3 Things: Exuberance, Small Caps, & 6% Realities

Submitted by Lance Roberts via RealInvestmentAdvice.com,

Bull Market Exuberance

As I addressed on Tuesday, the exuberance in the markets following the election, is getting just a bit overdone. To wit:

“Such an outlook is certainly encouraging, but there is a long way to go between President-elect taking office, drafting bills and getting them passed. There is even a further period of time before any actions actually passed by the Trump administration actually create perceivable effects within the broader economy. In the meantime, there are many concerns, from a technical perspective, that must be recognized within the current market environment.”

The level of “complacency” in the market has simply gotten to an extreme that rarely lasts long. The chart below is the comparison of the S&P 500 to the Volatility Index. As you will note, when the momentum of the VIX has reached current levels, the market has generally stalled out, as we are witnessing now, followed by a more corrective action as volatility increases.”

sp500-vix-113016

More to this point, the chart below shows the S&P 500 as compared to the level of volatility as represented by the 6-month average of the Volatility Index (VIX). I have provided three different bands showing levels of investor sentiment as it relates to volatility. Not surprisingly, as markets ping new highs, volatility is headed towards new lows.

sp500-vix-113016

This rise in complacency is also correspondent to the level of investor optimism following the recent election. The change in expectations is actually quite a phenomenon considering the rapid change in the narrative from “Trump The Terrible” to “Trump The Great.”

This post-election surge in investor optimism is shown below. The first chart is the bull/bear ratio of both professional investors (as represented by the INVI Index) and individuals (from AAII). Currently, the level of bullishness has surged to levels more normally associated with intermediate term tops in the market.

aaii-invi-bullratio-112916

The net bullishness (bulls minus bears) of both individual and professional investors has likewise surged to levels which again have been more historically representative to intermediate term tops in the market.

aaii-invi-netbullish-112916

As I have noted on Tuesday, with the markets overly extended, bullish and complacent, the risk of a correction has risen markedly. 

sp500-marketupdate-113016

As shown in the chart above, the market is currently pushing a 3-standard deviation of the 50-dma which it has not done at any point over the last 3-years. Such extensions can, of course, be resolved by the markets either trending sideways or declining. In either event, the current levels of complacency, bullish optimism and price extension suggest there is little upside in the markets currently.

As I discussed previously, the most likely outcome is some corrective action in the first couple of weeks of December as hedge and mutual funds pay out redemptions and distributions. Such a correction will offer a better opportunity to re-evaluate equity related exposure and adjust accordingly.

Importantly, there is little currently to suggest the markets can withstand higher rates, inflation, US Dollar or tighter monetary policy for long. The impact to exports, corporate earnings, consumption and debt will impact economic growth negatively which is why I am still hedging equity risk exposure in portfolios. Maybe “Trumponomics” will work as planned and economic cycles can be repealed? Maybe stocks have indeed reached a “permanently high plateau?”

However, given the current dynamics of the market from a historical perspective, valuations, debt-to-income ratios, etc., there is little to suggest such long-term bullish outcomes are likely. For now, I suggest remaining patient as the long-term benefits of excessive risk taking are skewed to the downside.

But then again, as John Maynard Keynes once quipped:

“Nothing is more suicidal than a rational investment policy in an irrational world.” 

We do live in interesting times.

 

Small Caps Surge On “Trumpectations”

On Monday, I listened to an interesting discussion on why investors should jump into “small cap” stocks now as the “Trump Train” was leaving the station. The premise is lower tax rates, and stimulus spending via “infrastructure,” is going to provide an ongoing boost to smaller capitalization stocks.

Of course, small capitalization companies have already experienced a tremendous move since the election chasing this exact premise. However, there may be a problem.

Small capitalization companies, as opposed to the larger brethren, are impacted more quickly by changes in the economic and monetary environment. For companies that do business internationally, changes to the dollar create a bigger impact earnings. Changes in interest rates more quickly impact decisions on borrowing decisions by changing the costs of capital.

The first chart shows the small-cap index relative to the 6-month rate of change of interest rates. The dashed black lines show that when there has been a rapid rise in rates, there has been short to intermediate negative outcomes for small-capitalization stocks.

small-caps-vs-rates-112916

The same can be seen with the 6-month rate of change in the US Dollar. As the dollar rises, the cost of exports to foreign buyers rise as well.

small-caps-vs-usd-112916

Currently, small-caps are getting the double whammy of rising rates and stocks simultaneously as shown below. If the media is correct, and the dollar and rates continue to strengthen under “Trumponomics,” the combined impact could effectively derail much of the benefit of the expected policies.

small-caps-vs-rate-usd-ratio-112916

There are also threats that stem from enacting large tax cuts and boosting public spending in an economy already nearing full employment, higher interest rates, and a stronger dollar. As noted by Anatole Kaletsky via Project Syndicate:

“The impact on financial markets will be disruptive, regardless of whether the Fed aggressively tightens monetary policy to pre-empt rising prices or lets the economy ‘run hot’ for a year or two, allowing inflation to accelerate.

 

With the US economy growing faster than expected and long-term interest rates rising, excessive strengthening of the dollar is a third major risk. Even though the dollar is already overvalued, it could move into a self-reinforcing upward spiral, as it did in the early 1980s and late 1990s, owing to dollar debts accumulated in emerging markets by governments and companies tempted by near-zero interest rates.

Just remember, as has always been the case, rapid changes in monetary variables have inevitability led to an unexpected and exogenous shock that have surprised the markets. This time will likely be no different.

 

Forecasts For 6% GDP Somewhat Unrealistic

Just recently, Barron’s penned an interview with Jeff Gundlach discussing the recent election of President-elect Trump and his views on interest rates going forward. To wit:

“Trump’s pro-business agenda is inherently ‘unfriendly’ to bonds, as it could to lead to stronger economic growth and renewed inflation. Gundlach expects President-elect Trump to ‘amp up the deficit’ to pay for infrastructure projects and other programs. That could produce an inflation rate of 3% and nominal growth of 4% to 6% in gross domestic product. ‘If nominal GDP pushes toward 4%, 5%, or even 6%, there is no way you are going to get bond yields to stay below 2%,’ he says.”

First, you can’t blame Gundlach for “talking his book” because if he is right, he will lose a LOT of money over the next 5-years as assets flow out of his bond funds and into other asset classes. However, I really don’t think he has much to worry about.

While everyone is certainly exuberant about the hopes for an economic boom under President Trump, let’s step back from the ledge for a moment and look at some realities.

As I have shown previously, there is a very high correlation between economic growth, inflation, interest rates and wages.

gdp-interestrates-inflation-112916

The problem for Trump, and for Gundlach’s outlook, is that we no longer reside in the 80’s where a large group of “baby boomers” were entering the workforce and driving a massive wave of innovation and productivity changes.  Today, we are on the wrong side of the demographic trends combined with falling productivity and labor force growth.

laborforce-productivity-growth-113016

As Dr. Ed Yardeni noted:

“In any event, the horses may already be out of the barn. Only 8.5% of payroll employment is now attributable to manufacturing, down from 10.3% 10 years ago, 14.3% 20 years ago, and 17.5% 30 years ago. Bringing factory jobs back to the US may bring them back to automated factories loaded with robots. Even Chinese factories are using more robots.”

And from Harvard Business Review:

“Slow productivity growth is the main cause of slow economic growth, and slow economic growth makes it all but impossible for everyone’s boat to rise. No wonder angry citizens want dramatic change. But while voters may see the problem in a political establishment that is out of touch, the populist politicians who are challenging that establishment are unlikely to fare better.

 

In the short term, they may be able to medicate the economy with a big tax cut or a dose of deficit spending. When the effects of that treatment wear off, though, the effects of slow productivity growth will linger.”

But beyond the productivity problem is simply debt.

Debt deters consumer spending as the debt must be serviced. Give consumers more money via a tax-cut, as we have seen previously, and it will not necessarily show up in the economy but rather in debt service. The pay down of debt would be good provided interest rates do not rise. However, if Gundlach is right, debt service will explode consuming whatever increases to income may come from tax reductions and infrastructure spending. 

gdp-totaldebt-112916

The same goes for the deficit. At $20 Trillion in debt, which will increase by $5 Trillion over the next 4 years at current run rates, an increase in rates towards 6% will send service costs skyrocketing. The deficit will expand sharply towards $2 Trillion completely sapping the economic recovery story.

gdp-deficit-113016

As opposed to the 1980’s when deficit spending could be used to increase economic growth, with a current $650 billion deficit, the input of an infrastructure spending program will be negligible at best and massively deflationary at worst.

If the Fed increases interest rates, along with the impacts of higher treasury rates, such will choke off the flow of credit available and makes businesses less likely to spend. While it may reign in inflation, it also decreases economic output. This typically leads to a recession.

As stated, the net positive impact to economic growth in the short-run from a Trump plan would be negligible.

“In short, introducing large stimulus plans during cycle peaks — roughly where we are now — doesn’t increase private spending as much as during downturns. So the 4% GDP growth promised by Trump is ‘not going to happen’ even with the plan.”

Just some things I am thinking about.

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Mexican Central Bank Head Quits Amid Fears Over “Trump Impact”

In one of the day’s more puzzling developments, the Mexican peso tumbled on news that the head of the Mexican central bank, Augusten Carstens, who several years ago competed against Christine Lagarde for the top IMF post, announced he would unexpectedly stand down from his post next July. The term of the 58-year-old Carstens, who headed the central bank since 2010, was due to conclude at the end of 2021, which makes today’s announcement particularly surprising.

Carstens, a former Mexican finance minister respected by international investors, will leave to take the top
job at the Bank for International Settlements in October for a
five-year term. He is known as a savvy political operator who rose from being the central bank’s chief economist in the 1990s to hold senior posts in the finance ministry. As head of the central bank, he presided over Mexico’s recovery from the global financial crisis and helped keep inflation low in a country that had suffered a string of economic mishaps in previous years.

The peso, which has plunged in recent weeks on by fears surrounding the Trump presidency, tumbled more than 1% on the news, hitting its lowest since mid-November, however it has since recovered modestly.

“It was shocking,” Ernesto Revilla, an economist at Banamex, said of Carstens’ departure cited by Reuters. “There were rumors of this, but no one was expecting it to happen so soon, especially with the new Trump scenario.” Revilla added that “Agustin has been a pillar of economic policy in Mexico.” He added that the peso suffered on Thursday because “there is no clear successor at the central bank … There is no one on the top of peoples’ minds of who could take his place,” he added.

So why the sudden announcement? Among the theories emerging is that Carstens has had enough dealing with the unpredicabilities in the political climate, especially since the Trump election, and wanted out. During the presidential campaign, Carstens had warned that Trump’s election could hit Mexico like a hurricane; he also conducted a stress test for local banks to prepare for the “contingency” of a Trump presidency.

Following Trump’s victory, Carstens followed the crowd in changing his tune, and suggested the next U.S. government’s impact could be less severe. However, today’s announcement confirms he was less than sanguine about a Trump presidency, and the impact it would have on the Mexican currency and economy, and opted out.

TO be sure, he is not along. Most members of the central bank’s board are concerned that uncertainty about new economic policies under Trump could further hammer the peso, according to minutes from the central bank’s board last meeting released earlier on Thursday. “Going forward, the majority agreed it’s possible that the … recovery won’t be sustainable due to the aforementioned uncertainty surrounding the economic policies of the new administration of the U.S. government,” the minutes said.

Among other things, Trump has threatened to rip up a free trade deal with Mexico during the campaign and any such move could hit Mexico’s economy, which sends around 80% of its exports to the United States.

Joining other nations eager to prop up their currency against the soaring dollar (and failing), Mexico’s central bank raised its main interest rate by 50 basis points to 5.25 percent on Nov. 17, the fourth hike this year to support the peso, which hit a record low after Trump’s win. It is down more than 20 percent this year. More hikes will be needed.  


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Broad Expansion of FBI’s Hacking Authority Begins Today

computerLest we incorrectly assume that the United Kingdom stands alone in expanding surveillance power, today a controversial rule change granting the FBI much broader authority to remotely hack into computers comes on line.

Rule 41 of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure was updated earlier in the year, but didn’t come into force until today, which gave Congress time to stop the rule change if it so wanted. This update to the rule allows federal law enforcement to seek permission to hack into large numbers of computers in any jurisdiction with a single judge’s permission. Before today a judge could only authorize hacking into computers within his or her own district.

What’s the big deal about this? Understand that this isn’t just about hacking into computers of suspected criminals. It’s about hacking into any computer that is connected to any sort of criminal investigation, and that potentially (and very likely) includes completely innocent parties who have had their own computers hacked and/or unwittingly installed malware to give a hacker access.

Tech companies and privacy activists have been critical of the broad scope of the rule change and are concerned about the potential consequences. From USA Today:

Opponents of the new rule, including Google and other big tech companies, say it would hurt crime victims twice by letting the government hack them after they’ve already been hit by criminal hackers. The government could potentially damage victims’ computers and smartphones and destroy their data, critics say.

Federal agents must make “reasonable efforts” under the new rule to tell law-abiding Americans that their devices have been hacked by the government, but privacy advocates said that requirement is weak and victims may never be told about the intrusion.

“We can’t give unlimited power for unlimited hacking — putting Americans’ civil liberties at risk,” [Sen. Steve] Daines said.

Daines and a small group of bipartisan legislators had been trying in Congress to delay the rule’s implementation, but they failed.

So be warned. If you end up getting hacked somehow, the FBI may well be poking around inside your machine looking for the culprit without you even noticing.

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Treasury-Bund Spread Widest Since The Fall Of The Berlin Wall

Today's massacre in money markets has seen global bonds crushed but US Treasuries dramatically underperforming. In fact, as Gavekal Capital's Eric Bush notes, the last time the spread between US and German 10-year government bonds had such a large yield differential was on May 10th, 1989, as in before the fall of the Berlin Wall.

The official date that the Berlin Wall fell is November 9th, 1989. Let that sink in for moment.

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And it’s not just 10-year bonds that are sitting at historic levels. The 5-year yield differential is at the widest level on record going back to 1997.

1-copy-copy-copy-copy-2

Over the past decade, a wider spread has been positive for US stocks. The correlation over the past decade between the spread in US-German government yields and the S&P 500 has been a significant 89%.

1-copy-copy-copy-copy

 

If we replace the S&P 500 with the P/E ratio for the S&P 500 the correlations remains a robust 81%.

1-copy-copy-copy

Our data on US and German 10-year yields goes starts in 1972 and since then the average spread has been 80 bps. From 1972 to 1979 the average spread was -26 bps (i.e. German bunds were yielding more than US treasuries on average). From 1980-1989, the average spread was 265 bps. And from 1990-present, the average spread has been 31 bps. We bring up these averages to point out that this relationship isn’t static and it does change over time.

The question facing investors is this: are we entering a period where US growth/inflation prospects (or maybe a lack of German growth/inflation prospects) support a 1980s spread level?

  • If the answer to that question is ‘yes’, then we could see this spread move considerably higher which could be supportive of US stock prices and valuation multiples.
  • If, however, the answer is ‘no’ then we would expect this relationship to fall back towards the mean that has been in place since 1990. This would suggest that either US bond yields will need to fall significantly or German yields need to rise by quite a bit. Either way, this mean reversion scenario is probably an anchor on US stocks and equity valuations.

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How Reason Is Made: Combine Investigative Reporting, Libertarian Principles, Commitment to Progress

Warning: Our actual recipe for covering politics in the coming year doesn’t actually include eggs (cage-free, of course), milk (raw and unpasteurized), poultry (no left or right wings, thank you very much), Fruit Loops, and booze.

Instead, we’ll be combining investigative reporting; a commitment to “Free Minds and Free Markets”; in-depth interviews with friends and foes; a brand-spanking-new daily podcast (subscribe for free!); and award-winning videos that inspire other outfits to follow suit (watch this from us in 2013, read this from Rolling Stone in 2014, and then watch this from Vice’s Weediquette in 2016).

Since 1968, when we began as a humble mimeographed magazine, Reason has broken the mold of tired left-right politics and provided a radically alternative way of thinking about politics, culture, and ideas—one that says all of us should be the authors of our own lives, planners of our own destinies, and masters of our own domains. As important, we’re not only giving you a heads-up about really bad government policies and actions that threaten to limit our freedom, we’re showing the ways in which people all over the world are using human ingenuity and technological innovation to create the world they want NOW. From printing 3D guns to making the moral case for free trade to showing how amateur filmmakers are building on legendary franchises such as Star Trek, you’ll read about it, watch it, or hear about first at Reason.

Over the past 12 months, Reason.com averaged 4 million monthly visits and Reason TV videos doubled their audience, pulling more than 2 million views here, at Facebook, and at YouTube. With a small but dedicated staff, we publish thousands of words every day at Reason.com and covered the ups-and-downs of the Libertarian Party presidential campaign like nobody else. We are your voice for libertarian ideas in the media, appearing on thousands of TV and radio shows, making the case for maximum human freedom and minimal government.

We love what we do—and we can’t do it without your help. That’s why we’re hosting our annual webathon through Tuesday, December 6. We’re asking readers of this site to make tax-deductible donations in dollars and Bitcoin to Reason Foundation, the 501(c)(3) nonprofit that publishes our award-winning journalism in video, audio, and print form.

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The 2016 election was about the weirdest campaign in history, pitting two manifestly unpopular candidates against one another, with neither one being able to win in a convincing fashion. Historically low numbers of Americans identify as Republican and Democrat, and more of us are libertarian than ever before. The coming year will be a hinge point for America, one where reactionaries on the right and left will try to maintain the same policies and mind-sets that have brought us a decade of anemic economic growth, endless war and surveillance, and an inability to define a positive, open-ended future. In such a world, Reason’s journalism—print, online, video, and audio—has never been more vital or needed. With your (tax-deductible!) support, we will be whipping up tasty, nutritious feasts for the mind and the body.

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Smith & Wesson Reports Record Sales; Stock Slumps On Weak Guidance

Moments ago, America’s legendary gun maker Smith & Wesson reported second quarter earnings which, not surprisingly, beat estimates on the top and bottom line, reporting non-GAAP earnings of $39.1 million, or EPS of $0.68, far above the $0.58 expected, and some 172% higher compared to a year earlier, on revenue of $233.5 million -a 63% increase Y/Y – which beat the high end of the company’s own guidance of $230 million, as well as beating street estimates of $227.5 million.

The company’s Q2 revenue was the highest recorded in company history.

James Debney, the CEO of SWHC, said, “We are very pleased with our second quarter results, which exceeded our financial guidance. In our Firearms Segment, we believe higher revenue was driven by strong consumer demand as reflected in adjusted background checks from the National Instant Criminal Background Check System as well as our own market share gains.  In our Outdoor Products & Accessories Segment, we completed the acquisitions of Taylor Brands and Crimson Trace, both of which were accretive to our non-GAAP earnings.”

“Subsequent to the end of the quarter, we completed the acquisition of substantially all of the net assets of Ultimate Survival Technologies, Inc. (“UST”), a provider of high-quality survival and camping products. UST delivered compound annual revenue growth of 49% from 2012 through 2015, maintained healthy gross margins, and developed hundreds of high quality products.  We believe the UST distribution network will create incremental opportunities for our existing accessory product lines.”

For the next quarter, SWHC guided to what would likely be another new all time high in revenue, predicting a sasles range of $230-$240 for the coming quarter (compared to Wall Street estimates of $237.7 million) whose midpoint would make it yet another record revenue quarter for the company history.  For the full 2017 year, Smith & Wesson boosted guidance from the previous range of $900-$920 million to $920-$930 million, above the consensus of $910.6 million.

The stock, however, has tumbled after hours, down over 8%, as a result of SWHC’s Q3 EPS guidance, which came in the range of $052-$0.57, missing Wall Street estimates of $0.61 cents.

And while there are concerns about the future growth of gun demand now that Hillary Clinton is no longer a potential threat to gun rights, the latest just released FBI data on background checks suggests these are, at least for the time being, courtesy of yet another record high print for the month of November, which rose to 2.561 million, an all time high, a month in which Trump was declared president.

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France President Francois Hollande Not Running for Re-Election No Surprise

The Socialist French president, Francois Hollande, announced today he would not be seeking a second term, saying he was aware of the “risk that going down a route that would not gather sufficient support would entail.”

Hollande’s decision doesn’t come as much of a surprise, his approval ratings had been dismal, hitting 12 percent in a poll this summer. And that was a longtime coming—back in 2014, just 3 percent wanted Hollande to be the Socialist nominee for president again in 2017. 85 percent wanted a Socialist primary, and just 15 percent would vote for him in that case. Last week, Hollande had just a 1 percent chance of being the next president of France on ElectionBettingOdds.com.

That betting aggregator, and polls, suggest the first round of the election, scheduled for April 23, 2017, could lead to a win by Francois Fillon of the Republican Party (the former UMP, whose last president, Nicolas Sarkozy, lost this year’s nationwide primary) over the National Front’s Marine Le Pen without the need for a run-off. The Socialists, so far, are a non-factor—they have a primary scheduled for January.

Hollande promised in his election bid in 2012 that he would resign if he couldn’t turn the economy around—surprisingly the socialist prescription of government jobs programs failed to do that. Unsurprisingly, Hollande never resigned. He did face a revolt in his own Socialist Party when trying to push through labor reforms meant to make it easier for employers to hire employees.

Fillon, the center-right frontrunner of the 2017 election, was described in Bloomberg Businessweek as “a neo-Thatcherite who wants to downsize government, slash taxes on corporations and the rich, and scale back labor protections.” His main opponent, Le Pen, meanwhile, who is often described as “far right“, has an economic plan, according to Bloomberg Businessweek, “that could be mistaken for a Marxist tract, with calls to strengthen the social safety net, raise trade barriers, and nationalize the banks.” The National Front is also an anti-immigrant, nationalist party.

Hollande’s popularity problem started before a series of terrorist attacks kicked off by Al-Qaeda-linked gunman massacring the offices of the satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo in January 2015. There were a series of attacks in Paris in November in which 130 people were killed, and a truck attack in Nice earlier this year that killed 86. There have also been a number of smaller incidents like stabbings, a beheading, and vehicle rammings. France has been in a state of emergency since the November Paris attacks.

Although Reuters reports it’s the “first time in decades that an incumbent French president has not sought re-election,” Jacque Chirac was a two-term incumbent when he chose not to seek re-election in 2007. However, in the history of the Fifth Republic, established in 1958, no other incumbent non-interim president had chosen not to run for re-election. Vincent Auriol chose not to run for re-election in 1953 during the brief Fourth Republic. “The work was killing me,” Auriol said at the time, “they called me out of bed at all hours of the night to receive resignations of prime ministers.”

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Trump Picks Retired Marine General “Mad-Dog” Mattis As Secretary Of Defense

President-elect Donald Trump has chosen 66-year-old retired Marine General James N. "Mad-Dog"Mattis to be secretary of defense, according to The Washington Post.

An announcement is likely by early next week, according to the people familiar with the decision. Mattis declined to comment. Spokespersons for Trump's transition team did not respond to requests for comment.

Mattis, 66, retired as the chief of U.S. Central Command in spring 2013 after serving more than four decades in the Marine Corps. He is known as one of the most influential military leaders of his generation, serving as a strategic thinker while occasionally drawing rebukes for his aggressive talk. Since retiring, he has served as a consultant and as a visiting fellow with the Hoover Institution, a think tank at Stanford University.

 

Mattis gets the nod ahead of a notable group who were up for the top role..

  • * David Petraeus, former CIA director and retired Army general
  • * Tom Cotton, Republican U.S. senator from Arkansas
  • * Jon Kyl, former Republican U.S. senator from Arizona
  • * Duncan Hunter, Republican U.S. representative from California and early Trump supporter, member of the House Armed Services Committee
  • * Jim Talent, former Republican U.S. senator from Missouri who was on the Senate Armed Services Committee
  • * Rick Perry, former Republican Texas governor
  • * Stephen Hadley, former national security adviser under President George W. Bush

His bio – as one would expect – is impressive… (via The Intercept)

Mattis is exactly what Trump is not, a soldier-scholar who knows something of the wider world. Now 66 years old, Mattis was born in Walla Walla, Washington. His lifelong bachelordom is the source of one of his many nicknames: “warrior-monk.” He served in every major U.S. Middle Eastern conflict from the first Iraq War on. In 2001, as a one-star general, he led 4,000 Marines in a search for Osama bin Laden near the Afghanistan/Pakistan border. In 2004, as a two-star, he led a Marine division into the second battle for Fallujah. He went on to lead combatant commands at the Pentagon and NATO, culminating in two years as the head of Central Command under President Barack Obama, reportedly leaving after disagreeing with Obama’s policy on Iran. Shortly before his departure, Mattis appears to have weighed in with the Pentagon on behalf of Theranos, Elizabeth Holmes’s troubled biotech firm. He later joined the company’s board. Should Trump nominate Mattis, emails between Mattis and Holmesare likely to come up during his Senate confirmation hearing.

But here are 16 quotes (via FreeBeacon) to get a better feel for "mad-dog"…

1. “I don’t lose any sleep at night over the potential for failure. I cannot even spell the word.”

(San Diego Union Tribune)

James Mattis

AP

2. “The first time you blow someone away is not an insignificant event. That said, there are some assholes in the world that just need to be shot.”

(Business Insider)

3. “I come in peace. I didn’t bring artillery. But I’m pleading with you, with tears in my eyes: If you fuck with me, I’ll kill you all.”

(San Diego Union Tribune)

4. “Find the enemy that wants to end this experiment (in American democracy) and kill every one of them until they’re so sick of the killing that they leave us and our freedoms intact.”

(San Diego Union Tribune)

Flickr

Flickr

5. “Marines don’t know how to spell the word defeat.”

(Business Insider)

6. “Be polite, be professional, but have a plan to kill everybody you meet.”

(San Diego Union Tribune)

7. “The most important six inches on the battlefield is between your ears.”

(San Diego Union Tribune)

8. “You are part of the world’s most feared and trusted force. Engage your brain before you engage your weapon.”

(Mattis’ Letter To 1st Marine Division)

Mattis in 2006 / Flickr

Gen. Mattis in 2006 / Flickr

9. “There are hunters and there are victims. By your discipline, cunning, obedience and alertness, you will decide if you are a hunter or a victim.”

(Business Insider)

10. “No war is over until the enemy says it’s over. We may think it over, we may declare it over, but in fact, the enemy gets a vote.”

(Defense News)

11. “There is nothing better than getting shot at and missed. It’s really great.”

(San Diego Union Tribune)

12. “You cannot allow any of your people to avoid the brutal facts. If they start living in a dream world, it’s going to be bad.”

(San Diego Union Tribune)

Gen. Mattis and Gen. Dempsey / Flickr

Gen. Mattis and Gen. Dempsey / Flickr

13. “You go into Afghanistan, you got guys who slap women around for five years because they didn’t wear a veil. You know, guys like that ain’t got no manhood left anyway. So it’s a hell of a lot of fun to shoot them. Actually it’s quite fun to fight them, you know. It’s a hell of a hoot. It’s fun to shoot some people. I’ll be right up there with you. I like brawling.”

(CNN)

14. “I’m going to plead with you, do not cross us. Because if you do, the survivors will write about what we do here for 10,000 years.”

(San Diego Union Tribune)

15. “Demonstrate to the world there is ‘No Better Friend, No Worse Enemy’ than a U.S. Marine.”

(Mattis’ Letter To 1st Marine Division)

16. “Fight with a happy heart and strong spirit”

(Mattis’ Letter To 1st Marine Division)

 

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Trump’s Formula for Success Is Typical Cronyism, Hollande Won’t Seek Re-Election, Baltimore Releases Body Camera Footage of Police Shooting: P.M. Links

  • SignHow did President-Elect Donald Trump (and Vice President-Elect Mike Pence) get Carrier and United Technologies to keep jobs in the United States instead of shipping them out of the country? Typical cronyist government tax breaks and federal contracts.
  • Sources tell the Washington Post Trump has selected retired Gen. James N. Mattis as secretary of defense.
  • Neighbors where Pence is temporarily staying pre-transition in Washington, D.C., are showing their support for gay issues (and presumably disagreement with Pence) by putting up rainbow flags.
  • France’s President Francois Hollande, a Socialist, announced today that he would not be running for re-election. He was deeply unpopular and had little chance of winning anyway.
  • A police officer in Tacoma, Wash., was shot and killed while responding to a domestic violence call. The suspect inside the home of the call was also killed.
  • Police in Baltimore are releasing—for the first time—body camera footage of police shooting a suspect, in this case of a man shot after refusing to drop knives. The man survived the shooting and is being treated at a hospital.
  • Krispy Kreme is facing a lawsuit because its raspberry-filled donuts don’t actually have raspberry in them and the blueberry donuts don’t actually have blueberries in them, at least according to the list of ingredients.

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