The Economy’s Blood Pressure Is Falling

Authored by Patrick Watson via MauldinEconomics.com,

It’s not a good sign for your health if your blood pressure drops too low. It can cause dizziness and fainting and, in severe cases, can even be life-threatening.

Similarly, the economy is probably sick when its circulatory system slows down. You don’t need a blood pressure gauge to know it, either. Just count how many trucks you see on the highway.

With freight traffic dropping, the economy could soon get dizzy… and we’ll all feel it then.

Photo: Wikimedia Commons

Rush to Import

Under normal conditions, busy highways and seaports indicate a growing economy. Businesses are producing more stuff that is finding its way to consumers.

That was happening, albeit slower than in past cycles, since we emerged from the Great Recession in 2009.

Donald Trump won the 2016 election in part because people feared the growth was slowing. He responded with a giant corporate tax cut, which passed Congress in December 2017. It was supposed to re-stimulate the economy.

said at the time any stimulus would be short lived and might actually lead to a recession. That’s still what I think, but it did help a little. The economy picked up in 2018.

But something else was happening: a brewing trade war.

  • January 2018: The Trump administration imposed tariffs on imported washing machines and solar cells.

  • March 2018: The president tweeted, “Trade wars are good, and easy to win,” and a few days later authorized new steel and aluminum tariffs.

  • April 2018: China fired back with tariffs on certain US goods.

  • June 2018: The European Union joined with retaliatory tariffs on certain US goods including whiskey, motorcycles, and orange juice.

It got worse from there, but the point is that anyone who was paying attention knew by mid-2018 that American buyers were going to pay more for imported goods.

US businesses responded by rushing to import as much as possible before tariffs (i.e., taxes)  rose even higher. Hence the Overheated Highways I wrote about in May.

Note, this wasn’t new demand. It was the same goods in the same amounts companies would have bought later on. They just bought them sooner in order to avoid tariffs.

Photo: Wikimedia Commons

Cargo Volumes Decline

When businesses moved up their import purchases, it meant they would import less in the future.

Now the future is here. Warehouses are full, and cargo traffic is slowing. Here are a few telltale headlines, just from this month.

That last story is particularly disturbing because it shows the same pattern unfolding in Asia and Europe as well as North America.

Lower bookings have made container spot rates from Asia to North Europe drop 36% this year. Reducing mining output in Brazil is making some companies send older ships to scrapyards.

The March NFIB Small Business Optimism Index showed a drop in the number of business owners who viewed inventories as too low, as well as reduced expansion plans. That may explain some of this decline.

Then there’s the latest Producer Price Index data. Here’s the PPI sub-index of trucking costs:

Chart: St. Louis Fed

You can see trucking costs climbed like crazy from mid-2017 through the end of 2018. Now they’re reversing downward. The last time that happened was late 2014, when oil prices crashed. The US had a kind of mini-recession over the next year.

The next time may not be so “mini.”

Economic Heartbeat

People who monitor this data closely are getting concerned. Annual growth in the widely respected Cass Freight Index, which tracks North American freight shipments, dropped in the last four consecutive months.

The editors, who weren’t too bothered by the first three declines, said this in their latest report:

As we try to navigate the ebb and flow of the economy, we don’t pretend to have any ‘secret sauce’ or incredibly complex models that have exhaustively analyzed every data point available. Instead, we place our trust in the simple notion that the movement of tangible goods is the heartbeat of the economy, and that tracking the volume and velocity of those goods has proven to be one of the most reliable methods of predicting change because of the adequate amount of forewarning that exists…

Beyond our concern that the Cass Freight Shipments Index has been negative on a YoY basis for the fourth month in a row,

  • We are concerned about the severe declines in international airfreight volumes (especially in Asia) and the recent swoon in railroad volumes in auto and building materials;

  • We are reassured by the sequential increase in the Cass Freight Shipments Index (up 2.0%) and the volumes in U.S. domestic trucking (especially in truckload dry van);

  • We are closely watching the volumes of chemicals and other shipments via railroad, as they have lost momentum in recent weeks and may give us the first evidence of the global slowdown spreading to the U.S.

Bottom line, the data in coming weeks will indicate whether this is merely a pause in the rate of economic expansion or the beginning of an economic contraction. If a contraction occurs, then the Cass Shipments Index will have been one of the first early indicators once again.

I have said before that we’ve reached Peak Globalization and the flow of physical goods will lose importance in the future. But for now, it’s still critical. The Cass data ought to concern everyone.

If cargo movement really is the “heartbeat of the economy,” like Cass says, the economy should probably consult a cardiologist. This problem may get worse before it gets better.

via ZeroHedge News http://bit.ly/2JmZKtd Tyler Durden

Was The CIA Source Of Inaccurate ‘Russia Probe’ Leaks? Two Senators Are Trying To Find Out

After AG William Barr suggested he was looking into allegations that the US intelligence community spied on the Trump campaign, Congress is finally bearing down on the source of the post-election leaks that bedeviled the Trump transition team and helped galvanize popular support for the investigation that eventually morphed into the Mueller probe.

According to the Hill, Ron Johnson and Chuck Grassley, the chairs of the Senate Homeland Security and Finance Committees, have sent a letter to Michael Atkinson, the Inspector General of the intelligence community, asking him to look into “leaks” to reporters following the election about the incipient investigation into election meddling that apparently came from within the intelligence agencies themselves.

Referencing a text sent by former FBI special agent Peter Strzok to FBI lawyer Lisa Page, the two senators said in their letter that “texts and emails demonstrate the need to investigate leaks from agencies or entities other than FBI.”

Grassley

If an investigation isn’t already underway, the two senators asked for an explanation from Atkinson on why the watchdog office hasn’t opened a probe.

The letter comes as Grassley, Johnson and Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Lindsey Graham have been laying the groundwork for their own investigation into the FBI’s handling of the Russia probe, the investigation into former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s misuse of a private email server to share classified information and the circumstances surrounding the FBI’s application for a FISA warrant on former Trump campaign aide Carter Page.
 
The two senators had previously requested a briefing from Barr about his efforts to investigate alleged “spying.”

The Strzok text referenced in the letter appears to point to evidence that other intelligence agencies had been leaking to the media during and after the 2016 campaign.

One message from December 2016 shows Strzok telling Page that he thought “our sisters have begun leaking like mad.” The meaning of “sisters” in this context isn’t clear, but Johnson and Grassley apparently believe it was a reference to other intelligence agencies, possibly including the CIA, as the Daily Caller reports.

In an email from 2017, Strzok wrote that an intelligence agency had apparently gathered more information than he himself had been privy to, which “might explain all these weird/seemingly incorrect leads all these media folks have. Would also highlight agency as source of some of the leaks.”

In their letter, the two senators asked Atkinson to please clarify to whom Strzok was referring. The Senators added in their letter that the Strzok email was apparently in response to a Guardian article about British intelligence agencies alerting their counterparts about contact between members of the Trump campaign and Moscow, including George Papadopoulos’s drunken conversation with an Australian diplomat about an alleged offer from academic and “Russian asset” Joseph Mifsud.

Strzok, who was famously having an affair with Page at the time, was a lead investigator in the Mueller probe and the Clinton email probe.

Meanwhile, Barr said on May 1 that the DOJ has “multiple” investigations going into criminal leaks. He has also formed a task force to investigate the origins of the Trump investigation.

Read the full letter below:

2019-05-06 Rhj Ceg to Ic Ig (Leaks) by Zerohedge on Scribd

 

 

via ZeroHedge News http://bit.ly/2Yg2Pjb Tyler Durden

Heartland Heartache Hits Record: “Mississippi River At Major Flood Stage For 41 Days & Counting”

Authored by Michael Snyder via The End of The American Dream blog,

Thousands of farmers in the Midwest have been waiting for a very long time for floodwaters to recede so that they can finally plant some crops, but instead more rain just keeps on coming.

As you will see below, it is being reported that the Mississippi River has now been at major flood stage for 41 days in a row, and a lot more rain is coming this week.  Meteorologists are warning us that major flooding may extend into June, and that means that many farmers will not be able to plant crops at all this year.  Unfortunately, as global weather patterns continue to shift many believe that what we are witnessing this year may become the “new normal” along the Mississippi River.

In response to my previous articles about the devastating flooding in the heartland, a few skeptics have tried to downplay the seriousness of the situation by claiming that at least the flooding along the Mississippi is not as bad as it was in 1993.

Well, that is no longer true in many areas.  The following comes from USA Today

The Mississippi River crested at higher levels than it ever had in the past. That was at 22.7 feet in Davenport, Iowa, on Thursday, a record that hadn’t been matched since records began to be kept in 1862, said Loveland. That is almost eight feet above flood stage.

In Rock Island, Illinois, the Mississippi set a record level of 22.7 feet, breaking the record set on July 9, 1993, during the Great Flood of 1993.

And according to NPR, the Mississippi has now been at major flood stage for 41 days in a row

The Mississippi River has been at major flood stage for 41 days and counting, and this week a temporary wall failed, sending water rushing into several blocks of downtown Davenport, Iowa.

I know that many Americans that live on the east and west coasts don’t really care about what goes on in the middle of the country, but this is a truly historic disaster.

At this point the flooding is so bad that authorities have actually decided to close the Mississippi River to all vessel traffic at St. Louis

As of Friday afternoon, the Mississippi River was closed to all vessel traffic at St. Louis. The U.S. Coast Guard shut down the river for a five-mile stretch, citing not only the extremely high water but also the swift current.

The river is already more than 8 feet above flood stage at St. Louis and expected to rise another 4 feet by Monday.

Closure of river traffic at one of the largest cities on the Mississippi is a huge blow for commerce since many goods are shipped on barges up and down the river.

This is yet another huge blow to a U.S. economy that is rapidly going in the wrong direction.

And guess what?

Meteorologists are telling us that a lot more rain is in the forecast for the region this week

The already-drenched residents of the middle part of the country are advised to keep their rain gear handy. Showers, thunderstorms and flooding will be a fact of life again for much of this week.

A cold front moving in from the north through the Plains and Midwest will clash with moisture from the Gulf of Mexico, leading to persistent precipitation over large swaths that are already saturated by runoff from the unusually heavy snow in the winter, forecasters said Sunday.

Of course the Midwest definitely doesn’t need any more rain.  At this point, Iowa has already received more precipitation during the last 12 months than any other “recorded period in 124 years of data”

The upper Mississippi was inundated with massive amounts of rain earlier this week, exacerbating the already high river level. “The state of Iowa has received more precipitation in the last 12 months than any recorded period in 124 years of data,” Bob Gallagher, the mayor of the upriver town of Bettendorf, told reporters Friday. “When you get as much rain as we have this year there’s just no way to avoid this situation.”

We are being told that major flooding along the Mississippi River will last into June, and it could potentially go even longer than that.

Billions upon billions of dollars worth of damage has already been done, and the total is going up with each passing day.

Millions of acres of farmland along the major rivers in the middle of the country will not be usable at all this year, and that means that crop production will be well below initial projections.

Food prices are already at painful levels, and family budgets are going to get squeezed tighter and tighter as food prices move up aggressively in the months ahead.  And for those living right on the edge, some very tough choices are going to have to be made.  The following comes from U.S. News & World Report

According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, some 40 million people in the U.S. were food-insecure in 2017, meaning they lacked consistent access to enough food for an active and healthy life.

The truth is that the U.S. is far more vulnerable to a “food shock” than most people would dare to imagine.  And as our planet continues to become more unstable, our vulnerability is only going to increase.

The food that we eat does not magically appear on our plates somehow.  People have to work extremely hard to produce it for us, and right now the heartland of our nation is being absolutely devastated by record setting flooding.

For now, many Americans don’t seem to appreciate the seriousness of this crisis, but as food prices continue to escalate there will definitely be plenty of complaining in the months ahead.

via ZeroHedge News http://bit.ly/2WutyYD Tyler Durden

Futures Plunge As Lighthizer Confirms Tariff-Hikes After China Reneges On Promises

While a Chinese delegation is still scheduled to visit Washington as planned this week, with talks to take place Thursday and Friday, U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer told reporters Monday that the Trump administration plans to increase duties on Chinese imports at 12:01 a.m. on Friday.

 

The result, more than half of the intraday gains have been erased already…

More problematic – or perhaps he just had to say that – Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin added that the market’s reaction was not a factor in China talks.

Developing…

via ZeroHedge News http://bit.ly/2ZSBLYG Tyler Durden

More Alarm Bells As Banks Report Lowest Loan Demand Since Financial Crisis

The latest alarm signal that the US economy remains on collision course with a recession, and that the US consumer remains especially burdened by debt and challenged by cash flows despite the record high in the stock market, came after today’s release of the latest Senior Loan Officer Opinion Survey (SLOOS) by the Federal Reserve, which was conducted for bank lending activity during the first quarter of 2019, and which reported that while lending standards and terms for commercial and industrial loans remained largely unchanged from already generously easy levels, demand for those loans tumbled to levels not seen since the financial crisis. Even more concerning is that banks also reported weaker demand for both commercial and residential real estate loans for the second quarter in a row, echoing the softer housing data in recent months.

First, the good news: three months after we reported that banks had continued to tighten lending standards in the last few months of 2018, potentially risking a feedback loop of tighter standard and declining demand, banks managed to break the first negative trend, and lending standards for commercial and industrial (C&I) loans remained essentially unchanged over the first quarter of 2019 for both large- and medium-sized firms as well as small firms, and on net terms for large and medium-sized firms eased slightly while terms were basically unchanged for small firms.

Some more details, via Goldman, which notes that relative to the last survey which we profiled here, standards on commercial real estate (CRE) loans tightened on net over the first quarter of the year, if more modestly than last quarter:

  • 14% of banks reported tightening standards for construction and land development loans; 10% of banks reported tightening standards on loans secured by nonfarm nonresidential properties, and 8% of banks reported tightening credit standards on loans secured by multifamily residential properties.
  • Banks reported that lending standards for residential mortgage loans remained largely unchanged on net in Q1 relative to the prior quarter.
  • Banks reported that lending standards on auto loans remained largely unchanged, and about 20% of large banks tightened standards and terms for credit cards.
  • 33% of banks surveyed reportedly narrowed spreads of loan rates over the cost of funds, while 6% widened spreads. 15% on net reported easier loan covenants. Other terms, such as collateralization requirements and premiums charged on riskier loans, remained largely unchanged. Demand for loans reportedly weakened on balance.

And while the lack of further tightening in lending standards was largely unchanged from the prior quarter, despite some instances of tightening, where there was s disturbing trend continuation was in what loan officers responded described as loan demand from large and medium corporations: here, as the chart below shows, the percentage of domestic respondents (i.e., banks) reporting stronger demand for C&I loans tumbled to the lowest level since the financial crisis, which suggests that either nobody needs debt to fund growth, expansion and new projects any more (unlikely), or potential US creditors are so worried about the future and their ability to repay, they refuse to take out any loans in the current business climate.

Digging into the data, banks reported that demand for CRE loans across all categories weakened on net, and demand for construction loans reportedly declined at 27% of banks on net. Similarly, demand for auto loans was basically unchanged, while demand for credit card loans and other consumer loans was moderately weaker. Banks also reported weaker demand across all surveyed residential loan categories, including home equity lines of credit.

It goes without saying, that such a sharp decline in loan demand is not what one would expect in what the BEA would represent is an economy that is growing at a 3%+ annualized rate.

Finally, responding to special questions on C&I lending to firms exposed to developments in Asia or Europe, a “moderate net fraction of banks reported they expect the quality of loans to exposed firms to deteriorate over the remainder of 2019. As a result, banks that have taken steps to mitigate risk of loan losses from such exposures reported the tightening of lending policies on new credit to exposed firms as the most frequently used action over the past year.

* * *

Here would be a good time to remind readers that according to a Reuters investigation conducted in mid-December, when looking behind headline numbers showing healthy loan books, “problems appear to be cropping up in areas such as home-equity lines of credit, commercial real estate and credit cards” according to federal data reviewed by the wire service and interviews with bank execs.

Worse, banks are also starting to aggressively cut relationships with customers who seem too risky, which is to be expected: after all financial conditions in the real economy, if not the markets which just enjoyed the best January since 1987, are getting ever tighter as short-term rates remain sticky high and the result will be a waterfall of defaults sooner or later. Here are the all too clear signs which Reuters found that banks are starting to prepare for the next recession by slashing and/or limiting risky loan exposure:

  • First, nearly half of the applications from customers with low credit scores were rejected in the four months ending in October, compared with 43 percent in the year-ago period, according to a survey released by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.
  • Second, banks shuttered 7 percent of existing accounts, particularly among subprime borrowers, the highest rate since the Fed started conducting surveys in 2013.
  • Third, home-equity lines of credit declined 8 percent across the industry, with growth slowing in areas such as credit cards and commercial-and-industrial loans, the survey showed.

Then there are the bank-specific signs, starting with Capital One – one of the biggest U.S. card lenders – which is restricting how much it lends to each customer even as it aggressively recruits new ones, CEO Richard Fairbank said last December.

We have been more cautious in the extension of credit, initial credit lines, the broad-based credit line increase programs,” he said. “At this point in the cycle, we’re going to hold back on that option a bit.”

Regional banks have become more cautious lately as well, as they avoid financing riskier projects like early-stage construction loans and properties without pre-lease agreements (here traders vividly recall the OZK commercial real estate repricing fiasco that sent the stock crashing). New Jersey’s OceanFirst Bank also pulled back on refinancing transactions that let customers cash out on their debt, and has started reducing exposure to industrial loans, CEO Chris Maher told Reuters.

“In a downturn, industrial property is extremely illiquid,” he said. “If you don’t want it and it’s not needed it could be almost valueless.”

What happens next?

While a recession is looking increasingly likely, especially as it becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy with banks slashing loans resulting in even slower velocity of money, while demand for credit shrinks in response to tighter loan standards and hitting economic growth, the only question whether a recession is a 2019 or 2020 event, bankers and analysts remain optimistic that the next recession will look much more like the 2001 tech bubble bursting than the 2007-09 global financial crisis.

We wonder why they are so confident, and statements such as this one from Flagship Bank CFO Schornack will hardly instill confidence:

“I lived through the pain of the last recession. We are much more prudent today in how we underwrite deals.”

We disagree, and as evidence we present Exhibit A: the shock write down that Bank OZK took on its commercial real estate, which nobody in the market had expected. As for banks being more “solid”, let’s remove the $1.5 trillion buffer in excess reserves that provides an ocean of artificial liquidity, and see just how stable banks are then. After all, it is this $1.5 trillion in excess reserves that prompt Powell to capitulate and tell the markets he is willing to slowdown or even pause the Fed’s balance sheet shrinkage.

via ZeroHedge News http://bit.ly/2VIhx4R Tyler Durden

Economic Avengers: Infinity Trade War

Submitted by Peter Pham of One Road Research

This past weekend, I finally managed to see Avengers: End Game, which is wildly popular Asia (and across the globe). And interestingly, my friend from Marvel has sent me a script of Marvel’s brand-new superhero series named the Economic Avengers, the new storyline in Marvel’s Cinemeatic Universe (MCU). From the look of it, this tetralogy is going to be blockbuster.

Here is the leaked series synopsis of all four films:

1. Prologue: Origin 

Across the universe, ChiCom has been collecting all the Infinity Stones of Trade Surpluses by exploiting the many loopholes and advantages generated from multilateral trade agreements. Each one of these trade surplus Infinity Stones that ChiCom collects makes him more powerful, and more dangerous.

Why? Because these stones provide ChiCom the power to impose a flawed social and economic paradigm on conquered subjects — currency manipulation, human rights violations, social credit system, and wealth inequality.

These policies, which have been largely ignored and unchecked by the UN for years, are part of the new order which ChiCom plans to spread throughout the universe.

Is it time to fight back against this domination?

2. Capitan America: Civil War 

Back in Washington, the political system is embroiled in an ongoing civil war. Three years ago, a champion of the forgotten named Captain America rose up and opposed the establishment’s plan to exert control on Americans and their lives.

The two sides draw a distinct line in the sand — many support a large government system, while others desire a smaller, less intrusive government. A civil war erupts between the Iron Men, the industrialists and neocons, and the Patriots.

During this conflict Captain America was thought to have gone rogue, allying with the now Russian-backed Red Skull. S.H.I.E.L.D is then sent by Washington to investigate Captain America, yet seems to find no collusion between the superhero and the foreign agents of the Red Skull. With the dust settling, Captain American is able to focus on the real threat to the universe — ChiCom.

3. Economic Avengers: Infinity Trade Wars

After years of successfully hunting and gaining the Infinity Stones of Trade Surpluses, ChiCom was ready to assume full control of the universe as we know it. And ChiCom’s success lies in his influence over Hong Kong and the villainous Wall Street army, who have helped ChiCom carry out his ambitious plan. Universalists, those that look to connecting all known civilizations together for profit, have marveled at cosmic rise of this new power.

To combat this and to help restore balance to the universe, Capitan America and the Patriots initiate fierce battles now called the Infinity Trade War, attacking ChiCom with trade tariffs.  

ChiCom retaliates with counter tariffs, and implemented a currency battle, using FX-Men interventionists and the Infinity Stone of Domestic Stimulus to offset Captain America’s powers.

As the war raged on, the patriots naively thought they have a plan to tame ChiCom through threat and negotiation. For months, the public was told that the Infinity Trade Wars were going well, and progress was being made.

But that was until ChiCom raises his Infinity Trade War Gauntlet and uses the combined power of the stones to usher in renegotiation. Just as with the North Korean Summit, patriots like Mike Pompeo suddenly begin to fall one by one. Capitan America doesn’t have much time left.

ChiCom’ master plan is to prolong the Infinity Trade War beyond 2020, which may be when Captain America’s powers recede and he is forced into retirement.

ChiCom has seen how powerful the Ultron Corporations have become in controlling national conversation, so he begins making deals with Ultron sub-units such as Apple and Google in hopes of fostering more dissent and gain more support.

But with the End Game getting closer, Captain America decides to add more tariffs, and ChiCom raises the Infinity Trade War Gauntlet once more…responding with more stimulus, devaluations and tariffs.

And with the snap of his fingers, all trade talks end.

4. Economic Avengers: End Game

A year later, with U.S. elections passed and the pro-ChiCom ticket won, Capital America has failed to stop ChiCom. However, he has learned the lesson that slow negotiations and tariffs aren’t enough to stop the super-villain from succeeding in taking control of the Universe.

He wishes he could have gone back in time to dismantle ChiCom’ acquisition of the Infinity Stones of Trade Surpluses.

All seems lost. Suddenly, another patriot named Navarro who was stuck in time, appears. He then informs Captain America that the best way to reverse ChiCom’ actions was to implement an unconventional and seemingly backward economic tactic – economic sanctions.

The power of managed trade is now on the table.

The issue with tariffs is that it’s predominantly a tax on importers, and ChiCom as a major exporter doesn’t feel the full brunt of the impact.

Managed trade, on the other hand, is the outright restriction of selected goods from ChiCom, thus taking away the power of his Infinity Stones. The stones could then be distributed to other countries with comparative advantages and aligned goals with the U.S. This is what it means when nations such as Vietnam and others move up the value chain.

And so, Capitan America takes action and implements managed trade, effectively reversing the powers ChiCom’s Infinity Stones and thus redistributing the flow of goods to other nations. The bilateral trade partners that aligned with and benefited from ChiCom become weaker.

The success of One Belt One Road initiative — ChiCom’ ultimate plan for universal dominance — starts to decrease in significance and influence as the flow of exports adjusts to ChiCom’s competitors.

To counter, the super-villain starts to implement a new deficit spending and money printing regimen.

The issue is ChiCom’s powerful army the Children of Xi, its billion–strong consumer base which needs more time to develop their gross national income power. This forces ChiCom to return to the negotiation table and ChiCom capitulates. The terms of the deal are to focus on the reexamination of subsidies, currency manipulation, deregulation, FDI, and FII.

The fight for fair trade is won.

In the final scene, fair trade ushers in a new era focused more on human rights and income equality, as trade and fair competition prevail in the Universe. It also redistributes the powers of the Infinity Stones to other countries, allowing them to prosper.

Captain America and the Patriots successfully prevent ChiCom’ master plan of universal domination and he retires, walking into the sunset with his beauty.

via ZeroHedge News http://bit.ly/2H7rCQJ Tyler Durden

US Stocks Stage Miraculous Rebound While Global Economy Suffers Longest Losing Streak In History

With less than 100 words and just two tweets, President Trump kicked out one of the most important legs of the delusional stool that has lifted the US stock market by the most in 32 years since the start of the year… and everything was going so well before that…

China was a bloodbath overnight…the biggest drop since Jan 2016

Catching down to Europe and US equity markets YTD…

Europe tumbled at the open but the BTFD’ers stepped in to make things more reasonable (Spain led, Italy lagged)…

 

It was an ugly start last night as Dow futures crashed 500 points and Nasdaq down over 2.3%… but by the close of the cash markets, it was barely a fleshwound…

Small Caps ended the day green…

All on the back of a giant short-squeeze…

 

And VIX was clubbed like a baby seal…

 

TICK data swung from its biggest selling program since Jan 28th to the biggest buying program since March 21st…(the biggest swing since the first day of 2019)…

 

Bonds were bid but yields rose all afternoon as stocks soared (though yields ended lower on the day)

 

The DXY Dollar Index ended the day marginally higher after a major roundtrip reversing at the US cash equity market open…

 

Yuan was smashed lower during the China session then miraculously bid for the rest of the day (still closed weaker against the dollar)

 

Gold and Silver were unch against the dollar but Crude and copper soared…

 

Gold spiked against the initially weak Yuan but the rest of the day was spent rebalancing Yuan…

 

And finally, while we have noted numerous times (too numerous to count) the decoupling between stock prices and any top-down or bottom-up fun-durr-mentals this year…

Schwab’s Jeff Kleintop has some bad news for all…

As Terreus Capital notes:Green shoots? Global Manufacturing PMI slips to 50.3 – lowest since July 2016. This is longest losing streak in 20 year history for the global manufacturing PMI. New orders, new export orders, output, employment all well below their long run trends.”

via ZeroHedge News http://bit.ly/2LnkBz5 Tyler Durden

Israeli Intelligence Warned White House Of “Iran Plot” To Strike US Troops

On Sunday night US national security advisor John Bolton threatened Iran with  “unrelenting force” while announcing the deployment of the USS Abraham Lincoln Carrier Strike Group and a bomber task force to the Persian Gulf region, saying further it sends a “clear and unmistakable” message to the Iranian regime.

Bolton’s statement also cited a “number of troubling and escalatory indications and warnings” from Iran, which later on Monday morning CNN Pentagon correspondent Barbara Starr described based on unnamed US defense officials as including “specific and credible” Iranian threats against US assets in Syria, Iraq, and at sea.

USS Abraham Lincoln, file image via Sky News

CNN’s Starr reported the following

US officials tell me the threats from Iran included “specific and credible” intelligence that Iranian forces and proxies were targeting US forces in Syria, Iraq and at sea. There were multiple threads of intelligence about multiple locations, the officials said.

It turns out, perhaps predictably, that the ultimate source of these claims is none other than Israeli intelligence. 

Axios White House correspondent Barak Ravid reports:

Israel passed information on an alleged Iranian plot to attack U.S. interests in the Gulf to the U.S. before national security adviser John Bolton threatened Iran with “unrelenting force” last night, senior Israeli officials told me.

This also comes as some high level Israeli defense officials have claimed Iran ordered the Palestinian Islamic Jihad to initiate a conflict in Gaza in order to distract Israel from stopping supposed Iranian expansion inside Syria. 

Thus it appears an entire US carrier strike group is now responding to what the White House believes is credible intelligence provided by the Israels. Or, it could simply fit with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s long stated intent to convince Washington to take preemptive military action against Iran. 

Axios reports the Israeli intelligence is “not very specific at this stage” but that the “intelligence gathered by Israel, primarily by the Mossad intelligence agency, is understood to be part of the reason for Bolton’s announcement.” The threats against US interests also reportedly include locations in Saudi Arabia and the UAE.

But the most obvious question must be asked: could Tel Aviv be setting up its more powerful ally in a “wag the dog” scenario to initiate war against Israel’s archenemy Iran? 

via ZeroHedge News http://bit.ly/2WrulcJ Tyler Durden

A Tale Of Two Americas… Going South Together

Authored by James Howard Kunstler via Kunstler.com,

A 25 percent tariff on Chinese goods coming into the USA. That’ll git her done, all right – if you mean pulling the plug on America’s holographic economy. For about thirty years this is how it worked: China sent a massive volume of finished goods to us and we paid them with a massive volume of US Treasury bonds at ever-lower interest rates. A great deal for us while it lasted. Or so it seemed. Eventually, China caught onto the swindle and began liquidating its US bond holdings to buy gold and other real goods like African mining rights and farmland, Iranian oil, and port facilities in strategic corners of the world.

Now China has obviously designed a policy to dissociate itself as much as possible from the losing trade racket with us and replace the American market by increments with whatever customer base it can cobble together from the rest of the world. The Belt-and-Road initiative to physically link China with Central Asia (and beyond) with railroad lines and highways through some of the most forbidding terrain on earth was an out-front part of the plan, which we haplessly financed by buying all that stuff they sent over here for decades, and giving them the time to complete that colossal project.

Buying all those cheap toaster-ovens, patio loungers, sneakers, sheet-rock screws, alarm clocks, croquet mallets… well, you name it, naturally made it uneconomical for America to make the same stuff, with all our silly-ass sentimental attachment to union wages, eight-hour workdays, and pollution regs, so we just steadily let the lights go out and the roofs fall in, and ramped up the “financialized” economy, with Wall Street parlaying Federal Reserve largess into an alternative universe of Three-Card-Monte scams using multilayered derivatives of promises to repay loans (that have poor prospects of ever being paid back).

The outcome of that was two Americas: the hipsterocracy of the coastal elites and the suicidal deplorables of Flyoverland.

The hipsterocracy sustains itself on the manufactured hallucinations of the holographic economy — that is, on the production of images, TV psychodramas, news media narratives, status competitions, public relations campaigns, law firm machinations, awards ceremonies, and other signaling systems to maintain the illusion that the financialized economy has everything under control as we transform into a nirvana of ultra high tech pleasure-seeking and endless leisure.

Meanwhile, out in Flyoverland, the holograms aren’t selling so well anymore. Nobody has the scratch to pay for them, not even those indentured to the neo-feudal empires of WalMart and Amazon. The children keep coming, though it’s nearly impossible for a man to support them, and increasingly the fathers just take themselves out of the picture. The women ferment in single-parent hopelessness. The children turn more feral by each generation. All remaining economic opportunity is diverted back into the leveraged buy-out mills of the Coastal Elsewhere. Even growing food out of the land was long ago converted into an Agri-Biz hustle based on practices with no future. And now the spring weather is drowning out that hustle and driving the corporatized farms into bankruptcy.

The two Americas have turned a formerly workable political system into a divorce court and for the past three years nothing of value has come out of that negotiation except more mutual grievance and animus. The hipsterocracy, drunk on craft beer, has concentrated its hologram production on an operatic extravaganza of racial and sexual melodrama and the stupendously dishonest campaign to vilify the deplorables’ champion, Mr. Trump. If it was originally designed to just divert the deplorables from their economic injuries, it actually succeeded in focusing their dwindling energy into wrathful, righteous rage against those who foreclosed their future.

As I write, the stock markets have opened up in what looks like the beginning of a very bad week — apparently a reaction to Mr. Trump’s floundering trade deal talks. When these markets go emphatically south, both Wall Street and its hipsterdom subsidiary will find themselves reduced to their own special hell of deplorability. The realignment that emerges from that unholy mess will be the surprise of our lives.

via ZeroHedge News http://bit.ly/2VOPnVI Tyler Durden

Fed Warns Valuations “Elevated”, Investor Risk Appetite “High”, Risky Debt Biggest Worry

In its semi-annual release of the Financial Stability Report today, The Fed continued to warn that asset valuations are elevated, risk appetite is high, and specifically warned about the perils of risky corporate debt.

The Fed’s view on the current level of vulnerabilities is as follows:

1 . Asset valuations. Valuation pressures remain elevated in a number of markets, with investors continuing to exhibit high appetite for risk, although some pressures have eased a bit since the November 2018 FSR .

2 . Borrowing by businesses and households. Borrowing by businesses is historically high relative to gross domestic product (GDP), with the most rapid increases in debt concentrated among the riskiest firms amid signs of deteriorating credit standards . In contrast, household borrowing remains at a modest level relative to incomes, and the debt owed by borrowers with credit scores below prime has remained flat .

3 . Leverage in the financial sector. The largest U .S . banks remain strongly capitalized, and the leverage of broker-dealers is substantially below pre-crisis levels . Insurance companies appear to be in relatively strong financial positions . Hedge fund leverage appears to have declined over the past six months .

4 . Funding risk. Funding risks in the financial system are low . Estimates of the outstanding total amount of financial system liabilities that are most vulnerable to runs, including those issued by nonbanks, remain modest relative to levels leading up to the financial crisis . Short-term wholesale funding continues to be low compared with other liabilities, and the ratio of high-quality liquid assets to total assets remains high at large banks.

As Bloomberg reports, in a particularly striking sign, the Fed said the businesses with the biggest existing debt loads are also the ones taking on the riskiest loans. And protections that lenders include in loan documents in case borrowers default are eroding, the U.S. central bank said in its twice-a-year financial stability report. The Fed board voted unanimously to approve the document.

“Credit standards for new leveraged loans appear to have deteriorated further over the past six months,” the Fed said, adding that the loans to firms with especially high debt now exceed earlier peaks in 2007 and 2014.

“The historically high level of business debt and the recent concentration of debt growth among the riskiest firms could pose a risk to those firms and, potentially, their creditors.”

Leveraged loans are routinely packaged into collateralized loan obligations, or CLOs. Investors in those securities — including insurance companies and banks — face a risk that strains in the underlying loans will deliver “unexpected losses,” the Fed said Monday, adding that the secondary market isn’t very liquid, “even in normal times.”

“It is hard to know with certainty how today’s CLO structures and investors would fare in a prolonged period of stress,” the Fed added.

The Fed further warned that debt owed by the business sector, however, has expanded more rapidly than output for the past several years, pushing the business-sector credit-to-GDP ratio to historically high levels .

The central bank also said that assets at hedge funds and broker-dealers grew “at a rapid pace” over the past year.

And finally, is The Fed admitting it is blowing bubbles again?

“… at the end of the quarter, some contacts noted the potential for excessive risk-taking, owing in part to a more accommodative monetary policy stance than had been previously anticipated”

Full Financial Stability Report below:

via ZeroHedge News http://bit.ly/2DTsAhl Tyler Durden