Hackers Create “Perfect Virus” – Put Oil Companies On Edge

Authored by Tsvetana Paraskova via OilPrice.com,

Russian security services have arrested a local hacker who planted malware at gas stations across Russia’s southern regions that had been cheating drivers out of the gasoline that they pumped in their cars in a major fraud scheme that later resold the stolen fuel.

 

Russia’s Federal Security Service (FSB) have arrested the creator of the malware, Denis Zayev, who had gas stations employees working with him to trick the software systems to selling less fuel to the customers, while reselling the fuel that was stolen.

 

This fraud was one of the largest such scams uncovered by the Russian services, a source in law enforcement told news outlet Rosbalt. The scheme extended to almost all regions in the south of Russia, with dozens of gas stations infected with the malware.

Zayev has created a “perfect virus” that couldn’t be detected by either security controls that oil companies have used to remotely monitor gas stations, or by specialists at the Ministry of Internal Affairs, according to the police source who spoke to Rosbalt.

The virus planted in the systems allowed the hacker and his accomplices to steal up to 7 percent of the fuel.

Zayev acted not only as the “seller” of the malware at some stations, but also as co-owner of the channel to steal fuel, and received a cut from the proceeds from the re-sale of the stolen fuel.

Schemes by hackers targeting gas stations are not new. 

 

In early 2014, 13 people were indicted in the U.S. for allegedly using small Bluetooth-enabled skimmers to steal more than US$2 million from credit cards that customers used at gas stations in Texas, Georgia, and South Carolina in 2012 and 2013. According to the Manhattan District Attorney, the four main defendants had attached skimming devices at gas pumps at Raceway and RaceTrac to steal credit card information from customers. 

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“It Seems Impossible How Much Is Jammed Into 1 Week”: Bond Traders Brace For Rollercoaster Week

Last week bond traders aged several years in just 5 days as they suffered through a hair-raising juggernaut of sharp daily moves and abrupt reversals…

… which sent the 10Y yield surging through a critical resistance level and beyond…

… even as the 2s30s yield curve continued to crater, tumbling to a level not seen since October 2007.

https://www.zerohedge.com/sites/default/files/inline-images/20180126_eod12.jpg

Well, if last week was bad, it’s about to become a rollercoaster from duration hell, because as Bloomberg previews the week ahead, with yields threatening to leap higher, “bond traders will grapple this week with market-moving stimuli coming at breakneck speed.”

Following last week’s ECB and BOJ decisions, this week US events will take center stage, as traders focus on Janet Yellen’s final meeting as Fed chair, the Treasury’s plan to cover widening deficits, and, on Friday, the latest update on the U.S. job market.

The selloff in Treasuries less than a month into 2018 last week sparked the latest bear market call, this time from Ray Dalio, who joined Bill Gross and Jeff Gundlach, warning of massive losses should bond yields spike.

“It seems almost impossible how much is jammed into one week,” Michael Lorizio, a senior trader at Manulife told Bloomberg. “The more responsible shorter-term trading rationale is rather than making a major shift in your investments, being willing to miss the first few basis points to have your longer-term thesis proven or disproven by the new data and information.”

Besides an unexpected upside surprise to the January jobs number following a disappointing December report, this week could see yields spiking should the Fed surprise the market with a statement on Jan. 31 that comes off as “more hawkish” than last month’s, in part because of climbing inflation expectations. In terms of expectations, Fed funds futures are pricing in more than 2.5 rate hikes, close to the FOMC’s own forecast of three. At the end of last week, options activity indicated growing interest in hedging against an extended selloff.

Meanwhile, Bloomberg notes that the 10-year breakeven rate is the highest since 2014, as inflation protection demand surges (it wouldn’t be the first time we have seen a breakeven headfake, only to tumble back down).

But while bond traders have learned to navigate the BLS and the Fed, in a potential unexpected twist, the Treasury will likely unveil bigger note sales this week for the first time since 2009, pushing supply higher with yields expected to follow. In other words, more issuance just as the Fed is trimming its balance sheet. Two weeks ago Goldman warned about precisely this risk, when it calculated that in 2018 US marketable borrowings will more than double from below $500 billion in 2018 to over $1 trillion in 2019 as the US deficit-funding debt tsunami finally get going.

asd

Of course, if the US consumer is getting weaker – and not stronger – as the popular narrative suggests, any yield spike will be very brief, as deflationary forces reestablish themselves. One such catalyst is the US personal savings rate, which as we showed most recently on Friday tumbled to a decade low and the third lowest on record (we will get an update on this rate tomorrow)…

… and the only thing that kept spending from crashing in Q4 was a record surge in credit card usage.

Dimitri Delis of Piper Jaffray also points to the deteriorating U.S. savings rate as a catalyst for future economic weakness.  “I don’t know what’s going to keep the consumer on the same pace as the last two years,” he said. “I can probably string together events that can get us to 3 percent on the 10-year, but once it gets there, are the fundamentals there to support that level? I don’t think so.

Then again, as Bloomberg concludes, two months ago traders weren’t so sure that 10-year yields could break above 2.4% and they’ve stayed above that level for five weeks. The trend for months has been for yields to climb and consolidate, before breaking even higher. And now that some of the most important trendlines are in sight, should yields continue to climb, some big holders are due for a big shock: as a reminder, according to the OFR, the market value impact from a 100bps rate shock is some $1.2 trillion and rising by the day.

With all that in mind, here are the key things to watch in the coming rollercoaster week, courtesy of Bloomberg.

  • President Donald Trump’s State of the Union address on Jan. 30 at 9 p.m. ET
  • The Treasury announces quarterly refunding plans Jan. 31
  • Jan. 31 is also when the FOMC releases its latest policy decision, in Yellen’s final meeting as chair before handing off to Jerome Powell
    • San Francisco Fed’s John Williams, who emerged this month as a candidate for Fed vice chair, is set to speak on Feb. 2
  • A fresh read on the U.S. labor market and an update on the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge highlight economic indicators:
    • Jan. 29: Personal income and spending; PCE deflator and core PCE; Dallas Fed manufacturing activity
    • Jan. 30: S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller home price indexes; Conference Board consumer confidence
    • Jan. 31: MBA mortgage applications; ADP employment change; employment cost index; MNI Chicago business barometer; pending home sales
    • Feb. 1: Challenger job cuts; nonfarm productivity; unit labor costs; initial jobless claims; continuing claims; Bloomberg consumer comfort; Markit U.S. manufacturing PMI; construction spending MoM; ISM manufacturing
    • Feb. 2: Change in nonfarm payrolls, unemployment rate and average hourly earnings; factory, durable goods and capital goods orders; University of Michigan survey data
    • Treasury bill auctions on Jan. 29 and Jan. 30

Finally, judging by the spike in 10Y on Sunday night, some are unwilling to wait and are already dumping.

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FX Weekly Preview: USD Weakness Profound, Can It Ever Meaningfully Correct?

by Shant Movsesian and Rajan Dhall MSTA fxdailyterminal.com

It was an eventful week in the currency markets last week, with focus on an ever weakening USD, which is all the more eye-catching given the fundamental backdrop at the present time. Key in that is ‘present time’, as markets – certainly in FX – tend to get ahead of the curve, but in this case, a little too aggressively for comfort.  In our view, some of the reasoning behind the past week’s dramatic demise has been somewhat overstated in the comments from US Treasury Sec Mnuchin’s comments on the USD, which some how manifested itself into an endorsement of a softer USD policy! We did not see it that way, but the story fit the move and the meme spread like wildfire. 

The truth is that the USD has been weakening since the middle of Dec 2017, and momentum truly gathered pace when earlier this year, reports that China were considering trimming their Treasury buying, or perhaps halting it altogether.  In a round-about way, this was denied, but it certainly raised concerns over the impact this would have on the US economy, especially when the twin deficit is back under scrutiny as it periodically is over time. 

At this point, some will argue over the net impact of the tax reforms at current levels of debt, and indeed the timing, and this was exacerbated by the recent shut down of the government as Congress failed to reach an agreement initially. Despite the eventual stop gap bill being passed, we are back to square one on 8 Feb.  This will likely to keep USD sentiment on the defensive, but we expect to see some moderation in the rampant flow seen in recent weeks, which was also set off by technical factors; namely the breach of the USD index of 91.0, last year’s base.  Listening to a number of asset/fund managers a few week’s back, this was seen to be a line in the sand and the rest has been history.  Since then, the USD has fallen into the mid 88.00’s (DXY), with the leading pairs all reaching some key levels, some of which were 2018 targets – now achieved in the first month of the year. 

Looking at what may turn the USD around, as we are clearly at oversold levels across the board, we look to the Core PCE data out on Monday and then the US payrolls report on Friday for some upside traction in wages and inflation.  This should start to see the market moving closer in line with the Fed dot plot, though curve flattening has also raised fears on longevity of the current level of the US economic cycle, with Europe and Japan looking at a sharper trajectory but for levels of inflation that we are currently faced with.

The Fed also meets this week, but we only have the rate announcement which will remain unchanged until March at the earliest, while the statement is unlikely to see much change, especially with some of the ‘average’ date readings of late.  Q4 GDP saw the first reading showing a healthy rise of 2.6%, and thankfully, despite falling short of expectations (3.0%), the market did not react as expected to any significant degree with durable goods orders, but also with strong consumer spending and a higher GDP price index which should feed into the inflation figures.  USD weakness will naturally feed into this also.  

EUR/USD has now reached 1.2500 as a result of the USD rout, and the ECB meeting and press conference last week were perhaps a little more restrained on the exchange rate (or more specifically the rate of appreciation) than some were hoping for, though in their own way they reflective this in their concerns over external factors and shocks to economic growth, of which excessive EUR strength is.  Inflation may not be to heavily impacted given strong gains in commodity prices, but in obsessing over reaching the 2.0% target, they are setting a rod for their own back, and this may delay any signal of an end to QE, even though we all know it is coming.  The ECB will expect to see US rates rising within this period, and this will hopefully take the sting out of the EUR, which has been moderating elsewhere, notably against GBP, but aggressively last week against the CHF and then late on Friday against the JPY also.

Normalisation in Japan has finally dawned on the (mass) market but is something we have been warning of over a number of weeks, and this looks like developing into the latest theme which may pick up in momentum.   We may have to look to the crosses for greater opportunities going forward, as the short term metrics suggest USD/JPY is stretched a little in the near term.  This is not to preclude a further extension to the downside which may dip under the lows from last September (107.30 or so), with 106.90-30 a potential zone were we may see covering ensue along with expected comments from the BoJ on monitoring FX moves.  We can discount any intervention unless the pace of JPY gains dictate, but up until now, the spot rate has been relatively measured in its path lower. 

EUR/JPY saw a sharp turn lower on Friday which took out support around the 13500 mark, but only a breach of 132.50 would signal a potential top in place despite continued expectations of a EUR/USD towards 1.3000.  However, it won’t be long before the market starts thinking about covering the risk over the Italian elections which are set for 04 March, and this may be a source of hindrance to the upside, with complacency taking over given the myopic view on all USD based pairs. 

Adding to near term risks on the EUR, we have the inflation data for Jan next week, which is expected to show the preliminary reading at 1.3% from 1.4%, but if the core picks up a little (1.0% from 0.9% forecast), then this may be overlooked.  Earlier in the week we get Q4 GDP which is expected to tick up from 2.6% to 2.7%, and would underpin any major sell off in the immediate future. Robust growth is widely acknowledged however and is more than priced in at this stage, so manufacturing PMIs (due later in the week) will be monitored for economic endurance from here on out.  

In Japan, we saw inflation last week moving in the right direction, reaching 1.0%, but all the while watching the various batches of second tier data which again offers some reassurance that this will continue all with the ultra accommodative BoJ policy in place. Household spending, industrial production, construction orders and housing starts are all Dec readings, while manufacturing PMIs at the end of the week cover Jan (currently in healthy expansionary mode at 54.4).  

In the UK, domestic data has been coming in better than expected, but in Friday’s GDP for Q4, we may have seen a 0.5% print drawing praise from Chancellor Hammond, but at an annualised rate of 1.5%, we hardly feel this is cause for joy, with the ONS suggesting the data masks growing concerns in the underlying performance ahead, notably in consumer spending which is one area of weakness we are anticipating in the year ahead – and already showing in the Dec retail sales figures. Nevertheless, we keep hearing that this is the year a Brexit deal is set to fall in place, and while we agree the wholesale panic which sent the traded weighted GBP index to sub 74.00 and Cable to sub 1.2000 levels was overdone, the pace of the recovery is a little premature to say the least, and EUR/GBP resilience into 0.8700 was highlighted late last week despite the GDP up-print. 

We need to hear of more positive developments in the Brexit negotiations to believe in this GBP rally, but in moves similar to that of the Oil price in mid 2016, investors and longer term traders took to believing in an eventual return to value, but this was from the 1.2500-1.3000 area.  We see little value in evaluating levels in Cable relative to those seen into the referendum vote due to USD distortions, but EUR/GBP offers a better perspective as we were trading just under 0.7600 ahead of the result, where polls were suggesting we were set to vote to remain in the EU.  The top was extended to the early 0.9200’s in Oct 2016 and just over 0.9300+ in Aug last year, so current levels reflect more tempered gains in the Pound.  The trade weighted index is now just above the 78.0 level in the meantime, vs a post Brexit high shy of 80.0, so this may prove more a signal to moderate gains near term, but under the current themes, more so against the EUR until the USD finds a base.  Little on the data schedule other than manufacturing and construction PMIs towards the end of the week. 

Canada is also in the midst of a renegotiation of trading terms, with the NAFTA accord holding up CAD out-performance given the BoC has started to raise rates.  Were it not for this uncertainty, we would have expected USD/CAD to have dropped under 1.2000 by now, but as long as there is little material progress in the talks, 1.2100-1.2200 will limit the downside for now. On Monday we will see how the sixth round of negotiations have fared, and sources claimed there was a little more compromise from Canada, but there is an abundance of here-say these days.  Nov GDP midweek offers the main data risk to contend with here. 

In Australia, the market looks to the Q4 inflation data for fresh direction on the AUD, but we sense there may be a little disappointment if the reaction to the equivalent NZ stats were anything to go by.  We saw the latter reading drop from 1.9% to 1.6%, but by the end of the week, the impact on the spot rate was net unchanged.  AUD/NZD was and remain higher though, pushing above the 1.1000 mark, so if Australia’s CPI number returns to 2.0% (from 1.8%), then we could see a further push higher in the cross rate. Industrial metals prices have been showing some exhaustion on the upside however, so along with the technical resistance into the mid 0.8100’s, we should at the very least see some momentum fading in AUD/USD, which would mean NZD/USD follows in kind.  In both cases, both the RBA and RBNZ will have something to say if we extend higher against the USD, so limited scope for differentiation away from the USD in the current climate.

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SOTU 2018 Preview: Trump To Kickstart The End of Chimerica… What This Means For Markets

While the State of the Union address is rarely if ever an FX market-moving event, in light of recent comments by both President Trump and Treasury Secretary Mnuchin and with global trade suddenly on everyone’s radar, if there is one market-sensitive topic that may get a kick start on January 31, it is US trade relations with China.

 

For readers who want to get a head start on the topic, Deutsche Bank’s Alan Ruskin suggests reading the United States Trade Representative 161 page primer on the “Report to Congress on China’s WTO compliance”, (it can be found here). According to the DB FX strategist, “the report is extraordinary, and at a minimum page 2 to 25 of the report deserve a read to understand the extent to which the US believes they have valid grievances on an array of perceived China WTO transgressions.”

In fact, he claims that this is a story that extends way beyond the recent headlines discussed in the press on steel, aluminium and intellectual property. The topic headlines to the summary, highlight the breadth of issues and a panoply of perceived legal violations including as they relate to:

  • China’s Industrial policies;
  • technology transfer;
  • Investment restrictions;
  • subsidies;
  • excess capacity;
  • reexport restraints;
  • Import bans on remanufactured products;
  • import ban of recoverable products;
  • government procurement;
  • Intellectual property rights, trade secrets;
  • bad faith trademark registration;
  • pharmaceuticals;
  • online infringements;
  • counterfeit goods;
  • electronic payment services;
  • theatrical films; banking services;
  • insurance services;
  • securities and asset management services;
  • telecom services;
  • internet services;
  • audio visual services;
  • legal services;
  • beef, pork and poultry;
  • biotechnology;
  • agricultural support;
  • publication of trade law transparency;
  • administrative licensing;
  • and competition policy

And below, DB notes, is the “it will not be business as usual” conclusion from the USTR report:

“For more than 15 years, the United States has relied on cooperative highlevel dialogues to effect meaningful and fundamental changes in China’s stateled, mercantilist trade regime. These efforts have largely failed. Accordingly, the United States intends to focus its efforts on enforcement going forward. These efforts will include not only use of the WTO’s dispute settlement mechanism to hold China strictly accountable for adherence to its WTO obligations, but also other needed mechanisms, including mechanisms available under U.S. trade laws. The United States is determined to use every tool available to address harmful Chinese policies and practices, regardless of whether they are directly disciplined by WTO rules or the additional commitments that China made in its Protocol of Accession to the WTO. The United States will not accept any Chinese policies or practices that are unfair, discriminatory or mercantilist and harm U.S. manufacturers, farmers, services suppliers, innovators, workers or consumers. Americans have waited long enough. The time has come for China to stop its market-distorting policies and practices and finally become a responsible member of the WTO.”

What does this mean for traders? Well, those who have been begging for FX vol (a precursor to all other volatility) will soon get their wish, because according to Ruskin, the likely upcoming US attack on China trade policies is apt to have broader bipartsian support than many other US trade measures.

Whether or not it will transition into a full-blown trade war remains to be seen, but in the immediate future a trade dispute with China has the capacity to impact markets through a variety of channels that includes:

  • i) choking global supply channels;
  • ii) inflating prices;
  • iii) influencing China’s global asset allocation, that could impact all of US bonds, equities and the USD negatively.

Of course, China knows all of this and explains the recent trial balloons by China and Bloomberg that Beijing may slow down, or even reverse, its purchases of US Treasurys.

What could stop a collapse in trade relations? Why, a market crash of course: as Deutsche predicts, a sharp uptick in US equity volatility is one of the few factors that could put a brake on this US push forward to change trade relations with China, and the above fits with a world of greater equity vol.

Focusing only on the currency side, the USTR report’s recommendations have the capacity to go way beyond calling China a currency manipulator. While in the initial instance, US attacking China’s WTO transgressions could be seen as encouraging of more CNY appreciation, in the longer-term this could prove both CNY negative and negative for most Asia EM FX. Short CNY/JPY would work under a risk-off environment, and has the added bonus that it offers some protection against a China official exodus from US bonds (if the politics turns unexpectedly ugly), with the yen one alternative reserve asset destination.

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White House Is Planning To Nationalize 5G Network: Report

In a stunning – if accurate – report published Sunday night, Axios claims that White House national security officials are considering an unprecedented federal takeover of a portion of the nation’s mobile spectrum/network to protect against Chinese attacks, in what may well be a pre-emptive shot, hinting at upcoming trade wars between the two superpowers.

Axios got its hands on PowerPoint deck and a memo, both of which were purportedly produced by a senior National Security Council official, which were presented to other senior officials at other agencies during a recent meeting.  The documents argue that America needs a centralized nationwide 5G network within three years. There’ll be a fierce debate inside the Trump administration, and an outcry from the industry over the next 6-8 months over how such a network is going to be built and paid for.

For those unfamiliar with 5G, Quora has a useful discussion on “How is 5G different from 4G and when will it be launched?”

The document’s author presents two options:

  • The U.S. government pays for and builds the single network — which would be an unprecedented nationalization of a historically private infrastructure.
  • An alternative plan where wireless providers build their own 5G networks that compete with one another — though the document says the downside is it could take longer and cost more. It argues that one of the “pros” of that plan is that it would cause “less commercial disruption” to the wireless industry than the government building a network.

Another expert who discussed the plan with Axios said the second option isn’t really feasible because a single, centralized network is what is needed to protect against cyberattacks from the Chinese or other foreign powers.

The source said the internal White House debate will be over whether the U.S. government owns and builds the network or whether the carriers bind together in a consortium to build the network, an idea that would require them to put aside their business models to serve the country’s greater good.

Option 1 would lead to federal control of a part of the economy that today is largely controlled by private wireless providers; here it is worth noting that Telecom companies are among some of the most hated US corporations because they benefit from the current oligopoly enshrined by the status quo. Furthermore, if Verizon and its competitors introduce new tiered plans in violation of net neutrality, this dissatisfaction will only worsen, making a government nationalization feasible.

In the memo, the Trump administration likens it to “the 21st century equivalent of the Eisenhower National Highway System” and says it would create a “new paradigm” for the wireless industry by the end of Trump’s current term.

Aside from its various other staggering implications, 5G nationalization would still leave many other elements of the market free to private competition. 

According to the presentation, the US must build superfast 5G wireless technology quickly because “China has achieved a dominant position in the manufacture and operation of network infrastructure,” and “China is the dominant malicious actor in the Information Domain.”

To illustrate the current state of U.S. wireless networks – perhaps as an aid to the attention-deficient administration- the PowerPoint uses a picture of a medieval walled city, compared to a future represented by a photo of lower Manhattan.

city

According to the leaked memo, the best way for the government to achieve its goal, is to build a network itself. It would then rent access to carriers like AT&T, Verizon and T-Mobile. (A source familiar with the document’s drafting told Axios this is an “old” draft and a newer version is neutral about whether the U.S. government should build and own it.)

This would be preferable for two reasons:

It’s a marked shift from the current system where those companies each build their own systems with their own equipment, and with airwaves leased from the federal government.

Nationwide standard: the federal government would also, according to the memo, be able to use the banner of national security to create a federal process for installing the wireless equipment, preventing states and cities from having their own rules for where the equipment could go.

The memo argues that a strong 5G network is needed in order to create a secure pathway for emerging technologies like self-driving cars and virtual reality — and to combat Chinese threats to America’s economic and cyber security. A PowerPoint slide says the play is the digital counter to China’s One Belt One Road Initiative meant to spread its influence beyond its borders. The documents also fret about China’s dominance of Artificial Intelligence, and use that as part of the rationale for this unprecedented proposal.

There’s even a suggestion that America’s work on a secure 5G network could be exported to emerging markets to protect democratic allies against China.

“Eventually,” the memo says, “this effort could help inoculate developing countries against Chinese neo-colonial behavior.”

US Telecoms are already working on building 5G networks, with AT&T, Verizon and T-Mobile, for example, investing heavily in this area. The process for setting 5G standards is well underway. Korea has been at the forefront of testing, as have Japan and others. It’s not clear a national strategy would yield a 5G network faster or by the memo’s 3-year goal.

The memo says China is slowly winning the AI “algorithm battles,” and that “not building the network puts us at a permanent disadvantage to China in the information domain.” There is a real debate to be had over China and AI, but it’s unclear what at all that has to do with a mobile network.

5G is expected to run at 10-20 gigabytes per second, which, as ForexLive points out, is blazing fast, further making the argument that nationalizing it would be a necessity to secure self-driving cars from being hacked.

Full document below (pdf source).

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Mexico Police Find Enough Fentanyl To Kill Millions En Route To US Border

The Mexican National Security Commission reports that federal police discovered a multi-drug international shipment that included 914 pounds of crystal meth, 100 pounds of fentanyl, 88 pounds of cocaine, and 18 pounds of heroin, in a vehicle headed to the California border.

 

According to the Oxford Treatment Center,

The lethal dose for fentanyl is generally stated to be 2 milligrams. Again, this lethal dose considers that the individual has not developed significant tolerance; however, even in individuals with significant tolerance, the lethal dose of fentanyl is extremely small compared to the potential lethal doses of many other opiate drugs.

That means the 100 pounds of fentanyl (45.5 kilograms) is enough to kill millions of Americans.

Federal police regularly conduct security and surveillance tasks along the highway that connects Ensenada with the town of Lazaro Cardenas. Ensenada is a coastal city in Mexico, the third largest in Baja California and located about 77 miles south of San Diego. Federal police closely monitor the highways in Baja, because the network of roads in the area are some of the top preferred methods of hauling drugs into the United States via drug cartels.

 

On Thursday, federal police noticed an SUV traveling without license plates towards the United States border. After pulling over the vehicle, the driver agreed to a physical inspection of the SUV, and that is where officers found “10 sacks, three suitcases, 18 packages made with adhesive tape and 18 plastic containers,” said Gob.MX.

 

“In total, 620 packages and containers were inside the vehicle, with 532 of crystal, 43 of fentanyl, 73 of cocaine and 8 of heroin, which yielded an approximate weight of 508.4 kilograms.,” Gob.Mx adds. The driver was arrested and now faces serious drug charges. Interesting enough, Mexican investigators were able to confirm the vehicle is registered in California.

In December 2017, we noted that drug cartel violence penetrated the tourist areas of Baja California Sur, home to Cabo and La Paz, which is just south to where the 100 pounds of fentanyl was found. In 2017, there were 62 homicides per 100,000 residents in Baja California Sur, as the country suffers from an out of control drug cartel war.

 

Earlier this month,  Mexico was assigned the Level 2 rating, as U.S. citizens and U.S. government employees are urged to “exercise increased caution” and “be aware of heightened risks to safety and security.” Increased violence in the region has been fueled by U.S. demand for opioids coupled with a power struggle between Mexican drug cartels. In the first 11 months of 2017, there were 22,409 deaths across Mexico–making it one of deadliest years ever.

 

It appears the 100 pounds of fentanyl that could have led to millions of overdoses across the United States was en route from the Tijuana cartel controlled area of Baja California.  The vast networks of cartel territories and drug routes are astonishing throughout Mexico.

 

Perhaps it’s not supply that’s the problem? America has a drug problem and its demand is fueling it.

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“Investors Are Residing In A Surreal World”, But One Banker Thinks It’s All About To Change

Submitted by Viktor Shvets of Macquarie

Volatilities: from masters to slaves

We ask whether a rise in volatilities is inevitable and what might be the consequences for asset classes and public policies.

Investors are currently residing in a surreal world of low volatilities and spreads, ignoring potentially radical shifts in monetary and fiscal policies and unwinding of extraordinary measures of the last decade. Even as CBs are worried about lack of volatility and excessive risk-taking, investors seem convinced that either strength of economic recovery, or return to liquidity and cost of capital supports, will ensure that volatilities are kept under control. Thus, either way, investors seem to expect that spreads would stay low and elevated valuations of various asset classes remain a permanent feature of an investment landscape.

Do we agree? In our view, financial markets have been for years drifting away from real economies. Not only is the value of financial assets at least five-to-ten times larger than the underlying economies, but also this ‘financial cloud’ is now managed by computer trading, algorithms, AI and passive investments.

This is potentially a highly destabilizing mix.

CBs are aware of dangers; hence the warnings by IMF and BIS to be ‘mindful’ of gaps between economic growth  and asset bubbles. In our view, CBs and financial supervisory bodies have essentially morphed from masters of the universe into slaves of grotesquely swollen financial markets.

The key to monetary policy is no longer to guide real economies, but to avoid a collapse of the financial cloud, out of fear of what a return to traditional price discovery and volatilities might imply for wealth creation and asset prices. Over the last three decades, real economies (everything from personal savings to fixed-asset investment) have become far more tightly intertwined with asset values than with wages or productivity.

In this surreal world of complete dominance of financial assets, conventional economic rules break down and financialization and avoidance of sharp asset price contractions becomes the paramount policy objective. In our view, this implies that liquidity supports cannot be withdrawn and cost of capital (holistically defined) can never rise.

Only a return to private sector dominance and accelerating productivity (rather than recoveries driven by liquidity and/or stimulus) can ensure ‘beautiful deleveraging’. We maintain that this remains a low-probability event.

Far more likely is that the latest two-year-old recovery was due to a mix of unique and to some extent unsustainable factors, such as massive liquidity injections by key CBs (US$3.5 trillion – Mar’16 and Dec’17), coordinated monetary policies (since Feb’16) and as always, China’s stimulus.

The question therefore is what would happen to values and volatilities, if these three supports are gradually  withdrawn. For example, CBs’ liquidity injection in ’18 is likely to be only ~US$0.7 trillion (turning negative in ’19) or growth of ~5%, barely enough to cover global nominal GDP (~6%).

Similarly, CBs are likely to make repeated attempts to raise cost of capital, despite likely inability to do so while China is tightening, and if history is any guide, it would more than likely over-tighten. This should raise volatilities. Even if assume that recovery is indeed more sustainable, CBs (uncomfortable as they are with current excessive valuations and low volatilities) would be happy to see volatilities rise and return to some form of price discovery. The 64-dollar dollar question is whether ‘patient is  sufficiently healthy to withstand pressure’.

Thus, one way or another, it seems volatilities are likely to rise at some point in ’18, and investors should consider buying volatility. As always ‘canary’ in the coalmine would be high yield, FX and EM markets. We remain comfortable with 1H’18 but we are concerned that policy errors could compound later in the year.

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California Councilman Slams Military As “Dumbsh*ts…Lowest Of Our Low”

A California city councilman and high school history teacher at El Rancho High School in Pico Rivera, Calif, was caught on video disparaging the United States military and calling its members “dumbshits” who are not “high-level thinkers.”

 

As The Daily Caller’s Derek Hunter reports, Gregory Salcido is a current member of the Pico Rivera City Council.

Three profanity-laced videos surfaced on Facebook Friday of Salcido declaring to his students that members of the military are dumb people who joined because they were poor students and that they are the “lowest of our low” of the country.

“They’re the frickin’ lowest of our low,” Salcido can be heard saying.

Three video of Salcido’s comments were posted to Facebook by a family friend of the student who took it and they quickly went viral. The student, who wished to remain anonymous, is the son and nephew of military veterans and told the local paper, “It was so disrespectful to my dad and my uncles and all veterans and those still in the military.”

Throughout the three videos, Salcido can be heard using vulgar language to describe the military as failed students with no other options but to serve.

We’ve got a bunch of dumbshits over there. Think about the people who you know who are over there — your freaking stupid uncle Louis or whatever, they’re dumbshits.

They’re not, like, high-level thinkers, they’re not academic people, they’re not intellectual people, they’re the freaking lowest of our low. Not morally, I’m not saying they make bad moral decisions, they’re not talented people,”

This is not Salcido’s first brush with controversy.

In 2012, he was accused of smacking one of his students who he said was disruptive.

The school district is investigating the videos and refused to comment on a “personnel matter.”

Salcido is currently on vacation, but posted a vague comment to his Facebook page about the controversy.

Screen capture from Facebook.

Other posts on Salcido’s Facebook pages show he is not a fan of President Donald Trump.

 

Screen capture from Facebook.

On the official webpage for his city council job, Salcido’s bio reads, “Councilman Salcido credits his students for being a constant reminder that keeping a positive and optimistic disposition is necessary for a productive future.”

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Gowdy Drops Big Hints About FISA Memo: FBI Misuse, Funding, And Hillary’s Relationship To Chris Steele

While lawmakers have been incredibly mum over the specifics of a four-page “FISA memo” containing allegations of FBI and DOJ malfeasance against then-candidate Donald Trump and his team, Rep. Trey Gowdy appeared on Fox News Sunday where he dropped the most telling breadcrumbs about the contents of the memo to date.

“If you think your viewers want to know whether or not the dossier was used in court proceedings, whether or not it was vetted before it was used, whether or not it’s ever been vetted — if you are interested in who paid for the dossier, if you are interested in Christopher Steele’s relationship with Hillary Clinton and the Democratic National Committee, then, yes, you will want the memo to come out,” –Trey Gowdy

Do you want to know that the Democratic National Committee paid for material that was never vetted, that was included in a court proceeding?” Gowdy asked rhetorically.

“Do you want to know whether or not the primary source in these court proceedings had a bias against one candidate? Do you want to know whether or not he said he’d do anything to keep that candidate from becoming president?”

While it’s not clear who the “primary source” is, it’s possible that Gowdy is referring to Christopher Steele, the former MI6 spy who assembled the dossier – or “Senior Russian Officials” which the “Trump-Russia” dossier heavily relied on for information. 

a
vanityfair.com

Perhaps the Russians preferred Mrs. Clinton over Mr. Trump, as the former came equipped with a pay-for-play charity that was utilized during the Kremlin’s purchase of Uranium One – giving Russia control over approximately 20% of United States uranium. Bill Clinton, notably, also met with Vladimir Putin at his house the same day he gave a Moscow speech for a cool $500k to an investment bank which then upgraded Uranium One stock. 

A close associate of Bill Clinton who was directly involved in the Moscow trip and spoke on condition of anonymity, described to The Hill the circumstances surrounding how Bill Clinton landed a $500,000 speaking gig in Russia and then came up with the list of Russians he wanted to meet.

The documents don’t indicate what decision the State Department finally made. But current and former aides to both Clintons told The Hill on Thursday the request to meet the various Russians came from other people, and the ex-president’s aides and State decided in the end not to hold any of the meetings with the Russians on the list.

Bill Clinton instead got together with Vladimir Putin at the Russian leader’s private homestead.

The friend said Hillary Clinton had just returned in late March 2010 from an official trip to Moscow where she met with both Putin and Medvedev. The president’s speaker’s bureau had just received an offer from Renaissance Capital to pay the former president $500,000 for a single speech in Russia. –The Hill

In comparison to the egregious pay-for-play facility the Clintons offered Russia, the FBI allegedly relied on the unverified 34-page “Trump-Russia” dossier to obtain a FISA surveillance warrant against one-time Trump campaign advisor, Carter Page. Prior to the FISA warrant, GOP Congressional investigators also believe the dossier was used to launch the original investigation into collusion between Russia and the Trump campaign before Robert Mueller was appointed as special counsel. 

Rep. Gowdy, however, declined to confirm whether the dossier was used to obtain the FISA warrant – noting that it was classified at this point and he’s not allowed to discuss it. 

Gowdy also said in the interview that he suggested the memo be reviewed by the FBI and the DOJ prior to its release, however he says that the document contains information already provided by these agencies, noting “There’s nothing in this memo the Department is not already aware of.”

 

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“Things That Go Bump In The Night” – The Transformation Of Markets Into Political Utilities

Authored by Ben Hunt via EpsilonTheory.com,

 

Pennywise: Tasty, tasty, beautiful fear.

Eddie: Okay, so let me get this straight. It comes out, from wherever, to eat kids for, like, a year, and then what? It just goes into hibernation?
– It (2017)

Even at eleven, he had observed that things turned out right a ridiculous amount of the time.
 -It, Stephen King (1986)

*  *  *

Same with markets. Things turn out right a ridiculous amount of the time. Pennywise only shows up once every 27 years. Should we be scared about his market equivalent?

Like many children with over-developed imaginations, I was always scared of things that go bump in the night. To this day I remember vividly the events (all fictional, of course) that frightened me so badly, like this scene from the 1979 made-for-TV movie of Stephen King’s Salem’s Lot, where little vampirized Danny tries to get his friend to open the upstairs window and let him in. You see, vampires have to be invited into your house. You have to give them permission to destroy you.

Hold that thought.

Anyway … as a child, I convinced myself that I could keep myself and my family safe from these malevolent forces and evil eyes if only I surrounded myself with the proper talismans (mostly stuffed animals, arranged just so around the bed) and said the proper words to God before going to sleep.

And it worked! This was classic magical thinking, just like that used by so many of our smartest and most powerful adults to protect us from the malevolent forces of economic recession and political decay.

I’d love to say that I’ve outgrown these fears that I know are irrational, but the truth is that I still surround myself with protective talismans and carry them with me wherever I go … a couple of lucky pennies, sure, but also a lucky dime (h/t Scrooge McDuck); one of the many chestnuts that I’ve rubbed between thumb and fingers till it’s oiled black and smooth, thinking this was my uniquely private charm until I recently found a well-worn chestnut hidden away in my grandfather’s rolltop desk; fortunes from cookies I ate 20+ years ago; my half of the turkey wishbone from this Thanksgiving, where my wife and I always not-so-secretly try to let the other win; an ancient post-it note wishing me luck, scribbled by one of my kids not for any particular reason, but just because. Powerful magics, all.

I’ll bet any amount of money that everyone reading this note has their own protective talismans. Maybe not as over-the-top as me, but you have them. This has always been my can’t-miss Turing test — the question you ask of an intelligence you can’t see to determine if it’s human or machine — what’s your talisman? What’s your charm of protection or luck? Every human being has a talisman. No machine would. It’s like asking a computer what mnemonic device it uses to remember something like the colors in the spectrum of visible light … the name Roy G. Biv has no meaning to a non-human intelligence other than as a curiosity of a less-capable species.

In investment and allocation circles, we have a name for these magical protections against spooky market forces that go bump in the night. We call them hedges. Now I’m not talking about hedge funds per se. I’m talking about the ad hoc hedges used by naturally long-only allocators like foundations and endowments and pension funds and big family offices. I’m talking about the ad hoc hedges used by naturally long-only investors like everyone with an IRA. I’m talking about how everyone reading this note has, at one time or another, gotten scared about markets and decided to hedge their professional portfolio or personal account with something that will make money if markets go down. Not as part of a considered review of risk tolerances and return projections and portfolio convexity (whatever THAT means). Not as part of an intentional portfolio that might include a long-volatility manager or a dedicated short fund. But just because we’re scared of something going bump in the night, and we need a talisman to ward off the bogeyman.

The most common of these casual hedges, the investment equivalent of a lucky penny, is the put option, and its most common expression is the put spread.

Quick review! A put is an option where you’re betting on whether the underlying thing, say the S&P 500, will go down below a certain price level before the expiration date of the option. So if I buy a put option that’s “struck” at a price level 5% below where the S&P 500 is today, and that option expires three months from today, then in three months my put option will only have value if the S&P 500 is at least 5% below its current price. The farther below that 5% strike price, the more money the option is worth.

A put spread is when I both buy AND sell a put option. Slightly different put options, of course, otherwise I’d just be buying and selling the same thing, but the difference between the two options — either in expiration time or (more commonly) the strike price — is the “spread” that I’m now betting on. So let’s say I bought a three-month put option struck at 5% down on the S&P 500 and sold a three-month put option struck at 15% down. When those options expire, I’ll make money on the put I bought if the S&P 500 is down at least 5%, and I’ll make a little money on the put I sold (limited to the price someone paid me for the option in the first place) if the S&P 500 avoids being down more than 15%.

Why would I do this complicated little dance? I do it in order to reduce the net cost of the put option I’m buying (the one struck at 5% down in this example). I want to buy some “insurance” on my portfolio that will pay off if the market is down more than 5%, and I can reduce the cost of buying that more-than-5%-decline insurance policy by selling someone else a more-than-15%-decline insurance policy. I mean … yeah, I’m scared of a 5% bogeyman attacking the market, but a 15% bogeyman? In the next three months? C’mon, that’s crazy talk. I’m not THAT scared.

As you can imagine, there are a zillion different variations on the put spread theme, depending on how scared I am and what I’m scared about. As you can also imagine, selling these put spreads to naturally long-only investors is a lucrative business for Wall Street, the bread and butter of equity derivative desks everywhere.

Again, I want to make clear that I’m not talking about the Street’s interaction with professional investors where options trading is part and parcel of their particular strategy. If you’re a BMW salesman, do you make your money by selling to a guy who owns a limo service and knows everything about the car business? No, of course not. You make your money by selling (or better yet, leasing) a new vehicle every three years to the doctors and lawyers and financial advisors who love their beemers. They’re not dumb guys and you’re not fleecing them (or else they’ll try a Mercedes for a change), but it’s not their business. This is where you make your margins. It’s exactly the same thing with the Street and selling portfolio hedges to naturally long-only investors.

Here’s the other similarity between luxury car sales and portfolio hedge sales. When you step back for any sort of a long-term view, is there really a meaningful difference in the transportation utility between a new BMW and a used Chevy? Of course not. There’s a personal utility I get in driving a BMW. My dad bought a BMW 1600 (the cheaper cousin of the 2002) in Birmingham freakin’ Alabama back in 1972 when BMWs were economy cars. I learned to drive a stick shift with that car. That car would flat-out FLY. It connects me with my father, gone 20 years now, and my own youth to own a BMW. So you’re damn straight I’m going to keep driving one. But I don’t own a BMW because it improves the Sharpe ratio of my transportation portfolio. I own it because it’s a powerful talisman for my personal life story. It makes me feel better about myself.

This is the reason why so many naturally long-only investors have paid for billions of dollars in ad hoc portfolio hedges, mostly in the form of put spreads, over the years. Not because these hedges have improved the risk-adjusted returns of their portfolio — decidedly on the contrary, in fact — but because they make long-only investors feel better and more secure about their portfolio. Ad hoc portfolio hedges are a crucial part of the STORY we tell our investment committees — either an external committee or, more importantly still, that internal investment committee we all carry around inside our heads — about how we are ever-vigilant against the monsters lurking just beyond the castle walls.

And it works! Not in an economic sense, of course, but in the powerful psychic benefit it provides, like me as a child arranging the stuffed animals around my bed just so, or me as an adult driving a BMW.

But here’s the thing about our adult talismans — they’re not cheap. Sure I might not care about the premium I pay to drive a BMW when times are good, but I can tell you from experience that I care a lot if my annual income takes a big hit. Talismans and charms are great for the psychic benefit they provide, and god knows I’m all about psychic benefits, but if it’s that or paying the mortgage …

I think that naturally long-only investors are now abandoning their portfolio hedges, because they can no longer easily afford the psychic benefits of these expensive adult talismans.

The investment returns of so many naturally long-only investors have been so disappointing for so many years (in relative terms if not in absolute terms) that it is harder and harder to justify the very real cost of putting on ad hoc portfolio hedges. If you don’t keep up with the Joneses in the investment returns you provide your client, external or internal, you will be fired. If you’re a good story-teller, that will buy you more time with your client than if you’re a poor story-teller, but it’s only a matter of time. You. Will. Be. Fired. In times like this, psychic benefits go by the wayside, and I think this is creating a big shift in the behavioral structure of markets.

I don’t have any proof-positive charts to show you that naturally long-only investors (who control the vast majority of financial assets in the world, btw) are now changing their long-held behaviors by abandoning ad hoc portfolio hedges. I have plenty of anecdotes and stories, and a couple of suggestive charts, but like all big shifts in investor behavior this is a slow burn that won’t be obvious until it’s already happened. If I’m right, though, this is a sea change in the way that the game of markets is played, with important implications for anyone who cares about playing the players and not just playing the cards.

Here are two charts that suggest a behavioral shift.

 

First, this chart shows the ratio of outstanding equity put options to call options on the Chicago Board Options Exchange (CBOE), the largest options exchange in the U.S. I like looking at the ratio of puts to calls because it’s not impacted by the overall level of options usage in and of itself. Whatever the overall option activity might be, this ratio is isolating how many investors are participating in negative markets bets (puts) versus positive market bets (calls). The put/call ratio is typically used by traders as a sentiment indicator (so in this case showing a bullish market sentiment), and that’s all well and good. I’m using it for a different purpose … not to judge sentiment levels per se, but to see if we can glean behavioral patterns from the path in which those sentiment levels change over time. I’m not particularly interested in measuring sentiment or even change in sentiment. I’m interested in understanding the behaviors associated with sentiment, and how those behaviors change over time.

There have been six trading days over the last eleven where there were only half as many put options held by investors as call options. Prior to this, there were six trading days with this 1:2 ratio over the past two years. Also, you can see on this chart that there have always been spikes of put buying activity every few months, when investors get scared about this or that and decide to buy some talismans for “protection”. We haven’t had that sort of spike since last summer, and it’s not like there haven’t been any well-publicized market bogeyman since last summer. It’s the put-buying behavior that’s changed.

Second, this chart  (h/t Devin Anderson and the rest of the Deutsche Bank equity derivatives team) shows the changing value of outstanding put options on the S&P 500. In other words, I’m less interested in the ratio or total number of put options out there at any given time, than in the dollar amount of hedging that those put options represent. This is what it means to show “delta-adjusted” open interest on put options, measured here in billions of dollars. So per this chart, over the past five years the maximum amount of hedging on the S&P 500 index using put options occurred in the fall of 2015, with about $230 million worth of “insurance”. Today, however, there is only about $70 million in S&P 500 index protection outstanding, the lowest amount in five years, and it sure looks to me like it’s on a path to nothing. Which would be an amazing thing.

I’m not saying that it’s a bad thing.

In fact, as someone who has a strong professional interest in encouraging allocators and investors to focus on what truly matters for their portfolios (see, of course, Rusty Guinn’s 2017 serial opus for Epsilon Theory, summary of the chapters linked here), I think it’s a good thing to stop making these ad hoc portfolio hedges. And if it’s accompanied by a conscious review of risk, reward and REGRET in our investment strategies for a profoundly uncertain world … well, that’s a really good thing.

But it is an amazing thing, with some important implications. Here’s one:

For years now, whack-a-mole vol-selling strategies, where any slight pick-up in volatility was promptly whacked on the head with a mallet of put selling and volatility futures shorting, have been extremely successful. Why? Because when volatility spiked up it meant that there was a bogeyman narrative being projected by CNBC and the like, and the naturally long-only allocator or investor got all scared and decided to “buy protection” with a put spread or some similar ad hoc hedge. And then when the bogeyman didn’t materialize, this “insurance” expired worthless, and the premiums paid were pocketed by the volatility selling strategies. If you’ve ever bought a portfolio hedge (and god knows I have), then you’ve been the counterparty to these vol-selling strategies. Time after time after time, you’ve been on the losing side of the zero-sum game that is the options market.

Today though … if that talismanic put-buying behavior is going away – and I think it is – then systematic volatility-selling strategies won’t work as well going forward as they have in the past. That’s not a bold market call. It’s just a mechanistic fact of markets: sellers don’t get as high of a price for what they’re selling if you have fewer buyers. Volumes go down and margins are squeezed for traders, too.

This isn’t just an issue for hedge funds and Big Bank equity derivative desks. Systematic vol-selling strategies are everywhere these days, including the most vanilla of accounts. Got a covered-call overlay (also called a buy-write strategy) on your RIA account? That’s a systematic vol-selling strategy. Now please, I’m not saying that these are bad strategies or anything like that. Really, I’m not. I’m saying that a change in the hedging behaviors of institutional investors isn’t just inside baseball stuff. It matters for every financial advisor, every individual investor trying to figure out what to do.

And it goes way beyond the impact on this investment strategy or that strategy. What I think we’re seeing is the next necessary step in the transformation of markets into political utilities, where political institutions like the Fed are tasked in a more and more explicit manner with supporting the interests of the Nudging State and the Nudging Oligarchy. Does anyone doubt that if a vampire were truly to appear and knock on the market’s window, say a vampire in the form of a North Korean artillery attack, that the central banks of the world wouldn’t do “whatever it takes” to keep markets from falling? Why should we pay good money to buy put options as a hedge on our portfolio when the Fed will give us a put option for free? I think this is the most far-reaching and transformative effect of the extraordinary central bank policies of the past eight years — we are no longer afraid of things that go bump in the night.

But should we be?

Let’s agree (I hope) that buying ad hoc hedges in response to our fear of things going bump in the night is a poor implementation of our worries, that it’s an expensive psychic benefit that rarely moves the portfolio performance needle even if it works. But if we could implement a hedging strategy in a systematic way (not necessarily mathematical, although maybe, but always rigorous and repeatable in its process … something I’ve written about a lot, notably here and here), should we?

Are there monsters that the Fed can’t protect us from?

YES.

I think that there are two ways to think about the monsters that are immune to the central bankers’ Protection from Evil spell (sorry, revealing my OG D&D roots there).

First, there are monsters that the central bankers CAN’T control. Now to be honest, there aren’t too many of these bogeymen out there after eight years of forward guidance chants and $20 trillion of asset purchases, but the most obvious ones all come out of some unexpected turn of events emerging from China — a military coup, a hot war, a yuan devaluation (or float), a cold war on trade … something of that ilk. All very low probability events, but not totally crazy, either. If China and the U.S. are ever seriously at odds in a geopolitical sense, then it doesn’t matter how much jawboning we get from central bankers … the market is going to decline in a serious way. But I don’t get too worried about these monsters that the Fed can’t control.

Much more important, I think, are the monsters that the Fed WON’T control.

There’s an old saying that I remember liking so much when I first heard it: “Ask for forgiveness, not permission.” It appealed to me (and I suspect to most readers) because it speaks to our personal sense of independence and autonomy. By golly, I’m going forward with this smart plan of action that might not get approved in advance by my boss or my board or my significant other, because I truly believe it’s best for the team. And if my boss or my board or my significant other has a problem with my actions after the fact … well, then I’ll swallow hard, take full responsibility and ask for forgiveness.

This is exactly the opposite of how vampires behave.

Vampires ALWAYS ask for permission.
Vampires NEVER ask for forgiveness.

You get one chance to say no to a vampire. After that … well, you asked for it.

I’m not talking about Stephen King vampires. I’m talking about real-world vampires, intensely self-interested professions that have been institutionalized into destroyers. Real-world vampires aren’t knocking on the window asking for permission to come in. We’ve already given them permission. They’re already inside.

Like politicians who are invited into our White House and Capitol with our votes. Politicians who then enact policies to enrich and empower themselves, their families and their posses. Politicians who pursue these policies with absolute entitlement and zero shame.

Like police and surveillance organizations who are invited into our homes and cellphones with our tacit and explicit expressions of support for civil security. Police and surveillance organizations who then seize our property and our communications. Police and surveillance organizations who pursue these seizures with absolute entitlement and zero shame.

Like technology companies who are invited into our friendships and purchasing behaviors with our voluntary social media and online commerce participation. Technology companies who then monetize our most private habits, opinions and preferences. Technology companies who pursue this monetization with absolute entitlement and zero shame.

Like unfathomably large banks who are invited into every aspect of our lives with our insatiable appetite for debt and consumption. Unfathomably large banks who then claim a permanent and unbreakable lien on our income and our labor. Unfathomably large banks who pursue this claim with absolute entitlement and zero shame.

Each of these modern vampires has charisma. They don’t present themselves as ghouls floating outside the upstairs window. They present themselves as the Robert Pattinson equivalent for whatever group of citizens they need to open the front door wide. It is, per Anne Rice, the first lesson of the vampire: “to be powerful, beautiful and without regret.”

This is how you NUDGE.

Each of these modern vampires of the Nudging State and the Nudging Oligarchy shares a certain DNA. Not to get all Marxist here, but these vampires share the DNA of Capital, in opposition to the DNA of Labor, and this is why you will never see the Fed or any other central bank lift a finger against them. Because the Fed is also a creature of Capital not a vampiric destroyer as these modern manifestations of Capital have become — but a creature of Capital nonetheless.

Meaning what, Ben? Meaning that all of the Fed’s policies — and particularly the monetary policies that are most impactful on our investment portfolios — are in the service of Capital. Sometimes, as we’ve experienced over the past eight years, that means incredibly accommodative monetary policy to support asset collateral prices. Sometimes, as we’ve seen in the past and I think we’re about to see again, that means punitive monetary policy to crush labor and wage inflation.

I don’t know how this change in monetary policy regime plays out. I don’t know how quickly punitive monetary policy happens or how far it runs. I can’t predict it. But I know that the Fed won’t prevent it, because the Fed isn’t your protector, and that’s what you should hedge against in an intentional, systematic way.

In real life it’s never the monster that goes bump in the night that gets you.

It’s always the monster in plain sight.

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