“It’s An Utter Mess” – Paul Craig Roberts Warns The Biggest Danger To Stocks Is The Dollar

Authored by Greg Hunter via USAWatchdog.com,

Former Assistant Treasury Secretary in the Reagan Administration, Dr. Paul Craig Roberts, says the record highs you see in the stock markets are based on “phony profits” that come from global central banks “propping up” the financial system.

Roberts says,

“Any of these central banks are really only there for a handful of big banks. That’s all they are concerned with.

 

All the Federal Reserve has been concerned with for the last decade is the welfare of a handful of mega banks. Of course, the banks are too large. They should have never been allowed to get that large. When you have a bank too big to fail, then your policy has failed.

 

You’ve allowed too much concentration. Where is anti-trust? Where is the Sherman Act?

 

Everything that was legislated in the past to prevent the kind of looming catastrophe that is hanging over our heads, this looming catastrophe is produced by central banks. They are perpetuating it because they don’t know how to get out of it.”

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has just warned on the profitability of nine huge global banks. Some say they equal nine possible Lehman Brothers, which was the financial institution that started the 2008 meltdown.

Is the IMF terrified of the slightest correction in the markets? Dr. Roberts says,

“I think so, yes, because it’s not based on reality. It’s based on massive liquidity. So, it’s full of all kinds of dangers.”

The biggest danger to Dr. Roberts, who has a PhD in economics, is the U.S. dollar.

Dr. Roberts contends,

“It seems to me that the only thing that would cause the Federal Reserve to stop the liquidity would be if the U.S. dollar fell under attack.

 

If for some reason people said, hey, we don’t want the dollar anymore, and they started moving out of dollars into other currencies or into something else, if they cease to hold assets in dollars, if that happened, the Fed would have to try to raise interest rates to support the dollar.

 

Then you could see that everything could come apart. If the interest rates would go up, there would be all kinds of derivatives that would not be sustainable. The stock market would collapse. It would be a mess. It would be an utter mess. That’s what the IMF is worried about. It’s a messy situation. How do you get out of it?”

How does Dr. Roberts say people should protect themselves? Dr. Roberts says, “I would not be in debt.”

via http://ift.tt/2x6lZut Tyler Durden

Catalan Leader Vows To Declare Independence If Spain Triggers “Nuclear Option”

The Spanish government crackdown on Catalan separatists has intensified this week, with a judge jailing two of the movements leaders and the country’s constitutional court officially declaring the region’s Oct. 1 referendum to be illegal. However, after confusing the Spanish government with his independence (non) declaration, regional leader Carles Puigdemont is refusing to back down ahead of tomorrow’s second, and final, Spanish ultimatum.

According to Reuters, Puigdemont told a meeting of his party on Wednesday he would formally declare independence Thursday morning if Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy follows through with his threat to invoke the so-called “nuclear option” of Article 155 of the Spanish Constitution, and suspend Catalonia’s regional autonomy – a decision that would likely lead to the arrest of Puigdemont and his government, followed by another violent crackdown on separatists.

Madrid has set a second and final deadline of 10 am local time Thursday for the Catalonian government to recant and officially revoke its symbolic declaration of independence, which Puigdemont suspended last week while hoping to negotiate with the Spanish government, Reuters reported.

Puigdemont has urged the European Union to mediate between Barcelona and Madrid, but EU member states have so far been reluctant to intervene, while Madrid has refused to even engage in any diplomatic contact.  In what some interpreted as an attempt to stall until international concern intensified, Puigdemont delivered a confusing speech in which he neglected to clearly explain his government’s planned course of action, and also refused to clarify whether his government had in fact declared independence, a strategy he employed again on Monday when Barcelona blew through Madrid’s original deadline for withdrawing its independence bid.

As the standoff enters its third, and perhaps final week, many believe the tensions have already had a negative impact on the Spanish economy. On Monday, Spain cut its economic forecast for 2018 as the costs of the Catalan crisis began to mount. And Spain’s threats to (peacefullly or otherwise) suspend home rule has sent Spanish spreads a little wider as investors brace for a disruptive Thursday morning confrontation, as short-term yields on Catalan on Spanish debt ticked higher.

If Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy moves to apply direct rule on Thursday, it would take between three and five days for regional autonomy to be effectively suspended. If that happens, expect a replay of the violent scenes that marred the region’s independence referendum, which inspired nearly 90% of the more than 2 million Catalans who successfully voted to choose independence. 

Indeed, in a preview of what may happen next, Mike Krieger wrote overnight the following:

If you think you’ve seen enough, brace yourselves because it may get far more chaotic in the days ahead. If Spain’s Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy goes through with his threat to invoke Article 155 on Thursday should Catalonia refuse to clarify its position on independence (it won’t), it’ll be the equivalent of a political nuclear bomb going off in Europe.  

 

Should the Spanish government activate Article 155, it’ll mark the culmination of a perfectly played independence movement by the Catalans. This isn’t to say that the road to independence, or more autonomy, will be smooth or easy from that point forward, but it will create a sense of increased solidarity amongst the Catalan people that wasn’t as widespread before October 1st. Many of those who opposed independence before, or were on the fence, will come around to standing with their friends and neighbors in the face of unacceptable aggression from Madrid. The road may be a long one, but invoking Article 155 will mark the beginning of the end for Madrid.  

via http://ift.tt/2xOSxZu Tyler Durden

Reagan To NYSE After Black Monday: Thank Heaven For Humans

30 years ago this week, after the dust settled in the largest stock market crash in history, President Reagan wrote a letter to The New York Stock Exchange members…

"During the extraordinary events of the past few days, the New York Stock Exchange has managed to maintain its usual high standard of operational performance.

 

"The calm, professional manner of dedicated men and women of the Exchange, its member firms and the Securities Industry Automation Corporation striving to meet unprecedented challenges undoubtedly helped assure investors of the soundness of the institution.

 

"In the age of computers, we often fail to appreciate that the heart and soul of any endeavor is people. The floor clerks, the operations and processing personnel, the P and S clerks, the margin clerks, the brokers — and all the rest of you — deserve our sincere and grateful thank-you for an important job very well done."

With humans even more removed from any actual market-making, who will provide the 'heart and soul' to rescue the markets this time? The Fed?

h/t Art Cashin

Perhaps Elon Musk's anxiety over AI is warranted and Reagan saw it coming?

via http://ift.tt/2xQqAWf Tyler Durden

Fraud, Exploitation, & Collusion: America’s Pharmaceutical Industry

Authored by Charles Hugh Smith via OfTwoMinds blog,

The rot within manifested by the pharmaceutical industry almost defies description.

The theme this week is The Rot Within.

America's Pharmaceutical industry takes pride of place in this week's theme of The Rot Within, as the industry has raised fraud, exploitation and collusion to systemic perfection.

What other industry can routinely kill hundreds of thousands of Americans and suffer no blowback? Only recently has the toll of needless deaths from the opioid pandemic finally roused a comatose corporate media and bought-and-paid-for, see-no-evil Congress to wonder if maybe there should be some limits placed on Big Pharma and its drug distributors.

The Drug Industry's Triumph Over the DEA (WaPo)

Explosive '60 Minutes' investigation finds Congress and drug companies worked to cripple DEA's ability to fight opioid abuse

What other industry can raise prices any time it wants because, well, it can? Longtime correspondent/physician J.F. recently submitted a chart of medication price increases (below)–nothing special, nothing out of the ordinary, just the usual because we can price increases.

What other industry has such complete control over the federal government? Dr. J.F. reminded me that the law enacting Medicare Part D prescription drug coverage specifically prohibits the U.S. government from negotiating lower prices on the immense volume of medications it purchases through Medicare (not to mention the Medicaid and Veterans Administration programs).

J.F. also submitted this investigative report from CNN, The little red pill being pushed on the elderly.

Here's the money-shot:

"The combination of two generic drugs that makes up Nuedexta — a cough suppressant and heart medication — was once available from specialty pharmacists willing to combine the ingredients for less than $1 a pill, according to a US Senate report on rising prescription drug prices. Now the FDA-approved medication costs as much as $12.60 a pill."

If this isn't fraud, exploitation and collusion, then what is it? Please don't say "good old free-market capitalism," because competition is nowhere in sight.

The pharmaceutical industry is a crony-capitalist cartel that buys whatever political influence it requires to maintain its power and profits. Isn't it obvious? Or have we become so distracted and drugged that we no longer care?

Ho-hum, just another 20 times the rate of inflation increase in medication prices by Big Pharma: nothing to see here, folks, just move along and take your meds….

We're number one! — in drug-induced deaths per million residents: isn't it amazing that this raises no eyebrows at all in our "leadership" or the citizenry?

Can we be honest for a change, and just admit that profits are way more important in our status quo than a couple hundred thousand deaths in America's permanent underclass?

The rot within manifested by the pharmaceutical industry almost defies description. That we tolerate this as business as usual (BAU) shows that ours is a society and economy afflicted with the sickness unto death.

'Worse Than Big Tobacco': How Big Pharma Fuels the Opioid Epidemic

*  *  *

If you found value in this content, please join me in seeking solutions by becoming a $1/month patron of my work via patreon.com. Check out both of my new books, Inequality and the Collapse of Privilege ($3.95 Kindle, $8.95 print) and Why Our Status Quo Failed and Is Beyond Reform ($3.95 Kindle, $8.95 print, $5.95 audiobook) For more, please visit the OTM essentials website.

via http://ift.tt/2zAQfiS Tyler Durden

American Express CEO Ken Chenault Is Retiring

Despite credit card giant American Express reporting another round of solid quarterly earnings, with revenue of $8.40bn beating expectations of $8.19bn, and generating EPS of $1.50, also above the $1.48 expected, and boosting its profit guidance for good measure, now projecting full year EPS of $5.80 to $5.90, up from $5.60 to $5.80 (above the consensus estimate of $5.75), AXP stock initially spiked, then immediately slumped back to  unchanged, following news that the company’s CEO since 2001, Ken Chenault, is retiring effective February 1, 2018.

The unexpected departure prompted Warren Buffett, the company’s largest shareholder, to share the following parting words “Ken’s been the gold standard for corporate leadership and the benchmark that I measure others against. He led the company through 9/11, the financial crisis and the challenges of the last couple of years. American Express always came out stronger. Ken never went for easy, short-term answers, never let day-to-day challenges distract him from what was right for the moderate to long term. No one does a better job when it really counts and he’s always done it with the highest degree of integrity.”

Chenault will be replaced by Stephen Squeri, who has been Vice Chairman since 2015 and prior to that was Group President of the Company’s Global Corporate Services Group.

Full press release below:

American Express Announces Stephen J. Squeri to Succeed Kenneth I. Chenault as Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

 

American Express Company (AXP) said today that its Board of Directors has appointed Stephen J. Squeri Chief Executive Officer and elected him Chairman of the Board, each effective February 1, 2018. Mr. Squeri, 58, will succeed Kenneth I. Chenault, 66, who will retire after a distinguished 37-year career with the Company.

 

Mr. Squeri has been Vice Chairman since 2015 and prior to that was Group President of the Company’s Global Corporate Services Group.

 

Mr. Chenault has served as Chairman and Chief Executive Officer since 2001.

 

“We are completing a two-year turnaround ahead of plan with strong revenue and earnings growth across all of our business segments,” said Mr. Chenault. “We’ve added new products and benefits, acquired record numbers of new customers, expanded our merchant network and lowered operating costs. We’ve dealt effectively with competitive challenges and redesigned our marketing, customer service and risk management capabilities for the digital age.”

 

“We’re starting a new chapter from a position of strength and this is the right time to make the leadership transition to someone who’s played a central role in all that we’ve accomplished,” Mr. Chenault continued. “Steve knows the industry. He knows the business and the brand. He knows the marketplace and how important the relationships we build with customers are to our success. He’s an excellent strategist and a strong leader.”

 

Robert D. Walter, Lead Director of American Express’ Board of Directors said, “Clear vision, sound judgment and the courage to make tough decisions are what define a leader. For 16 years we’ve had a great one in Ken Chenault. He’s met every challenge head on. He’s rallied the organization at times of crisis and he’s delivered for shareholders by making a great company even better.”

 

“Ken has also groomed an outstanding successor,” Mr. Walter continued. “Steve built commercial payments into one of our fastest growing businesses. He strengthened a world-class customer service network and transformed our technologies infrastructure. He’s led a reengineering program that lowered operating expenses and reallocated funding to the initiatives that are now driving growth across the business.”

 

“We’ve had a very thorough succession process underway for five-plus years that involved every member of the board and we are unanimous in our decision that Steve’s the best person to build on the progress under way at American Express,” added Mr. Walter.

 

Warren Buffett, chairman and chief executive officer of Berkshire Hathaway Inc. said, “Ken’s been the gold standard for corporate leadership and the benchmark that I measure others against. He led the company through 9/11, the financial crisis and the challenges of the last couple of years. American Express always came out stronger. Ken never went for easy, short-term answers, never let day-to-day challenges distract him from what was right for the moderate to long term. No one does a better job when it really counts and he’s always done it with the highest degree of integrity.”

 

“American Express is a very special company, one in which I first invested 53 years ago,” Mr. Buffett added. “Ken built on its storied history – not by abandoning traditional strengths, but by building on them and adding new ones. He’s been a great CEO and Berkshire Hathaway shareholders owe him a huge thank you.”

 

“I’ve spoken with Steve and have been hearing about him from Ken,” continued Mr. Buffett. “From everything I’ve heard, he’s absolutely the right person for the job. He knows the business, has a great track record and appreciates what makes American Express special. Ken and the board have picked someone who is going to build on a great legacy of service and success.”

 

Berkshire Hathaway is American Express’ largest shareholder.

 

“It’s a privilege to lead one of the world’s most admired companies and I appreciate the expressions of confidence from the Board and our largest shareholder,” said Mr. Squeri. “Ken has been a terrific mentor. He leads by example and taught me, along with the rest of the organization, the importance of the personal connection millions of people around the world have with American Express.”

 

“I feel very good about what we’ve accomplished and, while it’s a fast-moving competitive marketplace, I believe we’re in a strong position for the years ahead,” Mr. Squeri continued. “American Express is a unique brand and a franchise that’s unmatched by any one competitor. We have an impressive range of growth opportunities ahead of us. I’m going to be focused on innovating, building the brand around the strength of our customer service and partnering with merchants and businesses to take full advantage of the digital convergence that’s underway in the world of payments and commerce.”

via http://ift.tt/2xOTr8A Tyler Durden

Big Blue Blasts Dow To (Another) New Record High As Chinese Yield Curve Inverts

Don't fight The Fed or The Machines…

The Dow is now the 2nd most overbought in 22 years… 3rd most overbought in 62 years

 

Kicking off The National Congress last night, Xi's words did not manage to inspire the bond market as China's yield curve inverted once again…

 

But thanks to Big Blue's best day in almost 9 years…

 

The Dow soared over 150 points, now above 23,100 (IBM +100 Dow pts, Goldman +45 Dow pts)

 

Notably there was an odd flash-crash 'error' in The Dow's VIX today…

 

As once again, Dow and Dow VIX rose together… something has to give…

NOTE – the decoupling between price and risk occurred when China intervened.

On the day the Nasdaq and S&P were unchanged as Trannies topped the surge in The Dow…

 

But Trannies remain red on the week as The Dow leads by a mile… (NOTE – some weakness into the close)

 

VIX found support at 10.00… and note the mini-spike in VIX into the close (random walk?)

 

FANG Stocks sank into the red on the week…

 

But healthcare stocks didn't despite yesterday's rally headlines being destroyed today…

 

Treasury yields rose on the day…mostly driven by European weakness…

 

The yield curve steepened modestly on the day, but remains at 9 year lows…

 

Another day, another pump'n'dump in the dollar index…

 

Bitcoin got hammered early on ICO news but once everyone realised it was old news, the cryptocurrency ripped back to 5400…

 

WTI and RBOB both initially sank after DOE data showed a mixed inventory picture and collapse in production, but by the close, both were in the green…

 

Gold and Silver extended their losses (below $1300 and stalled at $17 respectively) after bouncing after the China's Golden Week…

 

Finally we note that 'crash' risk (SKEW) has never been this high relative to 'normal' risk (VIX)…

 

via http://ift.tt/2x613nz Tyler Durden

What To Look For If This Is Indeed A Major Bubble

The core thesis presented earlier by Fasanara Capital, is that what is taking place in the market right now is the blowing of arguably the biggest asset bubble in history, or rather twin bubbles – impacting both equities and bonds…

… created by trillions in central bank liquidity injections, and characterized by unprecedented equity valuations…

… concurrent bond bubbles, especially in Europe…

… defined by a “fake markets cycle”…

… which relies on narratives created daily to justify the “fake markets”…

… thus avoiding any discussion of the unstable, or “metastable” equilibrium…

… which makes for tremendously fragile markets with:

  • LARGE POTENTIAL FOR HOT MONEY FLOWS / WEAK HANDS TURNING WHEN MOMENTUM DOES
  • UNCERTAIN DIVERSIFICATION, CROWDING EFFECT, NARROW EXITS
  • UNCERTAIN LIQUIDITY
  • SMALL DISTURBANCE ENOUGH TO PROVOKE LARGE ADJUSTMENT

And, more importantly as discussed earlier, “where the liquidity tide that created it all starts petering out.

And like every unstable equilibrium, there are various, specific triggers that could result in the puncture of the “Twin Bubbles”, where are as follows:

  • LIQUIDITY TIDE PETERING OUT: The Global liquidity tide from Central Banks is soon to be past its peak. Flows work in reverse, for the first time in 10 years. First real crash test for momentum.
  • RATES RISING: It started raining. Over-indebtedness may have closed on to Minsky point.
  • (IL)LIQUIDITY EVENT: The liquidity in markets is deceptive and ephemeral, likely to dissipate as markets move lower.
  • VOLATILITY SPIKING: Volatility is like a balloon held underwater. Its rise may trigger a chain effect across major market players (Risk Parity funds, Short Vol ETFs, Low Vol ETF, momentum strategies, etc.)
  • GEOPOLITICS / POLITICS: From populism in developed countries (Germany, Catalonia, Italy, Brexit, Trump latest cases in point) to confrontations in North Korea / Middle East (end of Pax Americana)

* * *

How can one test if Fasanara is right? As the fund itself proposes,”assume for a second this is indeed a major market bubble, and an unstable equilibrium about to snap… What would you be on the lookout for as confirming signs?

Here are just two potential catalysts:

  • CENTRAL BANKS PANICKING at the first signs of market weakness, and
  • A growing list of DISLOCATIONS across markets.. Happening with increasing frequency..

Addressing the first takes nothig more than a google search:

And, of course, countless market anomalies. Fasanara writes that given the frequency with which market anomalies come up, a point of adjustment may be imminent. Some examples:

  • The BANK OF JAPAN NOW OWNS ALMOST 80% OF THE ENTIRE JAPANESE ETF equity market. The BoJ will likely be the major shareholder in 55 companies by the end of 2017. BOJ holds 39% of Japan’s govt debt, equates to 79% of Japan’s GDP
  • The SWISS NATIONAL BANK BOUGHT $ 100BN BETWEEN US AND EUROPEAN STOCKS. It now owns 26 million Microsoft shares
  • The listed stock of the SWISS NATIONAL BANK ROSE 120% IN THE LAST 2 MONTHS; up almost 400% in 1 year
  • USD-DENOMINATED RUSSIAN BOND YIELD TRADING BELOW TREASURY YIELD, as ETF buy indiscriminately and irrespective of valuations
  • ARGENTINA uses defaults as a recurrent macro-prudential policy, to tackle debt overloads from time to time. Most recently in 2014, 2001, 1989. Yet, this year, the country ISSUED A 100-YEAR BOND FOR 7.9% YIELD. Red-hot demand. It was oversubscribed 3.5x.
  • LEVERAGE TO BUY STOCKS AT THE NYSE (MARGIN DEBT) HIT AN ALL-TIME RECORD of $549bn this year (read), and went up in lockstep with the S&P as both doubled up since 2009.
  • Is it 2007 all over again in CLOs? No, way better than that. COVENANT-LITE LOANS ARE OVER DOUBLE WHAT THEY USED TO BE IN 2007. Assuming 2007 was a credit bubble and covenant-lite was one of the thermometers taking temperature, this is twice a bubble
  • Anomalies in ETF land – CLOSE TO 90% OF EQUITY FLOWS (from 7% 15 years ago) ATTRIBUTABLE TO PASSIVE FUNDS or ETFs

And of course, inside ETFs…

  • As of end January, ETFs and passive funds represented almost 30% of AUM in the US. Close to 90% of equity flows in the US (from 7% 15 years ago) is attributable to passive funds or ETFs
  • The product is so hot that Vanguard, to compete, felt compelled to cut fees 3 times from late January to mid-February, in a race-to-zero against rivals.
  • An ETF on ETFs was launched in April: TETF will be composed of stocks of companies driving the growth of the ETF industry
  • A sought-after Junior miner gold ETF got larger than its index recently. So much so that it was forced to buy other ETFs. Incredibly, there are 10 Canadian companies that this ETF owns where its ownership percentage is more than 18%
  • The ETF Select Dividend lost 35% during August 2015 at a time when its constituencies lost just 2.5% on average, showing that disconnections work both ways when the time comes. ETFs are not always synonyms of liquidity.
  • One of the largest US Energy ETF has 50% of the fund invested in just four stocks. ETFs are not always synonyms of diversification.
  • Low Vol ETFs are filled with tech stocks. Passive aggressive ETFs.
  • JPM here explains that 37% of the NYSE trading volumes YTD taking place during the last 30 mins of trading, because of passive funds that rebalance at the end of the day
  • Researchers showed that “a single percentage point increase in ETF ownership has demonstrable effects on an individual stock. Over the ensuing year, correlation to the share’s industry group and the broader market ticks up 9%, while the relationship between its price and future earnings falls 14%.”

But the best indicator may be the simplest one: what is Warren Buffett doing with all his cash…

And while others may have their doubts, Fasanara is putting their portfolio where their mouth is.

via http://ift.tt/2iobv7u Tyler Durden

Massachusetts Man Convicted Of Plotting To Behead Conservative Blogger Pamela Geller

A Massachusetts man named David Wright has been convicted of plotting to kill conservative blogger Pamela Geller after she organized a draw the Prophet Muhammad contest in Texas in 2015.

Wright, 28, is facing life in prison after being found guilty on all charges, including conspiracy to provide material support to a designated terrorist organization and conspiracy to commit acts of terrorism transcending national boundaries, after prosecutors said Wright, his uncle and a third man conspired to kill Geller because they were outraged that she organized the contest. The contest, which took place in 2015, was interrupted when two men opened fire outside the event, wounding a security guard before they were killed ina  shootout with law enforcement. But the attackers had no connection to Wright or his family members.

Wright’s uncle, Ussamah Rahim, told Wright on a recorded phone call that took place after Geller's event that he couldn’t wait to attack Geller and decided instead to go after “those boys in blue,” referring to the police. Wright told his uncle that he thought this was “beautiful” and encouraged him to delete all the data from his computer before carrying out his attack, the Associated Press reported. Hours later, Rahim was shot and killed by authorities after he lunged at them with a knife when they approached him in Boston. The group never carried out their planned attack on Geller.

Wright cried on the stand when he spoke of his uncle, insisting that he didn’t think Rahim was serious about the attack. Wright, who was more than 500 pounds (227 kilograms) in 2015, testified that he used Islamic State group propaganda to get attention but was just playing a role and never wanted to commit violence.

“I didn’t want my uncle to get hurt. I didn’t want law enforcement to get hurt,” Wright said.

 

“I lost someone who was very close to me because I was so deluded and self-centered that I couldn’t see beyond my own need for attention.”

Prosecutors said Wright was the ringleader of the plot, and that his uncle had received instructions from Junaid Hussain, an Islamic State group member and hacker, who was killed during airstrikes in Syria.

Though Wright's account of the plot was easily debunked after prosecutors found that he created a Twitter page seeking recruits for their “martyrdom operation cell,” conducted extensive research on weapons, and collected a trove of horrific Islamic State group documents and videos. He also created a manifesto warning that America’s “days are numbered,” prosecutors said. Wright’s uncle bought three large knives — one for each of them — for their attack on Geller, authorities say.

Wright “was committed to ISIS, and knew exactly what he was doing,” Assistant US Attorney Stephanie Siegmann told jurors, using an acronym for the Islamic State group.

The third man accused in the plot, Nicholas Rovinski, pleaded guilty last year to conspiracy charges and faces 15 to 22 years in prison. Rovinski, of Warwick, Rhode Island, testified against Wright, telling jurors that Wright said Geller “deserved to be beheaded” because she insulted Mohammad.

via http://ift.tt/2gl2Nmc Tyler Durden

Surprisingly, I’m Quite Optimistic About the Future

To summarize, in just the last few years the world has invented a way to create software services that have no central operator. These services are called decentralized applications and they are enabled with crypto assets that incentivize entities on the internet to contribute resources — processing, storage, computing — necessary for the service to function.

It’s worth pausing to acknowledge that this is kind of miraculous. With just the internet, an open protocol, and a new kind of asset, we can instantiate networks that dynamically assemble the resources necessary to provide many kinds of services.

– From Adam Ludwin’s: A Letter to Jamie Dimon

I’m actually pretty optimistic about the future. I know some of you might be surprised to hear that, but it’s true. This might not be the case if I had only five years left on the planet, but assuming I’m fortunate enough to stay healthy for another few decades, I think the world will be a much better place when I leave it than when I came in.

The simple fact of the matter is this. For things to get substantially better from any situation, it’s always easier to start from a pretty bad place. When I write articles describing the U.S. economy as a rent-seeking, oligarch controlled swindle, I don’t do this to fill you with a sense of insurmountable dread. Rather, the purpose of those posts is to shake as many people as possible out of their slumber. There’s simply no way we can come up with appropriate and conscious solutions to our problems unless we can identify the various scams that govern so much of life around us.

The most lucrative scams are simultaneously extremely bold and well hidden. As such, there’s no greater scam on earth than the scam of the monetary system. A system where a small group of unelected technocrats (central bankers) are given power to create and distribute money at their discretion. The power that these people wielded during the financial crisis was historic in nature and dastardly in its results. Essentially, the monetary system was used as a weapon to bailout and further enrich those already entrenched in positions of power and wealth at the expense of everyone else. There’s simply no way Donald Trump would be President today had it not been for the extraordinarily lopsided “recovery,” which was a direct result of government’s extremely unethical and arguably criminal response to the financial crisis.

continue reading

from Liberty Blitzkrieg http://ift.tt/2xORBVf
via IFTTT

Something Wicked This Way Comes: McDonalds – A Bear In A Bull Costume

Authored by 720Global's Michael Lebowitz via RealInvestmentAdvice.com,

As Halloween nears, kids are choosing costumes to transform themselves into witches, baseball players and anything else they can imagine. In the spirit of Halloween, we thought it might be an appropriate time to describe the most popular costume on Wall Street, one which many companies have been donning and fooling investors with terrific success.

Having gained over 65% in the last two years, the stock of McDonald’s Corporation (MCD) recently caught our attention. Given the sharp price increase for what is thought of as a low growth company, we assumed their new line of healthier menu items, mobile app ordering, and restaurant modernization must be having a positive effect on sales. Upon a deeper analysis of MCD’s financial data, we were quite stunned to learn that has not been the case. Utility-like in its economic growth, MCD is relying on stock buybacks and the popularity of passive investment styles to provide temporary costume as a high-flying growth company.

Stock Buybacks

We have written six articles on stock buybacks to date. While each discussed different themes including valuations, executive motivations, and corporate governance, they all arrived at the same conclusion; buybacks may boost the stock price in the short run but in the majority of cases they harm shareholder value in the long run. Data on MCD provides support for our conclusion.

Since 2012, MCD’s revenue has declined by nearly 12% while its earnings per share (EPS) rose 17%. This discrepancy might lead one to conclude that MCD’s management has greatly improved operating efficiency and introduced massive cost-cutting measures. Not so. Similar to revenue, GAAP net income has declined almost 8% over the same period, which rules out the possibilities mentioned above.

To understand how earnings-per-share (EPS) can increase at a double-digit rate, while revenue and net income similarly decline and profit margins remain relatively flat, one must consider the effect of share buybacks. Currently, MCD has about 20% fewer shares outstanding than they did five years ago. The reduction in shares accounts for the warped EPS. As noted earlier, EPS is up 17% since 2012. When adjusted for the decline in shares, EPS declined 7%. Given the 12% decline in revenue and 8% drop in net income, this adjusted 7% decline in EPS makes more sense. MCD currently trades at a trailing twelve-month price to earnings ratio (P/E) of 25. If we use the adjusted EPS figure instead of the stated EPS, the P/E rises to 30, which is simply breathtaking for a company that is shrinking. It must also be noted that, since 2012, shareholder equity, or the difference between assets and liabilities, has gone from positive $15.2 billion to negative $2 billion. A summary of key financial data is shown later in this article.

In addition to adjusting MCD’s earnings for buybacks, investors should also consider that to accomplish this financial wizardry, MCD relied on a 112% increase in their debt. Since 2012, MCD spent an estimated $23 billion on share buybacks. During the same period, debt increased by approximately $16 billion. Instead of repurchasing shares, MCD could have used debt and cash flow to expand into new markets, increase productivity and efficiency of its restaurants or purchase higher growth competitors. MCD executives instead manipulated EPS and ultimately the stock price. To their good fortune (quite literally), the Board of Directors and shareholders appear well-deceived by the costume of a healthy and profitable company. Over the last three years, as shown below, compensation for the top three executives has soared.

Source: MCD 2017 proxy statement (LINK)

The following table compares MCD’s fundamental data and buyback adjusted data from 2012 to their last reported earnings statement.

Data Source: Bloomberg and MCD Investor Relations

The graph below compares the sharp increase in the price of MCD to the decline in revenue over the last five years.

Data Courtesy: Bloomberg

Passive Influence

The share price of MCD has also benefited from the substantial increase in the use of passive investment strategies.

Active managers carefully evaluate fundamental trends and growth prospects of potential investments. They typically sell those investments which appear rich and overvalued while buying assets which they deem cheap or undervalued. When there is a proper balance among investing styles in a market, active investors act as a policeman of sorts, providing checks and balances on valuations and price discovery. Would an active investor buy into a fast food company with minimal growth prospects and rapidly rising debt, at a valuation well above that of the general market and long-term averages? Likely no, unless they knew of a greater fool willing to buy it at a higher price.

On the other hand, passive managers focus almost entirely on indexes and are typically less informed about the underlying stocks they are indirectly buying. They are indiscriminate in the deployment of capital allocating to match their index usually on the basis of market capitalization. Such a myopic style rewards those indexes exhibiting strong momentum. When investors buy indexes, the stocks comprising the index, good and bad, rise in unison. Would a passive investor buy into a fast food company with minimal growth prospects and rapidly rising debt at a valuation well above that of the general market and long-term averages? Yes, they have no choice because they manage to an index that includes that company.

When the marginal investors in a market are largely passive in nature, active managers are not able to effectively police valuations, and their influence is diminished. During such periods, indexes and their underlying stocks rise, regardless of the economic and earnings environment.  As the saying goes “a rising tide lifts all boats,” even those that are less seaworthy, such as MCD.

Summary

We warn investors that, when the day after Halloween occurs for MCD and other stocks trading well above fair value, investors might find a rotten apple in their portfolio and not the chocolatey goodness they imagined.

Buybacks will continue to occur as long as executives reap the short-term benefits, stock prices rise, money is cheap, and investors remain clueless about the long-term harm buybacks inflict on value. We suspect passive strategies will also garner a larger than normal percentage of investment dollars as long as these blind momentum strategies work. That said, valuations will reach a tipping point and the masking of fundamental weakness will be exposed.

Building wealth on faulty underpinnings is a strategy ultimately destined for failure. We urge investors to understand what they are buying and not be mesmerized by past gains or what the “market” is doing. Simply, when a stock rises above fair valuations, future returns are sacrificed.

via http://ift.tt/2ysKRjY Tyler Durden