The Pope Supports Migrants, not Trump, Obama to Visit Cuba, Cosby Files New Suit Against Accuser: P.M. Links

  • Wait until Trump promises to "make Heaven great again."Pope Francis visited the border between Mexico and the United States and appealed to governments to be sympathetic to plight of migrants.
  • But in much, much more important news Pope Francis also said that Donald Trump is “not Christian” for his anti-immigrant, pro-wall positions. So that’s what the news cycle is all about. Even the pope has to start a fight with Trump to get publicity.
  • President Barack Obama will become the first sitting president to visit Cuba in 88 years.
  • The economist who claims that Bernie Sanders’ economic agenda will actually increase growth and not utterly destroy us all is nevertheless going to vote for Hillary Clinton in the primaries.
  • Bill Cosby is filing a civil suit against one of the women who has accused him of sexual assault, accusing her of breaching the confidentiality agreement from back in 2006 that settled her complaint and demanding the money he gave her back.
  • The feds are dropping charges against the six other employees of gay escort site Rentboy.com, leaving only CEO Jeffrey Hurant facing the court.
  • To appeal to millennial gamblers, casinos are trying to get regulators to allow slot machine variations that actually call for skill to win rather than just chance. Video games and pinball are the inspirations, which is funny if you know the early history of pinball machines (they were often used for illegal gambling).

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P2P Site That Financed San Bernardino Massacre Hikes Rates Citing “Turbulent Markets”

“Peer-to-peer lending is probably a bad idea,” we wrote, earlier this month. “Securitizing peer-to-peer loans is definitely a bad idea,” we added.

The P2P space has witnessed monumental growth over the past several years. P2P platforms lent over $12 billion in 2015 alone and as we documented last summer, Wall Street is supercharging the space by securitizing the loans.

Obviously, the idea of pooling and packaging consumer loans is a dicey proposition even when the lender is a corporation (see our coverage of Springleaf and OneMain for example). But when the lender is an individual, we’re in uncharted waters entirely.

That is, P2P-backed paper effectively embeds person-to-person counterparty risk in the financial system. Investors are buying paper backed by the “full faith and credit” of individuals seeking to refi their credit cards and the loans are made by other individuals whose capacity to absorb losses is completely opaque.

As Michael Tarkan, an equities analyst at Compass Point Research put it last year, “We’ve created a mechanism to refinance a credit card into an unsecured personal loan [and that] hasn’t been tested yet through a full credit cycle.

Well guess what? We’re about 1% from entering a full-on default cycle according to Deutsche Bank and that means that when it comes to P2P, we’re about to see what happens when widening junk spreads collide head on with abysmal economic growth, lingering student loan debt, and the waiter and bartender “recovery.” 

The cracks, we said two weeks ago, are already starting to show. A recent presentation by LendingClub showed that some P2P debt is “underperforming vs. expectations” as write-off rates for a portion of five-year LendingClub loans were roughly 7 percent to 8 percent, compared with a forecast range of around 4 percent to 6 percent. Here’s what that looks like in terms of blue spheres and red arrows:

“Matching up individual borrowers and lenders may sound like a good idea in principle, but effectively, you’ve got a brand new set of companies (the P2Ps) attempting to assess individual borrowers’ credit risk on the fly in cyberspace,” we warned, adding that the whole model is “an absurdly difficult proposition and one that obviously comes with myriad risks especially when those credits are sliced up and sold to investors.”

Well don’t look now, but another prominent P2P lender is sounding the alarm bells on credit risk. “Prosper Marketplace Inc. has started charging borrowers more for loans on its platform, as the company deals with a greater risk of defaults while striving to keep its loans attractive to investors with higher-yielding alternatives,” WSJ wrote on Wednesday. “The San Francisco company, which runs one of the biggest online consumer-lending platforms, told investors who buy its loans Monday that it was raising its rates by on average 1.4 percentage points due to ‘the current turbulent market environment that we have witnessed since the beginning of 2016.’”

The move by Prosper – which originated some $1.6 billion in loans last year, up 350% from 2014 – comes on the heels of a similar push higher by LendingClub which hiked rates in December after Janet Yellen’s ill-timed liftoff. Here’s more from WSJ: 

Overall, Prosper’s rates will rise to an average of 14.9% from 13.5%, the company said in the email to investors.

 

“This looks like a typical credit-cycle turn,” said Brian Weinstein, chief investment officer at Blue Elephant Capital Management, which invests in online consumer loans and manages $100 million in assets.

 

Mr. Weinstein said he urged Prosper to start charging borrowers more since August when he first noticed worsening loan performance. Prosper said in its email to investors that it had been increasing the estimated losses on its loans since last August.

 

The company didn’t discuss specifics in the email. Last week, ratings-firm Moody’s Investors Service said that it may downgrade a subset of a pool of Prosper loans that are securitized, citing higher-than-forecast late payments and charge-offs. The original rating on those loans was Baa3, which is investment grade.

 

New securitizations of consumer loans have halted since the Prosper loans deal last year. A package of loans made by Chicago’s Avant Inc., including some to people with subprime credit scores, is being shopped to investors.

Right, so the model started to fall apart last August in the wake of the market turmoil caused by the yuan deval and things have only gotten worse since. Got it.

The question now is what happens to the nascent P2P-backed ABS market once spreads start to blow out on the existing paper and what impact a meltdown will have on loan origination across the space. 

We can only hope things don’t go south too fast because without Prosper, good people like Syed Farook and Tashfeen Malik won’t be able to obtain the $28,000 loans they need to finance the jihad in California.  


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Forget “The Great Moderation”, This Is “The Great Intellectual Failure”

Via Scotiabank's Guy Haselmann,

A well-known central banker once said to me, “if you don’t have a Plan B, then you don’t have a plan”.  When he spoke those words over a year ago, he was referring to the Fed’s lack of an exit strategy from zero rates and its QE-swollen balance sheet. He was telling me that the Fed was so focused on bettering ‘today’ through aggressive stimulus that it could not worry about ‘tomorrow’. He speculated that central banks were “terrified of looking as if they were doing too little”.

Part of the Fed’s aggressiveness entailed waiting as long as possible to initiate its first hike.  However, many believe that the Fed waited much too long, and in doing so missed the ideal window of opportunity to hike (for the first time in almost nine years).  Some would even characterize Twist, QE2 and/or QE3 as unnecessary, labeling it monetary over-reach and the underlying source of the violent market behavior observed since the hike in interest rates.

It is likely that a non-linear direct correlation has existed between the length of time the Fed maintained its extreme accommodation and the market’s reaction at the point of rate ‘lift-off’. If this is true, then financial risk assets would have been even more adversely affected if the Fed had waited longer to hike; alternatively, markets would have had a lesser reaction if the Fed had hiked back in 2013/14.  This formula likely became even more precise the further nominal GDP underperformed rosy forecasts.

Paradoxically, the quick and sharp declines in equity and credit markets have caused many pundits to allege the opposite point of view – that the Fed made a ‘mistake’ by hiking rates in December. It is counter-factual to know for sure, but I maintain that the market reaction would have likely been much less severe had it come earlier, and much more severe had the Fed delayed the inevitable even further.  Therefore, if there was a ‘mistake’, it was hiking too late, rather than hiking in December. There is never a “good time” to hike rates (reduction ad absurdum)

It is easy to play ‘armchair quarterback’, but few would disagree that ‘good’ policy leads to good outcomes.  By waiting so long to shift gears, debt levels increased further, global and US economic growth waned, China and Japan stumbled, and geo-political tensions increased. One thing seems clear, the Fed’s timing became ‘less good’.

Some of you may be thinking that the factors just listed would suggest that no hikes would have been best. I disagree. Monetary policy has been unfairly called upon to fix all which ails economies and financial markets. There has to be some tipping point where too much monetary stimulus – via QE or negative rates – ensures negative long-term benefits and great risks to financial stability.  Where exactly is this point?  Are we there yet?

The Bank for International Settlements (BIS) warns against asymmetric monetary policy’s ‘propensity for hugely damaging financial booms and busts’.  The BIS believes such policy entrenches financial instability leading to chronic economic weakness, and ruptures the open global economic order (translation: leads to currency wars and protectionism).

Markets have developed an unhealthy dependency on central banks to provide ever-greater stimulus with each decline in financial market prices or ebb in economic activity.  A highly-combustible paradigm exists when risk assets perform better as economic performance wanes (like today), simply because of the expectations of further central bank support.

Current solutions to economic woes reside with politicians not central banks. The only hope of avoiding a severe market downturn going forward is to rebalance the policy mix.  Great changes are required in terms of the tax code, health care costs, better property right protections, regulation, entitlements, global trade, and  cooperation on international currency policies (to name a few).  Over-active monetary policy has been enabling fiscal inaction.

Many of these issues are the root causes of economic shortcomings.  Without better understanding, clarity, and visibility on these factors, ultra-accommodative monetary policy will remain ineffective. Maximum effectiveness can only result from monetary, fiscal and regulatory policies working together.

Yellen’s testimony last week exposed great political tensions. Ironically, both parties, who typically agree on little, were united in their criticism of Fed policy. It was troubling that they dislike both past policies, as well as, all of the Fed’s current options.  In other words, they hate higher rates as IOER is, as they called it, “a taxpayer subsidy paid to banks”, but they also criticized the Fed’s QE and zero rate policies. They also displayed great concern for the possibility of negative rates.

I believe that market pundits arguing for easier money (or negative rates) do not fully understand the long-run unintended consequences to markets and economies from extreme and long periods of unconventional monetary policy. Market turbulence today is a warning sign.

Today, there are almost $7 trillion of sovereign bonds with negative yields. The countries where negative yields are official policy account for almost 25% of global GDP. After Japan experimented with negative rates the Nikkei lost over 15% in two weeks and the Yen unexpectedly appreciated by 7%. Banking shares in the EU, and Japan fell by over 20%. Market angst might be a sign that policymakers are underestimating the economic risks.

Unfortunately, central bank policymakers all possess a deep-seeded belief that ‘expanding the money base will lead to inflation’.  Many of them believe this, because as they state, ‘that is what happened in the past’.

The world today is a vastly different place than in past cycles. The market reaction to the BoJ move is a waving red flag, a warning sign.  Central bankers need to realize that there could be significant mis-measurement errors which partially explain their poor forecasts in recent years: populations in developed-world economies are far older; economies and corporations are much more indebted; world economies are more globalized, and; technology has continued to improve at a rapid rate. Old rules cannot be applied well.

History might look back on this period as a great intellectual failure for not properly understanding these dynamics.  The Fed should spend more of its intellectual power trying to understand why its policy actions have not had the desired or expected result.

Draghi gave us an initial hint this week in this regard when he said before EU Parliament that the ECB will be studying Europe’s monetary transition mechanisms.  In the meantime, central banks are increasing or maintaining massive accommodation, while seemingly disregarding the risks.  As many have written recently, ‘Einstein’s definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting a different result’.  Let’s hope that reaction to the BoJ’s experiment into negative rate territory serves as an adequate warning to reassess.

Global economic data has been terrible this week. The counter-intuitive short-covering rally in risk assets has provided another opportunity to fade the move.  Long-Treasuries remain the most attractive and safest place for portfolios to hide while market turbulence continues and central banks recede from what is shaping up to be counter-productive actions.

If the Fed ever moves to negative rates (which I doubt barring a catastrophe), than its ability to conduct effective policy changes will diminish. This is the basis for the increasing number of articles about the elimination of paper currency as a means for it to regain control.  For investors, this would be their gold-moment.  Under this scenario, it is not unthinkable for gold to rise to $4000 per ounce (to pick a level out of thin air).

“Johnny’s in the basement / Mixing up the medicine / I’m on the pavement / Thinking about the government” – Bob Dylan


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Is This Why Treasury Yields Surged In The Past Three Days?

Amid last Thursday's cataclysmically illiquid flash-crash like collapse in Treasury yields, speculators in extreme net short positions reached for anything to hedge their positions. Most remarkably, call-buying (i.e. betting on / hedging lower yields) relative to put-buying exploded to a record skew. It would appear that the utter panic protection positioning is being unwound in the last few days and that has dragged yields considerably higher. Today the skew is back to "normal" and Treasury yields are once again falling, unfettered by the technical flow from panicced options hedges.

 

Aggregate (10Y equivalents) speculative positioning in Treasury futures was already near record shorts

 

And so last week's yield crash sent the Treasury skew crashing to record lows… (positioning/hedging for lower yields)

 

Those apparently panicced hedges have been quickly lifted as rumors, news, central banker promises, and flows have calmed the chaotic moves – dragging the skew back to "normal" and smashing yields higher…

 

And now that the skew has normalized, yields are falling once again as the deflationary wave pressures continue…

 

Charts: Bloomberg

 


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Did The “Bartender & Waitress” Jobs ‘Recovery’ Just End?

In the new bifurcated normal US economy, with the manufacturing sector unofficially in recession, it has been the growth of the services sector, and, as we detailed here, implicitly the surge in "bartenders & waiters" jobs, has saved the government's "recovery" statistics in the last few years. Given the recent performance of the National Retail Association's Restaurant Performance Index, the jobs recovery 'party' just ended.

 

Since December 2007, it is clear where the jobs gains have been…

 

But judging by the lagged effect of the collapse of the Restaurant Performance Index, that party is over…

h/t @noalpha_allbeta

Just like it was in 2008…

 

We are sure this is nothing that some double-seasonal-adjustments can't fix, but for those who don't believe in unicorns, the lagged impact of a collapsing manufacturing economy have now hit the services sector… and with that knocked the last leg of the "recovery" stool out from under The Fed.


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Made-up Government Stats Inflame “Overweight Haters” Contempt for Britain’s Obese

Submitted by Mark Tovey via The Mises Institute,

In the cramped carriages of trains on the London underground, the bumping of body parts periodically furnishes occasion for a few murmured words between strangers. Aside from these apologetic exchanges, the passengers usually avoid getting involved with one another. Last November, however, this culture of British indifference was contravened when a group called Overweight Haters Ltd., apparently rapt by a sense of public duty, began an on-train shame campaign against fat Londoners, which involved giving out cards:

“We disapprove of your wasting NHS [National Health Service] money to treat your selfish greed. … You are a fat, ugly human.”

This odious act was, in part, sociological fallout from Britain’s nationalized system of health care. Single-payer medicine makes intimate health issues fair game for crass debate in the public square.

The government-employed statisticians and health experts, however, is the subject for analysis today. Writers of reports on obesity policy options are obliged, it seems, to include a section on the social cost of obesity – and the higher the number generated, the better. Their entire program of interventions dearly depends on this section for its implementation. In the words of one government source: “If rational individuals pay the full costs of their decisions about food intake and exercise, economists, policymakers, and public health officials should treat the obesity epidemic as a matter of indifference.” Theoretically, if the social cost is found to be low or zero, the rest of the report (all 150 pages of it) should end up in policymakers’ recycling baskets. Given this incentive structure, it is perhaps unsurprising that the UK Government Office for Science reported a number so obviously flawed.

How the Report Exaggerates Cost

As a Crown-stamped document, the report emanates authority. This makes its estimate suitable for uncritical regurgitation by journalists, politicians, and pundits. It is now etched into the British psyche: obese people are an ungodly drain on our NHS. To fully comprehend what it means to be cast as an enemy of the NHS in modern day Britain, note that, in protest of the Conservative Party’s quasi-reformist healthcare policies, in the county of East Sussex last Guy Fawkes Night a giant, naked effigy of Prime Minister David Cameron was paraded, jeered, and burnt.

The report in question, Foresight Tackling Obesities: Future Choices Project, claims the cost of obesity to the NHS was £3.9 billion in 2015 — this includes the direct cost of treating obesity, as well as a proportion of the cost incurred by treating obesity-related diseases, e.g., diabetes, coronary heart disease, stroke. However, and this is the point we want to stress, no effort is made in the report to account for the fact that obese people die earlier, and so often do not cash out their state pensions. That is, it gives the gross cost of obesity, when it is the net cost (which is much, much lower) that is the true indicator of obesity’s burden on the public purse.

Let’s estimate the net cost. The National Audit Office, an independent parliamentary body, estimates that obesity accounted for 30,000 excess deaths in 1998 in England alone (no data is available for the rest of Britain). On average, each individual died nine years earlier than they would have done had they not been obese. Assume that, in every year following 1998, the same was true: 30,000 people died nine years early. It follows that there were 270,000 fewer people alive in England to collect their pensions in 2015 due to obesity. (The formula is number of deaths multiplied by number of years lost per person due to premature death, and the logic underpinning that formula is captured in the diagram below.)

Figure 1: Number of people not collecting a state pension every year on account of their having died an early, obesity-caused death.

Number of people no collecting a state pension

In the diagram: Each dot represents 30,000 people “missing” from society due to untimely death. The first wave of people died nine years prematurely in 1998, and so there were 30,000 fewer people alive to collect state retirement payments from 1999 to 2007 — represented by red dots. The second wave of 30,000, who died in 1999, are represented by pink dots. By 2007, the number of people absent from society levels out at 270,000 (= 9 x 30,000). There are six dots above 2004, seven above 2005, eight above 2006; but nine above 2007, nine above 2008, nine above 2009, etc. Given the assumed death rate and years of life lost, 270,000 is the “long-run” number of English people missing from society because of obesity.

The state pays up to £8,300 per year to over-65s, which includes pension, top ups, heating allowance, and a TV license. Because in 2015 there were 270,000 fewer over-65s alive on account of premature death, the state’s liabilities in England alone were reduced by over £2.2 billion. This puts the net cost of obesity at about £1.7 billion, which is less than 2 percent of the NHS’ 2015/16 budget, and 56 percent lower than the gross cost. If we’d had the necessary data to include the rest of Britain (Scotland, Northern Ireland, and Wales), we might well have found the net effect of obesity on the state’s coffers in 2015 to be nil, or close thereto.

Of course, some obese people do claim out-of-work sick payments from the government, which inflates the net burden of obesity — but the amount is paltry (approximately £50 million a year) and this does not upset the conclusion of our analysis.

Government as an Agent of Social Conflict

In short, by highballing their estimate of the social cost of obesity, the report’s interventionist authors have unnecessarily contributed to the stigmatization of obese people in British society. Remember, Overweight Haters Ltd. cited the burden of obesity on public finances as their primary grievance.

Multiple studies have shown that fat-shaming causes obese people to gain more weight. This should be obvious given that obsessive eating is rooted in negative emotional states, from which sweet and fatty foods — calming opioids — provide fleeting respite. In fact, 69 percent of adults undergoing gastric bypass surgery report having suffered abuse as children, which makes sense given that tormented youngsters are more prone to suffer mental health issues in later life, and to use food as a conciliatory mechanism.

This is an age-old story: interventionists are known in libertarian circles for compounding the very problems they seek to solve. For example, when the Federal Reserve lowered interest rates after the dot-com crash, it stoked a housing bubble; when Western forces swore to defeat terrorism, they created ISIS; when Chairman Mao ordered the killing of grain-stealing sparrows, he caused a famine. This time, the interventionists sought to solve the obesity problem — and again they made the problem worse.


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No Vast Vatican Conspiracies for Trump

Curse you, Donald! I will not be demoted!You know what leaped out at me in Donald Trump’s weird screed about the pope today? These eight words:

They are using the Pope as a pawn

Back in the day, people like Trump thought the man in Rome was the grand chessmaster, not a mere pawn of a Mexican cabal. Along with all the other ways he’s shaking up politics, Trump is now turning the old nativist conspiracy stories on their head.

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Company Flagged By Kyle Bass As A Ponzi Scheme Was Just Raided By The FBI

Over the years, Hayman Capital’s Kyle Bass has gotten heat for his trade recommendations, with “virtual portfolio” pundits accusing the Texan of being a “one-hit wonder” ever since his subprime trade, with little else to show for his repurtation.

That is no longer the case: after making a strong case over the past 3 months that Texas-based REIT United Development Funding IV is nothing but a Ponzi scheme – a name he has been short –  the stock tumbled, jumped, and then tumbled again.

However, after its most recent plunge moments ago which led to its being halted, we doubt it will rebound again.

 

The reason for today’s most recent, and surely final crash: an FBI raid of UDF’s Texas office.

As NBC DFW reports, the FBI on Thursday raided the office of a Grapevine company that has financed more than $1 billion in residential development across Texas, but some say the company operates as a Ponzi scheme.

Agents were seen carrying boxes out of United Development Funding on the 1300 block of Municipal Way and loading the boxes into large trucks.

 

UDF has acknowledged it has been under investigation by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission and said it was cooperating, but added no specific charges of wrongdoing have been made.

 

The FBI raid was the first indication that a criminal investigation into the company was under way.

A hedge fund founded by Dallas investor Kyle Bass, Hayman Capital Management, claims in a website that, “UDF exhibits characteristics consistent with a Ponzi scheme.”

Two weeks ago, UDF’s chief executive officer, Hollis Greenlaw, tried to defend his company when he posted an online message to shareholders accusing Hayman of making “false and misleading statements about our company.” We doubt he will have any witty rejoinders this time:

FBI spokeswoman Allison Mahan confirmed that agents were at the firm’s offices conducting a law enforcement operation, which she declined to characterize as a search warrant.

UDF stock is currently T1 halted, and we doubt it will reopen ever again.


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