Dramatic Footage: Bahrain Oil Pipeline Explodes, Bursts Into Giant Flames

An oil pipeline in Bahrain exploded, and burst into giant fireball, as numerous videos posted on social media showed. According to the Saudi Gazette, an explosion caused a fire in an oil pipeline near Buri village. It adds that no injuries have been reported, and that civil defense teams are extinguishing the fire.

More from Al-bilad Press (google translated):

A large explosion of one of the oil pipelines near the area of ??Buri overlooking the market Waqif, and evacuate all houses near the scene of the explosion. The Waqif market was completely closed so firefighters could control the fire. The Ministry of the Interior through its official account on the site “Twitter” there is no casualties at the scene. It also announced the cutting off of traffic on the Crown Prince’s road towards Hamad City.

The representative of the “country” from the heart of the pipe fire in the village of Buri that a huge fire block devoured a group of cars parked off the village and Souq Waqif.

The delegate added that the civil defense mechanisms rushed to the scene of the incident from the area centered in the village of Damastan and began to block the flames of escalating fire and has been strengthened from the number of other centers.

Residents of the houses adjacent to the fire site were reported to have been evacuated.

Yet, one can’t help but wonder just how “quality” these pipelines are if they tend to not only explode on their own but burst in giant flaming fireballs. Of course, the alternative is that the explosion was not accidental, but what some would call a terrorist event, although the government of Bahrain, which houses the Naval Base for the US Fifth Fleet, would probably be the last to admit that is the case.

In light of recent dramatic tremors in the region, and following last week’s news that Bahrain’s finances are in dire straits, prompting the tiny nation to beg for a bailout from Saudi Arabia and the UAE, an act of terrorism certainly can not be discounted.

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Hindenburg Omen Sighted As Stocks Suffer First Weekly Loss In 2 Months

Credit markets to stocks this week…

 

Before we start – let's celebrate. As @BespokeInvest notes, we're making history today: first 12 month period in the history of the S&P 500 without a 3% drawdown. The VIX is also the lowest on record using a rolling 12 month average.

 

All major indices ended the week red. This is the Dow & S&P's first weekly loss in the last 9 weeks. Trannies were worst (worst weekly loss since July). Small Caps worst week since August.

 

This was VIX's biggest weekly rise in 3 months…

 

Russell 2000 VIX actually ended slightly lower with S&P VIX the biggest riser on the week…

 

Financials (green) were the week's worst performing sector, Utes (blue) and Retailers (black) outperformed…

 

On the week when the goivernment unveiled its tax plan, high tax stocks underperformed…

 

Bonds and Stocks fell on the week for the first time since June…

 

Which coincided with the worst drop in Ruisk-Parity funds since June…

 

All of which happens as a cluster of Hindebnburg Omens strikes…

 

Breadth in stocks remains weak…

HYG (High Yield Bond prices) tumbled most in 3 months…

 

High Yield continues to diverge from stocks…

 

VIX remains suppressed…

 

Treasuries sold off quite hard today – notable along with the equity weakness, suggesting Risk Parity problems – as the long-end underperformed, swinging the curve steeper…

 

The yield curve ended the week very marginally steeper after a v-shaped bounce midweek…

 

The Dollar Index fell for the first week in the last 4…

 

 

Crude was up for the 5th week in a row, copper lagged…

 

Gold and Bitcoin tumbled on the day…

 

One reason for the drop in Bitcoin is perhaps some wealth transfer from crypto to cash spending for Singles Day…

 

 

Gold was hit hard today a $4billion notional dump but remains higher on the week post-Saudi-chaos…

 

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Rupert Murdoch Reportedly Offered To Buy CNN

With the Murdoch family's push to buy out Sky News stalled in the UK as members of parliament raise concerns about his fitness for ownership given the myriad sexually harassment and abuse scandals at Fox News, it appears the Australian-born octogenarian TV mogul may be setting his sights on a new prize: CNN.

Following the revelation earlier this week that the DOJ was pushing Time Warner to sell off CNN as one of the conditions for its proposed acquisition by AT&T after President Donald Trump threatened to block the deal just to spite the "fake news" purveyor, Reuters is reporting that Rupert Murdoch telephoned AT&T Chief Executive Randall Stephenson twice in the last six months to talk about buying the cable news channel.

The DOJ later said that Time Warner offered to sell CNN if it would help the deal win approval, but regardless of who first proposed it, one thing is clear: it appears CNN, along with the rest of TW's broadcasting unit, is for sale. And with Murdoch gradually handing more and more power to his sons, James and Lachlan, an acquisition of CNN – which has benefited recently from a bump in ratings thanks in large part to Trump's campaign and presidency – would be a potentially legacy cementing achievement. An official told Reuters Thursday that the Justice Department staff have recommended that AT&T sell either its DirecTV unit or Time Warner’s Turner Broadcasting unit, which includes news company CNN, afor the deal to gain approval.

However, another source told Reuters that Murdoch has "zero" interest in CNN. AT&T agreed to buy Time Warner in October 2016. Stephenson also said he has no interest in selling CNN, and is ready to defend the deal in court, if necessary.

According to one of the sources on Friday, Murdoch called Stephenson twice unprompted on May 16 and Aug. 8 and on both occasions asked if CNN was for sale. Stephenson replied both times that it was not, according to the source.

Time Warner shares jumped 4% on the news.

 

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Sam Zell Is Stumped: “For Amazon’s Value To Be Justified, It Has To Be Worth 25% Of The US Economy In 5 Years”

When it comes to the last financial crisis, few timed the peak quite as well as Sam Zell, who sold his Equity Office Properties Trust, the largest office REIT, to Blackstone in 2007, literally days before the bottom fell out of the market. So, with Goldman dying to know when the next crash will take place, it is no surprise that it picked Zell as one of the people to ask. Unfortunately, Zell was unable to provide the much desired answer, and instead when Goldman’s Allison Nathan asked him “how much longer do you think the current economic expansion can last?” His answer was anticlimatic: “Frankly, I don’t have any idea. If I knew the answer to that, I would be rich. A year and a half ago, I said we were in the eighth or ninth inning of the expansion. But I think the election of Trump has changed that. There is more optimism in the business sector now, which has given us extra innings. So this expansion may last a little longer than everybody thinks.

(Indicatively, when Zell says he “would be rich”, it is unclear just what number he envisions besides “more”: his current net worth is $5 billion according to Forbes.)

What, according to Zell is the cause for this “business sector optimism”? Surprisingly, his answer – as has been the case for a while – is Donald Trump:

Allison Nathan: Has your initial optimism post the election waned given the challenges Trump has faced in making progress on his legislative agenda?

 

Sam Zell: No, just the opposite. Despite all of the public tweeting and noise surrounding our president, the reality is that the steps he’s taken on deregulation, reversing executive orders, and so forth are confidence-building and very positive. The possibility of changing Dodd-Frank to increase lending to small businesses, for example, could have a very big impact. And I think that’s why the economy is responding in the same positive manner as is the stock market.

 

Allison Nathan: If tax legislation doesn’t pass, would that make you more pessimistic?

 

Sam Zell: No. Expectations about tax reform have declined over the last eight to ten weeks and are now pretty limited. Originally, there was an assumption that a lot could get done. But that outcome assumed a lot more support both from within the Republican Party and from some lawmakers on the other side of the aisle, which has obviously not come to pass. That said, I think tax legislation will be passed and will definitely feature a reduction in the corporate tax rate, likely some adjustments on the taxation of repatriated income, and maybe some reduction in taxes for middle-to-low-income people. Beyond that, I don’t have much expectation for significant tax reform. And if it fails to pass, I think the opposition will be blamed, not Trump. In my view, Washington continues to be remarkably disconnected from the reality of what’s going on in most of the country, and that’s reflected in Congress’s inability to get things done.

Yet while unwilling to commit to a time frame for the next recession, Zell does discusses what catalysts would make him turn bearish.

Allison Nathan: You are famous for identifying the peaks and troughs of market cycles throughout your career.  What do you look for when you are determining whether we are near an inflection point?

 

Sam Zell: I tend to see those opportunities when day-to-day activities don’t make any sense to me. And there is probably nothing more relevant to seeing around the corner than assessing supply versus demand. For example, when I see people building office space without being able to identify the future tenants, as I do today, that is a warning sign that supply is engulfing demand. In general, we’re humans, and we tend to follow the pendulum to extremes. The more I see extreme imbalances between supply and demand, the more I become convinced that the opposite is correct. And when conventional wisdom becomes 100% bullish I usually close my checkbook

But his best response was to a question about the current valuation of FANG darlings such as Amazon. Asked if “there places today where you think we are at or near the top of the cycle and expect a sharp reversal?” His response was classic:

I can’t explain the valuation of the big tech companies, and can’t believe that we won’t see a significant correction there. For example, in order to justify the multiple that Amazon trades at today, the company would have to be worth 25% of the US economy five years from now. This situation is no different from the one in 1997, when I pointed out that Cisco’s multiple would only be justifiable if the company represented 25% of the US economy five years later. Obviously, that didn’t happen, and I don’t think it’s going to happen with today’s big tech companies, either. I’m also generally concerned about the size, scale, and influence of these companies, which I think is out of hand and dangerous to our overall society. Absolute power corrupts absolutely, and these companies are being set up to do exactly that.

* * *

Below we excerpt some additional thoughts from Zell’s Goldman interview:

  • Allison Nathan: What about on the fixed income side? Do valuations there concern you at all?

Sam Zell: Yes. Going back to my earlier comments on supply and demand, we’ve just come through quantitative easing in the US, and the European Central Bank is still buying and adding new money to the system. I look at all that and think there’s too much supply, so there’s got to be an adjustment.

  • Allison Nathan: You called the top of the commercial real estate (CRE) cycle in 2007. Many market observers view CRE as a source of risk today. Do you agree that such concern is warranted and, if so, how big of a risk might it pose to the economy?

Sam Zell: I don’t think substantial concern is warranted just yet. The level of activity in CRE is nothing like previous periods of massive expansion, like the one that took down the economy in the 1980s, for example. In fact, the Great Recession of the late 2000s was the first recession since World War II in which we didn’t have massive oversupply of CRE built or under construction heading into the downturn. And there was a period of three or four years after the start of the recovery with almost no new construction; we didn’t begin to see a significant amount of new supply until 2013. That said, as I mentioned earlier, I see some signs that CRE supply is overwhelming demand. If it keeps going at the current rate, I would become alarmed about the potential for another CRE crash. But I am not quite there yet.

  • Allison Nathan: There has been a lot of focus on retail property coming under pressure with the rise in online shopping. How concerned are you?

Sam Zell: Well, let’s start with a very simple fact: The United States has five square feet of retail space for every one square foot that anybody else has around the world. So we are starting with a significant over-allocation of space to retail. Then we bring in the internet. It makes up only about 8.5% of retail sales at this point, so we’re just talking about early stages. But those early stages are creating dramatic changes. Why would anybody go to the store to buy something that they can order online and have delivered the same day or the next day? The result is that the very best retailers and the small, corner strip mall centers are immune, but everything else is either obsolete or in grave danger. And the definition of “everything else” is a lot. So I think that the retail format and platform is going to change radically. And the net result is going to be the US needing a lot less retail space across the country than we currently have and previously felt was necessary.

  • Allison Nathan: You have substantial exposure to residential real estate, which, of course, was a key source of the Great Recession. What notable residential trends are you seeing today?

Sam Zell: For over 20 years prior to the Great Recession, the US built over a million single-family homes per year, leading to a massive oversupply. But that did not apply to multi-family units, or what I’d call rental property. Post the recession, the number of new single-family homes per year dropped as low as 500,000, and new mobile homes, which at the peak reached 350,000 per year, fell to 25,000. With the collapse in supply of new single-family homes, there was significant growth in the demand for multi-family units. That growth has continued, particularly as the definition of demand has changed. When we went public with Equity Residential in 1993, it was made up  of garden apartments in the suburbs. And the definition of quality was expressway frontage. Today, we own no garden apartments in the suburbs. All of them are high-rise apartments in central business districts. And the measure of quality is walking score (i.e., how far to the subway, to Starbucks, to the gym, etc.). These are pretty dramatic changes, many of which are driven by perhaps the greatest demographic change in the last 100 years: the deferral of marriage. I graduated college in 1963 and was married ten days later. So was everybody else. Today, the average male is getting married with a three in front of his age. And the average female is almost as old. That has enormous implications for demand and for society more generally.

  • Allison Nathan: If you take a step back, how do you rate the investment environment today?

Sam Zell: I rate the investment environment as certainly not good… and certainly not bad. The real issue is that the supply of capital is at a level that I’ve never seen before in my career. And that oversupply of capital is dramatically reducing the rewards that you get for investment. So whereas there are always opportunities, dislocations, and inefficiencies, the number of those opportunities is significantly lower than normal relative to the amounts of capital available today.

  • Allison Nathan: What do you make of the apparently large amount of “dry powder” in private equity today?

Sam Zell: To me, dry powder reflects the amount of fear in the market. I’d say there’s insufficient fear today, so there’s too much capital available—and thus too much dry powder to allocate towards a limited set of opportunities given generally high asset prices. If you change the fear factor, you could go from too much dry powder to no capital available in a relatively short period of time.

  • Allison Nathan: What would instill fear in the market?

Sam Zell: How about North Korea? How about Venezuela? How about Russia? How about the South China Sea? Want me to keep going?

  • Allison Nathan: But will markets ever respond in a significant way to these geopolitical risks?

Sam Zell: I don’t know the answer, but if North Korea fires an inter-continental ballistic missile at Guam, I think everybody’s perception of investment will change.

  • Allison Nathan: You mentioned that there are always investing opportunities. Where do you see the most compelling ones today?

Sam Zell: The most crowded areas are in technology, applications, “disruptions,” and all of the magic words that are driving people today. But the excitement over them doesn’t make them compelling. In many cases, I don’t think you’re getting paid for the risk involved—and the risk, by the way, may be unbridled competition. By contrast, I see opportunities in much more mundane areas. For example, we made a big investment this year in a trash-hauling business. We’re building waste-to-energy facilities. We’ve been buying refineries. We’re looking at agricultural investments. These are all assets that people value inappropriately, in my view. And, while perhaps less flashy than tech, that’s the kind of stuff that I’m always looking for.

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Podesta Group CEO Quits Weeks After Tony Podesta’s Sudden Departure

Content originally published at iBankCoin.com

Longtime Podesta Group CEO and former Jeb Bush staffer, Kimberly Fritts, is leaving the firm to start her own lobbying operation, three Podesta Group staffers told Politico.

Tony Podesta, who co-founded the Podesta Group with brother John Podesta, announced his resignation last Monday – hours after Paul Manafort and his deputy, Rick Gates, surrendered to the FBI in connection to Robert Mueller’s ongoing investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 election.

Tony Podesta’s name had become a scarlet letter,” a Podesta Group staffer told Politico, speaking on condition of anonymity, adding “I expect a lot of the top talent will go with her.

The Podesta Group had originally planned to reorganize under a different name under the direction of Fritts, however she announced her resignation during a Thursday staff meeting. Paul Brathwaite, a Podesta Group principal, said last week that he was leaving to start his own shop, Federal Street Strategies.

As Politico reported last week, the Podesta Group was “hustling to hang on to as many clients as possible,” amid two of the firm’s highest-paying clients, Oracle and Wells Fargo, jumping ship.

On the Fritts

Despite Fritts’s departure, her Podesta Group past may follow – as she is directly involved in the Russian influence scandal. Between 2012-2014, Fritts signed off on five FARA bi-annual supplemental statements which failed to disclose Tony Podesta and the Podesta Group’s use of a Ukrainian shell corporation to peddle Russian influence throughout Washington DC.

Fritts then retroactively filed a supplemental disclosure on April 12, 2017 that amended three years of omissions, which include the Podesta Group’s work with Paul Manafort and the Ukrainian shell corporation. (h/t MaryLander1109)

Deep Probe

Podesta and his now-disbanded firm are said to be a major focus in the Mueller investigation – with the DC lobbying shop identified as “Company B” in Manafort’s indictment.

As we reported two weeks agoa former longtime Podesta Group executive who was extensively interviewed by Mueller’s Special Counsel, told Fox’s Tucker Carlson that Paul Manafort and the Podesta Group had worked together since at least 2011 to peddle a “parade” of Russian oligarchs throughout DC.

Manafort, who was reportedly at the Podesta Group’s DC office “all the time, at least once a month,” worked with Tony Podesta through a shell group called the European Centre for a Modern Ukraine (ECMU).

The executive also reported that Russia’s “central effort” was the Obama Administration. In order to get closer to the Clinton State Department – John Podesta reportedly recommended Clinton’s chief adviser at State, David Adams, for a job with the Podesta Group – giving the lobbying firm a “direct liaison” between the group’s Russian clients and Hillary Clinton’s State Department.

Uranium One

The David Adams hire fits hand-in-glove with with the timing of the notorious Uranium One deal – which ultimately saw 20 percent of American uranium sold over a period of several years to the Kremlin, after over $140 million was donated by Uranium One interests to the Clinton Foundation.

As part of the approval process for the transaction, the nine-member Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS) – largely considered a joke – had to sign off. Curiously, internet researcher Katica uncovered documents obtained through a FOIA requiest which revealed FBI records retention requests to each member of the CFIUS who signed off on the Uranium One deal – weeks after the Clinton email investigation began.

“The committee almost never met, and when it deliberated it was usually at a fairly low bureaucratic level,” Richard Perle said. Perle, who has worked for the Reagan, Clinton and both Bush administrations added, “I think it’s a bit of a joke.” –CBS

Notably, the Podesta Group lobbied for Uranium One while failing to file as a foreign agent, with Tucker Carlson’s source revealing that Tony Podesta coordinated with a Clinton Foundation employee to discuss how to help the Russian-owned mining company.

Tony Podesta was basically part of the Clinton Foundation.” Former PG Exec

Bribes, Kickbacks and Art

In addition to hiding behind shady accounting, the Podesta Group had no board oversight, and all financial decisions were reportedly made by Tony Podesta, said Tucker Carlson’s source, who added that “payments and kickbacks could be hard for investigators to trace,” describing a “highly secret treasure trove” which could be used to conceal financial transactions – including Tony Podesta’s vast art collection.

 

All of this, according to Carlson’s source, while Kimberly Fritts filed bogus FARA reports on behalf of the Podesta Group. It will be interesting to see if she emerges from Mueller’s probe unscathed.

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China Accounts For A Third Of Global Corporate Debt And GDP… And The ECB Is Getting Very Worried

There is a certain, and very tangible, irony in the central banks’ response to the Global Financial Crisis, which was first and foremost the result of unprecedented amounts of debt: it was to unleash an even greater amount of debt, or as BofA’s credit strategist Barnaby Martin says, “the irony in today’s world is that central banks are maintaining loose monetary policies to generate inflation…in order to ease the pain of a debt “supercycle”…that itself was partly a result of too easy (and predictable) monetary policies in prior times.

The bolded sentence is all any sane, rational human being would need to know to understand the lunacy behind modern monetary policy and central banking. Unfortunately, it is not sane, rational people who are in charge of the money printer, but rather academics fully or part-owned, by Wall Street as Bernanke’s former mentor once admitted (see “Bernanke’s Former Advisor: “People Would Be Stunned To Know The Extent To Which The Fed Is Privately Owned“). Actually, when one considers where the Fed’s allegiance lies (to its owners), its actions make all the sense in the world. The problem, as Martin further explains, is that “clearly if central banks remain too patient and predictable over the next few years this risks extending the debt supercycle further.”

Translated: the bubble will get even bigger. Unfortunately, it is already too big. As Martin shows in chart 9 below, which breaks down global non-financial debt growth over the last 30yrs split by type (household debt, government debt and non-financial corporate debt), “it is currently hovering around the $150 trillion mark and has shown few signs of declining materially of late. Yet, the “delta” of debt growth over the last 10yrs has been on the non-financial corporate side. Government debt growth has slowed down recently as countries have clawed back to fiscal prudence. Households have also deleveraged over the last few years given their rapid debt accumulation prior to the Lehman event.”

A more detailed look at the debt breakdown, as usual, reveals something disturbing: in terms of non-financial corporate debt growth, note the influence of China (Chart 10). Post the Global Financial Crisis, China debt-financed a large increase in corporate sector investment as external demand slowed. Much of this was in the form of a construction boom, which drove overstocking in real estate and overcapacity in upstream industries. Chinese corporates also borrowed more than was necessary in order to boost their cash buffers.

As can be seen, China non-financial corporate debt growth expanded far in excess (Chart 13) of that for Chinese households and the government sector.

And while Chinese authorities have now acknowledged the worrying levels of corporate debt, with the outgoing head of the central bank himself warning about a Chinese “Minsky Moment”, the restraining of credit growth still appears to be quite selective (coal and steel industries, for example). Therefore, as Martin shows in Chart 11, Chinese non-financial corporate debt now accounts for around a third of global non-financial corporate debt!

To be sure, there is a reason why China has emerged as the world’s most prolific debt creator in the past decade.  Since 2005, China has contributed an unprecedented one-third of total global growth – more than the combined contribution of advanced economies.

Furthermore, China accounts for around 10% of global imports and while that partly reflects China’s important position in global value chains, for many trade partners a significant  proportion of value added depends on final demand in China, which means that if something terminal, or merely “bad” happens to China’s economy, it would likely lead to a global depression. Putting China’s growth demands in context, the world’s most populous nation is one of the world’s largest consumers and producers of many commodities, accounting for over half of  global copper, aluminium  and iron ore consumption, and a high proportion of global energy consumption.

Fundamentally, however, it’s all about China’s debt, whose broadest aggregate, Total Social Financing, which includes shadow debt as well, is now rapidly approaching 250% of China’s GDP. 

What is even more concerning, is that not even a record amount of debt is enough to let China’s economy grow at the rate it did just a few years ago. As the ECB discusses in a report released overnight, the state sector is playing an increasingly more important role through rapid infrastructure expansion by local governments. A sizeable part of the investment since the global financial crisis has been infrastructure investment mostly by local governments, which are forbidden from running budget deficits. And yet, in order to meet ambitious growth targets, they resorted various loopholes, including land sales and off-balance-sheet funding through local government financing vehicles, which borrowed through bond issues and bank loans. Factoring such finance into calculations of an “augmented deficit” suggests that in recent years the stimulus provided by government has been significantly larger than that shown by official deficit figures. This means that not only is all the talk of moderating stimulus total bunk, but China has never stimulated its economy as much as it does now!

All of the above (and much more) is why the European Central Bank issued a paper looking at not only the latent risks in the Chinese economy, but warning that the euro area is at “significant” risk of a sharp readjustment of China’s economy. According to the ECB, a swift rebalancing of the world’s largest exporter would slow the currency bloc’s economic expansion by about 0.3 percentage points. And while Bloomberg adds that this may not be much in the face of growth expected to top 2% this year and the next, it’s based on the assumption that the shockwaves of such an event across the world’s economy would be limited. Taking into account larger effects on trade, foreign exchange and global financial markets, the slowdown would amount to 1.2% points.

It gets worse.

An “abrupt adjustment” – i.e. a hard landing” – in China, with GDP shrinking 9% points through 2020 on the back of a sharp financial tightening – would slow euro-area growth by 1.5% points even under the more conservative assumptions. In reality, due to the global credit crunch that would ensue, it is safe to assume that Europe would fall into an instant depression when, not if, China undergoes an “abrupt adjustment.”

That said, this being the ECB, which famously told Zero Hedge it did not have a “Plan B” for a Grexit (until it was revealed several years later that it, in fact, did and lied to us), these pessimistic outcomes are not the ECB’s baseline. Instead, the central expectation of the traditionally jolly central bank, with an unpleasant habit of buying far more bonds than are being issued, is for a limited rebalancing with gradual reforms and, consequently, continuously slowing growth. And while there are risks, especially in the financial sector, China has ample “policy space” to counter a slowdown, thanks to its vast reserves and current account surplus, the ECB said.

That said, the ECB’s conclusion is troubling: “China has been the economic success story of the past four decades, but economic growth has been slowing and vulnerabilities are increasing… Spillovers to the euro area would be limited in the case of a modest slowdown in China’s GDP growth, but significant in the case of a sharp adjustment.”

Actually, in case of a “sharp adjustment”, one can kiss the past 10 year “recovery” not just in Europe but across the entire world. Which is why to all those who are confused what is the most important catalyst for the next economic and financial crash, the answer was, is and remains the same.

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OPEC’s War Against Shale Is Far From Over

Authored by Gregory Brew via OilPrice.com,

Despite the recent market rally and current bullish streak in oil prices, the years-long competition for market share between OPEC and U.S. shale producers shows no sign of abating, and will likely continue for the next several years at least.

That was OPEC’s conclusion in the group’s World Oil Outlook released this week. OPEC believes U.S. shale production will grow faster than previously expected, reaching 7.5 million bpd by 2021, an increase of 56 percent from the group’s estimate last year.

According to OPEC calculations, current shale production in North America is approximately 5.1 million bpd—an increase of 25 percent from a year ago.

Despite low prices, shale has shown remarkable resilience and an ability to bounce back from downturns.

OPEC expects shale to finally taper off by 2025 and decline by 2030, by which point OPEC will have increased output by eight million bpd, from 33 million bpd to 41.4 million bpd.

By 2021, oil demand will increase by 2.3 million bpd, a fairly bullish projection. OPEC expects fierce competition with North American shale producers for market share, particularly when regulations on shipping fuel take effect in 2020, increasing refinery demand for fuels that shale producers will be well-positioned to provide. Related: The U.S. Export Boom Goes Beyond Crude

Total U.S. production will increase by 3.8 million bpd by 2022, chiefly on the back of increased shale output, equal to seventy-five percent of production growth outside the fourteen members of OPEC.

That growth will be front-loaded, says OPEC, as drillers seek out new fields and aggressively exploit current shale deposits. Yet OPEC admitted that shale will capture more market share in the short term, likely out-competing OPEC output. The group will probably commit to an extension of production cuts when it meets on November 30, and those cuts could extend to the end of 2018 and beyond, in order to raise prices.

But no one is tying the hands of shale producers, who are free to pump as much as they want. Higher prices are a powerful incentive for output to increase, with inventories rising unexpectedly this week by 2.1 million barrels after steady declines for the last two months. U.S. production, according to the EIA, rose by 67,000 bpd in the first week of November, rising to 9.62 million bpd.

Shale looked like it was slumping earlier this year. The rig count has steadily fallen since August, despite the increase in prices. Total production peaked in mid-2015 and then experienced a steady decline to August 2017.

 A sudden increase could be possible if prices fix above $60, as many now predict, but it could take some time to translate into higher production.

OPEC is leaving the door open if it extends cuts—a tactical move that its leadership probably knows will cost it market share in the near term. Yet not everyone thinks the extension is a done deal. The head of Citigroup Inc. noted that hedge funds are banking on an extension before it becomes a reality. If tight market conditions emerge in 2018, Citigroup thinks U.S. shale will surge again, cutting back the balance put in place by the OPEC cuts. While the OPEC cuts are likely to be extended, Citigroup doesn’t see them lasting through to the end of 2018.

In advance of the OPEC meeting, expectations about a “fair” might have to change. A year ago, most OPEC producers would have been happy with $50, but now the expectation is that Brent will hit $70 by the end of the year. For OPEC states that have struggled for the last few years with budget deficits, the promise of higher prices is an immense temptation to cheat on their production quotas and break compliance with the cuts.

OPEC greed, increasing shale output and lower-than-expected growth could cause the price to fall again sooner rather than later. Then again, a sudden spike in geopolitical volatility in the Middle East or Venezuela could reduce output and tighten markets sooner than expected.

OPEC anticipates a fierce battle ahead with U.S. shale. Nevertheless, the group has much to be thankful for, as prices have recovered and markets appear to rebalance. Despite Citigroup’s skepticism, it’s likely OPEC leaders will soon agree on a further extension of cuts. While this could leave the door open to another surge in shale production, OPEC appears confident that, in time, the threat from shale will recede.

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You Won’t Believe The Nerve of These Three Government Officials

Via The Daily Bell

The problem with government is it elevates people to positions of power over their fellow citizens. And all too often, these people take advantage of their status.

You Get The Prosecutors You Pay For

When you’re in power, the rules don’t really apply to you. I mean, sure, officially you still have to follow the law. But what happens when a politician is in a position to change the rules?

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton has found an interesting way to fight charges of securities fraud. His lawyers are attempting to limit how much prosecutors can be paid. As Attorney General, Paxton is in a unique position to defang the prosecutors attempting to hold him accountable for illegal activity.

States typically have the power to pay prosecutors more for tough high profile cases. But the Attorney General has used this as an opportunity to try to limit the pay for prosecutors. He says it is to make sure the government doesn’t take advantage of their power to gouge taxpayers.

A helpful side effect is that the prosecutors might drop off his case if they are limited to what they can earn.

This move has threatened the ability of the state to attract qualified prosecutors for tough cases, like prosecuting the attorney general. Classic conflicts of interest inherent in government.

Police Get a Little Overzealous

As much as police need to be held accountable, they also need to protect themselves. One cop saw his partner being attacked by a man with a knife. The guy even got a couple stabs in. Clearly, the police officer was completely justified in shooting the man.

He shot him nine times, and the man was down. But he was still moving. At this point, procedure says an officer should stop with the deadly force. But the officer instead shot the man nine more times, later justifying it by saying he was still moving.

Then the cop, according to court documents, took a running start and stomped on the man’s head, three times.

So again, completely justified to use deadly force on a knife-wielding man attacking your partner. Not justified to shoot him an additional nine times after he was down, and then stomp on his head, for some reason.

It really just seems like this cop was waiting for an opportunity to go Rambo on someone. And that is a scary person to have out there on the streets enforcing the law.

At least the appeals court will allow the dead man’s family to sue for excessive force. Too often police are given sovereign immunity and cannot be held civilly accountable for their actions on the job.

Legal Consequences For Lying About Service

A police officer and former military member was dealt a double blow. A court affirmed that he cannot sue a news station over defamation. At the same time, he was found guilty of fraud to obtain government benefits.

He wanted to sue because the news said he lied about receiving a Purple Heart. The only problem was, the news was telling the truth. But not only had he lied about receiving a Purple Heart, he also used the lied to get a special license plate that allowed him to avoid certain taxes.

And that’s when it became a criminal case. While he was tied up in court trying to sue over defamation, he was charged and convicted of fraud for lying about his military service to receive government benefits.

This is a case of stolen valor, and being convicted by his own big mouth.

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Goldman’s Top Strategist Reveals The Two Biggest Risks To The Market Today

The past few months have been a very nervous time at Goldman Sachs, and not just because Gary Cohn wasn’t picked to replace Janet Yellen as next Fed chair.

Back in September, Goldman strategist Peter Oppenheimer wrote that the bank’s Bear Market Risk Indicator had recently shot up to 67%, prompting Goldman to ask, rhetorically, “should we be worried now?” The simple answer, as shown in the chart below, is a resounding yes because the last two times Goldman’s bear market risk indicator was here, was just before the dot com bubble and just before the global financial crisis of 2008.

 

One month later, and a decade after Black Monday, it was Goldman’s clients’ turn to be nervous. As chief equity strategist David Kostin  wrote in his Weekly Kickstart report, “In the ninth year of economic expansion, with S&P 500 up 15% YTD, the most common question from clients is, “When will the rally end?” He was referring to the chart below which he prefaced thus:

Thursday marked the 30-year anniversary of Black Monday. On October 19, 1987, the S&P 500 plunged by 22%, its worst single-day return on record. Following the decline in global equity markets, it took the S&P 500 a full year (October 20, 1988) to regain its pre-crash level. This week also marked 20 months since the last 10% S&P 500 correction and 16 months since the last 5% drawdown. This ranks as the fourth longest streak in history (behind 17-19 months in 1965, 1994, and 1996) and at 332 trading days is well above the historical average of 92 days. In the ninth year of economic expansion, with S&P 500 up 15% YTD, the most common question from clients is, “When will the rally end?”

Fast forward to today, when Goldman has dedicated its entire Top of Mind periodical by Allison Nathan to just one question: “how late are we in the business cycle”, and when does it end.  As Nathan writes, “more than eight years into the US economic expansion, there are few signs that it will end anytime soon. But with US equity indices at record-highs, 10-year Treasury yields only moderately off their lows, and valuations for both looking stretched, whether “no recession” also means “no correction” is Top of Mind.” To answer the question, she polls the opinions of Omega Advisors Vice Chairman Steve Einhorn, Sam Zell, and various of Goldman’s own strategists.

All agree that recession risk is low today and unlikely to move substantially higher before late 2019 or 2020. But they disagree on the amount of market risk today—and what to do about it.

As for Goldman’s own view, which we discussed last week in why “Goldman’s Clients Are Becoming Increasingly Schizophrenic“, the taxpayer-backed hedge fund advises clients “to stay invested rather than try to time the next equity downturn,” even though as Goldman itself admits, valuations have never been higher and the Fed’s tightening process introduces a major risk factor to the complacency of the status quo. 

And while there are several truly informative interviews in the report, the one we found most striking was that with Goldman’s Charlie Himmelberg, whose official title is Co-Chief Markets Economist at Goldman Sachs and, due to his focus on credit instead of equity, is widely seen as Goldman’s top strategist. Among the topics he covers are the following:

  • Where are we in the US business cycle today
  • Can the bull market can continue
  • Is the business cycle and the market cycle the same thing
  • Where are the vulnerabilities today
  • Do stretched valuations necessarily imply that we are heading towards a market correction
  • Would a major correction would play out differently in this cycle than in the last one
  • What should investors own today

But the most interesting discussion was what Himmelberg believes are the biggest risks to the market today. His answer is below:

Allison Nathan: So what do you see as the biggest risks to the market today?

 

I would focus on two. One is the withdrawal of quantitative easing (QE). In principle, it should be a non-issue. But I see good reasons to be worried, which are rooted in the psychology of markets. From my recent discussions  with investor clients in both Europe and the US, it’s clear that most market participants give QE a lot of credit for the current level of bond and equity valuations. Unless that QE narrative can be replaced with something else, I see a risk that withdrawing QE will significantly reduce investors’ willingness to own the market. So far, the Fed has deftly managed the unwinding of QE, with no major market impact. But other QE programs around the world have to unwind at some point. So I do think there is quite a bit of risk—not in the year ahead but over the next several years—that markets will struggle to reconcile stretched valuations with reduced support from central banks.

 

The other risk I worry about is the possibility of a downturn in corporate profitability despite the continued economic expansion. That’s actually a fairly typical late-cycle pattern. Profit margins tend to fall much sooner than GDP growth, partly because the labor market puts pressure on wages at a time when companies don’t have as much pricing power, and have already exhausted the productivity gains from redeploying spare capacity. Given that we expect the unemployment rate to fall to 3.8%—with risks skewed to the downside—I think the pace of wage growth only picks up  speed from here. And it isn’t obvious to me that companies can offset that. In addition to the usual competitive considerations, price inflation has been weak, and—again—stable inflation expectations have likely weighed on pricing power. So I have much higher conviction in wage inflation gaining traction in a tight labor market than in price inflation picking up in a world with such well-anchored expectations. So unless you’re quite optimistic about productivity gains to offset that wage growth, it’s hard to feel optimistic about the risks to profit margins over the next year.

 

Allison Nathan: These both look like longer-run risks to watch. What are you worried about nearer-term?

 

Charlie Himmelberg: If you told me six months from now that the market had sold off by 15%, I would say it was probably due to a shift in market psychology (like an over-reaction to the failure of tax reform or the end of QE) or some sort of marketglitch (like the 1987 crash). Market structure is very different today given the changes to broker-dealer balance sheet capacity since the financial crisis. We’ve also seen a growing allocation of retail and institutional money into “premium chasing” quant strategies, including, for example, ETFs that sell equity vol. I think many of these developments are positive, but the associated market structure remains largely untested. So I would not rule out the risk of a glitch that triggers, say, a 5-10% correction.

Want more? Below we excerpt the full interview with Charlie Himmelberg, Co-Chief Markets Economist at Goldman Sachs.

Allison Nathan: Where are we in the US business cycle today?

 

Charlie Himmelberg: There are many ways to date an economic expansion. Chronologically, the US economy is clearly late in the cycle. But when it comes to identifying the types of imbalances that could signal the end of the  expansion, we seem to be coming up short. The labor market has arguably tightened beyond the level of full employment, but imbalances there still seem mild. And it’s hard to pinpoint any areas of excessive or unsustainable credit growth like what we saw in the last cycle. The household sector has actually been deleveraging in this expansion. Given that we’re in such a low-rate environment, this means that the debt burden on households is remarkably low today. In the corporate sector, while there has been significant re-leveraging, companies have been able to finance themselves at extremely low rates, and lock in those rates at long maturities. So even though we should be mindful of today’s high corporate leverage ratios, it’s hard to see how a slowdown in corporate credit creation would bring an end to this expansion, either. Finally, any fiscal headwinds that we might expect from deleveraging in the public sector are probably more behind us than they are ahead of us, especially if tax reform provides some tailwinds. This lack of imbalances suggests to me that the expansion has more room to run.

 

That said, what may be even more important to the longevity of the current cycle—and may not be as appreciated by investors—is the extent to which inflation expectations are anchored. This significantly reduces the risk that Fed actions pose to the expansion. More often than not, at least in postwar history, recessions were preceded by monetary tightening. That’s arguably because central banks did not always have the luxury of well-anchored inflation expectations. If you think back to the Volcker era, for example, central banks weren’t just fighting cyclical inflation; they were fighting the movement of inflation expectations. And once those inflation expectations get built up, it typically takes a tremendous amount of economic pain to bring them back down. As a result, policymakers have historically been inclined to hike out of the mere fear of inflation, which raises the risk of stopping an expansion prematurely.

 

But today, well-anchored inflation expectations allow the Fed to move gradually and test whether we are actually at an inflationary point of capacity utilization. We may be forecasting more Fed hikes than the market is pricing, but we expect them to happen at roughly half the pace of past hiking cycles. It therefore seems much less likely this time around that the Fed will precipitate a recession.

 

Allison Nathan: Does that imply that the bull market can continue? Should we think about the business cycle and the market cycle as one and the same?

 

Charlie Himmelberg: Not quite. There has been a pretty close correlation over the last 50-60 years between the stock market and the real economy. The stock market tends to lead the business cycle by about eight months on average. But at the same time, asset markets experience a lot of volatility that doesn’t always signal an impending economic slowdown. As the economist Paul Samuelson liked to say, the stock market has forecasted “nine of the last five recessions.” My view is that the conditions today are actually pretty ripe for a market correction, but not a recession. Again, it’s very hard to tell a story where the real economy rolls over. It’s easier to tell a story where the market cracks on some other catalyst. 

 

Allison Nathan: Where do you see vulnerabilities today?

 

Charlie Himmelberg: Equity and bond market valuations look extreme by any metric. While there are some good fundamental reasons for that, it’s hard not to worry that the risk premium in risky assets has fallen to unsustainable levels.

 

Allison Nathan: But on the equity side, aren’t valuations justified by low interest rates?

 

Charlie Himmelberg: That is a common refrain, but the devil is in the details. Much of the decline in long-term rates is due to factors that have nothing to do with how one should value future dividends for equities. I would argue that the single biggest reason for the decline in ten-year bond yields over the last 30 years is the decline in inflation. Since the early 1980s, estimates of the term premium have declined roughly five percentage points, which is tied not only to the lower levels of inflation, but also to the lower risk of inflation. In theory, these factors should play no role in the discounting of dividends for equities. Adjusted for these factors, rates have not declined by nearly as much as ten-year bond yields. That means that the equity risk premium has not fallen nearly as much as the decline in 10-year yields would seem to imply. So in my view, the equity market can’t use the decline in bond yields as justification for current valuations; valuations are just high.

 

Allison Nathan: Do stretched valuations necessarily imply that we are heading towards a market correction?

 

Charlie Himmelberg: No. That’s the tricky part—the pain trade, so to speak. If you look historically at the effects of high valuations on tactical returns, say, one or two years ahead, it’s surprisingly difficult to get bearish readings off of valuations. Now, over a longer horizon, the current level of equity valuations does imply very low expected returns. In fact, by my estimates, they imply expected returns on the order of zero over the next five years. That is obviously far below historical averages, suggesting that at some point in the next five years, we are indeed going to see some kind of correction. But how much edge do valuations give you in predicting the timing of that correction? Statistically, the answer is disappointingly little.

 

Allison Nathan: So what do you see as the biggest risks to the market today?

 

Charlie Himmelberg: I would focus on two. One is the withdrawal of quantitative easing (QE). In principle, it should be a non-issue. But I see good reasons to be worried, which are rooted in the psychology of markets. From my recent discussions with investor clients in both Europe and the US, it’s clear that most market participants give QE a lot of credit for the current level of bond and equity valuations. Unless that QE narrative can be replaced with something else, I see a risk that withdrawing QE will significantly reduce investors’ willingness to own the market. So far, the Fed has deftly managed the unwinding of QE, with no major market impact. But other QE programs around the world have to unwind at some point. So I do think there is quite a bit of risk—not in the year ahead but over the next several years—that markets will struggle to reconcile stretched valuations with reduced support from central banks.

 

The other risk I worry about is the possibility of a downturn in corporate profitability despite the continued economic expansion. That’s actually a fairly typical late-cycle pattern. Profit margins tend to fall much sooner than GDP growth, partly because the labor market puts pressure on wages at a time when companies don’t have as much pricing power, and have already exhausted the productivity gains from redeploying spare capacity. Given that we expect the unemployment rate to fall to 3.8%—with risks skewed to the downside—I think the pace of wage growth only picks up speed from here. And it isn’t obvious to me that companies can offset that. In addition to the usual competitive considerations, price inflation has been weak, and—again—stable inflation expectations have likely weighed on pricing power. So I have much higher conviction in wage inflation gaining traction in a tight labor market than in price inflation picking up in a world with such well-anchored expectations. So unless you’re quite optimistic about productivity gains to offset that wage growth, it’s hard to feel optimistic about the risks to profit margins over the next year.

 

Allison Nathan: These both look like longer-run risks to watch. What are you worried about nearer-term?

 

Charlie Himmelberg: If you told me six months from now that the market had sold off by 15%, I would say it was probably due to a shift in market psychology (like an over-reaction to the failure of tax reform or the end of QE) or some sort of market glitch (like the 1987 crash). Market structure is very different today given the changes to broker-dealer balance sheet capacity since the financial crisis. We’ve also seen a growing allocation of retail and institutional money into “premium chasing” quant strategies, including, for example, ETFs that sell equity vol. I think many of these developments are positive, but the associated market structure remains largely untested. So I would not rule out the risk of a glitch that triggers, say, a 5-10% correction.

 

Allison Nathan: Do you think a major correction would play out differently in this cycle than in the last one?

 

Charlie Himmelberg: Yes, because the search for yield in the current cycle has evolved differently. In the run-up to the last crisis, the search for yield went off the tracks by applying high leverage to structures that featured some pretty dramatic mismatches between maturity and liquidity. When that came apart, it resulted in forced liquidations and a downward spiral in prices. In the current expansion, the search for yield has probably been at least as intense, but I think the lessons learned in the crisis have discouraged a repeat of these mistakes. Instead, I think illiquidity is the new leverage. With so much competition for assets at increasingly high prices, many investors—especially long-duration investors like insurers and pensions—seem to be putting as much of their portfolio as possible into illiquid assets. That includes private equity, private debt, direct lending, and commercial real estate (CRE), among others. You can see this shift in the differential between the rate of return on CRE and real yields on Treasuries, which is closing in on 30-year lows. So the premium required to sacrifice liquidity has compressed.

 

The silver lining is that not only have investors deployed far less leverage than in the last cycle; in many cases, they’re also sitting on a lot more cash. So if a market dip reaches fairly sizeable levels—say, 10% or 15%—there is money on the sidelines that could step in to seize those opportunities. So there is limited leverage to fuel a fire, and maybe even a little water to help douse the flames.

 

Allison Nathan: Given everything we have discussed, what should investors own today?

 

Charlie Himmelberg: Investors will have to strike a difficult balance. On the one hand, this recovery can probably power through 2018 and even a couple of years beyond that. Even if investors knew with perfect foresight that a recession would start in two years’ time, history suggests they would want to stay fully invested; the year prior to a recession has historically been the best year to own equities, and it has not made sense to rotate out of them until the recession was practically upon us. That said, it’s hard not to want to be defensive, given where current valuations are.

 

I would describe my own view as “reluctantly bullish,” which in practice means I’m bullish on economic growth, but cautious on valuations. So, for example, if you want to own equities today, I think you want to own “growth betas,” like global industrials. I think it also means you want to own emerging market equities, many of which are further behind in the cycle, and companies in developed markets that can keep up rapid sales growth. I also think that 10-year Treasury yields in the mid-2% range are not as over-valued as many assume, since growth risks skew toward recession beyond the next one to two years. If we do find ourselves in a recession, markets will know that policy rates are going back to zero, in which case duration should provide a valuable hedge to risk portfolios.

Finally, here is a chart from Goldman that puts over 160 years of the US business cycle, including booms and busts in context:

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De-FANGed: Five Ways The Disrupters Could Be Disrupted

We highlighted the launch of the ICE FANG futures contract earlier this week (here) and what an auspicious moment it was for the launch.

The argument put forward by our guest author, Kevin Muir via The Macro Tourist blog, was that it is possible to be “bearish on the FANG stocks, but not be some perma-bear who thinks the world is about to collapse”. As Muir explained.

The reality of today’s limited alpha market is that when an investing theme gets some legs, it often becomes overdone and prone to disappointment. I have written about how, all too often, this results in a series of rolling mini-bubbles. There is nothing wrong with observing that the new era tech stocks are stupidly overbought, and that the risks are to the downside in the coming months. You can be bearish on FANG without thinking all stocks are going to zero…This new FANG contract offers some great opportunities to short the speculative names that have been the source of such over-exuberance, while maybe hedging it with a long position in the S&P 500 futures contract.

Muir commented wryly that now he would be able to get in as much trouble as high-profile bear, David Eeinhorn of Greenlight Capital by buying “old economy stocks and shorting the new tech darlings.” Another investor, with more than one gray hair of experience, has penned a thoughtful bearish piece on the FANGs in recent days, this time Neil Dwayne of Allianz Global Investors. Dwane’s piece is titled “De-FANGed: 5 Ways the Disrupters Could be Disrupted.” Dwane begins by noting that while consumers love the services they provide, the regulators are taking an increasingly close look at their anti-competitive practices.

Just as the growth, earnings and cash generation of these Big Tech names have soared, so has their impact on economies and consumers, who are wowed by the services, price transparency and convenience they provide. As a result, there has until recently been little public pressure to challenge the dominance of these firms, which some critics liken to near-monopoly status. Yet these powerful companies are attracting greater scrutiny from regulators:

 

  • In June 2017, European Union antitrust regulators fined Google EUR 2.4 billion for unfairly manipulating search results to benefit its own shopping platform.
  • In October 2017, the European Commission levied a EUR 250 million fine against Amazon for receiving illegal state aid from Luxembourg.
  • As the US government probes Russia’s alleged influence on US elections, it is asking hard questions about Facebook and Google’s roles in selling advertising and allowing “fake news” to proliferate.
  • In May 2018, the European Union will implement a robust set of requirements – the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) – aimed at guarding personal information and reshaping how organizations approach data privacy. This will affect not only the FANG stocks, but any company with a digital presence in the EU.

Pointing out that government regulators appear to be increasingly focused on reining back the dominance of these companies, Dwane asks whether these “masters of high-tech disruption” are about to find themselves disrupted. Dwane finds that it may not only be regulators which could reverse the seemingly never-ending rise in market capitalisation of these stocks. He outlines five ways in which the disrupters could be disrupted, beginning with the critical, for some of these companies, and potentially vulnerable issue of online advertising.

1. Digital advertising comes under pressure

“Bots” and automatic algorithms have completely transformed the realm of digital advertising and brought in billions of dollars in revenue for Facebook and Google. Yet an old adage still rings true today – “half the money I spend on advertising is wasted; the trouble is, I don't know which half”. If doubts about ad-sales effectiveness and practices grow, they could undermine social media business models and the profitability of the FANGs.

  • Some firms may be overstating the reach and effectiveness of their technologies. One mega-cap US consumer-goods company recently made headlines when it slashed its online ad spending, citing “largely ineffective” digital ads.
  • On the other hand, some of these ad-sales platforms may work too well, bringing into question the professed “platform neutrality” of some Big Tech companies. Amid growing concerns about Russia’s role in recent US elections, Facebook recently bought its own high-profile ads to detail how it is “protecting our community from election interference” – a clear response to calls for them to police their network.

 

2. “Free” content dilutes brand loyalty and bottom lines
Even though social media has become part of our daily lives, how much brand loyalty does it inspire? Surveys show that use of social media would drop if consumers had to pay for access – or they would migrate to other “free” services. This has implications for corporate longevity. Some may not endure in the same way as companies in more traditional industries once did with similar size and scale.

 

For its part, Google has recently announced it is dumping its “first-click-free” news policy, which had forced media companies to offer some free content or see their search-engine rankings plummet. This can be seen as a way of helping to support digital subscriptions – and therefore funding – for news providers. Google may also hope this heads off more onerous regulations by positioning them as good corporate citizens, and by reinforcing their stance that they are not a media company.

 

3. Unused cash grows costly
The FANGs remain extremely profitable, yet much of the cash they generate languishes on balance sheets. The result is billions of dollars left unused, un-returned to shareholders and unable to boost economic growth – and in many cases untaxed as well. This is growing increasingly frustrating for almost everyone but the cash-rich companies themselves. Unfortunately, there may not be much shareholders can do about it – the “founder’s stock” structure used at some firms does not always create an environment of good corporate governance – though active investors can try to effect change. Regulators have more power, however, and they are clearly looking for ways to claw back some of this cash.

 

4. Regulators crack down on data privacy
Big data, predictive algorithms and artificial intelligence all rely on one thing: collecting and analysing information. However, when the data in question come from the lives and habits of private citizens, shouldn’t they be able to influence how the data are used? Regulators in Europe agree. The EU’s new GDPR will give citizens more insight into and control of their digital information – and it will give regulators a potent new weapon against companies that don’t act in consumers’ best interest. While rules that are overly stringent could limit the benefits of technological innovations, the GDPR could also increase consumers’ trust in digital services and create a level playing field for companies that responsibly monetize consumers’ data.

 

5. Political pressure leads to new “duty of care” requirement
As a global producer of content that leverages it against advertising to drive growth, Facebook has effectively become a media company – yet critics suggest that it seeks to leverage its success as a global influencer without the responsibility that comes with it. This privilege may disappear if the US government imposes on Facebook and other social media platforms the kind of “duty of care” requirement that many old-world media companies have been facing for many years. This would force some Big Tech firms to engage in the kind of onerous editorial and legal responsibilities that already impair their current competitors – ironically disrupting their own disruption and potentially adding to their cost bases.

Dwane’s conclusion, which we lay out below, is that the growing regulation of these companies alone will bring their heyday – in stock market terms anyway – to an end. In contrast, he sees a better outlook for China’s version of the FANGs…the BATs (Baidu, Alibaba and Tencent).

Western governments have for the most part been happy to let Silicon Valley oversee itself, but it is clear that this grace period may be closing – especially in Europe. In addition to some of the new rules and pressures outlined above, we expect the playing field to be levelled further:

  • The EU has launched a growing assault against US tech companies to ensure they pay their fair share of tax to society; it will soon announce a new plan that addresses cross-border sales tax rules.
  • The US government has room to manoeuvre. Historically, concentrated power similar to that wielded by today’s Big Tech firms has led to government intervention – witness the breakup of the US telecom monopoly in the 1980s or US government actions against Microsoft in the 1990s.
  • As the US Congress continues to probe Facebook and Google’s role in allegedly helping Russia influence US elections, it could fuel a growing backlash about issues ranging from political advertising to online privacy.

It is growing increasingly possible that these regulatory pressures could soon begin to limit the almighty FANGs’ reach in the US and Europe – rich but small markets compared with the opportunities facing China’s BATs (Baidu, Alibaba and Tencent). These firms are in many ways the Chinese equivalents of the FANGs, yet as of now, the BATs aren’t facing the same level of increasing regulatory scrutiny as their FANG counterparts. With less-onerous oversight and a larger opportunity set in their own neighbourhoods – populations in Asia are exponentially bigger – one could make the case that the BATs may fly further than the FANGs.

Whether Dwane’s arguments will prove to be just another premature obituary in the performance of the awesome FANGs, time will tell. Left to their own devices, there seems to be no stopping them. The things is, there’s something that governments value above all else, control. Perhaps the real question is just how close to the deep state (s) are some of these companies already? For now, however, any dips in these stocks are reversing quickly…as we saw again yesterday.

 

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