion will be clarified as never before in that bright blast, as Hillary—a very strong woman—cackles in the background from her bunker about how she came, saw, and a million died.

via http://ift.tt/2dXAH1q Tyler Durden