Trump Blasts “Punch Drunk,” “Very Low IQ” Robert De Niro Over Tonys Rant

Two days after actor Robert De Niro surprised the censors at the Tonys (and elicited a standing ovation from the audience) by delivering a profanity laden rant where he declared “F**k Trump”…

The president has – true to form – rebuked the Oscar-winning actor with a tweet, labeling De Niro a “very Low IQ individual” who “has received to many shots to the head b real boxers in movies.”

Trump then questioned whether De Niro understands that the “economy is the best it’s ever been with employment being at an all time high, and many companies pouring back into our country.” Trump concluded the rant with “Wake up Punchy!”

We imagine De Niro – who owns the upscale restaurant chain Nobu (where he recently grabbed headlines by banning Trump from eating there) – is keenly aware of the strength of the economy. After all, restaurants like his typically are the first to benefit from a growing economy as the limousine liberal set typically feels more comfortable dropping $500 or more for dinner when times are good.

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The Most Successful Investor In Modern History Is Selling… Here’s What It Means For You

Authored by Simon Black via SovereignMan.com,

It’s typically pretty hard to find anything exciting to say about drywall.

Yes, drywall… as in, the building material that’s used for interior construction.

Drywall, also known as wallboard, is manufactured from rehydrated gypsum to produce a calcium sulfate plaster, that’s later mixed with mildew-resistant foaming agent. . . hello? Are you still there?

Seriously, though, in this particular case, drywall is a big deal.

I’ll explain.

The largest distributor of wallboard in the United States is a company called USG.

USG is quite large– the company has been around for more than a century and generates billions of dollars in revenue.

(Its shares trade on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker symbol USG.)

And it just so happens that none other than Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway is the largest shareholder in USG.

Buffett scooped up a 31% stake in the company during the financial crisis 10 years ago in a sweetheart deal that valued USG at less than $1 billion.

Yesterday, USG agreed to a $7 billion takeover bid from another drywall manufacturer, Germany-based Knauf.

Presuming the deal closes, Buffett’s investment in USG will net around $2 billion, nearly 7x his original investment ten years ago. Not a bad return.

But here’s the interesting thing.

Warren Buffett is notorious for almost NEVER selling. His famous quip, “Our favorite holding period is forever,” means that he likes to find wonderful businesses that are selling at a discount, buy as much of them as possible, and enjoy the returns of that investment indefinitely.

In other words, if you’ve acquired a fantastic, well-performing asset at a cheap price, why sell?

And he practices what he preaches. Buffett rarely sells anything.

It was a big deal, for example, when he announced earlier this year that he had sold off all of his IBM shares. It was a very rare move for Buffett.

But with USG, Buffett was happy to sell; Knauf’s bid was a whopping 31% higher than where USG’s stock was trading prior to the announcement.

That’s a pretty insane price… so insane, in fact, that the man who typically holds his investments forever– is happy to sell.

It’s even more peculiar given how well USG has been performing.

Revenue and operating cash flow have been growing steadily. And the US housing market (which drives USG’s fortunes) has also been strong.

Maybe Buffett just didn’t like the company, or management. Who knows. And by itself, the USG sale might not be a big deal.

But let’s go back to what we discussed a few months ago.

As I wrote in February, Buffett’s company reported a record cash balance in its annual report– a massive stockpile of $116 BILLION in cash at the end of 2017… most of it in short-term Treasury Bills.

Moreover, Buffett reported that he hardly bought anything in 2017 either:

“In our search for new stand-alone businesses, the key qualities we seek are durable competitive strengths; able and high-grade management; good returns on the net tangible assets required to operate the business; opportunities for internal growth at attractive returns; and, finally, a sensible purchase price.

That last requirement proved a barrier to virtually all deals we reviewed in 2017, as prices for decent, but far from spectacular, businesses hit an all-time high.”

Buffett’s $116 billion mountain of cash was enough to literally buy any of the 450 largest companies in the United States.

But he didn’t buy a single one. Why? Because they’re all too expensive. Asset prices are far too high.

So… here is the most successful investor in modern history who:

1) Didn’t buy anything in 2017;

2) Is stockpiling a mountain of cash;

3) Is now selling an asset that he would typically hold forever because another company made an absurdly high offer for the business

It’s true that no one rings a bell at the top (or bottom) of any market.

But it seems pretty clear from Buffett’s actions that it might be a good time to take some money off the table and wait patiently for the compelling opportunities yet to come.

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“What About The Girls You Molested On C-SPAN?” Heckler Asks Biden

Joe Biden was confronted by a heckler last weekend while promoting his new book at The Grand Opera House in Wilmington, Deleware.

The former Vice President was discussing his son Beau’s horror over pediatrician Earl Bradley, who was convicted of raping and molesting children, when a man in the second row sitting behind U.S. Rep. Mike Castle and Biden’s sister Valerie stood up and asked “What about the girls you molested on C-SPAN at the Senate swearing-in?

As the crowd erputed in boos, the man interjected “no no no no no, he did it.. no no, let him answer” 

The man was then escorted out by security as the audience jeered. A few moments later, Biden quieted the crowd and responded “This is not Trump world,” which drew applause. 

Let’s take a look at exactly what the heckler was talking about, courtesy of Paul Joseph Watson:

We can only hope that Biden’s ego and hubris can overcome criticism over his glad-handling unwilling participants, as he would make a highly entertaining candidate in 2020. He’d also have his bestest buddy Barack Obama’s support, we’re certain. 

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University of Michigan Realizes Facts Don’t Care About Your Feelings, Changes Speech Policy

MichiganJust one day after the U.S. Department of Justice announced it would join a lawsuit challenging the University of Michigan’s anti-harassment policies on grounds they allegedly violate the First Amendment, university officials have decided to revise the policies in question.

“The revised definitions more precisely and accurately reflect the commitment to freedom of expression that has always been expressed in the statement itself,” said E. Royster Harper, vice president of student life, in a statement.

The university prohibits harassment, which it defines as “unwanted negative attention,” and encourages students to report instances of it to the campus’s Bias Response Team. Administrators have pledged, however, to remove language from the code of conduct that claims “the most important indication of bias is your own feelings.”

Federal officials are pleased with this decision.

“Attorney General Jeff Sessions is committed to promoting free speech on college campuses, and the Department is proud to have played a role in the numerous campus free speech victories this year,” said Justice Department Spokesperson Devin O’Malley.

I have reached out to Speech First, the First Amendment defense group that filed the lawsuit, for comment. This post will be updated when I hear back.

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What’s Wrong With The Economy: 9 Toxic Dynamics

Authored by Charles Hugh Smith via OfTwoMinds blog,

These nine dynamics are mutually reinforcing.

Beneath the surface signals of an eternally rising stock market and expanding GDP, we all sense something is deeply, systemically wrong with the U.S. economy. These nine structural dynamics generate secondary dynamics, all of which are toxic to social mobility, sustainable prosperity, accountability and democracy:

1. The financialization of the economy, which transformed services, credit, risk and labor into commodities that could be traded globally. Financialization generates enormously asymmetric returns: those with access to low-cost credit, global markets and expertise in finance collect the lion’s share of gains in income and wealth.

2. The technological transformation of the economy, which has placed a substantial scarcity premium on specific tech/managerial/communication skills and devalued ordinary labor and capital. As a result, the majority of gains in wealth and income flow to those with the scarce skills and forms of capital, leaving little for ordinary labor and capital.

3. The end of cheap fossil fuels. The fracking boom/bubble has obscured the long-term secular trend: the depletion of cheap-to-access and process oil. As many analysts have observed (Nate Hagens, Gail Tverberg, Richard Heinberg, Chris Martenson et al.), the global economy only grows if energy and credit are both cheap.

4. Globalization, which transformed the developing world into the environmental dumping ground of the wealthy nations and enabled the owners of capital to offshore waste and labor.

5. The destructive consequences of “growth at any cost” are piling up. “Growth” is the one constant of all existing political-economic systems, and none of the current Modes of Production (i.e. the structures that organize production, consumption, the economy and society) recognize that “growth” is not sustainable.

The first two dynamics drive three other dynamics that have hollowed out the productive economy:

6. The dominance of debt-funded speculation as the means of “getting ahead”as opposed to producing products and services of intrinsic value that serve the core needs of communities.

7. The economy’s gains in income and wealth are concentrated in the very top of the wealth-power pyramid: the top 5%–entrepreneurs, professionals and technocrats, etc., and within this class, most of the gains go to the top 1/10th of 1% –the existing owners of wealth, and financiers/speculators with access to cheap credit.

The net result is the bottom 95% have few opportunities to “get ahead” outside of gambling in the asset bubbles du jour: the stock and housing market. While the average middle class household may be able to borrow enough to speculate in the housing bubble, two factors limit the odds of success for ordinary investors/gamblers:

A. The gains in housing are concentrated in specific markets; outside these hot markets, gains are modest.

B. Asset bubbles eventually pop, leaving those still owning the assets with losses. The risks are thus intrinsic and high. The average investor/gambler lacks the experience needed to recognize the bubble has stopped expanding and exit the market before ll the other speculators rush for the narrowing exit.

8. The devaluation of ordinary labor and capital means the bottom 60% of the economy that lacks the requisite skills with a scarcity premium in the Emerging Economy have lost easy access to the ladder of social mobility.

9. The concentration of wealth and power in the hands of the self-serving few corrupts the economy and democracy. The U.S. economy is dominated by insider and elite rackets, skims, scams and cartels/quasi-monopolies, all of which corrupt the economy by creating perverse incentives for exploitation and gaming the system to benefit the few at the expense of the many.

This corruption in service of maximizing private/personal gains at the expense of the system itself also corrupts the mechanisms of governance, which are now little more than cloaking devices that protect insiders and elites from scrutiny and consequences.

The 20% above the bottom 60% may appear to have some access to social/economic mobility, but this is largely an artifact of the bubble economy since 2009. Once the bubble deflates, the illusion of social mobility for the “middle class” between the bottom 60% and the upper 20% vanishes.

The “upper middle class” between the bottom 80% and the top 5% is being squeezed by the over-production of elites, i.e. the over-abundance of those with college degrees and the relative scarcity of secure jobs within the top 5%. As a result, credential inflation is rampant, with Masters Degrees replacing Bachelors Degrees as the default for a white-collar job, and PhDs replacing Masters diplomas as the new default for positions that lack security and upward mobility.

In other words, the number of people who qualify for and desire a slot in the elite class (top 5%) far exceeds the number of slots available. As Peter Turchin has explained, this competition generates social disorder at the top of economic heap as the top 20% fight over the few positions open in the top 5%. The disgruntled, frustrated losers far outnumber the relatively few winners.

These nine dynamics are mutually reinforcing, meaning that each dynamic strengthens one or more of the others, reinforcing each other so the sum of the nine is far more powerful than a mere addition might suggest.

The New Aristocracy (the top 9.9%) (The Atlantic)

*  *  *

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Judge Approves AT&T’s $85BN Takeover Of Time Warner

In a ruling that will please merger arbs and other traders betting on the biggest M&A deal of the year (not to mention a legion of investment bankers), Federal Judge Richard Leon has blocked a DOJ lawsuit intended to scuttle telecom giant AT&T’s planned $85 billion buyout of media conglomerate Time Warner – a ruling that could launch a flood of mega-mergers – and in the process defying Trump who repeatedly voiced his displeasure with the merger during his presidential campaign.

Here’s a breakdown of Leon’s ruling, courtesy of Bloomberg:

  • Leon rejects Justice Dept’s request for an order blocking merger, clearing way for deal that the mobile-phone giant says will fuel its evolution into a media powerhouse.
  • After nearly two years, AT&T is on cusp of completing its acquisition of Time Warner, a deal it struck in bid to become an entertainment giant that can feed Time Warner programming like HBO and CNN to its 119m mobile, internet and video customers

Leon, who urged the government not to appeal his ruling, has filled in some important gaps in the case law surrounding so-called “vertical integration” deals,  in which a company makes a bid for a firm that occupies a different level in the supply chain, instead of bidding for a direct competitor. In the past year, more than $118 billion in “vertical” M&A deals have been announced, according to CNBC. With only days left until the deal expires, AT&T has vowed to move quickly to finalize it.

Almost as important as the decision was Leon’s opinion on the government’s push to block the merger, as Bloomberg pointed out earlier.

He can rule in AT&T’s favor and deny the government’s request for an injunction, side with the Justice Department and block the deal on antitrust grounds, or rule it illegal, but allow it to go forward by meeting conditions aimed at protecting competing pay-TV companies that want access to Time Warner programming.

The government has suggested an alternative to blocking the deal: requiring AT&T to sell its DirecTV unit or preventing it from acquiring Time Warner’s Turner Broadcasting.

Earlier Tuesday, the top US anti-trust regulator, Makan Delrahim, aggressively defended the government’s lawsuit during a speech at a forum hosted by the non-partisan Open Markets Institute.

“The career staff put together a straightforward consumer welfare analysis that showed that the merger would unlawfully raise prices for cable TV subscribers and harm online innovation…The harms of that transaction, following a consumer welfare rubric, were simply too great to accept, or try to fix with ineffective behavioral remedies.”

Interestingly, Delrahim, who was nominated by Trump back in September, had previously spoken out in favor of the deal when he was still an academic.

The DOJ’s lawsuit was incredibly controversial due to President Trump’s criticism of the deal during the final weeks of the 2016 campaign, which raised questions about whether Trump was (possibly illegally) trying to influence the outcome of the decision to try and spite CNN (earlier this year, we noted that the cable news organization had laid off a few dozen employees, allegedly in anticipation of a possible sale if the judge ruled against AT&T). Furthermore, the judge’s decision to block AT&T and Time Warner’s lawyers from accessing any White House communications about the deal only allowed speculation about Trump’s influence to fester.

As the New York Times – and many others – reported, today’s decision will have a significant impact on other mega-mergers like Disney’s offer to buy 21st Century Fox and CVS’s push to buy Aetna.

Ahead of the decision, investors were growing increasingly optimistic about the odds that the judge would approve the deal by pushing Time Warner shares higher, driving up the market-implied probability that the deal would go through.

ATT

Though in a sign that investors were having last-minute doubts about the fate of the deal, shares of Time Warner declined on Tuesday, while shares of AT&T climbed. 

ATT

In response to the ruling, which was delivered at the close, AT&T shares were tumbled after hours while Time Warner shares climbed nearly 5%.

Three

The deal is now expected to be completed within ten days.

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WTI/RBOB Slide On Russia Oil-Cut Rollbacks, Surprise Inventory Builds

After last week’s biggest inventory build since 2008, headlines confirming Russia is seeking a roll-back of oil-cuts saw selling pressure ahead of the API data which confirmed last week’s surprise builds in crude, gasoline, and distillates.

 

Bloomberg reports that Russia plans to propose that OPEC and its allies be allowed to return production to October 2016 levels, rolling back most but not all of their output cuts within three months, according to a person familiar with Russian thinking.

The nations would proportionally share out a 1.8 million barrel-a-day increase to their output limit starting as soon as July, the person said, asking not to be identified because the information isn’t public. The actual boost in supply to the market would be less than that because some states, notably Venezuela, Angola and Mexico, aren’t able to increase, the person said.

Additionally, next year, the U.S. government doesn’t see worldwide or U.S. crude production as high as it once did. The Energy Information Administration decreased its 2019 forecast for global production to 102.21 million barrels a day, with most of the downward revision from OPEC.

“Overall, where we’re at, is continuing to call into question just what the ultimate outcome will be of the OPEC meeting,” said John Kilduff, a partner at Again Capita LLC.

“The opposition that you’re seeing from several OPEC members has given the market some pause about continuing to sell off here.”

API

  • Crude +833k (-1.25mm exp)

  • Cushing -730k (-900k exp)

  • Gasoline +2.33mm

  • Distillates +2.1mm

EIA-reported builds in Crude, gasoline, and distillates last week shocked markets, and this week confirmed that surprise in API data…

OPEC decisions remain on everyone’s mind but inventory data is spoiling the short-term fun and games.

“Our best guess is currently that there will be no formal decision to change the production target, but a rather a type of agreement or understanding that compliance will be relaxed,” said Johannes Benigni, chairman of JBC Energy Group in Singapore.

The surprise build combined with Russia sent prices modestly lower…

“The market is kind of re-thinking their concerns over OPEC trying to ramp up production, especially given the problems in Venezuela and Iran,” said Rob Haworth, who helps oversee $151 billion at U.S. Bank Wealth Management in Seattle. Given that some cartel members are having trouble even fulfilling their quotas, the specter of unwinding the caps is “not as bearish a scenario as some may have thought.”

 

 

 

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Gundlach Live Webcast: “Push Me, Pull You”

There has been a certain urgency to Jeff Gundlach’s recent webcasts, and today he will hold his latest public address to DoubleLine investors (and everyone else) just three weeks after his most recent webcast, which in turn was just 2 weeks after the prior one.

The title of today’s webcast is the cryptic “push me, pull you” which we assume has to do with the interplay of stocks and bonds, and/or the economy vs inflation, as well as upcoming quantitative tightening inversion by central banks.

Readers can registed by clicking on the image below or going to the following link.

Looking at recent economic data, Gundlach predicts that nominal GDP may hit as high as 5.6% for LTM June 30, suggesting that 10Y yields are accurately priced (when taking into account 10y Bunds).

We will post the full slidedeck once it is available, as well as selected slides from today’s presentation..

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Stocks & Bonds Shrug At Historic Summit, Surging Inflation, Sky-High Optimism

An historic Summit in Singapore, near record high business optimism, 7 year high surge in consumer prices, PTJ saying markets may meltup at some point, and bonds & stocks go nowhere…

The S&P and Dow struggled to stay green all day…but when 3pmET hit – markets were panic-bid… just because

 

Trannies remain best on the week…

 

Tech outperformed Financials once again…

 

Most eyes were on AT&T and TWX ahead of the judge’s decision tonight…

 

Treasury yields remained in a very narrow range once again with the long-end modestly outperforming the short-end ahead of tomorrow’s FOMC…

 

10Y yields made an early run towards 3.00% again but failed and ended unchanged…

 

But while overall yields didn’t move much the yield curve tumbled to a fresh 11 year flat…

 

The Dollar Index spiked on headlines that Jay Powell is planning on a press conference at every FOMC Meeting… This broke the dollar closing price out of its 18-day tight range)… (1168, 1170, 1169, 1168, 1169, 1168, 1171, 1173, 1177, 1170, 1171, 1172, 1171, 1172, 1170, 1170, 1170, 1172, 1176…)

 

EM FX slid for the 2nd day…

 

But ARS and BRL both gained on the day amid interventions…

 

Cryptocurrencies crashed ahead of the US equity market close…with Bitcoin now back below $6,500…

Bitcoin is back at its lowest since Feb 2018…which is perhaps the driver of the plunge as it breaks April support lows…

It’s been an ugly few days…

 

Despite USD strength, commodities did a whole lot of nothing…

 

Gold fell back below $1300 into the close today…

 

Finally, after February’s rapid PANIC correction, the markets heading back into EUPHORIA territory once again

 

 

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Rand Paul’s Violent Neighbor Motivated by Brush Piles on Paul’s Property

One of the more peculiar politics-adjacent stories of last year was November’s brutal attack on Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.). Paul’s neighbor Rene Boucher was formally charged for the attack in January.

At the time, pundits hostile to Paul quickly victim-blamed for the vicious assault, which gave Paul five broken ribs and lung lacerations. GQ declared him an “asshole neighbor” who is one of those troublesome “Libertarians [who] don’t want to follow the rules that we as a society have agreed upon, because they feel those rules step on their freedoms.” (Apparently, someone accused Paul of “believ[ing] in stronger property rights than exist in America” because he composts and grows pumpkins on his property.) The New Yorker similarly praised attacker (and Democrat!) Boucher as a “near-perfect neighbor” and looked suspiciously on the libertarian-leaning Paul for thinking all that property rights stuff maybe meant he shouldn’t be sent to the hospital by his “near perfect neighbor” for things he did with his lawn.

Politico saw Paul’s inability to come to a Coasean solution, irrespective of property rights, of whatever grievance prompted his neighbor to break his ribs as a sign that “one or both of them is a jerk. I believe that this is an excellent working hypothesis. I’ve seen Senator Paul up close. He is, let us say, pretty high on himself.” USA Today gave the developer of the two men’s housing association space to condemn Paul, without much in the way of actionable specifics, for wanting to control his own property too much.

Now the specifics of what motivated Boucher—unknown, it should be stressed, by all the above pundits and reporters who were sure it was Paul’s fault—are more well-established in the public record as Boucher seeks probation instead of jail time for his crime.

Boucher was very upset, apparently, by piles of brush on Paul’s property, though within sight of Boucher’s. He had been reacting to these offending brush piles by paying to have them hauled to dumpsters, then by setting a yard fire to destroy them (so carelessly that he gave himself second-degree burns), and eventually by attacking Paul.

In addition to the brush piles in his neighbor’s property, Boucher also insists that Paul’s use of a lawnmower the day of the attack blew some leaves onto Boucher’s property—the only activity of Paul’s that sounds even close to a legitimate complaint, though obviously not a “send neighbor to hospital” level of complaint. Sometimes, even a person with libertarian leanings doesn’t deserve to have five of his ribs broken for believing he has some rights to use his own property.

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