Police Militarization is Not Inevitable: 58 Percent Think It’s Already Going Too Far

they've gone to disneylandAmericans, it seems, have had enough police
militarization, with the latest Reason-Rupe poll
finding
a full 58 percent of respondents believing that the use
of drones, military weapons, and armored vehicles by local police
departments as already going “too far.” That includes a full 60
percent of both Democrats and Tea Partiers. Opposition is under 50
percent among non-Tea Party Republicans.

Policing in the United States has seen rapid militarization,
fueled by the war-like mentality that comes with the “drug war,” as
well as by the abundance of military surplus available to local
police departments from the federal government, especially since
9/11. The military gear ends up at agencies across the country,
from
New York
to
Wyoming
. Earlier this year, the Defense Department even sent
“free” (original cost to taxpayers: $658,000 each) mine-resistant
ambush protected (MRAP) vehicles
to 500 local police departments
; vehicles the Pentagon didn’t
think the military needed are now being used by local police
forces. Disturbingly, an ACLU FOIA request revealed one police
department, that of Concord, New Hampshire, cited the presence of
Free State Project and Occupy New Hampshire activists as domestic
terror threats for which the military vehicles were necessary.
Concord had
spent some time
trying to get the feds to cover the cost of a
military vehicle, and ended up getting at least the one for
“free.”

The Super Bowl has become one annual display of such a post-9/11
dedication to security theater. Next month’s Super Bowl, to be held
in New Jersey, has the NYPD promising “unprecedented
security for the event. Police militarization is difficult to
ignore. Evidence of the policy greets Americans at nearly every
transit center in the country, and at countless other points of
interest.  It’s inherent danger is displayed every time a
story about police abuse pops
up; not many may make it into the national news cycle, but there’s
a constant stream of such stories in the local news. Former Reason
editor Radley Balko’s new book, Rise of
the Warrior Cop
, chronicles the history of police
militarization in America, helping make the policy part of the
national debate and not an inevitability to be resigned to.

The opposition to police militarization even (or especially)
extends to the use of drones by cops, the least readily
identifiable of domestic law enforcement’s military toolbox.
Earlier this year, the FBI
acknowledged
using drones for domestic surveillance in “a very
minimal way,” but it’s impossible to point to a drone the way you
can point to an automatic weapon, a military vehicle, or full body
armor. Nevertheless, wherever a local cop or politician has
suggested the acquisition or deployment of drones, there’s been a

backlash
from concerned residents.

Related: Watch Reason TV’s “Cops With Machine Guns: The Killing
of Michael Nida,” a piece from 2011, below

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/12/18/police-military-is-not-inevitable-58-per
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Housing Starts, Permits Surge On Seasonal Adjustments, Rental Units

Today’s key economic data point, aside from the FOMC announcement of course, was the monthly Housing Starts and Permits data. And with November starts printing at 1091K, a massive 202K unit surge compared to the 889K in October, this was the highest monthly print since early 2008 and biggest monthly jump since… 1990! Supposedly builders just can’t get enough. Well, maybe. Until one again looks below the headlines, where one finds that a substantial portion of the jump is once again due to the builders’ bet that rental housing demand will continue growing, as multi-family unit starts soared from 281K to 354K – just shy of the highest print since 2008 as well.

However, there was more: because if one assumes a major surge in seasonally adjusted data, there should be a matched surge in NSA data too. There wasn’t, and in fact the NSA print rose by a very modest 5.5K to 82.8K actual houses started in November. Additionally, the single-family print barely rose from 49.2 to just 51.9, well below the highs seen in the summer of 2013, when unadjusted single-family starts were higher than the November print from March until August! In fact, at 51.9K, single unit homes are back to mid-2011 levels. Thank you seasonal adjustments.

But nowhere was the seasonal adjustment in today’s data more evident than in the Housing Permits number. Yes, the headline number was great: it dipped modestly from an upward revised 1039K to 1007K but beat expectations of 990K handily. So what happens when one looks at the non-seasonally adjusted number? It cratered from 90.3 to 70.9K – this was the lowest print since February and the biggest absolute monthly drop in 5 years since November 2008!

Some seasonally-adjusted housing recovery…. in rental properties.


    



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Water and Agriculture

It’s like a futuristic film with hoards of evil masses of people, poverty-stricken, living off the land, while the rich and wealthy continue to lord it, served to their hearts content and just raking it in, while the others hardly get enough to eat and drink. Yes, the resources of the planet are finite for the moment. Yes, those resources belong to the same people and yes the lands are worked for the benefit of the dollar-hungry few, while the money-poor subsist on what scraps get thrown to them. But, it might look like the future, but the present certainly resembles very much the long-forgotten past. We haven’t come very far since the days of feudalism, have we? There is still a power-crazed lord of the manor there that is just a business tycoon under another name. There are still the poor vassals that eke out their existence and wait in expectant eagerness for the bones to get tossed to them as the lord and his ladies walk off into the ramparts of the castle. This time it’s the water and the agricultural lands that are the much-sought after means of wealth. They bring down governments these days and oust leaders.

Water and Agriculture are already the cause of many a dispute in the world and even more so in the Middle East, in the Near East and in Africa. Take the example of ex-President Mohamed Morsi and his fall from power. The Ethiopians decided to spend $3 billion on the building of a hydraulic damn to siphon off the Nile. In May 2013, Morsi convened a meeting to discuss the project and it quickly turned into a fiasco with the media as it was transmitted live (by mistake or on purpose) on national television. The meeting went from decision-making discussions to threats of declaring war and to bribery of senior Ethiopian officials, via the destruction of the dam itself by Egyptian forces. Just a few weeks later, Morsi had fallen from power.

Water is everything from economic survival to territorial appropriation. It’s the cause of the downfall of governments and the revolt of the masses in countries that saw the ousting of their leaders during the Arab Springs. No country in the region was in a position to assume agricultural independence and each country has suffered from the increased dependence on water. There were food crises that hit those nations in 2007 as the Western world was being hit by their own financial crisis. The governments of countries in the regions massively invested in agriculture to keep the barking dogs at bay. But, that did nothing but increase the financial pressure on the economy and brought about hyperinflation. The governments were to some extent the cause of their own strife.

  • Saudi Arabia pays out a billion dollars per month for imported food.
  • Egypt forked out $3 billion for wheat alone in 2010.
  • The countries of the Gulf import some 90% of their food today.
  • Food prices got out of control in the lead up to the Arab Springs when the United Nations published figures showing that price indexes rose from 2009’s level of 157 to over 230 in 2011.
  • Wheat increased over that same period by 30%.

According to the Pierre Blanc from the CIHEAM research laboratory (International Center for Agronomy Studies, France), the future will be worse as agricultural lands are transformed into deserts. Climate change coupled with demographic transitions (increasing numbers of people are huddled together on small pieces of land – in Egypt 95% of the population lives on 5% of the land, for example) in countries in the water-poor regions of the world will lead to increased hydraulic demand that will not be met by available supplies today. While the regions remain politically unstable, the volatility of governments and policies will only mean that it will pave the way for increased disputes over the sharing of resources. Recent discoveries of oil reserves and gas along the Mediterranean coastline between Egypt, Israel Lebanon and Syria as well as Turkey and Cyprus will mean that those countries (as well as other nations in the Western world) will be vying for a place to exploit those reserves to a maximum.

  • Egypt has until now supplied 50% of Israel’s energy needs.
  • But that may change in the future with the discovery of Tamar and Leviathan gas reserves.
  • Tamar (282 billion m3) would allow Israel to ensure its energy needs for the next 25 years.
  • Leviathan (540 billion m3) would be a surplus that would enable Israel to rake in a great deal of money.
  • 60% of Leviathan will be used for domestic consumption in Israel, while 40% will be exported to other countries.
  • The other countries along the coastline seem to have equally promising amounts of gas and petrol in areas under their exclusive economic control.

Where there are resources that we want, there is a fight for power; that struggle turns into political upheaval and change. Too much testosterone will be flying around there yet again and everyone will be playing out their role of the alpha male to dominate the others.

Originally posted: Water and Agriculture

Mandela and Obama: Millions of Miles Apart |  Potato Juice Just Got Upped | Government: Byword for Corruption | Getting Ready for the Big One: February 2014 | Pornvestments | The Stooges are Running the Show, Obama |  Banks: The Right Thing to Do | Bitcoin Bonanza | The Super Rich Deprive Us of Fundamental Rights |  Whining for Wine |Cost of Living Not High Enough in EU | Record Levels of Currency Reserves Will Hit Hard | 

 Indian Inflation: Out of Control? | Greenspan Maps a Territory Gold Rush or Just a Streak? | Obama’s Obamacare: Double Jinx | Financial Markets: Negating the Laws of Gravity  |Blatant Housing-Bubble: Stating the Obvious | Let’s Downgrade S&P, Moody’s and Fitch For Once | US Still Living on Borrowed Time | (In)Direct Slavery: We’re All Guilty |

Technical Analysis: Bear Expanding Triangle | Bull Expanding Triangle | Bull Falling Wedge Bear Rising Wedge High & Tight Flag 


    



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Poll: Majorities of Democrats and Independents Support Legalization of Marijuana

In less than a month, people
will be able to legally purchase and use marijuana recreationally
in Colorado thanks to the state’s landmark marijuana law that takes
effect January 1. Americans nationally, however, are still divided
on whether marijuana should be legalized.

In the latest
Reason-Rupe poll
, 49 percent of Americans told Reason-Rupe that
they favor the legalization of marijuana while 47 percent say they
are opposed.

Majorities of Democrats (55 percent) and independents (51
percent) favor marijuana legalization, as do 37 percent of
Republicans. Instead, a majority (59 percent) of Republicans
opposed legalizing marijuana. Despite the libertarian streak in the
tea party movement, a majority (54 percent) of tea partiers also
oppose making marijuana legal, while Republicans who don’t identify
with the movement are slightly more likely to oppose (61
percent).

Support for legalization increases with education and declines
with age. Forty-six percent of those with a high school education
or less support legalization, while 54 percent of college graduates
and 57 percent of post-graduates are in favor of legalizing
marijuana. In addition, 56 percent of Americans under 35 favor
making marijuana legal, middle aged Americans are evenly divided,
and 60 percent of those over 65 oppose such a policy change.

January
2013 Reason-Rupe poll
 asked the question slightly
differently, by asking if Americans favored or opposed the
legalization of marijuana for recreational use. Similarly, 47
percent favored and 49 percent opposed. Interestingly, asking about
recreational use depressed Republican support to only 25 percent,
while the December 2013 poll which did not mention “recreational
use” found Republican support as high as 37 percent. Both time and
wording have bolstered Republican support; particularly emphasizing
marijuana as a “recreational” activity is likely counterproductive
to convincing social conservatives to support reform.

Nationwide telephone poll conducted Dec 4-8 2013 interviewed
1011 adults on both mobile (506) and landline (505) phones, with a
margin of error +/- 3.7%. Princeton Survey Research Associates
International executed the nationwide Reason-Rupe survey. Columns
may not add up to 100% due to rounding. Full poll results,
detailed tables, and methodology found here. Sign
up for notifications of new releases of the Reason-Rupe
poll here.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/12/18/poll-majorities-of-democrats-and-indepe2
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A.M. Links: Economists in Survey Say Income Inequality is Hurting the American Economy, China Confirms Near-Collision With US Navy Ship, Up to 500 Killed in South Sudan Since Sunday

  • China has confirmed that one of its warships
    almost collided
    with the USS Cowpens earlier this month.
  • An official from the Los Angeles County
    Sheriff’s Department
    has acknowledged that the department
    should not have hired about 80 of the officers it did in 2010.
  • Washington,
    D.C. gun owners
    will face up to a year behind bars and a $1,000
    fine if they do not re-register their firearm from Jan. 1,
    2014.
  • Most economists in a
    survey conducted by the Associated Press
    believe that income
    inequality is hurting the American economy.
  • Up to 500
    people
    have been killed in South Sudan since Sunday as fighting
    between military factions spread from the capital.
  • Indians have protested the treatment of a diplomat who was

    stripped and searched
    after being taken into custody by police
    in New York City.

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from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/12/18/am-links-economists-in-survey-say-income
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Kurt Loder Reviews Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues

One understands why Will Ferrell and director
Adam McKay waited so many years to follow up Anchorman: The
Legend of Ron Burgundy. That 2004 hit, which they co-wrote, seemed
to take wild non-sequitur humor as far as it could go—its scabrous
raunch approached perfection. A sequel would have to expand upon
the earlier film’s concept of a preening TV nitwit amok in the
happy-talk local-news scene of the 1970s. Kurt Loder poses the
question: Could such a movie ever be more than a re-tread?

View this article.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/12/18/kurt-loder-reviews-anchorman-2-the-legen
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Spanish Bad Loans Jump To New Record As Banks Come Clean Over Mortgage Defaults

Spanish loan delinquencies as a percentage of the total have risen for the 8th straight month to a new record high of 13.00% (even as sovereign bond spreads continue to plunge to multi-year lows signaling all is well). With unemployment rates stuck stubbornly high, however, reality is starting to dawn in the Spanish banking system as mortgage defaults are rising following the Bank of Spain’s order for lenders to review their portfolios. As Bloomberg reports, the default rate for Banco Santander alone jumped to 7% (from 3.1%) following its “reclassification” of loans that it had refinanced (never expecting to be repaid) and with home prices still falling, “there is an urgency to come clean” as regulators see the need for banks to cover a further EUR5 billion shortfall in provisions.

 

The slow-and-steady rise in deliquencies smacks of an industry that is dripping out there problems – hiding facts from reality and the spike for Banco Santander is merely highlighting the mis-statement…

 

Via Bloomberg,

With Spain’s persistently high unemployment rate now at 26 percent, the couple is among the 350,000 homeowners who may be foreclosed upon by lenders in the next two years as the housing crisis worsens, according to AFES, a Madrid-based association that advises on restructuring debt. Since 2008, about 150,000 families have been hit with a foreclosure.

 

“We refinanced three years ago, but now the noose is around our necks,” Males, 42, said. “Not only do we still owe more than the original loan. We’re losing our home as well.”

 

 

As mortgage defaults rise, lenders will have to set aside money to cover losses, hurting profits, according to Juan Villen, head of mortgages at Spanish property web site Idealista.com. Spanish banks absorbed 87 billion euros ($120 billion) of impairment charges last year after Economy Minister Luis de Guindos forced them to record more defaults on loans to developers. The government took 41 billion euros in European assistance to shore up its failing lenders.

 

 

Defaults are rising partly because of changes required by the Bank of Spain that force lenders to book more soured mortgages.

 

“When the real estate bubble burst in 2008, banks used refinancing en masse to cover up non-performing residential mortgage loans,”

Which led to a broad loan review…

In April, the Bank of Spain ordered lenders to review their portfolios of refinanced loans, including mortgages, to make sure they’re classified in a uniform way. Lenders had 208 billion euros of loans on their books that they’d restructured or refinanced as of the end of 2012, according to the regulator.

 

The review led the regulator to the preliminary conclusion that classifying all refinanced loans correctly would cause a 21 billion-euro increase in defaults. Lenders would need to generate a further 5 billion euros of provisions to cover the losses.

 

The default rate for Banco Santander SA (SAN)’s Spanish mortgages jumped to 7 percent in September from 3.1 percent in June as it reclassified loans that it had refinanced.

 

“As a bank this will be the main focus area, whether you are properly recording your non-performing loans, especially the refinanced ones,” said Alexander Pelteshki, an analyst at ING Financial Markets in Amsterdam. “There is an urgency to come clean.”

But it’s not going to get better any time soon…

“Until Spain starts creating jobs and credit starts flowing again, house prices aren’t going to recover,” Beatriz Toribio, head of research at Fotocasa, said. “We expect further price declines, albeit smaller than in previous years, in 2014.”


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/9sc9Nmd58qQ/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Perfect storm sending the A$ below 85c

shutterstock 82525309 150x150 Perfect storm sending the A$ below 85c

December 18, 2013
Hong Kong

 

[Editor’s Note: Tim Staermose, Sovereign Man’s Chief Investment Strategist, is filling in today while Simon is scouting new agricultural properties.]

Earlier this year I ate a $36 hamburger in Sydney.

And after the sticker shock wore off, I wrote about the Australian dollar’s massive, obvious overvaluation.

When the Aussie dollar passed A$1.04 per US dollar, I advised readers of my premium investment newsletter to protect the value of their portfolios with a trade that profits as the Australian dollar falls.

This call paid off for my readers; the Aussie dollar is now below $0.90. But I believe it has much further to fall.

For starters, Reserve Bank Governor Glenn Stevens (Australia’s equivalent of Ben Bernanke) said in a widely publicized interview last week that he wants the Australian dollar at 85c or below.

In response, global hedge funds are now selling it with abandon and helping Mr. Stevens get his wish sooner rather than later.

As with most targets, it will probably overshoot significantly, and I wouldn’t be surprised to see the Aussie fall to 80c or less over the coming year.

Simultaneously, the recently installed coalition government’s statements this week on the state of the Aussie government’s finances and economy have been almost comical.

The government has admitted that, contrary to its election promises, a budget surplus will be impossible during the course of its term.

This year’s budget deficit is expected to be A$47 billion, more than 50% higher than the A$30.1 billion predicted as recently as August.  And it’s sliding even deeper into the red for the next three years.

A projected A$4.2 billion surplus in 2016-17 proved wishful thinking.  The government now says it is heading for a A$17.7 billion deficit– over 4x higher.

Economic growth next year is now forecast to remain at a sluggish 2.5%, and the unemployment rate is forecast to stay at elevated.

This means that future interest rates cuts are likely.

That’s a further blow to the Aussie dollar, which has been a beneficiary of global investors seeking Australia’s higher-than-average interest rates.

On top of everything else, Australia’s reputation as an open, business-friendly economy, welcoming of foreign investment, has taken a severe beating, after the new government rejected a high-profile takeover deal last month.

Archer Daniels Midland was told it would not be allowed to invest billions of dollars in Australia’s Graincorp because it is “against [Australia’s] national interest.”

After a black eye like that, it’s highly doubtful that other US businesses will be bringing their greenbacks to invest Down Under any time soon.  And that’s more bad news for the currency.

This is a major turn of events given that, over the last few years, Australia had become a ‘new Switzerland’ of sorts—a safe haven currency with a pristine government balance sheet.

Now, this isn’t the end of the world for Australia– the situation with both the money supply and national finances is still far superior than most of the West.

But there’s simply too much negative momentum right now.

And while a brief counter-trend rally is certainly possible, it’s my firm conviction that a longer-term bearish bet on the Australian dollar will prove lucrative.

from SOVErEIGN MAN http://www.sovereignman.com/expat/perfect-storm-sending-the-a-below-85c-13315/
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Biting The Hand That Bails You Out: JPM Sues FDIC

There is a saying: “don’t buy the hand that feeds you” but there is nothing in popular aphorism literature about suing the hand that bails you out. Which is precisely what JPM did overnight when it sued the Federal Deposit Insurance Company, claiming the agency was responsible for over $1 billion in liabilities assumed by the bank as part of its takeover of Washington Mutual in 2008. Of course, having been the subject of a relentless battery of lawsuits by every US agency imaginable, many were wondering when JPM would strike back, or rather if it would have the temerity to sue the same government that bailed it out with billions of direct injections and even more billions in FDIC-subsidized bond issuance. The answer is yes, and as JPMorgan alleged in the complaint, the FDIC agreed to shield it from liability from lawsuits claiming failures by Washington Mutual. JPMorgan said it took on only limited liabilities in its purchase of the Seattle-based bank’s assets. What next: Jamie Dimon sues the Fed for forcing it to acquire Bear Stearns’ assets at the firesale price of $2 $10 per share, in which the bank assumed Bear’s assets if not so much its liabilities – after all there was a government to bail it out for that.

From Bloomberg:

“The FDIC’s indemnification obligations that are the subject of this action are a matter of contract,” the New York-based bank said in its complaint. “They are promises that the FDIC made to JPMC to induce JPMC” to buy Washington Mutual’s assets, it said.

 

Greg Hernandez, an FDIC spokesman, didn’t immediately return voice-mail and e-mail messages after regular business hours seeking comment on the bank’s allegations. Brian Marchiony, a JPMorgan spokesman, declined to comment on the case.

WSJ adds:

J.P. Morgan and the FDIC have squabbled over who must shoulder the burden for legal claims stemming from decisions Washington Mutual made before the deal. J.P. Morgan said the FDIC receivership that liquidated the failed thrift in 2008 should pay any claims. The FDIC has countered that J.P. Morgan is responsible.

 

The battle came to a head Tuesday when the New York bank alleged in its suit, filed in U.S. District Court in Washington, D.C., that the FDIC receivership hasn’t honored its obligations. J.P. Morgan is seeking a portion of the $2.7 billion remaining in the receivership, which includes $1.88 billion J.P. Morgan paid for Washington Mutual’s branches and deposits.

 

* * *

 

The assets in the receivership should be “sufficient,” J.P. Morgan said in its lawsuit, to cover everything from a settlement with mortgage-finance companies Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to injuries sustained by a woman who slipped on a ceramic tile outside a Washington Mutual branch to millions in unpaid state taxes. The FDIC has said previously that it didn’t reject all Washington Mutual-related claims.

 

J.P. Morgan said in its lawsuit filed Tuesday that the FDIC pledged in a 39-page purchase agreement to protect it from such liabilities. One key section of the agreement states the FDIC receivership “agrees to indemnify and hold harmless” J.P. Morgan for any liabilities of Washington Mutual that “are not assumed” by J.P. Morgan. In exchange, the bank said in its lawsuit Tuesday, J.P. Morgan “protected” the FDIC “from potentially unprecedented liability and helped ensure the stability of the country’s banking system.”

As a reminder, there wasn’t exactly a gun to JPM’s head when it was bidding for WaMu’s assets being offered in a sudden and dramatic firesale:

The fall of the Seattle thrift was the biggest commercial-banking failure in U.S. history, and it presented immediate benefits to J.P. Morgan, expanding its network across the U.S. for the first time. The FDIC chose J.P. Morgan’s bid over a competing offer from Citigroup Inc.

But while JPM was happy with purchasing WAMU’s assets at pennies on the dollar, it seems it had some reservations about the liabilities. As for JPM’s strategy, it is quite clear: divert attention from the possibility of even more billions in legal provisions.

J.P. Morgan reiterated in its lawsuit that it separately expects the FDIC receivership to cover any potential damages resulting from a private lawsuit brought by Deutsche Bank National Trust Co. seeking as much as $10 billion on behalf of more than 100 trusts holding poorly performing bonds issued by Washington Mutual. J.P. Morgan and the FDIC already have disagreed in that case over who ultimately is liable for those claims.

Will the US government – engaged in a push to “punish” banks for what has largely been a failure to govern and supervise effectively and thus also divert attention from its failings – settle with JPM, or will this merely enrage the Department of Justice and seek even more punitive damages (if no prison sentences – never prison sentences) from JPM management remains to be seen. One thing is certain: JPM’s lobby spending in the next year is set to break all records – after all politicians have made it quite clear they demand much moar from the Wall Street lobby.

Full JPM complaint below.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/RrdRIiKXDV4/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Frontrunning: December 18

  • MOAR: BOJ Said to See Significant Room for More Bond Purchases (BBG)
  • Meltdown Averted, Bernanke Struggled to Stoke Growth (Hilsenrath)
  • New Mortgages to Get Pricier Next Year (WSJ)
  • Republicans to Seek Concessions From Obama on Debt Limit (BBG)
  • Hunting for U.S. arms technology, China enlists a legion of amateurs (Reuters)
  • Jury Begins Deliberating in Case of SAC Portfolio Manager (WSJ)
  • BP to Write Off $1 Billion on Failed Well (WSJ)
  • Rajan Unexpectedly Keeps India Rates Unchanged to Support Growth (BBG)
  • Thai protesters say they will rally to hound PM from office (Reuters)
  • SEC Brings Fewer Enforcement Actions, Slows Early-Stage Probes (WSJ)
  • Eurozone agrees ‘backstop’ for failing banks (FT)
  • Merkel Prods EU Finance Chiefs as Bank-Failure Talks Heat (BBG)
  • China confirms near miss with U.S. ship in South China Sea (Reuters)

 

Overnight Media Digest

WSJ

* Russia lavished Ukraine with a bailout package worth at least $20 billion on Tuesday, trumping the West in a Cold War-tinged struggle that keeps the former Soviet republic in Moscow’s orbit.

* Inflation is slowing across the developed world despite ultra-low interest rates and unprecedented money-printing campaigns, posing a dilemma for the Federal Reserve and other major central banks as they plot their next policy moves.

* A five-year battle between the largest U.S. bank and one of its regulators escalated Tuesday when JP Morgan Chase & Co sued the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp over the messy 2008 purchase of Washington Mutual Inc’s banking operations.

* First-year enrollment at U.S. law schools plunged this year to levels not seen since the 1970s as students steered away from a career that has left many recent graduates loaded with debt and struggling to find work.

* Xiaomi Inc, the startup that has rattled China’s smartphone market with its fast-selling handsets, is looking to tap its international fan base for help as it tries to expand abroad, according to its new American executive.

* Private-equity firm Centerbridge Partners LP backed out of a deal to acquire LightSquared Inc, the telecommunications firm in bankruptcy proceedings, amid uncertainty over when federal regulators would clear the way for the company to build out its wireless network, said people familiar with the matter.

* Frontier Communications Corp agreed to buy AT&T Inc’s landline telephone, broadband and TV operations in Connecticut for $2 billion in cash, expanding its base of operations and shoring up the ability to pay its dividend.

* The world may be anxious to welcome Microsoft Corp’s next chief executive. The company’s board isn’t in a rush. John W. Thompson, the Microsoft director leading the search, said in a blog post Tuesday that the board doesn’t expect to name a new CEO until next year.

* After fighting over everything from arcane spectrum rules to telecom mergers, Dish Network Corp and Sprint Corp are showing signs of becoming friends. Sprint, the No. 3 U.S. cellphone carrier by subscribers, and Dish, a satellite TV company, said Tuesday they will work together to test a fixed wireless broadband service in Corpus Christi, Texas, beginning in the middle of next year.

* A coming vote for control of the board of Telecom Italia SpA could finally dispel confusion over the strategy of the telecommunications company, allowing it to pursue an investment plan to address Italy’s “hypercompetitive” telecom market, Chief Executive Marco Patuano said in an interview.

* China’s Wanda Cinema Line Corp is expanding its partnership with IMAX Corp signing on 80 new IMAX theaters in a deal that would make China the big-screen company’s largest market.

 

FT

BP Plc accused a U.S. lawyer of making “misrepresentations” about the number of clients he represented in his legal action against the energy giant over the 2010 Deepwater Horizon disaster.

3M, whose products range from Post-It notes to films used in flat-panel TVs, said it may buy back up to $22 billion worth of shares in the five years until 2017, jumping on the bandwagon of U.S. companies announcing sizable capital returns to investors.

JPMorgan Chase & Co, the largest U.S. bank, has sued the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, which managed the receivership of Washington Mutual after the it failed during the financial crisis and then sold most of its assets to JPMorgan.

Britain’s Airports Commission on Tuesday outlined two ways to grant Heathrow a third runway, while casting severe doubt on proposals for a hub in the Thames estuary that had been championed by Mayor of London Boris Johnson.

British retailer House of Fraser is in advanced, exclusive talks to be bought out by French department store chain Galeries Lafayette, according to two sources familiar with the situation.

 

NYT

* William Morris Endeavor, working with its private equity partner, Silver Lake Partners, beat out two other groups with an offer of about $2.3 billion for IMG, according to people with direct knowledge of the matter, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because the companies intend to announce the acquisition on Wednesday.

* Facebook is betting the patience of some of its users against the hundreds of millions of dollars it could make on video advertisements. The company will place video ads into some news feeds – the stream of items on a Facebook page – starting this week.

* The first initial in the ABC television network stands for “American,” but it might well stand for “asterisk.”

* A bipartisan tax-and-spending plan designed to bring some normalcy to Congress’s budgeting after three years of chaos cleared its final hurdle on Tuesday when 67 senators voted to end debate on the measure and bring it to a final vote before it goes to President Obama for his signature.

* Frank Darabont, the creator of one of television’s biggest hit shows, “The Walking Dead,” escalated his long feud with the AMC network on Tuesday, charging in a lawsuit that he had been cheated out of tens of millions of dollars because of “self-dealing” by the network.

* President Obama has chosen a former Microsoft executive, Kurt DelBene, to replace Jeffrey Zients as head of the effort to finish repairs on the government’s health insurance website, administration officials said on Tuesday.

* BP on Tue
sday accused a Texas lawyer of fraudulently driving up its settlement costs in the 2010 Gulf Coast oil spill by claiming to represent tens of thousands of clients who turned out to be “phantoms.”

* Some e-commerce marketers are having a challenging holiday season, and they blame Google for it. A change to Gmail that relegated retailers’ emails to a separate inbox for promotions has had a big effect during the busiest shopping period of the year, according to three services that manage mass emails. And another change to Gmail, involving the way it shows images in messages, made it harder for retailers to track who opens their emails.

* The deal world remained muted this year in terms of big transactions and activity. According to Dealogic, the number of announced takeovers in the United States so far this year was down about 22 percent, while volume was $1.1 trillion, up about 15 percent from last year but still below the level in the years before the financial crisis.

* The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation has tapped Susan Desmond-Hellmann, chancellor of the University of California, San Francisco, as the next chief executive of the charitable organization.

 

Canada

THE GLOBE AND MAIL

* Manitoba is calling for a recount of its population, claiming Statistics Canada’s estimate is too low and is ultimately shortchanging the province in transfer payments.

The province believes it has 18,000 more people than the 1,265,015 residents Statscan says it has, with the province arguing it will lose $100 million in federal transfers because of the discrepancy.

* Toronto city council met to discuss water rates and rules with the integrity commissioner on Tuesday, but instead, all eyes were on the controversial mayor, Rob Ford, as he stood twice to apologize, danced in the chamber, argued with a councillor and received a personal visit from Santa Claus in his office.

Reports in the business section:

* Two of Barrick Gold Corp’s independent directors – Robert Franklin and Donald Carty – resigned suddenly on Tuesday, the company said in a surprise announcement that came less than two weeks after it overhauled its board and nominated four new independent board members.

* Imperial Oil Ltd has applied to build a $7-billion steam-driven Alberta oil sands project during a period in which industry-wide costs are expected to climb because numerous major developments will be under construction.

* The dozens of First Nations along the route of TransCanada Corp’s Energy East pipeline should not expect offers for equity stakes in the $12-billion project as the company seeks approval, although a host of other economic benefits would accrue to the communities, TransCanada’s chief executive said.

NATIONAL POST

* Ontario’s elite private schools have won a court battle to enforce their own discipline free from judicial oversight, following the controversial expulsion of a student caught smoking a bong on his last day of high school.

* Oil sands advocacy group Ethical Oil has filed a formal complaint against a judge who participated in a mock trial of well-known environmentalist David Suzuki. Held at Toronto’s Royal Ontario Museum in November, the live theater performance put Suzuki on “trial” for seditious libel.

FINANCIAL POST

* The National Energy Board will release a verdict on Enbridge Inc’s Northern Gateway pipeline on Thursday, setting the stage for a decision on the contentious pipeline by the federal cabinet next year.

* BlackBerry Ltd’s interim Chief Executive John Chen has found the man he wants to lead the struggling company’s enterprise services business.

Late Tuesday, BlackBerry officials announced John Sims, formerly the president of SAP AG’s mobile service business, as the new president of the division.

* After receiving nearly 200 submissions from market players during months of consultations, Canadian regulators have decided to combine scrutiny of mutual fund compensation with a separate consideration of whether they need to overhaul the rules governing the relationship between financial advisers and retail clients.

 

China

CHINA SECURITIES JOURNAL

– The most severe threat to China’s economy in 2014 could come from its volatile property market, experts and analysts told the paper. The real estate environment could lead to the weakening of investment and a hard landing, they said.

– China’s banking regulator discussed drafting regulations on the establishment of private banks and the use of private capital to establish small and medium-sized banks in a meeting held on Monday, the paper said.

SHANGHAI DAILY

– Online sales of masks and air purifiers on China’s online marketplace Taobao have reached 870 million yuan ($143.3 million) so far this year amid the country’s worsening smog. Rival JD.com said similar sales had increased 685 percent versus 2012.

SHANGHAI SECURITIES NEWS

– Chinese search engine firm Baidu Inc is set to launch a new financial management product “Baifa” on Dec. 20 in conjunction with asset management firm Harvest Fund. The product will have a 1 yuan threshold for investment.

CHINA DAILY

– Authorities in China’s northeastern Hebei province began the demolition of 18 cement factories on Tuesday in a bid to clean up soaring levels of pollution. Seventy-four plants on the outskirts of Shijiazhuang, the provincial capital, are targeted for destruction by March.

PEOPLE’S DAILY

– Some of China’s government units have become complacent about mass education, said a commentary in the paper that acts as the Party’s mouthpiece. Such complacency only underlines the importance of educating the masses, it said.

 

Britain

The Telegraph

NETWORK RAIL TO ADD 30 BLN STG TO GOVERNMENT DEBT

Network Rail is to be reclassified as a public-sector company, adding 30 billion pounds ($48.72 billion) to public sector net debt. The change to the status of the state-owned company that manages Britain’s railway network, will take place next September, the Office for National Statistics said.

CO-OP BONDHOLDERS BACK 1.5 BLN STG RECAP

The Co-op Bank’s 1.5 billion pound emergency recapitalisation has passed its final investor hurdle as the lender received the support of bondholders for the deal.

SIR MARTIN SORRELL BUYS INTO DAVOS

Martin Sorrell’s WPP Plc has bought a 30 percent stake in Richard Attias & Associates, the conference producer behind the annual meeting of political and business leaders in Davos in the Swiss Alps.

The Guardian

MARK CARNEY STANDS BY FORWARD GUIDANCE POLICY

Bank of England Governor Mark Carney has robustly defended his forward guidance policy in parliament against critics who argue it is confusing and has done little to persuade markets that an interest rate rise can be delayed for three years while the economy mends.

GLAXOSMITHKLINE TO STOP PAYING DOCTORS TO PROMOTE DRUGS

Britain’s biggest pharmaceutical company, GlaxoSmithKline , has said it will stop paying doctors tens of millions of pounds a year to promote its drugs.

LIBOR RATE-RIGGING SCANDAL TRADER PLEADS NOT GUILTY

A former UBS and Citigroup trader has pleaded not guilty in a London court to charges that he had sought to manipulate Libor benchmark interest rates with employees from around 10 leading banks and brokerages.

BOB DIAMOND COULD GAIN MILLIONS FROM NEW AFRICAN INVESTMENT VENTURE

Bob Diamond, ousted as boss of Barclays last year after the Libor-rigging scandal, potentially stands to reap millions of pounds from a new stock market venture set up to acquire financial services companies in Africa.

HEATHROW AND GATWICK SHORTLISTED FOR NEW RUNWAYS

A new battle looms over a Heathrow third runway –
or a second at Gatwick airport – after the Airports Commission said that additional capacity was needed in the south-east of England. Extra runways at London’s two biggest airports are on the shortlist the commission will study before issuing its final recommendation.

CAR INSURANCE TOO HIGH, SAYS COMPETITION COMMISSION

Car insurance premiums are too high, with the way no-fault claims are settled and contracts between insurers and price comparison sites among the issues driving up costs for consumers, the competition watchdog has said.

The Times

MANUFACTURING SECTOR HOLDS ITS MOMENTUM

Growth in factory orders and output has remained at its highest since the mid-1990s, confirming that the manufacturing recovery has kept its momentum. The Confederation of British Industry’s survey of nearly 400 factory bosses found that nearly all industry sectors reported growth for a second consecutive month.

HOUSE OF FRASER CLOSE TO FALLING INTO FRENCH HANDS

House of Fraser, one of Britain’s oldest retail chains, is in late-stage talks with a view to being bought by the family owned French department store Galeries Lafayette, it emerged last night.

The Independent

UK INFLATION FALLS TO A 4-YEAR LOW AT 2.1 PCT IN NOVEMBER

The lowest inflation for four years added to the UK’s economic purple patch yesterday, following strong quarterly growth and declining unemployment in boosting the nation’s recovery prospects next year.

MEGA DISCOUNTERS LURING CUSTOMERS AWAY FROM BIG FOUR SUPERMARKETS IN RECORD NUMBERS, SAYS KANTAR

Half the country shopped at an Aldi or Lidl in the last three months for the first time on record, with cash-conscious shoppers love-affair with discount supermarkets shows no signs of slowing down.

 

 

Fly On The Wall 7:00 AM Market Snapshot

ANALYST RESEARCH

Upgrades

Luxottica (LUX) upgraded to Overweight from Neutral at HSBC
Pan American Silver (PAAS) upgraded to Neutral from Underweight at JPMorgan
Roadrunner (RRTS) upgraded to Buy from Hold at Stifel
Southern Copper (SCCO) upgraded to Buy from Neutral at Citigroup

Downgrades

Avon Products (AVP) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at BofA/Merrill
El Paso Electric (EE) downgraded to Hold from Buy at Jefferies
Jabil Circuit (JBL) downgraded to Sell from Neutral at Citigroup
Kinross Gold (KGC) downgraded to Neutral from Overweight at JPMorgan
LATAM Airlines (LFL) downgraded to Sell from Neutral at Goldman
Nanometrics (NANO) downgraded to Hold from Buy at Stifel
Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) downgraded to Underweight from Neutral at HSBC
Targacept (TRGT) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at MKM Partners
Tower Group (TWGP) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at Compass Point

Initiations

Alere (ALR) initiated with an Outperform at JMP Securities
Arc Logistics (ARCX) initiated with a Buy at Citigroup
ArrowHead Research (ARWR) initiated with a Buy at Jefferies
Cognex (CGNX) initiated with a Buy at BB&T
DaVita (DVA) initiated with a Buy at KeyBanc
Envision Healthcare (EVHC) initiated with a Buy at KeyBanc
Eros International (EROS) initiated with a Buy at UBS
Fabrinet (FN) initiated with a Buy at B. Riley
Foundation Medicine (FMI) initiated with an Outperform at JMP Securities
GigOptix (GIG) initiated with a Buy at B. Riley
Groupon (GRPN) initiated with an Outperform at Northland Securities
Illumina (ILMN) initiated with an Outperform at JMP Securities
LabCorp (LH) initiated with a Market Perform at JMP Securities
MEDNAX (MD) initiated with a Hold at KeyBanc
Mirati Therapeutics (MRTX) initiated with a Buy at Jefferies
NeoPhotonics (NPTN) initiated with a Buy at B. Riley
Organovo (ONVO) initiated with a Market Perform at JMP Securities
Plains GP Holdings (PAGP) initiated with a Buy at Citigroup
QIAGEN (QGEN) initiated with an Outperform at JMP Securities
Quidel (QDEL) initiated with a Market Perform at JMP Securities
Rackspace (RAX) initiated with a Neutral at UBS
Restoration Hardware (RH) initiated with a Buy at KeyBanc
Tableau Software (DATA) initiated with a Neutral at RW Baird
United Rentals (URI) initiated with a Buy at Jefferies
World Point Terminals (WPT) initiated with an Outperform at Wedbush

HOT STOCKS

Amazon Web Services (AMZN) announced upcoming China region for cloud computing platform
Kraft Foods (KRFT) authorized $3B share repurchase program
Jabil Circuit (JBL) to sell aftermarket services unit for $725M, announced $200M share repurchase program
Blackstone (BX) purchased three Texas power plants from Direct Energy for $685M cash
BorgWarner (BWA) acquired all shares in Gustav Wahler, terms not disclosed
Teva (TEVA) confirmed agreement with Pfizer (PFE) to settle generic Viagra patent litigation
iRobot (IRBT) CEO Angle told CNBC he sees ‘a high growth year’ in 2014

EARNINGS

Companies that beat consensus earnings expectations last night and today include:
Lennar (LEN), HEICO (HEI), VeriFone (PAY)

NEWSPAPERS/WEBSITES

  • Some advertisers rejoiced when Facebook (FB) introduced long-awaited video advertisements. A bigger question is how users will react and some are wary, the Wall Street Journal reports
  • Consumers can expect to pay more to get a mortgage next year, the result of changes meant to reduce the role that Fannie Mae (FNMA) and Freddie Mac (FMCC) play in the market, the Wall Street Journal reports
  • The Fed will decide today whether the U.S. economy is finally resilient enough to withstand less policy support, or whether it is prudent to wait a bit longer. A policy announcement is expected at 2 p.m., Reuters reports
  • Boeing (BA) is narrowing its list of sites for building its newest jetliner, the 777X, to “a handful,” signaling its determination to consider locations outside Washington state where it now builds similar planes, Reuters reports
  • New BlackBerry (BBRY) CEO John Chen, rejecting calls to exit the hardware business, gets a chance this week to convince investors he has the time and vision to revive a unit that’s dragging sales back down to 2007 levels, Bloomberg reports
  • Goldman Sachs (GS) is among as many as 11 companies set to be fined early next year in a four-year-old EU antitrust probe into an underwater power cables cartel that tests regulators’ ability to penalize private-equity investors, sources say, Bloomberg reports

SYNDICATE

AMC Entertainment (AMC) 18.421M share IPO priced at $18.00
MarkWest Energy (MWE) announces 4.75M unit sale under equity distribution agreement
Opexa Therapeutics (OPXA) 4.12M share Spot Secondary priced at $1.70


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/n3mWGw3bVA8/story01.htm Tyler Durden