NYFD Responds To Fire At Trump Tower; No Evacuations, Injuries Reported

A fire as broken out on the roof of Trump Tower and fire crews are responding, according to the Today Show.

 

 

CBS also has footage of the fire…

 

 

The fire appears to be electrical in nature. No evacuations have been ordered, and there have been no injuries reported. President Donald Trump is at the White House, not his residence

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Bill Blain: “Nothing Has Changed: Too Much Money Is Still Chasing Too Few Assets”

Submitted by Bill Blain of Mint Partners

Too much money chasing too few assets sums up financial asset inflation and declining returns.

A Good and Prosperous New Year to us all!

It’s going to be an interesting year…… how many times have I written that before? “This time it’s different” is another over-used New-Year opener – to which I respond: “Oh no, its not!”

But first: MiFID 2. We’ve seen the first few market days under the new regime and the rules and transaction reporting requirements are in place. It’s taking a little time for the mechanics to bed down – but MiFID has not closed the market down. Get over it and get used to it. We’ve still to see the medium term consequences, for instance in relation to double counting dark pools and Systemic Internaliser (SI) effects. At that point we’re likely to see more meaningful comment about market effects and potential distortions – we will be watching carefully how this plays out. For now… we’re living with it.

What did last week tell us about the prospects for 2018? Lots of amusement value from the must read “Fire and Fury”, and Trump’s inevitable reaction. Yet, he did get his tax reform passed, and the next big programme, infrastructure, is working its way through. The US is transforming. Maybe that’s our first lesson for 2018 – “don’t be distracted by the noise!”

The first week of the 2018 saw stock markets carry on regardless! Low volatility and high expectations rule sentiment. Despite some modest US employment numbers on Friday, they continued to rise, hitting new records.
Bond Spreads continued to tighten. Nothing has apparently changed. We’ve got investors fighting to buy new high risk subordinated debt from Monte dei Paschi (which may be the world’s oldest bank, but for how much longer?), and does 6.25% for Argentina 10-year risk of 7% for 30 year risk really make sense? (Actually, I’ve got clients explaining their strategies which include buying risky European banks because the risks are overstated, and EM guys arguing that’s where the upside lies!)

Whatever – risky assets are yieldy, so folks are buying them. Aside from such blisters of risk vs return doubt, what we do know is simple: as financial asset values rise, their return decreases.

The thing is, nothing has changed. The basic problem across the financial asset markets remains too much money chasing too few assets. That’s why financial assets are costing more and returning less.

 

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We are all too familiar with US stock investors using more money to chase a smaller number of outstanding shares in a declining number of stock market names. (A smaller number because of buybacks and M&A/PE).

We’re very aware central banks are still holding vast swathes of the bond market (and the ECB’s case, still buying more.) And what are corporates doing with the vast amounts of new debt they are raising, and the cash they can now repatriate back into the US? They are buying back stock! The result is predictable – stocks and bond prices are rising.

If you are looking for inflation – that’s where it is.

The tighter returns and distortions on Financial Assets are the major reasons the smart money is looking outside financial assets (bonds and stocks) and buying real economy assets ranging from PE investors, right across to the alternative assets such as infrastructure, transport and housing I spend most of time working on these days.

Where does it all stop? Everyone is looking for the big 2018 threat. Will it be inflation? A number of learned bond investors say so. However, inflation has proved curiously shy in the wake of QE. While economies are growing, pay packets are not. Despite the Japanese government calling for 3% wage hikes, wages in Occidental economies remain constrained. We’ve also got a rising number of economists looking at the US economy and wondering just how tired the recovery has become. How much longer can it struggle upwards? There are two rising fears: a recession, and the potential for stagflation. Ouch. Stagflation would certainly be a slap in the chops for the politicians and central banks making the Gordon Brown mistake: claiming this recovery is different, that the business cycle is dead, etc… Nothing lasts forever…

Way back in 2016 Mint’s Chief Economist, Martin Malone, was one of the first to turn mega-bullish – pointing towards the prospects for Global Synchronised Growth pushing markets higher. He was spectacularly right last year – correctly calling the Japan and US markets. This year I can’t help but notice everyone has hopped on the global growth bandwagon. That makes me nervous…

Even though I’ve been wrong about Europe – where it does look like a real and sustained economic recovery is underway (much to my surprise) – I’m wondering just how resilient the global economy is. Maybe that’s where the real threats and possible dislocations lie? If Martin is right, then there is plenty of remaining upside for stocks as global GDP expands. (And since you ask, my prediction is Europe will stumble through Italian elections and Spanish/Catalan unpleasantness intact…)

On the other hand, the outlook for bonds can only be negative… spreads are way too tight and let’s see how the economic forces start to stack up in the US – and whether it’s a 3 or 4 hike year! We’ll know soon enough!

Anyway… its great to be back at my desk! Looking forward to a great year!  

 

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Global Euphoria Sends Stocks To New All Time Highs, Korean Won Boosts Dollar With Overnight Fireworks

Every day is “deja vu all over again” for global stock markets which hovered close to all-time highs on Monday as the best start to a year in eight years showed little sign of running out of steam, thanks to “goldilocks” – the combination of global growth and low inflation – which has sent risk appetites into overdrive

For traders returning from holiday, Wall Street last week posted its best start to a year in more than a decade; In yet another case of “bad news is again good news”, Friday’s disappointing jobs report, while weaker than expected, encouraged hopes that “brisk growth and low inflation can be sustained this year.” The MSCI world index was flat, just below record highs. It has gained 2.5% in the first five trading sessions of the year, its best start since 2010, according to Thomson Reuters data.

After surging every day last week, U.S. equity futures are little changed while European stocks followed Asian markets higher before the start of another earnings season that’s expected to produce strong profit outlooks. The euro and the pound retreated against the dollar which snapped a two-day drop as traders unwound stale short positions, while the euro slid under 1.20 after it failed to find support from data showing speculative long positioning on the common currency reached a record even as Euro-area economic confidence rose to a two-decade high; euro-area bonds and Treasuries were steady, with U.S. two-year yields within sight of psychological 2% level

European stocks climbed for a fourth day, rising to the highest levels since August 2015 and poised for their longest winning streak in two months. Europe’s Stoxx Europe 600 Index added 0.2%, following a weekly gain of 2.1%, the best start to a year since 2013 and its biggest weekly advance since April. Miners and carmakers lead gains, with the latter poised for the highest level since May 2015. Novo Nordisk shares pushed marginally higher after they said they had made a bid for Belgian rival Ablynx, whose shares are yet to open but were indicated higher by as much as 45%. Commerzbank and Deutsche Bank are propping up the DAX after Cerberus said they oppose a merger between the two lenders.

Earlier, Asian markets inched towards all-time peaks. Australia’s ASX 200 (+0.1%) and KOSPI (+0.4%) were positive ahead of inter-Korean talks which begin tomorrow. The tone for the rest of the Asia-Pac region was mostly reserved throughout the day amid the absence of Japanese participants due to public holiday. Chinese shares continued their strong start to the year, with property developers and energy stocks among the top gainers amid optimism over real estate sales and after the government said it would support mergers in the coal sector. The MSCI China Index climbed 0.7%, taking its advance this year to 6.3%; the gauge is at its highest in 10 years. The Hang Seng Index rises 0.3% for 10th straight gain, its best run since October 2012, while the Hang Seng China Enterprises Index rose +0.2%. The Shanghai Composite Index rose +0.5%; its seventh day of gains and the longest streak since March 2016. Real estate companies accounted for five of top 10 advancers on Hang Seng Index, as China developers listed in H.K. build on their best week since January 2015, while property subgauge outperforms in Shanghai. Of note: the PBoC refrained from liquidity operations for the 11th consecutive day, draining a net 40bn yuan in liquidity, amid reports of tighter shadow banking regulations, as well as PBoC researcher comments regarding scope for higher rates.

In an otherwise quiet FX session, South Korea’s won sharply dropped after the government warned it would take action to stem one-sided moves in the currency, which spurred speculation of central bank intervention.  Losses in most other emerging Asian currencies accelerated through the trading day.

 

 

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As emerging market assets advanced this year, other Asian governments including Thailand and the Philippines have also flagged that they would act to smooth volatility if needed. “Since the start of the year, Asian currencies backed by strong trade and current account surpluses, particularly the TWD, THB and KRW have continued to strengthen,” said Heng Koon How, head of markets strategy, global economics and markets research at United Overseas Bank Ltd. “It’s not surprising that local authorities may act to stabilize FX markets in the interim and prevent excessive strength.”

The dollar index rose for the first time in three days as the rally in the euro faded and options signaled bets on a weaker common currency according to Bloomberg; support also came from the Fed’s Williams who said in Reuters interview that three rate hikes in 2018 “makes sense”. The dollar rose against all G10 peers on Monday, even as gains failed to push the Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index markedly away from a three-month low reached during Asian hours.

The greenback has been pressured since the start of the year amid doubts on the strength of the U.S. economic recovery and its impact on the pace of Federal Reserve policy tightening. Market players are focusing on riskier assets such as stocks, while persistent political worries in the U.S. have also weighed on the greenback.

“The dollar may recover in the short-term due to stale short positions and lack of any meaningful catalysts in other currencies to take the dollar another leg lower,” said Viraj Patel, a currency strategist at ING Bank NV. “But this doesn’t mask the structural problems — we think these political and protectionist risks for the dollar could be more evident ahead of President Trump’s State of the Union speech on Jan. 30.” Elsewhere, the Australian dollar reverses gains made since Friday’s U.S. non-farm payroll miss as macro accounts short spot against both kiwi and dollar. The MSCI EM Asia Index gained for a fifth day.

In commodity markets, many commodities paused after the recent run-up in prices, supported by a broadly weak U.S. dollar and the rise in global growth expectations. WTI and Brent crude futures both modestly in the green near 3-year highs that were hit late last week as the rig count last week showed that drillers lowered the number of rigs by 5 in the latest week. Precious metals were slightly lower with silver falling from 6-week highs and gold pulled back 0.1% after rising for its fourth straight week last week.

Attention in the U.S. will turn to the quarterly earnings season, which kicks off this week with the Street expecting solid growth of around 10 percent. Analysts at Bank of America Merrill Lynch said that the global economy had entered 2018 “firing on all cylinders”. “This growth is keeping our quant models bullish and driving earnings revisions to new highs,” they added. “We stay long outside the U.S., with Asia ex-Japan and Nikkei our growth plays, Europe still for yield.”

Meanwhile, in Europe attention is returning to Germany’s struggle to form a government, restraining the single currency. The pound fell and U.K. stocks were flat following weak economic data and reports that Prime Minister Theresa May is considering creating a position for a minister in charge of contingency planning for a no-deal Brexit.

Expected data today includes only US consumer credit. Other things to watch this week include U.S. inflation data; Fed spearkers including San Francisco Fed President John Williams and head of the New York Fed Bill Dudley; China producer and consumer prices data are due Wednesday, while a reading on the country’s money supply is expected in coming days;  U.S. firms announcing earnings this week include JPMorgan Chase & Co., Wells Fargo & Co. and BlackRock Inc.

Market Snapshot

  • S&P 500 futures little changed at 2,742.75
  • STOXX Europe 600 up 0.2% to 398.28
  • MSCI Asia Pacific up 0.2% to 179.67
  • MSCi Asia Pacific ex Japan up 0.3% to 589.26
  • Nikkei up 0.9% to 23,714.53
  • Topix up 0.9% to 1,880.34
  • Hang Seng Index up 0.3% to 30,899.53
  • Shanghai Composite up 0.5% to 3,409.48
  • Sensex up 0.6% to 34,370.28
  • Australia S&P/ASX 200 up 0.1% to 6,130.37
  • Kospi up 0.6% to 2,513.28
  • German 10Y yield fell 1.1 bps to 0.428%
  • Euro down 0.3% to $1.1989
  • Italian 10Y yield fell 0.9 bps to 1.737%
  • Spanish 10Y yield fell 2.0 bps to 1.502%
  • Brent futures up 0.3% to $67.80/bbl
  • Gold spot down 0.2% to $1,317.11
  • U.S. Dollar Index up 0.4% to 92.27

Top Overnight News

  • Stephen Bannon’s apology for his comments trashing Donald Trump’s family did little to tamp down the president’s anger at his former chief strategist, as aides describe the president demanding a stark choice from supporters of both men: you are either with Bannon, or with me
  • Angela Merkel’s own party bloc is making her life more difficult as hard-liners seek to force the German chancellor to shift to the right in talks on setting up a government, while she is also seeking a commitment this week from the rival Social Democrats to start formal negotiations on extending their governing alliance

  • U.K. PM Theresa May is starting the new year with a Cabinet reshuffle which will see her move her education and health ministers and create a post for a no-deal Brexit minister, according to newspaper reports
  • Berlusconi could end up holding the aces after Italy’s election
  • Merkel calls for deal as make-or-break government talks begin
  • China’s foreign-currency holdings rose $129 billion in 2017, posting the first annual gain since 2014 amid tighter capital controls, a stronger yuan and resilient economic growth
  • Euro-area January Sentix investor confidence at 32.9 vs 31.1 in December
  • Germany November factory orders fall 0.4% m/m; estimate unchanged m/m

Asia equity markets traded mostly higher as the positive tone seeped through from last Friday’s record performance on Wall Street where all major indexes printed at all time high levels despite the NFP miss, while the DJIA extended above the 25,000 level and posted its best start to the year in over a decade. As such, ASX 200 (+0.1%) and KOSPI (+0.4%) were positive in which with the latter outperformed ahead of inter-Korean talks which begin tomorrow. The tone for the rest of the Asia-Pac region was mostly reserved throughout the day amid the absence of Japanese participants due to public holiday, while Shanghai Comp. (+0.4%) and Hang Seng (-0.1%) were choppy after the PBoC refrained from liquidity operations and amid reports of tighter shadow banking regulations, as well as PBoC researcher comments regarding scope for higher rates. Opining in the China Daily, PBoC Deputy Head of Research Ji Min stated that there is room for a rate increase in the short-term, although he later reversed himself. On Monday, the PBoC skipped open market operations again today citing relatively high bank liquidity.

Top Asian News

  • China’s Currency Reserves Bounced Back Last Year Amid Cash Curbs
  • China Insurer Up $101 Billion Trades Like a Technology Stock
  • Aramco Joins Saudi Companies Boosting Pay After Royal Orders
  • Won Swings to Loss as Korean Government Warns of Stern Steps
  • Won’s Whipsaw May Be a Warning to Emerging-Market Currency Bulls
  • Asia Stocks Extend Rally on Earnings, Korea Talks Outlook
  • Macron Calls for China-EU Relationship to ‘Enter 21st Century’
  • China’s Richest Woman’s Wealth Rose by $2 Billion in 4 Days

European equity markets continued their march higher on Monday with all the major indices trading in positive territory. With little major macro news over the weekend, equity markets continued where they left off in the US where all the major indices closed at record highs. In individual equity news, Novo Nordisk shares pushed marginally higher after they said they had made a bid for Belgian rival Ablynx, whose shares are yet to open but were indicated higher by as much as 45%. Commerzbank and Deutsche Bank are propping up the DAX after Cerberus said they oppose a merger between the two lenders. A firm rebound in core bonds, and the recovery started on Eurex where Germany’s 10 year debt future caught a bid ahead of nearest chart support below 161.50. Market contacts noted light buying amidst a paring of Dax gains and then more of an intraday short squeeze once the opening peak was breached. Bunds have now been up to 161.80 (+21 ticks vs -20 ticks at worst), and last
Friday’s 161.87 session high is next on the radar, although firmer than forecast Eurozone retail sales may stall further upside. Gilts have also reversed early Liffe losses to trade at 124.82 (+17 ticks vs -24 ticks at one stage), awaiting news from UK PM May on her new Cabinet Ministers/posts.

Top European News

  • German Factory Orders Dip But Economy Continues Upward Trend
  • May Emerges Stronger in 2018, Ready to Finally Reshuffle Cabinet

In FX markets, the USD is higher against most of its major counterparts after initially trading lower at the beginning of Asia-Pac trade. The turnaround appeared to be intervention from South Korea who were said to buying dollars to weaken the KRW. GBP/USD trades lower as markets await a cabinet reshuffle from UK PM Theresa May although no major changes are expected. AUD/USD is back down below 0.7850, with the AUD undermined by a marked slowdown in Australia’s construction index and Government forecasts for a sharp 20% decline in iron ore prices this year.

In commodities, WTI and Brent crude futures both trade relatively flat and near 3-year highs that were hit late last week as the rig count last week showed that drillers lowered the number of rigs by 5 in the latest week. Precious metals were slightly lower with silver falling from 6-week highs and gold pulling back after rising for its fourth straight week last week. Markets will be looking out for comments from Fed speakers later in the session on the future path of Fed policy given the its sensitivity to rate hikes. Australia’s government sees iron ore prices dropping 20% this year to an average USD 51.50/ton, due to increasing global supply and moderating Chinese demand.

Looking at the day ahead, the November consumer credit numbers are due. The Fed’s Williams and Rosengren speak at an Inflation targeting conference, while the Fed’s Bostic will also speak on monetary policy and the US economic outlook. Elsewhere, France’s President Macron arrives in China today for a three day state visit.

US Event Calendar

  • 3pm: Consumer Credit, est. $18.0b, prior $20.5b
  • 12:40pm: Fed’s Bostic Speaks on Economic Outlook in Atlanta
  • 1:35pm: Fed’s Williams Speaks at Inflation Targeting Conference
  • 4pm: Fed’s Rosengren Speaks at Inflation Targeting Conference

DB’s Jim Reid concludes the overnight wrap

If you’ve just come back to work from holidays today, you’ve missed a bit of a melt up in risk assets so far in 2018 with US equities climbing every day this year (S&P500 +2.60% so far) and Europe increasingly getting in on the act (Stoxx +2.10% YTD) after a hesitant start on an initially surging Euro. Basically the year has started as a turbo charged version of 2017 with many of the same themes still present. Data on both sides of the Atlantic has generally been strong but we’re yet to see signs of elevated inflation pressures with Friday’s US average hourly earnings ‘only’ in-line and with a 0.1ppt downward revision to the prior month.

In a relatively quiet week for data the main highlight has to wait until Friday with the latest US CPI report due. Last month’s release was another miss (the 7th in 9 months) with one of the standout contributors a 1.3% fall in apparel prices, the third largest drop in history and the largest since 1998. Our economists expect the change in apparel prices to largely unwind and, as such, core CPI (+0.2% forecast, +0.2% consensus vs. +0.1% previously) should come in relatively healthy as a result. A print in line with DB’s expectation would see YoY core CPI slip two basis points to 1.69% but the six-month annualised change would rise about 17 basis points to 2.08% and the three month annualised change would rise almost twice that to 2.19%, providing some evidence of core inflation firming. With the price of most refined energy products falling in December, headline CPI (+0.1% vs. +0.4% previous) should moderate correspondingly.

A reminder that our credit view is positive in Q1 based on assumption of still subdued inflation and still contained government yields in the early part of the year. However we think both will move higher from around Q2 and exhibit more volatility and will thus create more headwinds for credit from then, albeit at tighter spreads than today’s levels. If we’re wrong on inflation though the carry trade will likely last longer as growth looks very solid at the  moment.

Staying with inflation, we also see US PPI data on Thursday and China CPI and PPI on Wednesday. Outside of the data, US Q4 earnings kicks off from Tuesday, with Friday seeing results from Wells Fargo, JP Morgan and Blackrock.

Back to credit, as mentioned at the top, on Friday my team produced the review of 2017 in Euro HY (link) and a report “Capitalising on the CDS-Bond Basis and Term Structure of Credit Spreads” which analyses the CDS-bond basis and curve steepness in EUR and USD corporate credit. Cash bonds have richened to CDS meaningfully since the ECB announced corporate bond purchases in early 2016. Michal Jezek expects this to reverse as they prepare for exit in 2018. At the same time credit curves are too steep and are expected to flatten, particularly in the CDS space as structured credit activity intensifies. The report provides macro credit trade ideas to take advantage of these dislocations and discusses the implications for hedging bond portfolios.

Over in China, December foreign exchange reserves rose for the 11th consecutive month to US$3.14trn (vs. $3.13 trn expected) amid tighter capital controls and resilient economic growth. This morning in Asia, markets are trading modestly higher. The Kospi and China’s CSI 300 are up 0.47% and 0.65% respectively, while the Nikkei is closed for a national holiday. The Hang Seng and China’s RMBUSD are marginally lower as we type with the former looking to extend a winning run to a tenth day.

Moving on now to the various central bankers speak from Friday and over the weekend. On rates, the Fed’s Williams expects unemployment to fall to 3.7% this year, but he is “not worried about inflation suddenly taking off” and suggested that “something like three rate hikes makes sense to me”. Conversely, the Fed’s Harker who is not a FOMC voter this year, believes two rate hikes will be appropriate in 2018 and “want to be slow and steady with any additional rate increases”. Although he sees the flat yield curve “worries so far have been a little inflated and don’t think the situation we’re in now is analogous to the inversion…. (seen) in the 70’s and ‘80’s”.

On potential impacts from the tax cuts, Mr Williams expect it to have a “modest, positive effect” on GDP growth and that the US economy will be in a very positive place two years from now, with “inflation at 2% and around 4% unemployment”.

Similarly, Mr Harker didn’t expect tax cuts to have a large impact on US economic growth. Elsewhere,the White House Chief economist Kevin Hassett noted the administration’s own analysis suggests the tax cuts should not alter the Fed’s projection of three rate hikes in 2018, in part as “if you have supply side stimulus, then it doesn’t put upward pressure on prices”. Finally, the Fed’s Bullard was more optimistic, he noted “there is some possibility that (tax cuts) could light a fire under investment and really drive growth higher…I have some sympathy for this idea…”

Following on, the Bundesbank’s Weidmann reiterated his views that setting a clear end for ECB’s QE bond buying program is justifiable and that “even after the end of net purchases, monetary policy will remain very expansive”. Elsewhere, the Fed’s Mester said US monetary policy should remain focused on price stability and maximum employment and “not be given a third objective of financial stability”.

Now recapping other markets performance from Friday. The S&P rose 0.70% to fresh highs with only two sectors marginally in the red (energy and utilities). European markets were all higher, with the Stoxx 600 up 0.93% back near its 2.5 year high and all sectors in the green. Across the region, gains were by led the DAX (+1.15%) and CAC (+1.05%), while the FTSE was the relative laggard (+0.37%).

Government bonds weakened with core 10y bond yields up c1-2bp (Bunds +0.4bp; Gilts +1.1bp; UST +2.4bp). Across the pond, Canada’s 10y bond yields rose 7.2bp after its December unemployment rate came in below expectations at 5.7% (vs. 6%) and to the lowest since 1976. In currencies, the US dollar index and Sterling gained 0.10% and 0.15% respectively, while the Euro weakened 0.32%. Elsewhere, precious metals softened (Gold -0.26%; Silver -0.04%) and other base metals also fell modestly (Zinc -0.06%; Aluminium -0.76%; Copper  -0.98%).

Away from the markets and onto Germany, where Ms Merkel and the SPD have begun exploratory talks on Sunday to form the next coalition government. Rhetoric appears to be cautiously optimistic, with SPD leader Mr Schulz noting “we aren’t laying down any red lines”, while Ms Merkel noted “I’m going into these talks with optimism, though it’s clear to me that a huge amount of work lies ahead”. Both sides want to finish initial talks by Thursday and if there are enough common grounds, formal negotiations could start from late January.

We wrap up with other data releases from Friday. In the US, the macro data was mixed. The December change in nonfarm payrolls was lower than expectations at 148k (vs. 190k), but the six-month average gain of 166k was still slightly ahead of the 12-month average of 161k. The labour market remains tight with the unemployment rate in line at 4.1% and steady mom at a record 17 year low. The growth in average hourly earnings was in line at 2.5% yoy. Elsewhere, the ISM non-mfg composite was below market at 55.9 (vs. 57.6 expected) but still above the long term average, while the headline November factory orders was above market at 1.3% mom (vs. 1.1% expected). Finally, the final reading for November durable and capital goods orders was broadly in line at 1.3% mom and -0.2% mom respectively, while the November trade deficit was slightly wider than expectations at -$50.5bln (vs. – $49.9bln). Factoring in the above, the Atlanta Fed’s GDPNowestimate of 4Q GDP growth is now at 2.7% saar, down from 3.2% previously.

In Europe, the macro data ranged from broadly in line to above market expectations. Firstly on the CPI, the Eurozone’s headline CPI was in line at 1.4% yoy, but core was a tad softer at 0.9% (vs. 1.0%) – steady for the third consecutive month. Across the countries, France’s CPI was in line at 1.3% yoy but Italy was below at 1% yoy (vs. 1.1% expected). Elsewhere, Germany’s November retail sales was materially above market at 4.4% yoy (vs. 2.3% expected), along with France’s December consumer confidence at 105 (vs. 103 expected) – a level exceeded in only two months in the last 15 years. Finally, the Eurozone’s November PPI was also above market at 2.8% yoy (vs. 2.5% expected).

Looking at the day ahead, Germany’s November factory orders will be out as this note hits inboxes. Then we get a range of confidence indicators for the Eurozone, including the January Sentix investor confidence along with the December economic, consumer and business confidence stats. Elsewhere, the Eurozone’s retail sales and the UK’s December Halifax house price index are due. Over in the US, the November consumer credit numbers are also due. Onto other events, the Fed’s Williams and Rosengren speak at an Inflation targeting conference, while the Fed’s Bostic will also speak on monetary policy and the US economic outlook. Elsewhere, France’s President Macron arrives in China today for a three day state visit.

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Why The “Time Is Up” For Europe’s Peripheral Bond Rally

By Bloomberg macro and Market Live commentator Kristine Aquino

Time’s Up for Euro Area Periphery Bond Rally

The world-beating run for euro-area periphery bonds is coming to an end. Yields are likely to finish 2018 higher and spreads to core securities will probably widen as the conclusion of quantitative easing exposes bloated debt burdens amid slowing economic recoveries. After all, we’re talking about a group of nations that includes three (Greece, Italy and Portugal) of the five most-indebted countries in the developed world, as measured by debt-to-GDP ratios.

Portugal’s bonds had a huge rally in 2017 as the nation’s progress on managing its debt load helped it win back investment-grade status with Fitch and S&P. But investors had anticipated the upgrades long before they came about, curbing the likelihood of the bonds benefiting from any extra follow-through.

And the economic environment there and elsewhere in the region is likely to become more challenging this year. Growth for most of the periphery will either slow, or be little changed, in the next two years, according to analyst estimates compiled by Bloomberg.

In 2018, Italy’s real (inflation-adjusted) GDP is forecast to fall 0.2 percentage points, while a 0.6 percentage- point decline is seen for Portugal and Spain.

Greece is the exception, with real GDP expected to rise 0.9 percentage points, though that follows consecutive declines in six of the past eight years.

Those economic fundamentals are likely to become a larger influence on investor appetite for the debt as the end of the ECB’s bond-buying program looms. Given that’s likely to lift yields on benchmark German debt, it’s likely to raise rates for periphery nations too.

And since QE arguably benefited periphery debt the most, the end of central-bank debt purchases also risks dimming periphery bonds’ appeal on a spread basis. Italy and Spain are also particularly vulnerable to idiosyncratic political risks in the medium term.

The aftermath of December’s Catalan election, where separatists garnered a majority, may provoke another flare-up for Spanish bonds. While the 10-year yield spread over Germany has receded from levels seen in October, when the region’s latest secessionist push came to a head, it’s yet to return to last year’s tightest levels.

Over in Italy, the peak of political risk will come later in 1Q, around the time of the March 4 election. The euroskeptic Five Star Movement leads in the polls and a protracted campaign may boost its prominence.

Together, there are considerable challenges for euro- area periphery bonds in 2018. With two-year yields negative in all those countries apart from Greece, the bar is too high for them to repeat their outperformance since the end of the region’s sovereign debt crisis.

 

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Estonian State-Backed Cryptocurrency Moves One Step Closer to Reality

Submitted by Simon Black of Sovereign Man

Estonia took another step towards introducing a state-backed cryptocurrency.

In August Estonia’s director of e-Residency, Kaspar Korjus, floated the idea of an official Estonian cryptocurrency.
The European Central Bank president responded with disapproval, saying that the euro is the only currency allowed for nations in the European Union.

But Korjus’ latest post says that the country is moving forward with a cryptocurrency, and the new proposals do not conflict with the euro.

Estonia’s e-Residency office outlined three specific proposals for how the country could develop a cryptocurrency. They welcome input from e-Residents, as well as Estonian citizens, and anyone else interested in cryptocurrencies.
Estonia’s e-Residency program does not grant actual residency to participants. It offers an online identity with the aim of streamlining international business. Anyone in the world can apply, and gain access to online tools which help them better serve European customers.

Since Korjus’ August blog post, many cryptocurrency enthusiasts have joined the program, hoping the platform will help them invest in and use cryptocurrencies. Others are interested in the potential for the e-Residency program to help launch and legitimize ICOs (Initial Coin Offerings).

Korjus has proposed three possible digital tokens that could serve e-Residents.

One proposal would use the cryptocurrency to incentivizes use of the e-Residency platform. It would reward contributors, and facilitate transactions within the online e-Residency portal. This is the online platform which offers business tools to e-Residents. Korjus says the cryptocurrency could be used among e-Residents to trade, for example, legal and financial services.

A similar proposal would tie the cryptocurrency’s value to the euro, and limit its use to the e-Residency community. E-Residents would change their euros into tokens which they could use on the platform. Individuals could redeem tokens for euros at any time, without risking a change in token value.

The third proposal would make the tokens less of a cryptocurrency, and more of a secure online identity used to access certain tools in the e-Residency portal. Your online identity would be tokenized and added to the blockchain. In the same way that you can track each individual Bitcoin preventing duplication, tokens attached to your identity could prevent online forgery.

What this means

E-Residency is a “solution looking for a problem,” as Korjus put it.

By integrating the e-Residency program with a state cryptocurrency, Estonia offers another solution which could solve a number of problems.

First, it provides a safer platform for cryptocurrency users and business owners by issuing a secure online identity.
Then companies can launch ICOs from the e-Residency platform. Here, they will already have access to many interested investors. By voluntarily submitting to Estonia’s ICO standards, this legitimizes ICOs hosted on the platform.

And finally Estonia creates an online marketplace for trade of services. Businesses can interact seamlessly without having to exchange national currencies, and deal with international regulations.

What this forms is the first digital nation. Korjus readily admits that Estonia does not know what the e-Residency or state backed cryptocurrency will evolve into. That direction depends on demand from e-Residents.

States are notoriously slow at adopting new technology. But Estonia is leading the way in bringing governance into the technological age.

And that is what makes Estonia so innovative when it comes to governing. This attitude could very well make the small nation a driving force behind the modern economy.

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Spanish Catholics Outraged After Gay-Themed Float Appears In Three Kings Parade

Authored by Joshua Gill via The Daily Caller,

Madrid’s 2018 Three Kings Parade featured a gay themed float to encourage LGBT normalization on the eve of Epiphany, stirring outrage among the country’s Catholic faithful.

The controversial float in Friday’s parade featured a female stripper, a female hip-hop artist, and a drag queen, according to Crux Now. The archdiocese of Madrid responded indirectly to the float, reminding Catholics that celebrations of Christmas and the Magi should center around praise of Jesus, not the promotion of personal ideologies.

Archbishop of Madrid Cardinal Osoro Sierra also tweeted after the parade, and urged parents to “explain to your children that the Wise Men from the East come to adore Jesus, filled with his joy and love, and give us these gifts.”

 

A member of Sierra’s team reiterated his message in stronger terms to Crux, saying “Let’s not use it for personal or ideological interests. The Magi came to adore Jesus.”

A representative of Orgullo Vallekano, a gay pride organization that helped organize the float, said that those involved suggested to Madrid’s city council that it be featured in a separate, parallel parade, but the city’s administration invited them to be featured in the Three Kings parade. Manuela Carmena, a former communist party member, serves as the head of Madrid’s city council and openly opposes Catholic culture and Catholic family teaching despite voicing praise for Pope Francis. Carmena is currently a member of Ahora Madrid, a party that won the Madrid’s elections after forming a coalition with United Left Madrid and the Communist Party of Madrid.

Ahora Now commemorated Christmas Eve 2017 with a tweet featuring a Christmas tree set ablaze.

Jose Luis Martinez-Almeida, spokesman for the Popular Party on Madrid’s city council, criticized the city council’s lack of reverence for Three King’s day and their lack of respect for Christianity on Twitter, according to Crux.

 

“We support Gay Pride and the rest of the celebrations, but we believe the Kings’ Day should be respected as a religious holiday,” Martinez-Almeida wrote.

Martinez-Almeida also posted another tweet, urging Carmena to “treat the Christian religion with the same deference and respect that treats the rest.”

The Madrid city council came under similar criticism last year for allowing the parade to feature bearded women, a female Magi, tricycles instead of camels, and Darth Vader.

 

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Europe Becomes Victim Of Russia’s Newest Oil Strategy

Authored by Irina Slav via OilPrice.com,

Higher shipments of Russian crude oil to China may saddle European importers with a fatter bill, an industry consultancy warned at the end of last year, noting the latest stage of Russia’s Eastern pivot: the launch of the expanded East Siberia-Pacific Ocean pipeline that would lift Urals crude supply to China twofold, to 30 million tons annually. 

 

http://ift.tt/2AFBv1g

FGE said in a note quoted by Bloomberg that Russia will start moving more Urals eastward right after the launch of the pipeline extension, at a rate of 160,000 bpd. The overall increase of Russian crude shipments to China, according to the consultancy, could be around 200,000 bpd. 

This means less oil for Europe, which is Russia’s number-one oil client. This only highlights the significance of Moscow’s Asian pivot amid lingering European sanctions following the 2014 annexation of Crimea and Russia’s involvement in separatist conflicts in the Ukraine. 

In 2016, Russia exported an average 3.7 million barrels daily to European countries, compared with less than a million bpd to China, according to figures from the Energy Information Administration (EIA). In percentage figures, Europe accounted for 70 percent of Russia’s 2016 crude oil exports, while the share of China was just 18 percent. Yet this is changing fast, as this chart from the EIA shows:

(Click to enlarge)

The rise in Chinese exports has been quite steep since 2014: as of November last year, Russia shipped 1.3 million barrels of oil daily to China. All the latest signs point to further growth. However, exactly how much this would hurt European buyers is unclear.

The Urals is currently trading at a discount of about $4 to Brent crude but WTI’s discount to the international benchmark is $6 a barrel. In other words, Russia’s diverting of crude oil from Europe to China could be an opportunity for U.S. exporters as long as they can keep their transport costs low enough. Europe will probably be grateful for the diversification. 

Over the long term, things are even more uncertain. Clearly, Russia has prioritized its relationship with China: In addition to the ESPO expansion, Gazprom is on track to complete the Power of Siberia gas pipeline by 2019. The 2,500-km mammoth of a pipeline will pump 1.3 trillion cu ft of gas to China annually. 

The country is already the third-largest consumer of natural gas in the world, behind the U.S. and Russia, and is expected to show the strongest demand growth over the coming decades—propelling it to second place by 2040 as the economy shifts away from coal. 

This soaring demand has already created shortages in parts of the country. A recent report by Eurasia Daily suggested the Power of Siberia will be essential in avoiding future gas shortages. Would that take gas away from Europe? It’s unlikely given Gazprom’s 30+-percent market share in Europe, and besides, there’s enough gas for everyone. What might happen is China overtaking Europe as Russia’s biggest gas export market at some point in the future, especially if Russia–EU relations continue to be strained.

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Czech President: The Culture Of These Migrants Is Basically Incompatible With Europe

Miloš Zeman, president of the Czech Republic, was interviewed by Prague TV station Barrandov on Thursday.

They asked him about the situation in France and what his vision is on multicultural Europe… his response was not the usual politically-correct narrative expected of a European nation’s leader.

Source: Voice of Europe

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How Three European Oligarchs Looted 100s Of Millions From Ukraine

Via AlJazeera.com,

Three Ukrainian oligarchs traded part of around $1.5bn in illicit assets traced to cronies of former Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovich, an exclusive investigation by Al Jazeera revealed on Sunday.

They did so as the war-torn country struggled to return suspected misappropriated funds to its coffers.

An unsigned contract obtained by Al Jazeera’s Investigative Unit identifies Alexander Onyschenko – the gas tycoon, former member of parliament and currently one of Ukraine’s most-wanted men – and Pavel Fuchs, a real estate tycoon who made his fortune in Moscow, as the buyers in the illegal deal.

Other documents suggest the seller was Serhiy Kurchenko – a fugitive Ukrainian gas tycoon based in Moscow who was known as Yanukovich’s “family wallet”.

The contract obtained by Al Jazeera, revealed in The Oligarchs investigation, said Onyschenko and Fuchs paid $30m, including cash and a private jet, for the Cyprus-based company, Quickpace Limited.

That company held $160m-worth of bonds and cash, which was frozen by a Ukrainian judge as they were suspected of being proceeds of crime.

The findings were “unbelievable”, said Daria Kaleniuk, executive director of the Anti-Corruption Action Centre (ANTAC).

“It sounds like an agreement between criminal bosses, you know? You can sign it with your blood.”

It is illegal in Ukraine and abroad to trade with frozen assets.

“The whole idea is I’ve frozen the asset because I think it’s the proceeds of crime,” said Jon Benton, former director of the International Corruption Unit at Britain’s National Crime Agency.

“It’s like trading in stolen goods that have been taken by the police. You’re putting the cash in the getaway car,” he told Al Jazeera.

The buyers aim to make a $130m profit by persuading a judge to unfreeze the assets.

Article 4.4 of the contract said that the buyers would cooperate in “taking action to remove the arrest from the accounts” held by Quickpace Limited.

Looted state

Ukrainian authorities froze the assets in June 2014 across numerous companies in Cyprus, the UK, Panama, Belize and the British Virgin Islands totalling $1.5bn. It is estimated that that Yanukovich and his cronies stole far more.

Evidence found on Yanukovich’s abandoned property hidden outside Kiev showed one of his clan’s corporate networks. Documents obtained by Al Jazeera expose another.

They reveal how Yanukovich’s clan pumped stolen money into companies in Ukraine with bank accounts in Latvia and gradually passed it through dozens of offshore shell companies in Cyprus, Belize, British Virgin Islands and other money-laundering hotspots including the UK.

“The philosophy of money launderers is just to create a situation where the money has moved through so many different companies and so many different countries, in so many different accounts that it would be almost impossible to recreate the trail,” said Bill Browder, chief executive of Hermitage Capital.

Yanukovich’s name never appeared on any of the paperwork.

The companies bear the names of nominee directors – cut-out characters who appear to be the owner of a company, but simply act on instruction by the real owner.

Ukraine’s new authorities started to look into the corrupt schemes after Yanukovich’s removal from office in 2014.

It began a series of reforms that included the establishment of the National Anti-Corruption Bureau of Ukraine (NABU).

But nothing important has been achieved in terms of the prosecution of the corrupt individuals or the recovery of the stolen assets.

“Resistance is very strong from the elites who are in power now and the more we investigate, the more we face this resistance,” Artem Sytnyk, NABU director, told Al Jazeera.

“Parliament is taking steps to sideline the management of the Anti-Corruption Agency and take control.”

Nazar Holodnitsky, Ukraine’s special anti-corruption prosecutor, refused Al Jazeera’s requests for information, saying: “Until this investigation is complete, any comments, assertions regarding the existence or absence of certain documents is premature.”

Onyschenko took the position that there was nothing wrong with buying a company holding frozen assets. “You can buy cheap and try to fix the problem to make money,” he told Al Jazeera.

Onyschenko confirmed Fuchs’ and Kurchneko’s role in the deal, but denied the deal went ahead.

“It was like normal business, but this has not happened. We didn’t buy.”

However, a Cypriot lawyer and the NABU, who worked on the deal, confirmed the sale of Quickpace went through and company documents record a transfer of ownership to one of Mr Fuchs’s companies.

Al Jazeera obtained a record of an initial payment of $2m from an account at Barclays Bank to another at a Russian-owned Latvian bank, Norvic Banka.

Currently, Quickpace is owned by Evermore Property Holdings Limited, a Cyprus company, which, in turn, is owned by Dorchester International Incorporated. Fuchs is its owner.

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Who Killed The Iran Protests?

One prime indicator that anti-government protests in Iran have truly died down to the point of now being completely snuffed out as reports today suggest, and as we began reporting at the end of last week, is that current headlines are now merely focused on the barely lingering and ephemeral “social media battle” and anonymous YouTube activism, along with multiple postmortem accounts of a failed movement already out. It seems there’s now clear consensus that Iran’s streets have grown quiet. 

It was evident by the end of last week that demonstrations were fizzling – even as the headlines breathlessly attempted to portray a bigger and more unified movement than what was really occurring on the ground. By many accounts, it was the much larger pro-government rallies that began to replace the quickly dying anti-regime protests by the middle of last week.

But a central question that remains is, who killed the Iran protests? There seemed to be a direct correlation between Western and outside officials weighing in with declarations of “solidarity” and support for regime change, and the drastic decline in protest size and distribution

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Image source: Breaking News TV

One such postmortem on the now dead Iran protests published on Sunday begins by lamenting:

Less than 10 days ago, a few sporadic demonstrations about economic hardships across Iran sparked a global media frenzy. In a matter of hours, social media became delirious with #IranProtest, awash with confident assertions that “The Iranian People want regime change”. Donald Trump waded in with his support. Nigel Farage, the unlikely new champion of Iran’s revolution, hosted an LBC radio Iran special.

Despite all of this excitement, reports from Tehran over the past few days have suggested that #IranProtests may – for now – be fizzling out (read brutally contained by the authorities).

Within the first days of protests and rioting, we posed the obvious question, “Are we witnessing regime change agents hijacking economic protests?” – this after the US State Department’s first statement declared solidarity with “freedom and democracy seeking” protesters while prematurely speaking of “transition of government”. Immediately came the predictable flurry of tweets and statements from government officials and think tankers alike echoing the familiar script which seems to roll out when anyone protests for any reason in a country considered an enemy of the United States.

And then there was Bibi Netanyahu’s surprising televised address to “the Iranian people” on behalf of the state of Israel, wishing them “success in their noble quest for freedom” – something which we predicted would only have an adverse effect on the demonstrators’ momentum, considering that authorities in Tehran accused protest leaders of serving the interests of and being in league with foreign “enemies” like Saudi Arabia and Israel nearly from day one. 

The address was surprising precisely because it was the surest way to kill the protests as quickly as possible. From the moment Netanyahu publicly declared, “When this regime [the Iranian government] finally falls, and one day it will, Iranians and Israelis will be great friends once again” – all the air was sucked out of whatever momentum the protesters had. 

For many average Iranians who had not yet joined anti-government demonstrations at that point, Bibi’s speech gave them every incentive to stay home. All that the regime had to say at that point was, “see, you are in league with enemies of the nation!” And that is exactly what Tehran did. It was on the very Monday of Netanyahu’s speech that Iran’s elite Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) announced it would be taking charge of the security situation in Tehran, though likely they were mobilized earlier. 

Early on Sunday the IRGC declared that rioting, sedition, and demonstrations are now finished: “Iran’s revolutionary people along with tens of thousands of Basij forces, police and the Intelligence Ministry have broken down the chain [of unrest] created… by the United States, Britain, the Zionist regime [Israel], Saudi Arabia, the hypocrites [Mujahideen] and monarchists,” a statement from the group’s Sepahnews website said. Also on Sunday state TV reported that Iranian Parliament held a closed-door meeting to assess the security situation throughout the country – no doubt they were talking about the plotting of external enemies to exploit Iran’s domestic situation.

And who can blame the Iranian authorities for believing this? Even France seemed to be in rare agreement with both Russia, China, and even the Iranian authorities on this one. 

Speaking of Iran’s parliament, Iranian citizens probably remember very well that a short time ago (June 2017), parliament was hit by a deadly ISIS attack which involved gunmen and suicide bombers terrorizing central Tehran, leaving 12 dead and 42 injured. What was Washington’s response? The White House essentially said that Iran had it coming:

 

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White House response to the June 2017 ISIS attack on downtown Tehran: “We underscore that states that sponsor terrorism risk falling victim to the evil they promote.”

So likely, Iranians don’t believe for a minute that either the American or Israeli governments actually care for people protesting on the streets – only a short while ago they were told “it’s your fault” as ISIS shed blood in their streets and government buildings. 

During Friday’s UN emergency session in which the US found itself isolated, France stuck by President Macron’s earlier words blaming the US, Israel, and Saudi Arabia for stoking tensions and exploiting Iran’s domestic unrest in a situation he said could lead to war. French Ambassador Francois Delattre urged Iran’s enemies to back off, saying just before the UN meeting, “Yes, of course, to vigilance and call for full respect of freedom of expression, but no to instrumentalization of the crisis from the outside – because it would only reinforce the extremes, which is precisely what we want to avoid.” 

His call to cautiously prevent the “instrumentalization of the crisis from the outside” was a clear reference to the repeat Israeli and US officials’ demands for international solidarity with the anti-Tehran protesters in cause of regime change. Or perhaps France also simply understood the obvious truth… that all the premature foaming at the mouth talk of Tehran regime overthrow coming out of Washington and Tel Aviv or other Western capitals would be the surest way to halt protests dead in their tracks. 

Because nobody wants to be hijacked in their cause… nobody wants to play stooge to foreign powers… nobody wants to be a geopolitical pawn, not the least of which the Iranians, who’ve had a long and bloody history of outside foreign meddling in their politics. Though the usual pundits will now simply fault the brutal and efficient IRGC for snuffing out the protests, they should look much closer to home. 

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