This 65-Year-Old American Lost His Life’s Savings For Failing To File A Form

Submitted by Simon Black via SovereignMan.com,

By all accounts Bernhard Gubser was living the American Dream.

Born in Switzerland he moved to the Land of the Free in the early 1980s to work at an international shipping company based in Laredo, Texas.

Eventually Mr. Gubser worked his way up to be President of the company and began traveling around the world to expand the business.

He became a naturalized citizen of the United States in the 1990s, something that would eventually cost him $1.35 million.

As a Swiss native, Gubser had a Swiss bank account. And as he was routinely spending a lot of time in Switzerland for business, and he felt that he might one day retire there, he kept the account open.

But the federal government has a rule: US taxpayers must disclose their foreign bank accounts each year to the Treasury Department.

Up until a few years ago, few people knew about this rule.

It wasn’t until around 2010, when the US government finally realized they were flat broke, that they started making a big deal about offshore reporting requirements and penalizing people with undisclosed accounts.

Gubser maintains that as soon as he found out about the requirements, just like most people, he immediately began to file the offshore disclosures.

The federal government took a different view, dinging him with a penalty of $1.35 million, roughly half of his life’s savings.

As they say, of course, ignorance of the law is not an excuse.

And Gubser is paying a $1.35 million penalty because he didn’t know.

Neither did Tim Geithner, as it turned out. Several years ago the former Secretary of the Treasury was found to have “accidentally” underpaid his taxes.

In this case, ignorance of the law was a perfectly valid excuse. Geithner was only required to pay back what he owed without additional consequence.

Hillary Clinton has been in the spotlight for having removed official, confidential, and classified documents from the State Department to her personal email server while she was Secretary of State.

She claims she didn’t know.

The President of the United States has closed ranks around her insisting that it was an honest mistake and that no crime was committed.

Funny thing, as anyone who’s ever held a security clearance in the Land of the Free knows, before being allowed access to confidential documents you sign a non-disclosure agreement known as the SF312.

I’ll never forget my own experience with the SF312 when I received a Top Secret clearance in the military. It was pretty sobering.

In the intelligence world, people joke that the SF312 is when you ‘sign your life away’, because the entire document threatens you with all kinds of penalties and imprisonment for mishandling of classified information.

Among the many federal laws governing classified information, Section 793(f) of the US criminal code criminalizes gross negligence resulting in the mishandling documents.

So whether or not Ms. Clinton ‘intended’ to violate the law is irrelevant.

And if it were anyone else who unwittingly spent months or even years mishandling classified information, we would be turning big rocks into little rocks wearing Dayglo orange jumpsuits.

I’m not trying to single out Hillary Clinton. The larger point is that the rules don’t apply for the political establishment

Yet for everyone else, they ruin people’s lives for the most mundane, victimless violations of obscure rules.

And every day they create more and more rules.

Just this morning the US federal government published 423 pages of new rules, regulations, and proposals.

That’s on top of the 704 pages published yesterday and the 688 pages published on Friday.

It makes me want to vomit when I think about how quickly they churn out regulations that squash individual liberty… yet still maintain that ignorance of the law is not an excuse.

It’s not radical to be repulsed by this double standard.

It’s not conspiratorial to look at objective data and recognize how personal freedom is in such obvious decline.

It’s not negative or pessimistic to be truly honest with yourself and ask, ‘is this really the country I remember from years ago?’

And it’s not unpatriotic to take simple, legitimate steps to reclaim your freedom and long-term prosperity from this obvious trend.

PS. There’s one thing that’s inspiring about this story. Bernhard Gubser isn’t taking this lying down. He’s fighting back and suing the federal government. The results of this case may provide a landmark precedent in how the government is able to come after taxpayers.

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Trump vs. Hillary: The “Slugfest” Of The Most Disliked Candidates Of Modern Times

Recently, we exposed the main reason people will be voting for either Donald Trump or Hillary Clinton: simply to block the other candidate from winning.

 

Now we find the motivation behind the responses: Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump are set to be the two most disliked general election candidates of modern times.

According to The Hill, in a poll conducted by FiveThirtyEight, 37% of voters hold a “strongly unfavorable” view of Clinton, with only one candidate having a worse result in the last 36 years: Donald Trump. Trump came in with a solid 53% of voters viewing him as “strongly unfavorable”

Given the fact that Hillary and Donald are two of the most disliked presidential candidates of modern times, and voters are really only voting to keep the other party’s candidate out of the White House, the race is shaping up to be quite interesting, as both candidates will most certainly go negative early and often to play on those poll results. 

“I think ‘slugfest’ would be an understatement” said Boston University professor Tobe Berkovitz.

While Trump was written off early in the GOP primary process, we are sure the same will happen again in the general election as he faces off against the seasoned political machine that is the Clinton camp. While we are not sure how he’ll ultimately fare against Hillary in the battle for the White House, one thing is a guarantee: Trump will make things interesting. Perhaps, like him or not, that’s a good thing at the end of the day for America.

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Saving Is Dumb… Say The Central Bankers

Submitted by Tony Sagami via MauldinEconomics.com,

Get a load of this headline from a German newspaper, which translates into “Extreme Low Interest: Who Saves Is the Fool.”

The reason for that insulting headline is simple: central bankers have been waging a war against savers.

 

Example #1: Former President of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, Richard Fisher, offered this sage (sarcasm alert) advice last week: “I would be prepared when they move – and I hope they move sometime in June – there’ll be a settling in of the market place. There will be a correction. Suck it up. Deal with it. That’s reality.”

 

Example #2: ECB President Mario Draghi had this to say: Negative interest rates are “not the problem, but a symptom of an underlying problem” caused by a “global excess of savings.”

“If central banks did not do this, investing would be unattractive,” said Draghi. In other words, shut up and buy some stocks!

What those central bankers want you to do is either (1) spend money to increase demand, or (2) buy stocks to increase capital.

Well, it sure looks like American consumers are not doing the former.

How many times have you heard experts say that the US economy is consumer driven? It’s true; almost 70% of our GDP is attributable to consumer spending.

However, the latest Census Bureau numbers show that retail sales fell 0.2% in March following a contraction in both February and January. In other words, retail sales fell over the entire first quarter.

Of course, the people who know how consumers are really doing are the people who sell to them, such as Sally Smith, the CEO of Buffalo Wild Wings, which just reported an awful quarter:

“The macro environment for casual dining has had a rough quarter and a rough couple of quarters. I just don’t think there is a robust consumer out there.”

If Smith and the Census Bureau are right, our economy is headed for a recession. EVERY time the yearly growth rate of retail sales has fallen below 3%, the US economy has gone into recession.

At the same time our consumer-driven economy is hitting a brick wall, there is a regulatory change coming that could knock the stock market off its feet.

SEC Ready to Stop Accounting Shenanigans

I’m talking about the Securities and Exchange Commission finally doing its job and putting a stop to the accounting hanky-panky that artificially inflates profits.

According to Dow Jones, the SEC is getting ready to step up its scrutiny of companies’ “homegrown earnings measures,” signaling it plans to target firms that “inflate their sales results and employ customized metrics that stray too far from accounting rules.”

It looks like the SEC is waking up to the misleading picture that pro forma earnings—compared to generally accepted accounting principles, or GAAP—generate. Now the commission is launching a campaign to crack down on made-to-order earnings.

Mark Kronforst, chief accountant of the SEC's corporation finance division, said, “The point is, now the company has created a measure that no longer reflects its business model. We’re going to take exception to that practice.”

So what will the SEC do? According to the Dow Jones article:

The agency plans to issue comment letters in the coming months that critique firms that booked revenue on an accelerated basis. Mr. Kronforst, who plans to speak Thursday at a Northwestern University legal conference about the issue, declined to name them.

 

Mr. Kronforst said regulators also plan to challenge companies that report their adjusted earnings on a per-share basis. The results are often higher than per-share GAAP earnings and look too much like measures of cash flow, which decades-old rules prevent from being presented on a per-share basis, Mr. Kronforst said. That is because investors could confuse cash flow with actual earnings, which truly represent the amounts that could be distributed to investors.

 

“We are going to look harder at the substance of what companies are presenting, rather than what the measures are called,” he said.

In other words, the SEC is finally going to do its job!

To see the impact of such a crackdown, all you have to do is take a look at the growing difference between GAAP profits and pro forma profits.

By the way, I suggest you re-read my March 8, 2016 column about corporate America’s accounting razzle-dazzle.

Yes, my bear market radar is on high alert, and the new SEC scrutiny could be just the thing that knocks the bull market off its feet.

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Top Hillary Clinton Aide Walks Out In Middle Of FBI Interview

With the FBI’s noose closing around Hillary and her closest State Department cohorts as the Federal agency nears the end of its criminal probe, some are getting increasingly concerned about what they will and will not say on the record. One such person is Hillary’s former State Department Chief of Staff, Cheryl Mills, who according to the WaPo walked out of an interview with federal investigators when an FBI official began to discuss a topic considered off-limits.

The off-limits questions reportedly concerned the way in which emails were given to the State Department to be distributed to the public. According to the Post, Mills worried that the questions would violate the attorney-client privilege, and investigators had previously agreed not to broach the subject. It is unclear when the interview occurred.

The Post adds that Mills and her lawyer left the room,  though both returned a short time later. It is not completely uncommon for FBI agents and prosecutors to diverge on interview tactics and approach, and the people familiar with the matter said Mills answered investigators’ questions. Mills and her lawyer, Beth Wilkinson, also asked for breaks more than once to confer, the people said.

Investigators consider Mills  to be a cooperative witness but the episode demonstrates the tension surrounding the criminal probe into possible mishandling of classified information involving the leading Democratic presidential candidate. In the coming weeks, prosecutors and FBI agents hope to be able to interview Clinton herself as they work to bring the case to a close.Cheryl Mills, Clinton’s former State Department chief of staff, and her lawyer both returned to the interview room a short time later, according to the newspaper, citing several unidentified people.

As the Hill adds, the Tuesday afternoon report comes as the federal investigation related to Clinton’s exclusive use of a private email server throughout her time at the State Department appears to be coming to a close. Interviews of Mills and other top aides have reportedly been conducted in recent weeks, and Clinton herself is expected to answer investigators’ questions soon.

Still, the episode with Mills shows the process has not been entirely smooth Clinton and her top allies, who have repeatedly shrugged off concerns about the server. The Post reported that Mills was seen as a cooperative witness despite the brief walkout. Clinton, the likely Democratic presidential nominee, has said that the setup was a mistake made out of a desire for convenience and not a desire to circumvent federal recordkeeping or transparency laws.

In response to this story, Wilkinson said, “Ms. Mills has cooperated with the government.” The Clinton campaign also did not provide a response, but spokesman Brian Fallon has said repeatedly that Clinton is willing to answer investigators questions, and he added in a recent statement that “we hope and expect that anyone else who is asked would do the same.”

So far, investigators have no found evidence tying Clinton to criminal wrongdoing, though they are still probing the case aggressively. Charges have not been ruled out. In recent weeks, they have been interviewing Mills and other aides.

One former State Department staffer who worked on Hillary Clinton’s private email server, Bryan Pagliano, was granted immunity so he would cooperate as part of the probe. In a hilarious update, the State Department “admitted” on Sunday that it was unable to track down any emails between Pagliano and Clinton, and apologized for its incompetence, even though it is common knowledge that at least one email during the time period in question was sent out and has been captured.

 

There is no indication a grand jury has been convened in the case, although according to some this is largely due to alleged intervention on behalf of the DOJ which has been eager to quash the investigation since day one.

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WTF Chart Of The Day: “Dead Retirees” Walking

Submitted by Jim Quinn via The Burning Platform blog,

The chart below is simply horrifying. Not only are these median net worth figures scary, realize that 50% of the households in the country have less than these figures. Having a a net worth of less than $200,000 as you approach or enter retirement is a recipe for disaster. When 70% to 80% of that net worth is tied up in your house, you are nothing but a dead retiree walking. You should acquire a taste for cat food and learn how to panhandle for money.

The $25,000 to $45,000 of non-home related net worth would also include vehicles, furniture, electronics, and appliances. The amount of this net worth in usable cash or investments is microscopic. How can people expect survive for decades on virtually no savings? This chart reveals that a huge percentage of American households will face miserable retirement years and/or having to work until the day they die. They will have to sell their homes to live off the proceeds. Who will they sell to? You can see the younger generations don’t have a pot to piss in. This does not bode well for home prices over the next couple decades, despite the artificial boom engineered by the Fed and Wall Street since 2012.

The unequivocal facts in that chart are the result of globalizing good jobs to foreign lands, the utter failure of our educational system, the success of Wall Street/Mega-Corporation propaganda in convincing a vast swath of America to live for today using easy money credit, politicians squandering the national wealth on the welfare/warfare state, and a Federal Reserve that has debased our currency by 96% in just over 100 years.

This chart will look even worse when the stock/bond/housing bubble implodes for the third time in the last sixteen years…

median-net-worth-by-age_large

 

We are sitting down to a banquet of consequences.

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“This Is The Most Obvious Disaster In Finance. Central Bankers Don’t Understand…”

In a recent note, Eric Peters, CIO of One River Asset Management, summarizes everything that's been happening over the past few years in one tidy anecdote. Citing an unnamed CIO, he points out that the central bank was created to help its member banks, and it attempts to impact the real economy by using interest rates as a mechanism to control the attractiveness of lending money. However, throughout all of the meticulous planning done by the creaters of the Federal Reserve, nobody bothered to ask what would happen if the central bank suddenly couldn't influence the attractiveness of lending money, thus not being able to affect the real economy – which is precisely where we are today.

From Eric Peters:

“Central banks were created to be the banks for banks,” said the CIO. “They were structured to influence the economy by increasing or decreasing the attractiveness of lending money.” If central banks wanted to spur banks to lend to the real economy, they reduced the interest rate they could earn from parking their money at the central bank. If they wanted to reduce bank lending, they increased the attractiveness of making risk-free loans to the central bank by raising interest rates.  

 

“But no one ever asked the question of what to do if the central bank was somehow unable to increase the attractiveness of lending money? If that happened, how could central banks influence the real economy?” Which is basically where we are today.

 

“It’s one of those questions that seemed so implausible that no one ever really considered it.” With central banks perplexed by this dilemma, they turned to negative interest rates. Hoping that by taxing banks for keeping money with the central bank, they’d spur lending to the real economy. “But by going negative, they simply push longer-dated interest rates lower, further reducing the attractiveness of making loans.”

 

By reducing the yield on every investment asset, pushing prices to overvaluation, this policy also destroyed the ability of investors to build diversified portfolios capable of withstanding even the slightest economic disruption. Which ultimately results in reduced private sector risk-taking; the lifeblood of every economy. “This is the most obvious disaster in finance. Central bankers don't quite understand it.”

 

It’s one of the key reasons Japan and Europe are performing so poorly.

 

 

“They never thought this through. And they should probably give up and raise rates to reverse this dynamic.” But that will cause extreme volatility. “And the irony is that central banks are creating precisely what they’re trying to avoid.”

We would just add that in addition to the the inability to control the attractiveness of lending money, what the central planners also overlooked (and continue to ignore) is, more importantly, the fact that central banks can not create individual demand. A bank can lend at whatever rate it chooses, but if there is no demand for that loan, the game comes to an abrupt end.

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Oil Slides After Crude Inventory Surges Most In A Month

Following Genscape's 1.4mm build estimate at Cushing, and expectations of a 1.1mm build, API reported a 1.46mm build. Chatter across trading desks was that API data had been leaked and that is what drove oil prices higher (after their Genscape-driven dump) which proved 100% incorrect as total crude inventories soared a shocking 3.5mm barrels (against expectations of no change) – the most in 5 weeks. Gaosline built less than expected and Distillates saw a draw but the damage was done and prices of WTI started to give back the days gains.

 

API

  • Crude +3.45mm (Exp unch)
  • Cushing +1.46mm (+1.1mm exp)
  • Gasoline +271k (+710k exp)
  • Distillates -1.36mm

The biggest weekly  build in 5 weeks…

 

Which spoiled the party in crude…

 

 

Charts: Bloomberg

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Fossil Stock Plummets 25% On Abysmal Results As US, Global Consumers Choose To Save Instead Of Spend

While everyone knew Q1 would be a terrible quarter for energy companies, it is turning out to be an absolute bloodbath for consumer-facing retail companies, and the latest example was “fashion accessory”, but really watch company Fossil, which has cratered after hours after reporting not only a miss in EPS of $0.12 (Est. $0.15) and revenue (which at $660 million was 9% lower than a year ago and missed expectations of $667 million), but also missed comp store expectations which dropped 3%, on expectations of a -0.4% decline: “A strong comparable sales increase in Europe was offset by a decline in the Americas and Asia.  A comparable sales increase in leathers and jewelry was offset by a decline in watches.”

The topline weakness was broad-based and included every single addressable market:

  • Net sales in the Americas decreased 7% or $26.0 million compared to the first quarter of fiscal 2015, with declines in watches, jewelry and leathers compared to last fiscal year.  Modest sales growth in Canada and Mexico was offset by a decline in the U.S.
  • Net sales in Europe decreased 8% or $18.1 million compared to the first quarter of fiscal 2015, with an increase in leathers offset by declines in watches and jewelry compared to last fiscal year.  Within the region, modest growth in France and Germany was offset by a decline in distributor markets and the U.K.
  • Net sales in Asia decreased 4% or $4.8 million compared to the first quarter of fiscal 2015, with an increase in leathers offset by declines in watches and jewelry compared to last fiscal year.  Within the region, an increase in India was offset by declines in most markets, including Hong Kong and China.

Among the odd reasons the company gave to justify the weakness in demand was the “strong dollar” in Q1, seemingly unaware that the DXY was actually weaker compared to a year ago:

During the first quarter of fiscal 2016, the translation impact of a stronger U.S. dollar decreased the Company’s reported net sales by $16.4 million, operating income by $12.9 million and diluted earnings per share by $0.08. The following discussion of the Company’s net sales is calculated in constant dollars and reflects regional performance based on sales in all channels within the geographic location.

But the main reason why the stock is down nearly a quarter is due to the company’s tragic guidance. FOSL now sees 2016 net sales down 1.5%-5.0%, saw down 3.5% to up 1.0%, est. down ~3%; it also sees 2Q GAAP EPS break-even to 15c versus an estimate of 60c; It goes on: FOSL now sees net sales down 8%-10%, may not compare to est. down .3%;

And then there was the following pearl: “During the first quarter of fiscal 2016, the Company invested $4.4 million to repurchase 0.1 million shares of its common stock at an average price of $47 per share.  As of April 2, 2016, the Company had $825.0 million remaining on its existing share repurchase authorizations.” Considering the stock is now down 25% to $30, the company is now down over 30% on its “investment.”

Joking aside, this was the latest confirmation that something is very badly broken with not only the US but also international consumer, who as the WaPo “determined” earlier is actively seeking to sabotage the Obama recovery by not spending on such products as Skaggen watches, but instead selfishly is saving away all available funds.

Expect even more weakness in the coming quarters, especially among comparable consumer companies, if this unpatriotic saving behavior does not revert back to what made the US consumer class the most beloved across the entire world.

One thing is certain: FOSL investors will certainly not be spending more in the coming days.

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The Inevitability Of Unintended Consequences

Submitted by Adam Taggart via PeakProsperity.com,

"No plan of operations extends with any certainty beyond the first contact with the main hostile force."

~ Helmuth von Moltke the Elder

 

"Shit happens"

~ Anonymous

Anyone involved with managing projects, people or systems knows that the only thing that can be planned with absolute certainty is that things will never go 100% according to plan.

This is true even in exceedingly simple situations, which we've written about at length here at Peak Prosperity (the uncontrollable nature of the straightforward Beer Game detailed in this post on the Bullwhip Effect outlines this well). And it's one of the truisms that gives us the most confidence that the world's central planners will eventually lose control of the global systems they are trying to manage via increasingly heavy-handed intervention.

History is full of examples where governments' best-laid plans failed in spectacular fashion, exacerbating the very problems they were intending to solve. Here are a few of our favorites:

Hoy No Circula

In the late 1980s, the air pollution in Mexico City had reached concerning levels. City planners decided that reducing the number of cars on the roads would have a material impact on improving air quality via reduced emissions, so they launched the Hoy No Circula ("today [your car] does not drive") program.

Hoy No Circula mandated that only certain cars could drive on certain days of the week. The rules were based on the last digit of a car's license plate. If your license plate ended in a 5 or 6, you couldn't drive your car on Mondays. If it ended in 7 or 8, Tuesdays were out. And so on.

The expectation was that people would commute via public transit more and, on any given day, there would be 20% fewer cars on the road. 20% fewer cars meant 20% fewer emissions, leading to improved air quality.

But… that's not quite how things worked out.

People, being people, didn't want to change their behavior. Having to find alternate transportation plans every few days proved a frustrating inconvenience. So how did the public respond? By buying a second car, with a license plate ending in a different digit than their primary vehicle.

This was bad for several reasons. Not only did it prevent the number of cars driving on the roads each day by dropping by the expected amount, but these secondary cars were predominantly cheaper, older "beater" cars — which were much more pollutive automobiles.

Even those who chose to commute instead predominately took taxis instead of public transit (Mexico City had, and continues to have, insufficient options for public transport). Most of the taxis in use when Hoy No Circula was first implemented were Volkswagen Beetles, one of the worst-emitting vehicles in circulation at the time.

So air quality actually in Mexico City worsened after the implementation of Hoy No Circula. And traffic congestion, which was already bad, got worse, as well.

The Cobra Effect

Such misguided policy-making isn't anything new. In our recent book Prosper!: How to Prepare for the Future and Create a World Worth Inheriting we share a fine example dating from the Crown rule in India era:

During British colonial rule of India, the government became concerned about the large number of cobras in Delhi. So it issued a bounty on the poisonous snakes, paying a ?xed sum for each dead cobra brought in by the public. It didn’t take long for things to start going sideways on this plan. In order to receive more payments, enterprising residents began breeding cobras.

 

Clearly this was not what the British rulers intended. Once they discovered how their program was being abused, they terminated the bounty scheme. And what happened next? Yep, with no incentive left, the breeders set their now-worthless snakes free. And the cobra problem in Delhi skyrocketed to much greater heights than before the bounty program began. The “solution” had the exact opposite effect as intended.

(Source)

An Inexhaustible Supply

Sadly, the inability of the central State to recognize its vulnerability to the law of unintended consequences is mighty. Each generation of policymakers refuses to learn from the errors of the preceding ones, and remains confident that as long as it has good intentions (at least publicly), success is inevitable.

But instead, we get bungle after bungle.

The economy is slowing? Fill the banks newly-printed capital! They'll lend it out, thus increasing the velocity of money, spurring consumer spending and re-igniting economic growth. This was the thinking in the wake of the 2008 slowdown — but what happened? The banks realized it was much safer to hold on to that new money, lever it up and buy 'safe bet' instruments like US Treasury bonds — thereby making risk-free profits. The money that the banks did deploy largely went into the assets that most favored the banks and their richest clients, resulting in the widest wealth gap our country has ever experienced in its history.

Money velocity still not perking up? Take the bold step of charging negative interest rates on bank deposits! That's sure to get money out into the larger economy, where it can seek a positive return. This is what a growing number of countries are experimenting with today; but like Japan and the EU are realizing, imposing negative nominal interest rates actually boosts demand for cash, gold and safes to store them in. Turns out, desperate and bizarro-world tactics like NIRP cause investors to prioritize return OF capital higher than return ON.

Workers not able to get jobs paying them enough to live on? Double the minimum wage! This sounds noble, but places a heavy cost burden on the already-beleaguered small employer. As we've recently discussed, dramatically boosting the minimum wage without any commensurate relief for small and medium-sized businesses simply adds to the incentive for these companies to shed as many jobs as possible and to invest in long-term non-human solutions like automation. We are permanently destroying the supply of jobs available to our workforce.

The point here is that in many cases (if not most), governments' cures are often worse than the disease they are treating. Or as my favorite de-motivational poster puts it:

Conclusion

And very likely compounding these unintended consequences is the basic principle of uncertainty. In his article Why Our Central Planners Are Breeding Failure Charles Hugh Smith opined on how unknowable much of the results of current monetary policy will be, despite the Fed et al's assurances that they have everything well under control:

As noted above, any policy identified as the difference between success and failure must pass a basic test: When the policy is applied, is the outcome predictable?  For example, if central banks inject liquidity and buy assets (quantitative easing) in the next financial crisis, will those policies duplicate the results seen in 2008-15?

 

The current set of fiscal and monetary policies pursued by central banks and states are all based on lessons drawn from the Great Depression of the 1930s. The successful (if slow and uneven) “recovery” since the 2008-09 global financial meltdown is being touted as evidence that the key determinants of success drawn from the Great Depression are still valid: the Keynesian (or neo-Keynesian) policies of massive deficit spending by central states and extreme monetary easing policies by central banks.

 

Are the present-day conditions identical to those of the Great Depression? If not, then how can anyone conclude that the lessons drawn from that era will be valid in an entirely different set of conditions?

 

We need only consider Japan’s remarkably unsuccessful 25-year pursuit of these policies to wonder if the outcomes of these sacrosanct monetary and fiscal policies are truly predictable, or whether the key determinants of macro-economic success and failure have yet to be identified.

It's this concern about the failure of the current strategy our central planners are pursuing, paired with the tremendous magnitude of the impending cost of that failure, that motivated Chris to issue our report The Consequences Playbook last year, which begins:

What’s really happened since 2008 is that central banks decided that a little more printing with the possibility of future pain was preferable to immediate pain.  Behavioral economics tells us that this is exactly the decision we should always expect from humans. History says as much, too.

 

It’s just how people are wired. We’ll almost always take immediate gratification over delayed gratification, and similarly choose to defer consequences into the future, especially if there’s even a ridiculously slight chance those consequences won’t materialize.

 

So instead of noting back in 2008 that it was unwise to have been borrowing at twice the rate of our income growth for the past several decades — which would have required a lot of very painful belt-tightening — the decision was made to ‘repair the credit markets’ which is code speak for: ‘keep doing the same thing that got us in trouble in the first place.’

 

Also known as the ‘kick the can down the road’ strategy, the hoped-for saving grace was always a rapid resumption of organic economic growth. That’s how the central bankers rationalized their actions. They said that saving the banks and markets today was imperative, and that eventually growth would return, thereby justifying all of the new debt layered on to paper-over the current problems.

 

Of course, they never explained what would happen if that growth did not return. And that’s because the whole plan falls apart without really robust growth to pay for it all.

 

And by ‘fall apart’ I mean utter wreckage of the bond and equity markets, along with massive institutional and sovereign defaults. That was always the risk, and now we’re at the point where the very last thing holding the entire fictional edifice together is beginning to give way. Finally.

When credibility in central bank omnipotence snaps, buckle up. Risk will get re-priced, markets will fall apart, losses will mount, and politicians will seek someone (anyone, dear God, but them) to blame.

In The Consequences Playbook (free executive summary; enrollment required for full access) we spell out what will happen next and how you should be preparing today for what might happen tomorrow. If you haven't yet read it, you really should. Suffice it to say, a tremendous amount of wealth will be lost if (really, when) the central banks lose control. And standards of living for many will be impacted. A little preparation today can make a huge difference in your future.

 

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Stocks Up, Bonds Up, Credit Up, Commodities Up, Dollar Up… Volume Down, Economy Down

Yeah ok – the best day in US equities in 2 months… on what? Data has been crap (even JOLTS 'good news' does nothging but corner The Fed into rate hikes even more), earnings have done nothing, bonds are rallying, and oil rallied on the back of a surge in production (perhaps front-running API inventory data)…"it's all good" up here right?

 

US economic data continues to deteriorate…

 

And it appears bonds have been right…

 

Volume plunges to 2016 lows…

 

Russell 2000 Small Caps underperfomed on the day as the rest of the major indices seemed to trade tick for tick after Europe closed except for Nasdaq's meltup (today's move felt much more index top down driven than any "stock" buying)

 

Nasdaq "Golden Cross"-ed this week, seemingly traded very technically, bouncing off the 100DMA and pushing to test the 50/200DMA…

 

Futures give us a better look at the excitement…

 

VIX tumbled to 3-week lows (13 handle) extending S&P's bounce off the Year-to-Date "unch" levels…

 

Bonds and stocks decoupled (both bid)…

 

Stocks accelerated notably more than VIX implied…

 

And "Most Shorted" stocks were squeezed for 30 mins after Europe's close, they continue to underperform…

 

After the biggest 7-day redemption in history (yes ever ever), HYG soared today by the most in 2 months – makes perfect sense… (CDX HY rallied by the most in 2 months also – tightening 18bps to 441bps)

 

Treasury yields traded in a narrow range, with the curve modestly glatter (2Y +2bps, 30Y -0.5bps)…

 

The USD Index gained modestly onteh day thanks to continued weakness in JPY (despite strength in commodity currencies)…

 

While copper ended red, and despite USD gains, Crude soared and PMs managed decent gains on the day…

 

Finally, it appears the dismal jobs data on Friday has prompted excitment in stocks and crude oil (yay less people employed to buy gasoline!!), left bonds unphased, and caused safe haven buyers to abandon Gold (hey – a job's a job right)…

 

Charts: Bloomberg

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