CNN’s Jeff Zucker May Challenge Trump In 2020

CNN President Jeff Zucker says he is “very interested in politics” and may consider running for President, according to the Washington Free Beacon

Zucker made the admission to former Obama administration official David Axelrod on his podcast, “The Axe Files,” after be was asked where he thought he would be in five years. 

“With regard to be where I’ll be in five years … I don’t know for sure where I’ll be but here’s the two things I do know: if the Miami Dolphins call, that’s where I’ll be,” Zucker said, adding “And number two, I still harbor somewhere in my gut that I’m still very interested in politics.

“You turned down an opportunity to work for Al Gore in 2000,” Axelrod said back. “You’ve talked in the past about potentially running for office.”

“So, I’m still interested in that, and it’s something I would consider,” said Zucker. 

“Interesting” replied Axelrod – who told the CNN boss to give him a call if he’s doing it. 

Zucker has a unique perspective on politics because of his past relationship with President Donald Trump. Zucker signed him for “The Apprentice” while he was at NBC, which helped turn the billionaire into even more of a household name.

Since Trump took office, he and CNN have consistently been at odds with one another. CNN sued Trump and several of his aides last month to restore White House correspondent Jim Acosta’s press pass. -Free Beacon

Trump has repeatedly blasted CNN over bias and “fake news,” and called for Zucker’s ouster in August. 

 

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“Tick, Tock…”

Authored by Jim Quinn via The Burning Platform blog,

“This country, and with it most of the Western world, is presently going through a period of inflation and credit expansion. As the quantity of money in circulation and deposits subject to check increases, there prevails a general tendency for the prices of commodities and services to rise. Business is booming. Yet such a boom, artificially engineered by monetary and credit expansion, cannot last forever. It must come to an end sooner or later. For paper money and bank deposits are not a proper substitute for non-existing capital goods. Economic theory has demonstrated in an irrefutable way that a prosperity created by an expansionist monetary and credit policy is illusory and must end in a slump, an economic crisis. It has happened again and again in the past, and it will happen in the future, too.” – Ludwig von Mises – 1952

As the von Mises quote proves, economic cycles, artificial booms created by Federal  Reserve easy money and delusional human nature are cyclically constant across the decades. Anyone with an ounce of critical thinking skills realizes the current artificial boom, created by a feckless Fed captured by Wall Street banks and corrupt Washington politicians who took Dick Cheney’s “deficits don’t matter” mantra to obscene levels, will end in another financial crisis. Our Deep State controllers have “solved” a financial crisis caused by too much debt by tripling down on more debt.

The current artificial boom would have ended in 2018, but Trump’s massive tax cut for corporations, who used their windfall to buy back their stock at all-time highs, and reckless government spending increases directly into the pockets of the military industrial complex, gave the GDP one final burst. Pumping adrenaline into a patient with cancer will also give the patient a momentary appearance of health, but the cancer continues to grow.

The highly educated IYI MBAs running companies like General Electric and GM wasted tens of billions in shareholder funds buying back stock at prices  far higher than their current price, putting their companies in danger of bankruptcy. A large proportion of S&P 500 companies have also committed this same outrageously idiotic greedy act. This is exactly what happened from 2005 through 2007 before the last financial collapse. It seems greedy CEOs always put their own personal wealth ahead of their shareholder’s wealth, as their compensation is dependent upon earnings per share.

As the propaganda-peddling cheerleaders on financial networks and in the bird-cage-lining financial press tout stocks at all-time high valuations and parrot bullshit about the “best economy ever”, the average American has seen their real wages stagnant going on a 3rd decade, as their debt levels reach all-time highs. The faux prosperity has been illusory, unless you are in the .01%, a corrupt politician, a government apparatchik, or a Deep State mouthpiece. If I wasn’t such a trusting soul, I might conclude financial crises is used by the wealthy to get wealthier.

When the fake news networks proclaim the economy can grow for many more years and the stock market will surely hit 30,000 in 2019, remember the simple chart below. It shows the U.S. stock market and recessions going all the way back to 1871. Over the last 147 years, recessions are a fairly regular occurrence, but since 1950 the country has only been in recession 15% of the time.

The arrogant academics running the Federal Reserve believe they can manipulate the levers of monetary policy to control the direction of the economy. Their hubris is always revealed when their easy money machinations blow up and lead to economic hardship for the masses. Every time.

To me, the most interesting aspect of the graph is the amount of time between recessions. It seems, in the history of the country, the longest we have ever gone without a recession was ten years. It has happened twice (1961 to 1971) and (1991 to 2001). We are now in year nine of economic advancement (at least for the .01%). Based on history the odds of recession in the next year would appear to be high. No one in the fake news media will provide these facts because they know stocks crash whenever a recession comes our way. The Fed is always surprised by recessions, financial crisis, and the busts created by their own policies.

With interest rates at still emergency low levels, government deficits over $1 trillion, consumer debt at all-time highs, stagnant real wages for real people, housing bubble 2.0 bursting, subprime auto bubble bursting, weak corporations saturated with debt, peak corporate earnings and a stock market still 50% overvalued based upon all long-term valuation measures, only a Wall Street shyster, Ivy League academic, or a bubble headed financial news network spokes-model can’t see recession and stock market crash dead ahead. The masses are about to find out again you can’t spend your way out of a recession or borrow your way out of debt.

Economic history is littered with the bodies of those who declared this time was different. If you think the economy will continue to grow for another few years based upon your belief in the brilliance and infallibility of the Fed, just remember their prescience as the last financial crisis was already in progress:

“The Federal Reserve is not currently forecasting a recession.”- Bernanke – January 10, 2008

“The risk that the economy has entered a substantial downturn appears to have diminished over the past month or so.”– Bernanke – June 9, 2008

“The GSEs are adequately capitalized. They are in no danger of failing.”– Bernanke – July 20, 2008

The tide is going out and we’re about to see who has been swimming naked. This next recession will not be reversed by running $3 trillion deficits and the Fed driving rates negative. The next recession won’t end until Americans learn how to live on what they’ve got.

It will be a profoundly earth shattering experience for a delusional populace. Hopefully, they will realize the true culprits and inflict justice on the financial criminals who escaped unscathed after their last criminal escapade. Time is growing short. The next crisis will define our nation going forward.

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Paul Ryan Is Kinda Sorry He Was a Total Failure at Balancing the Budget

As the newly minted chairman of the powerful House Budget Committee in 2011, Rep. Paul Ryan (R–Wisc.) delivered a sober message from the congressional floor.

“We are driving our country and our economy off of a cliff,” he said. “The reason is that we are spending so much more money than we have. We can’t keep spending money we don’t have.”

Despite a record of supporting costly wars and the massive expansion of Medicare under President George W. Bush—and No Child Left Behind, and the Troubled Assets Relief Program (TARP), and The Patriot Act (and its renewals)—Ryan spent the early years of the Obama administration waving the banner of fiscal conservatism. He sounded dire warnings about the budget deficit, produced several proposals to balance the budget (eventually…), and championed the passage of spending caps as part of the Budget Control Act of 2011. He rode that reputation as a budget wonk to a three-year run as Speaker of the House starting in October 2015.

But Ryan is now leaving office as an abject failure; a supposed budget hawk who presided over three years of growing deficits and laid the groundwork for worse ones to come.

At least he’s decent enough to feel kinda bad about it.

“On healthcare itself and debt and deficits, it’s the one that got away,” Ryan said at an event hosted by The Washington Post last week, calling those issues (along with a failure to address immigration policies) his “biggest regrets” while in office.

More like the 400 billion that got away. That’s roughly how much the budget deficit has grown during Ryan’s tenure.

But the growth of the deficit only tells part of the story of Ryan’s failure.

Earlier this year, the one-time budget hawk presided over the pre-dawn passage of a budget bill that makes mincemeat of the very spending caps Ryan championed back in 2011. The budget deal he inked with President Donald Trump and Senate Republicans in February grew government spending by about $400 billion this year, and it included an $165 billion boost for the Pentagon over the next two years. The budget deal will add an estimated $1.7 trillion to the federal debt in the next decade, according to a nonpartisan analysis from the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget.

The Congressional Budget Office estimates that the deficit will continue to grow after Ryan leaves office. For the current fiscal year, which began on Oct. 1, the CBO projects a budget deficit of $981 billion. By next year, the deficit will hit $1 trillion—driven by a combination of this year’s spending hikes and last year’s tax cuts. Without changes to current law, the deficit will continue to climb for the foreseeable future.

Rep. Justin Amash (R-Mich.) offered the best, most frank assessment of Ryan’s time as Speaker when he told Reason‘s Nick Gillespie that fiscal conservatives were better off under Speaker John Boehner, who actually did reduce the deficit during his time with the gavel—and who did it while Democrats ran other parts of the government:

I would rather have the guy swearing at me and letting me have a vote than not considering me at all…Under [Ryan’s] speakership, we’ve had the fewest open amendments of any speakership. We’ve had zero….Everything has to be pre-approved by the Speaker…. Under Boehner, you could walk up…and offer an amendment as long as it was germane to the bill, you got to vote on it. And this was true on basically all appropriations bills. Now, we don’t even do appropriations bills. They come up with some omnibus bill and spring it on us at the last second and they say, ‘This is the bill.’

Ryan was handed a golden opportunity to change the direction of America’s fiscal trajectory—to stop driving off that cliff he talked about on the House floor back in 2011—and he choked.

Seeing as the rest of us will be paying for Ryan’s budgetary hypocrisy for years to come, you’d think he could at least offer a real apology.

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America’s Fitness Boom Is a Free Market Success Story: New at Reason

A recent report in Inside Higher Ed shows “exercise science” as the fastest growing academic field, with religion and history most rapidly shrinking.

It’s the latest in a series of data points suggesting that organized exercise is challenging the humanities and traditional religion as a place where people seek community, meaning, and discipline.

The students making choices about college majors may be making rational decisions about their employment prospects.

If the market for exercise science degrees is booming, maybe it’s a sign of not only of physical health but of market health—a capitalist success of supply meeting demand. Capitalist abundance is often blamed for obesity. Let it also get some credit for the exercise boom, writes Ira Stoll.

View this article.

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Kolanovic Qu(a)ntuples-Down On Bullish, Even As Another JPM Strategist Sees “Bad Omen” For Stocks

It’s become like clockwork: any time the market gaps higher, JPM’s quant “Gandalf” is out with a new note “reminding” JPMorgan clients that now is the time to buy stocks.

And he certainly has been persistent: having declared an all clear for stocks four times in a row (first on October 12, following the systematic puke, then one week later on Oct. 19, then again on Oct. 30 when stocks hit another recent lows, then once more after the midterm elections when he said that a split congress was the best outcome for markets just before stocks tumbled once more and wiped out the entire post midterm gain in one session) Kolanovic last said the “Pain trade is higher” back on November 16 when shortly after stock tumbled once more, hitting their second correction for 2018. Today, the JPM Quant is back again, quintupling – or is that quantupling – down on his bullish outlook, with his fifth note in just under two months urging clients of the largest US bank to buy stocks because – in his view – the G20 meeting “removes important obstacle for market upside.”

In his latest note, Kolanovic largely repeats what he said two weeks ago, namely that “with both of our views largely confirmed (by Powell’s speech, Fed minutes, and what we see as significant progress at the G20), we think that the path for near-term market upside is largely clear” and that “the pain trade is on the upside.”

Focusing on the outcome of the G-20 dinner between Trump and Xi, Kolanovic shares the market’s (initial) euphoria, and concludes that for political reasons, Trump will be compelled to go beyond a mere truce and even make concessions so that the trade war ends during the pre-election year:

We think that the G20 meeting brought significant progress in the US-China relationship and should be positive for the market going into year-end. We stated previously that US-China trade dynamics are largely driven by the US political cycle and performance of the US equity market. We believe, simply speaking, that the administration cannot afford a falling market, large trade related layoffs, and fleeing donors in a pre-election year. The trade war did not yield the desired political results in the US mid-term elections. It did not rally the lower-income and rural base, it crippled middle-income 401(k)s a month before voting, and it alienated the business community and wealthy political donors. After losing the House, the trade war is less likely to be escalated given the inability to pass new fiscal measures to counter an economic slowdown (last year’s fiscal stimulus is wearing off). We often hear that trade is an important economic issue with bi-partisan support. We would like to note that over the past 20 years, global trade was responsible for significant gains in the US economy, stock market, income and wealth of the US population.

Kolanovic also lets some of his personal feeling seep through in the latest note, writing that “some of the issues around trade with China have prejudicial/racial undertones. For example, last week on national television we heard disgraceful statements how the Chinese are ‘not capable of innovating’ and hence have to steal IP, or how proponents of free trade are part of ‘globalist elites’ conspiring against white blue collar workers, etc.”

The good news, to Kolanovic, is that the trade war is soon ending, based on something that Larry Kudlow himself said:

Our view is that despite likely additional volatility and more ups and downs, the ill-conceived trade war with China is ending. Ironically, this may have been summarized by Larry Kudlow’s interview last week when he said: “…at the end of that rainbow is a pot of gold. You open up that pot and you have prosperity for the rest of the world, but you’ve got to get through that long rainbow.” We all know that there is no pot of gold at the end of a rainbow, and that searching for one is a misguided effort. To summarize, we expect the easing of trade tensions will be a significant positive for equity markets.

As usual, the meticulously logical JPM quant assumes the same level of logical reasoning can be ascribed to the president, when a quick scroll through Trump’s tweets over the past two years reveals that this is a very risky assumption, especially if Trump believes that he needs an external distraction to redirect attention from his domestic problems which, we are confident, even Kolanovic would agree are only set to emerge with the publication of the final Mueller report. As such any assumption that a “logical” Trump will pursue a quick resolution to the trade war that has defined much of his tenure is challenging at best, and for the opposing view look no further than Goldman Sachs which earlier today calculated that the odds of a “comprehensive deal” in 3 months are a paltry 20%.

Menawhile, looking at current investor positioning, Kolanovic correctly notes that it is rather light; in fact as Nomura’s Charlie McElligott explained earlier, the beta of mutual funds to the market is a tiny 17-percentile, the lowest since 2014, and suggesting that any ramps are more painful to asset managers – as shorts rip far more than longs – than continued drift lower.

Sure enough, as the JPM quant confirms, “equity exposure (beta) of global hedge funds (HFRXGL) was higher than the current level 98% of the time historically, and trend followers (CTAs) are net short equities (beta of -0.25).” To Kolanovic, these trend followers “may need to buy given that signals are now turning positive.” To justify his thesis, the strategist also notes that “the performance of defensive factors vs. cyclicals is in a bubble” and the Put/Call ratio is very low, “both of which point to near term market upside risk.”

Of course, all of those arguments have been laid out before by Kolanovic, and virtually every single time, the initial strong rally has subsequently fizzled. Maybe this time will be different.

More interesting is Kolanovic’s surprising defensive posture, noting that “many clients have asked us about the recent uptick in news stories with negative market sentiment” and why at least the quant group at JPM remains so stoically bullish. To this, Kolanovic responds that his “analyses suggest that most of the press (as well as many investors) are ‘trend following’ and fit the fundamental narrative to recent price action.” He also blames narrative goalseeking, and “other biases – e.g. managers that are underweight or trailing the broad market are more likely to convey negative views. There are specialized websites that are consistently spreading misinformation on geopolitical, social, and market issues.” Kolanovic also takes aim at the abovementioned Goldman report and a recent report by Morgan Stanley’s bear Mike Wilson, saying that “a number of sell-side firms forecasted an escalation of the trade war at the G20 meeting or a looming bear market, and are now defending those views.”

Here the bassoon-playing strategist thinks “that some of the prominent negative macroeconomic views are entirely inconsistent – for instance, a view that in 2019 we will have a combined economic slowdown, rapid hiking by the Fed, and significant escalation of the trade war. This view has a simple logical mistake: these 3 events are not independent (higher likelihood of one, reduces the likelihood of the others).”

Perhaps he is right (this time).

On the other hand, maybe Kolanovic should sit down with his colleague Nikolaos Panigirtzoglou, author of the Flows and Liquidity weekly newsletter, who on Friday first pointed out a very troubling “omen” for risk assets, namely the inversion of the forward curve between the 1-year and the 2-year forward points (this on Monday was subsequently followed by the Treasury cash curve itself inverting between the 3s and 5s for the first time since the financial crisis, with the 2s10s set to follow momentarily).

Such an inversion is rare to say the least and has happened only two times over the past two decades: in 2005, 2000: just ahead of major market peaks; these inversions also tend to signify the end of the Fed’s tightening cycle. 

But most notably, Panigirtzoglou writes that such inversions in the forward curve, either for the 3Y-2Y forward spread, or the 2Y-1Y forward spread, are “bad omens for risky markets”, which is the phrasing the “other” JPM strategist said back in April when the 1M OIS 3Y-2Y curve rate forward first inverted, with the ensuing 2y-1y inversion and shift forward in Fed policy rate reversal “worsening this bad omen.

Why? Because in even more bad news for the BTFD crew, the lesson from the previous US monetary policy cycles is that a sustained recovery in equity and risky markets has tended to occur only after the inversion disappears and the front end of the US curve, in particular the 2y-1y forward rate spread, resteepens.

So which is it: is the pain trade higher (according to JPM’s Kolanovic), or is a “sustained recovery in equity and risky markets” now put on hold indefinitely until the forward curve resteepen, with this forward curve inversion a “bad omen” for stocks and getting “worse” (according to JPM’s Panigirtzoglou). Because both can’t be right yet the fact that one bank is pushing both views at the same time could lead some more cynically-inclined observers to conclude that one of the two views is intent on “spreading misinformation” about JPM’s true “house view” and perhaps suckering clients to take the trade that JPM’s own prop traders.

We look forward to the market’s performance over the next few months to determine which of the two views falls within this definition.

(for those asking, Dennis Gartman will not be of any help as he both remains “still a bit net long” while going “very, very slightly short of the broad market.” To wit: “to test the waters, we went very, very slightly short of the broad market, buying the short ETF, SH, when the Dow was up a bit more than 100 “points.” Compared to the position we had had in the short-side derivatives two weeks ago our short side now is perhaps 20% of what it was, and on balance, given our other positions we are still a bit net long of equities and we are so because the CNN Fear & Greed Index has only now risen above 20 after having fallen to the low single digits two weeks ago. When this Index makes its way back above 75 and turns lower… and it will do that and it will do that quickly… we’ll take a far more deliberate and far more bearish stance.)

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Video Shows Chicago Cop Using Handcuffs to Beat Teen Over the Head

A Chicago police officer now faces a use-of-force investigation, thanks to a video that appears to show him beating a teenager over the head with a pair of handcuffs.

Police say 16-year-old Skyler Miller matched the description of a robbery suspect. “We had a crew of young individuals going around on the Red Line robbing people, and he was identified as a possible suspect with that particular group,” Police Superintendent Eddie Johnson tells WBBM. “So that’s why they were approaching him.”

Two Facebook videos taken at the scene revealed what happened next. In one clip, two officers attempt to detain Miller, who protests. “Relax,” the officers tell Miller, who claims he “didn’t do shit.” Miller is clearly belligerent, and he refuses to go with them.

The other video appears to pick up soon after. At that point, Miller is being held by two officers while a third repeatedly hits him on the head with a pair of handcuffs. Once Miller is on the ground, a fourth officer joins the effort to detain him. Eventually, the cops help Miller up off the ground and lead him up an escalator:

Miller was taken to the police station. Police tell WFLD he’s being charged with resisting arrest. But he has to be charged in connection with the robbery. “By the time the dust settled on that particular robbery, the [robbery] victim had wandered off,” Johnson tells WBBM. “So we still haven’t located that victim yet.”

Miller says he had no idea why the cops were trying to detain him. “Two officers came up and one threw me against the wall and they tried to put the cuffs on me,” he tells the Chicago Sun-Times. “They didn’t tell me why. They didn’t tell me what I was arrested for.” The Civilian Office of Police Accountability has since opened an investigation into the incident.

The Chicago Police Department has been plagued by allegations of misconduct for years. Indeed, from 2004 to 2014 the force spent more than $500 million handling misconduct-related lawsuits.

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Gold, Yuan, & Stocks Gain On Trump-Trade-Truce But Yield Curve Crashes

The alternative ending for last night’s Trump-Xi dinner…

Chinese stocks soared after the trade truce, but like US, leaked back in the afternoon session with no follow-through…

But it was China’s currency that really surged – jumping around 1.1% -the biggest daily gain since August…

 

Similar picture in Europe – big gap open and euphoria fades…

Is France weighing on sentiment?

 

US Futures ramped instantly, with Dow futures gapping up almost 500 points before exuberance faded…

 

On the cash side, Trannies and Small Caps leaked into the red before a buying surge restarted (don’t forget it is the first trading day of the month too)…Nasdaq was the day’s best performer…

 

Dow dumped after tagging 26k overnight…

 

Critically, the S&P stalled exactly where we thought – around 2800…

 

Dow and S&P pushed well above the big technical DMA levels but Nasdaq found resistance…

 

FANG Stocks are up 6 days in a row…

 

AAPL, AMZN, and MSFT are chasing each other’s tale at the same market cap…

 

Credit markets compressed on the day, but after the initial gap tighter, spreads pushed wider all day…

 

Treasuries were mixed with the short-end higher in yield and long-end notably outperforming…

 

10Y yields plummeted after their initial gap higher overnight, ending lower on the day at 2.98%… (lowest since September)

 

The yield curve collapsed despite the trade truce hype… This is the biggest flattening in 2s30s since Dec 2017

 

With 3s5s inverting for the first time since 2007…

 

And 2s5s also inverting into the close…

 

The Dollar ended the day lower from Friday’s close but it ended at the high of the day and ramped non-stop from around 4amET…

 

Cryptos slid lower over the weekend…

 

With Bitcoin back below $4000…

 

Oddly mixed bag in commodities too – copper ended notably lower despite what might be seen as a positive for China, Crude flip-flopped around, and PMs managed gains on a weaker dollar…

 

Gold jumped to one-month highs at $1240, blowing above its 50- and 100-DMAs

 

WTI Crude surged out of the gate, back above $53.50, despite Putin confirming no new additional production cuts. But as reality and uncertainty loomed, WTI faded back…

 

Gold strengthened against Yuan back to its key 8500 level..

 

Finally, we ask, who are you going to believe, desperate politicians need a win or the bond market…

Makes you wonder?

And then there’s this…

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Ford To Announce 25,000 Job Cuts: Morgan Stanley

On a day when US and European auto stocks rallied (at the expense of shares of their Chinese competitors) following President Trump’s tweet (since complicated by comments from Kudlow and Mnuchin) that China might soon agree to reverse its tariffs on US-made cars, Morgan Stanley has published a report that further justifies the short-term bull case for autos while possibly infuriating President Trump.

BBG

After Ford successfully spun its latest “restructuring” as a jobs-neutral, union-endorsed shifting of employees from one factory to another, one analyst at Morgan Stanley is calling “bulls***”, writing in a report published Monday that the Detroit automaker could soon announce an even larger round of job cuts than rival GM, which famously incurred the wrath of President Trump last week when it announced that it planned to shutter five North American factories and fire 14,700 US workers (the job cuts would affect both hourly blue-collar workers as well as white-collar salaried workers).

Cars

MS analyst Adam Jonas said that as part of Ford’s $11 billion ‘restructuring’, Morgan Stanley expects the car maker could cut as many as 25,000 jobs (though the bulk of the cuts would likely focus on its profit-draining European operations).

“We estimate a large portion of Ford’s restructuring actions will be focused on Ford Europe, a business we currently value at negative $7 billion,” Jonas wrote. “But we also expect a significant restructuring effort in North America, involving significant numbers of both salaried and hourly UAW and CAW workers.”

Ford’s 70,000 salaried employees have been told they face unspecified job losses by the middle of next year as the automaker works through an “organizational redesign” aimed at creating a white-collar workforce “designed for speed,” according to Karen Hampton, a spokeswoman.

“These actions will come largely outside of North America,” Hampton said of Ford’s restructuring. “All of this work is ongoing and publishing a job-reduction figure at this point would be pure speculation.”

Ford announced last week that it would be slashing shifts at 2 US factories and moving workers elsewhere.

Ford also is cutting shifts at two U.S. factories in the spring and transferring workers to plants building big SUVs and transmissions for pickups in moves that the automaker said will not result in job reductions.

But the biggest risk here for US workers is that these cuts will likely be self-reinforcing, as rival automakers scramble to shrink their staff amid intensifying pressure for cost cutting.

Jonas said other automakers will be forced to follow GM’s and Ford’s actions as the industry transforms, first to abandon factories building slow-selling sedans and ultimately to retool to build electric and self-driving vehicles.

“We believe existential business model risk will be prioritized over near-term profits and cash return,” Jonas wrote. “We still do not believe investor expectations have fully considered the near-term earnings risk.”

Of course, if China doesn’t lower tariffs (and instead the US imposes tariffs on cars made in Europe and Japan) this number wouldn’t come close: That scenario would be significantly worse.

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Recreational Pot Will Be Legal in Michigan This Week. Here’s What You Need to Know.

|||Dmitry Tishchenko/Dreamstime.comRecreational pot will officially become legal in Michigan on Thursday, 30 days after nearly 56 percent of the state’s voters passed Proposal 1. That initiative makes Michigan both the first Midwestern state and the 10th state overall to permit the possession and use of recreational marijuana. (The other nine are Alaska, California, Colorado, Maine, Massachusetts, Nevada, Oregon, Vermont, and Washington. It is also legal in the District of Columbia.)

The ballot initiative was backed by the Coalition to Regulate Marijuana Like Alcohol. As the group’s name suggests, it want to treat recreational pot like wine or beer, including a plan to generate tax revenue from its sale.

The opposition mostly came from establishment Republicans. Former state Senate Majority leader Randy Richardville, a spokesperson for the anti-legalization Healthy and Productive Michigan, claimed the plan was the “worst idea” the state had seen. Richardville added that while he didn’t “necessarily disagree with recreational marijuana,” he believed the ballot initiative would lead to more pot use among younger people. (The Coalition to Regulate Marijuana Like Alcohol released noted that teen pot use in Colorado and Washington state has remained roughly the same since legalization.)

Here’s what you need to know about the new system:

What?

Proposal 1 established a new law called the Michigan Regulation and Taxation of Marihuana Act. Under this law, people in the state will be allowed to possess up to 2.5 ounces of pot and up to 12 plants for personal use, not in addition to the 2.5 ounces.

The act prohibits the use of vehicles while under the influence, consuming pot in public places, growing plants in a publicly visible place, and possessing any substance on the grounds of a school or a correctional facility. Municipalities also have the power to adopt stricter ordinances.

Tax revenue from pot sales will go to the state treasury department’s implementation of the new laws and to medical marijuana research, as well as to counties, schools, and infrastructure.

Who?

Only those 21 and older will be allowed to “possess, consume, purchase or otherwise obtain, cultivate, process, transport, or sell marihuana.” Michiganders under the age of 21 will not be allowed to possess pot in any quantity.

The state government will also issue licenses for retailers, transporters, processors, growers, microbusinesses, and safety compliance facilities. Municipalities will be allowed to limit the number of licensed establishments within the town limits.

Penalties

Possessing more than the legal amount of pot can result in a $500 fine and forfeiture of the substance. The first two offenses will be civil infractions; after that, they’re misdemeanors.

Underaged users can face a $100 fine and forfeiture of the substance for their first offense; in subsequent offenses, the maximum fine will increase to $500. Minors under the age of 18 could also face community service and four hours of drug education or counseling.

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“It Feels Like 2006”: Subprime Auto Loan Issuance Soars Amid Record Investor Interest

As the market continues to show signs of topping, euphoric investors apparently now believe that it’s a great time to pile into the riskiest of subprime auto loans, according to a new Wall Street Journal article.

Investors this year have been buying record amounts of subprime auto securitization deals that have single-B credit rating components to them. These are deals that are easily considered to be “junk” and are “the lowest grade offered when such bonds are sold”. According to data from Finsight, lenders have already issued $318 million in single-B rated debt in 2018, which is more than “all prior years combined”.

The appeal of these deals is the high yield, which comes as a result of the additional risk that investors bear with loans to borrowers who have FICO scores below the mid 600 level. These deals are layered with different tiers, each with a different level of risk and return based on how and when they receive payments.

Single B tranches are generally the last in line for bondholders, which sometimes result in these deals paying rates of more than 6%, or about twice what the 10-year pays. In exchange, they are the first to bear risk. 

But not everybody is willing to bear this risk. Evan Shay, an asset-backed securities analyst at money manager T. Rowe Price, told the Journal: 

“It would be one thing if it was year two of the recovery and performance was rock solid and we were off to the races. The issuance late in the economic cycle appears to be raising some eyebrows.”

But that hasn’t stopped issuers from being able to find buyers that are enticed by the returns. In fact, the single B portions of these deals have sometimes even been upgraded. It’s a bold bet on the health of the U.S. consumer, who by all accounts simply seems to be on his or her last leg, drowning in debt at the top of an economic cycle. 

Borrowers are getting slightly more creditworthy in subprime, with the average FICO score moving up from 577 to 588, according to a Fitch Ratings Report that came out in August. However, 80% of borrowers are amortizing their loans over more than five years – a term that makes them more susceptible to default. Since 2012, delinquencies of over 90 days have been trending higher for all auto loans, according to the NY Fed. 

Not only that, but signs of trouble in subprime continue to pop up. For instance, lender Honor Finance LLC closed its doors over the summer and some bonds backed by the firm’s loans were recently downgraded to double-C. Delinquencies at Honor started rising last year, according to the article.

These loans begin defaulting late last year and bondholders in the double C tranche have been bracing for losses despite Westlake Financial Services, who took over the loans, trying to “aggressively pursue borrowers” who are in the early stages of delinquency.

Amy Martin, an analyst at S&P, said on a recent conference call: “In some ways it feels like 2006, which was one year before the great recession started.”

One of the reasons that bondholders might be comfortable with subprime loans is because they performed well during the years of the financial crisis. For the most part, borrowers continued to pay their loans because they needed to get to work, even if they choose to default on things like things like their homes.

And despite these cracks on the surface, subprime auto loans still show no sign of slowing down. According to S&P, companies have issued about $29.7 billion of asset-backed securities made up of subprime auto loans this year, passing the former record of $24.5 billion in 2017.

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