Taking The Pulse Of A Weakening Economy

Authored by Charles Hugh Smith via OfTwoMinds blog,

Corporate buybacks provide the key analogy for the economy as a whole.

Central banks have been running a grand experiment for 9 years, and now we’re about to find out if it succeeds or fails. For 9 unprecedented years, central banks have pushed the pedal of monetary stimulus to the metal: near-zero interest rates, monumental purchases of bonds, mortgage-backed securities, stocks and corporate bonds, injecting trillions of dollars, yuan, yen and euros into the global financial system, all in the name of promoting a “synchronized global recovery” that in many nations remains the weakest post-World War II recovery on record.

The two goals of this unprecedented stimulus were 1) bringing consumption forward and 2) generating a “wealth effect” as the owners of assets rising in value would translate their perception of feeling wealthier into more borrowing and consumption that would then feed a self-sustaining virtuous cycle of expansion.

The Federal Reserve has finally begun reducing its stimulus programs of near-zero interest rates and bond purchases, the idea being that the “recovery” is now robust enough to continue without the extraordinary monetary stimulus of the past 9 years since the Global Financial Meltdown of 2008-09.

Will the “synchronized global recovery” continue as interest rates rise and central bank assets purchases decline? Policy makers and economists evince confidence as they collectively hold their breath–is the recovery now self-sustaining?

2018 is the first test year. Global assets–stocks, bonds and real estate–remain at levels that are grossly overvalued by traditional measures, and most economies are still expanding modestly. But since the other major central banks have only recently begun to “taper” / reduce their securities purchases, the real test has yet to begin.

The pulses of asset valuations and productive expansion are weakening. Asset valuations are either no longer expanding or are actively falling; markets everywhere feel heavy, as if all they need is one good shove to slip into major declines.

The vaunted “wealth effect” was extremely asymmetric: only those in the top 5% who owned enough assets to experience a meaningful increase in wealth–those who bought assets years before the current bubble expanded, and the relative few households who own roughly 70% of all financial assets–and the few workers and entrepreneurs who benefited from an increasingly “winner take most” expansion.

As a result, the enormous increases in assets had little real effect on the bottom 80% who own few assets, and only modest effects on the “middle class” between the bottom 80% and the top 5%.

Meanwhile, bringing consumption forward has drained the pool of future consumption and creditworthy borrowers. Future consumption now rests on the shaky foundation of marginally qualified buyers and the relatively few young people forming new households who also have high incomes and good credit.

The reality nobody dares acknowledge is that a “recovery” based not on improving productivity and innovation but on cheap credit and an artificially stimulated “wealth effect” was inherently weak, for the stimulus effectively hollowed out the productive economy in favor of the financialized, speculative economy and created perverse incentives to over-borrow and over-spend, stripping future demand to create the illusion of growth in a stagnating economy of rising wealth and power inequality.

A funny thing happens when you borrow from the future to spend more today–the future arrives, and we find the pool has been drained to serve the absurd policy goal of “no recession now, or ever again.”

Corporate buybacks provide the key analogy for the economy as a whole: as sales, productivity and profits all stagnate, corporations borrow against future earnings to buy shares back from investors to push share prices higher, creating an illusion of “wealth.” But it’s all illusion; once the billions in buybacks cease, gravity takes hold and the phantom “wealth” dissipates.

Apple is simply the latest corporation to announce slowing sales growth and to compensate for this stagnation with a massive $100 billion buyback to prop up shares at their current valuation.

Perhaps these realities are seeping into the margins of the complacent herd. It certainly feels like the “smart money” is selling (distributing) to the complacent herd, which is one lightning strike and thunder clap away from a panicked rush to sell and book 9 years of gains before the synchronized global asset bubbles all pop.

Markets have ignored the tapering of central bank support (asset purchases), but the question remains: is this complacency temporary?

Productivity is the only sustainable source of widespread prosperity, and it’s stagnating:

*  *  *

My new book Money and Work Unchained is $9.95 for the Kindle ebook and $20 for the print edition. Read the first section for free in PDF format.  If you found value in this content, please join me in seeking solutions by becoming a $1/month patron of my work via patreon.com.

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Gartman Stopped Out Of 10Y Treasury Short

Two days ago we reported that less than two weeks after getting stopped out on his WTI short, days after he was also stopped out on his Nasdaq short, “world-renowned commodity guru” Dennis Gartman decided he had had enough of boring, boneheaded assets, and decided to short the 10Y treasury.

NEW RECOMMENDATION: The bond market has rallied ever-so-slightly in the course of the past several days, taking it from being aggressively over-sold back to neutrality and in protracted bear markets neutrality is about all that one can ask.

We need to remember that the bond market is now two years into a bear market and that the supposed line-in-the-sand at 3% will prove ephemeral as the ten year trades to 4% and perhaps 5% over the course of the next two or three years.

We are sellers of the ten year here, willingly risking the yield to drop to 2.92 from 2.98 presently, and when the yield moves upward through 3.02 again we shall add to short positions.

As we write, the ten-year note future is trading 119 11/3nds.

What happened next was predictable: the 10Y proceeded to spike higher…

… and then it went higher, and higher, and higher, until this morning’s disappointing NFP print, which prompted some to – incorrectly – concluded that the Fed may be getting cold feet about hiking more. Whatever the reason, however, moments after the NFP was announced the 10Y yield plunged, sliding from above 2.93% to below 2.91% in the span of milliseconds.

More importantly, recall from Gartman:

We are sellers of the ten year here, willingly risking the yield to drop to 2.92 from 2.98 presently, and when the yield moves upward through 3.02 again we shall add to short positions.

Well, he risked… and lost.

And just like that, Gartman was just stopped out for the 3rd time in 2 weeks. And now, 10Y yields can go ahead and soar.

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NBC Forced to Backtrack on Story About Feds Wiretapping Michael Cohen: Reason Roundup

CohenNBC originally reported that federal authorities had listened in on at least one phone call between Donald Trump and his former attorney, Michael Cohen. If that were true, it would be a potentially game-changing development in the legal fracas involving Trump, Cohen, and porn actress Stormy Daniels.

But the news network had to revise its scoop after three senior officials disputed its account. The feds had merely monitored a log of calls that Cohen made to various people; they had not tapped the calls themselves. According to NBC’s corrected story:

The calls are logged by a machine called a pen register, which records the number of the phone that made the call and the number that received it, but does not record the contents of any conversation.

NBC News originally reported that Cohen’s phone lines had been wiretapped, meaning a judge had given investigators approval to listen to phone calls. Three senior U.S. officials now dispute that, saying the monitoring of the calls was limited to a log of calls.

At least one phone call between a phone line associated with Cohen and the White House was logged, the person said.

It is much easier for investigators to obtain pen registers than it is for them to obtain wiretaps, which means the story isn’t anywhere as explosive as it initially seemed.

Former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani, who recently joined Trump’s legal team, has instructed the president never to call Cohen again. Giuliani may have made a colossal mistake of his own, however, in contradicting Trump’s story that he never reimbursed Cohen for a payment to Stormy Daniels.

FREE MINDS

A recent free speech event at the University of New Hampshire hosted by Turning Points USA and featuring commentator Dave Rubin went about as well as you might have expected. Protesters formed a blockade in an attempt to prevent attendees from entering the event. One activist, Nooran Alhamdan, argued with Rubin about hate speech, asking: “What will it take to be hate speech, and when will I actually become the victim? When I’m dead?” according to The New Hampshire. Rubin countered that the Supreme Court has never identified or defined a hate speech exception to the First Amendment.

The event proceeded as planned, though hecklers continuously interrupted. These disruptions call to mind recent incidents at CUNY and Duke.

FREE MARKETS

Everybody is still talking about—and to a great degree, profoundly misreading—this Ross Douthat column about incels and “the redistribution of sex” (itself a response to this post by Robin Hanson of George Mason University). As Conor Friedersdorf pointed out on Twitter, Douthat wasn’t actually endorsing the thing the column was about:

Reason, I should note, is more optimistic than Douthat about the good that sex robots could do.

QUICK HITS

  • The younger brother of Parkland shooter Nikolas Cruz has filed suit against several Broward County officials who he claims “tortured” him during a recent jail stint. Zachary Cruz, who was held for driving without a license, says he was effectively punished for his brother’s crimes.

  • Twitter says that all 336 million users should change their passwords.

  • Former Reddit CEO Ellen Pao sent a tweet warning text companies of “incels”—men angry about their inability to find sexual partners—in their midst. She also challenged them to do something about this, though employers asking workers intimate details about their sex lives seems like it could run afoul of anti-harassment law.
  • The Kilauea volcano in Hawaii erupts.
  • A sex abuse scandal forces the Nobel Prize panel to cancel the 2018 prize for literature.
  • The Atlantic held an in-house conversation between Jeffrey Goldberg and Ta-Nehisi Coates about the Kevin Williamson firing. Read it here.
  • Justin Amash, international man of mystery:

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Dollar Spikes, VIX Flash-Crashes After Payrolls Disappointment

Following this morning’s disappointing payrolls data – if you ignore the ridiculous 3.9% unemployment rate that The Fed focuses on – the dollar index is spiking back above pre-FOMC levels.

However, it is the massive VIX flash-crash to a 10 handle is the most notable…

 

Stocks are sinking post-payrolls…

Not a fat finger!

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No Wage Inflation? Not So Fast: Overtime Hours Soar

“And just like that, wage inflation went away.”

Despite unemployment falling to 3.9% and tight labor markets, the BLS is reporting the lowest levels of annualized wage inflation in a year.

However, as Southbay Research points out, what is going on is a mirror image of the February wage inflation scare, when a drop in hours worked prompted the BLS to calculate that average hourly earnings jumped even as weekly earnings remained flat.

First, here is what the wage data revealed:

  • Accelerating inflation: Construction (0.6% m/m), Retail (0.5%), Information (0.3%), Pro Services (0.3%)
  • Decelerating inflation: Wholesale Trade (-0.1%), Transportation (-0.2%), Financial Services (-0.4%), Education & Health (-0.1%), Leisure (0.2%)

What is going on is that at the aggregate level, hourly earnings – which as the name implies are an “average” – declined. The driver was simple: a sharp jump in hours worked, specifically at the “overtime hours” level, which hit a new post crisis high.

As Southbay points out, as a sign of pressure, overtime jumped again and remain at a cyclical high.  Overtime is both costly and (in a tight labor market) a sign that employers can’t find more workers.

Combining this regular hours, and we get the answer for today’s surprising miss in wage growth, even as the unemployment rate printed a new cycle low of 3.95: the real culprit in the low AHE is the sudden jump in hours worked, which of course, is the denominator in the AHE calculation.

And judging by the sharp post-kneejerk spike in the dollar after the disappointing, post-payrolls slump, the market may have figured this out.

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Conservatives Need to Put Aside Kneejerk Police Support: New at Reason

When it comes to problems in the public schools, my conservative friends are right on target with their critique. These schools often do a poor or mediocre job performing an important function. That’s because they lack competition and are funded by political priorities rather than customers. Teachers’ unions have undue sway over the entire process. They make it nearly impossible to fire even grossly incompetent teachers and that small percentage harms many students. Those same unions drive up unsustainable benefit costs.

Like everyone else, conservatives appreciate teachers—but they realize that the current taxpayer-funded system needs many reforms and more competition. There’s nothing wrong with pointing this out, which is a reality in any government-funded, union-controlled monopoly anywhere in the world.

Yet when it comes to another type of taxpayer-funded, union-controlled monopoly, conservatives lose their sense of perspective. I’m referring, of course, to local and state police agencies. The same dynamic described above works there, too. Police agencies are bureaucratic. Unions protect the bad apples and make it nearly impossible to fire anyone—even officers caught on video misbehaving or being abusive to the public. The agencies hand out unsustainable benefits and have some bizarre spending priorities (tank-like vehicles, etc.). They are secretive and insular. They use asset forfeiture to grab the property of people never convicted or even accused of a crime.

It’s time for everyone—conservatives included—to recognize that efforts to reform police departments are as necessary as efforts to reform our public schools, writes Steven Greenhut.

Read the whole thing here.

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Argentina Hikes Rates To 40% To Stall Currency, Bond Market Collapse

It may be time to cry for Argentina…

The Central Bank of Argentina (BCRA) just hiked its 7-day repo reference rate to 40.00% – up a stunning 1275bps in a week – in a desperate attempt to stall the collapse of the peso (and ARG bonds) this week.

BCRA hiked this week three times:

  • 4/27 +300bps to 30.25%
  • 5/03 +300bps to 33.25%
  • 5/04 +675bps to 40.00%

The central bank said it will continue to use all tools at its disposal to avoid disruptions in the markets and guarantee a slowdown in inflation. The bank is ready to act again if necessary, it said in the statement.

As The FT reports, appetite for Argentine assets has been waning in recent months as concerns grow over the country’s painfully high level of inflation and large trade and fiscal deficits. A severe drought is also complicating President Mauricio Macri’s efforts to revive Latin America’s third-largest economy. Agricultural exports are one of Argentina’s main sources of hard currency, but the worst drought in decades is expected to hit this year’s soybean and corn harvests. The country’s famed cattle industry is also predicted to rack up millions in losses.

And, of course, adding to Argentina’s woes is the return of US dollar strength.

The peso has now plunged over 17% this year against the dollar, and plunged yesterday by the most since it began its free-float in December 2015.

Furthermore, Argentina’s ‘infamous’ Century bonds have collapsed – selling off for 15 days straight as those who bought the 100-year bonds last year in the massively oversubscribed deal are likely regretting that ‘reach for yield’ choice now…

As we said at the time of issuance, while the bond was massively oversubscribed, investors questioned the wisdom of investing for a such a long term in a country as volatile as Argentina.

“It’s awfully premature for Argentina to issue 100-year bonds,” said Jorge Piedrahita, chief executive officer of Puma Investments. “When you look back in history, I’m not sure we can find a 20-year period where Argentina has not defaulted.”

That bridge will be crossed in due course, meanwhile aside from the government, the biggest winners were Citigroup Inc and HSBC, who acted as lead book runners on the deal.

That bridge may just about to be burned once again.

Argentina’s Treasury Secretary Dujovne is attempting to stabilize the narrative, stating alongside Caputo that the central bank’s actions are meant to address volatility and reaffirms the government’s commitment to tighten fiscal policy (which many have doubted).

Dujovne warns “we can’t go on living on borrowings” saying that the country’s fiscal deficit target will change to 4.9% of GDP.

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Big Miss In Payrolls, Earnings Growth As Unemployment Rate Hits Record Low 3.9%

Is the Fed’s rate-hike cycle over?

Coming into today’s payrolls number, the sellside community was hoping that last month’s unexpectedly poor payrolls number would prove to be a one off. It was not, and moments ago the BLS surprised with yet another poor jobs number, when it reported that in April, the US generated only 164K jobs, missing expectations of a 190K print, if modestly better than last month’s upward revised 135K number (from 102K).

Total 164,000 April payrolls, compared with an average monthly gain of 191,000 over the prior 12 months, with most job gains occurring in professional and business services, manufacturing, health care, and mining.

February payrolls were revised down from +326,000 to +324,000, while March was revised up from +103,000 to
+135,000, netting a +30,000 job gains for the past two months. After revisions, job gains have averaged 208,000 over the last 3 months.

It wasn’t just the headline payrolls number that was a disappointment: the much more closely watched average hourly earnings print also missed, rising just 0.1% M/M, below the 0.2% expected, and 2.6% Y/Y, also missing the 2.7% expected.

The only good in today’s report is that the unemployment rate dropped to a new record low of 3.9%, which however was the result of a 240K drop in the labor force as the number of employed Americans (per the Household Survey) remained virtually unchanged at 155.181K

Developing.

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Turkish Cargo Vessel Rams Greek Warship In Aegean Sea

In the last three months, tensions between two NATO member states have escalated dramaticallyTurkey has threatened to invade Greek islands, Greece has responded, and Greeks now see Turkey as the greatest threat to their existence., but today it appears the situation may have escalated dramatically as Turkish cargo ship KARMATE has collided with the Greek warship ‘Armatolos’ despite warnings that it was on collision course.

KeepTalkingGreece reports that the incident took place at 4 o’ clock Friday morning, South-East off Lesvos within Greek territorial waters. The Turkish-flagged ship had deviated form its original course and fled into Turkish territorial waters. The gunboat was on NATO mission “Aegean Activity” patrolling for migrants and refugees illegally entering Greece from Turkey.

According to a statement issued by the Greek Navy, the Turkish cargo came towards the gunboat, “approached and touched” ARMATOLOS on the left side. KARMATE increased speed and made it towards the Turkish coast. It did not respond to continuous radio calls from ARMATOLOS to stop.

The Turkish cargo violated the International Law of the Sea, breaching safety rules and avoid collision, the statement said.

The Turkish cargo had also ignored visual signals and warning calls from the gunboat while it was on collision course.

The cargo continued its route and entered Turkish territorial waters. Within 1.5 nautical mile, it was stopped by a Turkish Coast Guard vessel that had heard of the whole incident through the radio.

Gunboat Armatolos suffered no serious material damage in the middle, no crew member was injured.

A Greek Coast Guard boat approached the gunboat that continued its course.

The gunboat immediately informed the Greek Navy and the NATO.

The Navy is going to seek compensation from the KARMATE Shipping company, Greek media reported.

Hours after the incident, the KARMATE seems to be anchored off Turkish coast, at the port of Dekili. The cargo had departed the port of Izmir at 10:30 p.m. Turkish local time with destination Tekirdag port in North Turkey.

The behavior of the Turkish captain of KARMATE is considered as “suspicious”, especially if one checks with the cargo route showing it clearly deviated from its original course.

screen shots via marinetraffic.com

Seven hours after the incident and KARMATE’s shipping company has not issued any statement.

The incident comes amid increased tensions between Greece and Turkey with Ankara to challenge sovereignty rights in the Aegean.

Last February,  a Turkish Coast Guard patrol boat rammed an anchored  Greek Coast Guard boatoff the islet of Imia, Ankara claims it was “under Turkish sovereignty.”

*  *  *
As we concluded previously, given that Turkey brutally invaded Cyprus in 1974, its current threats against Greece — from both ends of Turkey’s political spectrum — should not be taken lightly by the West.

Greece is the birthplace of Western civilization. It borders the European Union. Any attack against Greece should be treated as an attack against the West. It is time for the West, which has remained silent in the face of Turkish atrocities, to stand up to Ankara.

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Frontrunning: May 4

  • Trump Gambit Over Disclosing Porn-Star Payment Stuns Staff (WSJ)
  • U.S. Wants $200 Billion Cut in China Trade Imbalance by End of 2020 (WSJ)
  • Here’s What the U.S., China Demanded of Each Other on Trade (BBG)
  • Small manufacturers tap the brakes as tariffs bite (Reuters)
  • Democrats target union workers who regret Trump vote (Reuters)
  • Trump not seeking to curb US forces in South Korea: U.S. national security adviser (Reuters)
  • U.S. jobs growth expected to regain momentum in April (Reuters)
  • Ex-Volkswagen CEO Winterkorn charged in U.S. over diesel scandal (Reuters)
  • In Birthplace of Junk, Investors See Risks After Decade of Debt (BBG)
  • A Haircut Costs 5 Bananas and 2 Eggs in Venezuela (BBG)
  • How to Look Like a Pro at Buffettpalooza This Weekend (WSJ)
  • Palestinian leader Abbas offers apology for remarks on Jews (Reuters)
  • Should Supply and Demand Determine the Price for a Fast Commute? (WSJ)
  • Walmart Beats Amazon in $15 Billion Flipkart Battle (BBG)
  • 5 Questions for Buffett Ahead of the Annual Meeting (WSJ)
  • Buffett’s Berkshire Braces for ‘Wild’ Swings From New Accounting (BBG)
  • What to Do Now the Deduction for Investment Fees Is Dead (WSJ)
  • Altria Group and Nikon Quietly Stay Away From the NRA’s Big Show (BBG)

Overnight Media Digest

WSJ

– JPMorgan Chase & Co is investing further in artificial intelligence. The largest U.S. bank by assets said Carnegie Mellon University’s head of machine learning will join JPMorgan in a new role, head of artificial-intelligence research. on.wsj.com/2HRRaU0

– Private-equity firm KKR & Co said it would convert to a corporation from a partnership, a significant shift to its structure that signifies how the new tax code is changing the contours of business in the U.S. on.wsj.com/2HML3QD

– Xerox Corp said its existing board and management would stay in place after an agreement with two of its biggest shareholders to oust the company’s chief executive and shuffle the board expired. on.wsj.com/2HM3BQV

– Nike Inc Chief Executive Mark Parker apologized to employees for allowing a corporate culture that excluded some staff and failed to take seriously complaints about workplace issues. on.wsj.com/2IdYj01

 

FT

BT Group Plc is set to reveal plans to cut thousands more jobs as Britain’s biggest telecommunications company battles to win back investors still spooked by an accounting scandal in Italy last year.

EDF has bought a large offshore wind project near the coast of Scotland for more than 500 million euros ($599.40 million) from developer Mainstream Renewable Power that marks the largest UK wind deal this year.

Barclays Africa Group Ltd, one of the continent’s largest banks, has fired KPMG as its auditor over the firm’s work linked to the Gupta business family and a high-profile bank failure.

Societe Generale SA said on Thursday that chief executive Frederic Oudea has been given another four years at the head of the bank, after deputy chief executive Didier Valet’s departure over the Libor rate rigging scandal.

 

NYT

– Volkswagen AG emissions scandal reached the highest echelons of the company on Thursday after its former chief executive was charged with conspiracy in the company’s rigging of diesel vehicles to feign compliance with federal pollution standards. nyti.ms/2HS1tmE

– Denver Post Editor Chuck Plunkett, who wrote an editorial last month that called the newspaper’s hedge fund owners “vulture capitalists”, said he resigned after another critical editorial he wrote was not allowed to run. nyti.ms/2HLg8E9

– Tesla Inc CEO Elon Musk’s contentious conference call with analysts after earnings announcement on Wednesday sent shares of the electric-car maker sharply lower. Tesla’s stock price fell 5.6 percent on Thursday, after Musk butted heads with analysts on the call who wanted updates on the company’s continuing production issues and high cash-burn rate. nyti.ms/2IfeU3I

 

Britain

The Times

Customers of TSB Bank are likely to face months of disruption before the bank is able to fully fix the computer problems that have left many unable to access their accounts and struggling to perform basic services such as paying in cheques, financial regulators believe. bit.ly/2KynGYP

Philip Clarke, the former chief executive of Tesco Plc , has been accused of carrying out “an extraordinary act of corporate vandalism” during his troubled period at the helm of Britain’s largest grocer. bit.ly/2KATPPp

The Guardian

House of Fraser’s rescue restructuring faces a significant hurdle after it emerged that the department store chain may have to fund a multimillion-pound injection into its pension scheme. bit.ly/2HNTTO7

An activist investor has criticised the management of Gloo Networks – the listed vehicle that aimed to buy digitally focused media companies valued up to 1 billion pounds ($1.36 billion) but is shutting up shop – for pocketing millions in salaries and bonus payouts despite failing to strike a single deal in three years. bit.ly/2HQutiL

The Telegraph

EDF, the energy firm behind the UK’s nuclear revival, will deepen its offshore wind ambitions with a major deal to buy a controversial Scottish wind project. bit.ly/2HLsxrL

Ophir Energy Plc will double its oil production with a $205 million (150 million pounds) deal to snap up a package of oil fields in southeast Asia from Australian oil group Santos. bit.ly/2HMOGGr

Sky News

A thousand more high street jobs are at risk as Calvetron Brands, the womenswear group behind the Jacques Vert and Precis brands, prepares to call in administrators less than a year after its last rescue deal. bit.ly/2KyODeQ

The Information Commissioner’s Office, which has been looking into Cambridge Analytica’s handling of data harvested from millions of Facebook Inc users, and raided its offices in March, said the inquiry would continue. bit.ly/2KyHgUX

The Independent

Virgin Media is closing its Swansea call centre and slashing almost 800 jobs. The telecoms firm said 552 staff positions and 220 subcontractors would go before the site completely shuts down next year. ind.pn/2HLr3Od

 

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