Senate Democrats Introduce $1 Trillion Infrastructure Plan, Offer Trump Support If He Backs It

Senate Democrats are set to unveil a $1 trillion infrastructure plan and offer President Donald Trump their support if he backs it, the NYT reports.

The plan includes $180 billion to rail and bus systems, $65 billion to ports, airports and waterways, $110 billion for water and sewer systems, $100  billion for energy infrastructure, and $20 billion for public and tribal lands.

Cited by the Times, Chuck Schumer said “our urban and rural communities have their own unique set of infrastructure priorities, and this proposal would provide funding to address those needed upgrades that go beyond the traditional road and bridge repair.” The Senate Democrat leader adds that “We’re asking President Trump to work with us to make it a reality/”

As part of his agenda, Trump has promised to unveil an ambitious infrastructure package during the first 100 days of his presidency. “We will build new roads, and highways, and bridges, and airports, and tunnels, and railways all across our wonderful nation,” he vowed in his Inaugural Address.

One of Trump’s top advisers said Monday, however, that the president’s plan may run into roadblocks in the Republican-led Congress.

“He has to come up with a financing plan, and I think there’s going to be a little bit of a tug of war between the conservatives in the Republican party who are concerned about deficits and the president who’s concerned about jobs,” Richard LeFrak said on CNBC’s “Squawk Box.” “I think he will prevail, ultimately, because he wants to put people to work.”

Republicans resisted President Barack Obama’s push for an infrastructure “surge” for eight years, arguing that the federal government couldn’t afford it and that state and local governments should shoulder more responsibility for improvements. However, now that Trump “has taken up the Democratic cause”, they may find it more problematic.

Meanwhile, as the NYT adds, the first major test of Mr. Trump and his sway over congressional Republicans will come Tuesday morning at 10 a.m. That is when the Congressional Budget Office, the nonpartisan Capitol Hill scorekeeper, will update its budget outlook. The office is expected to say that the federal deficit, after years of decline, will start swelling again this year and will pick up steam over the next decade if policies aren’t changed to curb the growth of health care programs and of Social Security in an aging populace.

The annual report could be a major brake on Mr. Trump’s agenda, which includes large increases in spending on infrastructure and defense, as well as deep tax cuts. Those plans could collide with Republican promises to balance the budget — if Republicans care about such niceties in the Trump era.

As we noted previously, according to a Barclays analysis, infrastructure spending in the US will take a long time to ramp up. The bank laid out the top 10 projects currently in planning or construction, and just these along will take as much as 1-2 years before any practical benefits “trickle down” to the long-ignored US steel sector which Trump has vowed to revitalize. This is what Barclays said last week:

Given the unknowns about Trump’s infrastructure plan – lack of clarity on total spend, past ineffectiveness of stimulus efforts, timing of implementation, pushback from Congress – we currently model no additional metals demand from supplemental infrastructure investment during 2017-18 into our baseline forecast. As greater visibility becomes available, we will adjust our consumption forecasts to take into account the latest spending plans. The key issue we think is facing the metals sector is that even if infrastructure spending is approved at the headline level ($1trn over 10 years, or $100bn a year) and implementation is effective, the project schedule does not allow for an immediate effect on metals consumption, particularly over the next two to three years.

A list of the ten largest US infra projects is shown below:

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Trump “Day Two”: Preview Of Today’s Key Events In Washington

“Day two” on the job for Donald Trump is shaping up as another busy day for both the White House and Capitol Hill. Below is a preview of all the scheduled events of interest today in Washington.

WHITE HOUSE:

  • 9am: President Trump meets with CEOs of the U.S. ‘Big Three’ automakers: GM, Ford, Fiat Chrysler
  • 10am: Trump meets with Chief of Staff Reince Priebus
  • 11am: Trump signs executive order; White House schedule doesn’t provide details on what order may entail
  • 1pm: Trump speaks with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi
  • 1:30pm: Trump meets with CIA Director Mike Pompeo
  • 3pm: Trump meets with Senate leaders
  • 3:45pm: Trump meets with Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell

HOUSE:

  • 10am: House convenes
  • 10:30am: House Ways and Means Cmte Chairman Kevin Brady details panel’s 2017 agenda; U.S. Chamber of Commerce, 1615 H St. NW
  • Noon: House considers H.R.7, which would amend Affordable Care Act to bar expenditure of federal money to purchase insurance that covers abortion services

SENATE:

  • 9:30am: Senate Armed Services Cmte holds hearing on defense budget for FY18 and onward; 216 Hart Senate Office Building
  • 10am: Senate Judiciary Cmte votes on nomination of Sen. Jeff Sessions for attorney general; 226 Dirksen Senate Office Building
  • 10am: Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Cmte votes on nomination of Ben Carson for HUD secretary; 538 Dirksen Senate Office Building
  • 10am: Senate Finance Cmte holds hearing on nomination of Rep. Tom Price for HHS secretary; 215 Dirksen Senate Office Building
  • 10am: Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Cmte to vote on nominations of Elaine Chao for Transportation secretary and Wilbur Ross for Commerce secretary; 253 Russell Senate Office Building
  • 10:30am: Senate Budget Cmte holds hearing on nomination of Rep. Mick Mulvaney for OMB director; 608 Dirksen Senate Office Building
  • Related: Trump Budget Director to Say National Debt Needs Action Quick
  • 10:30am: Senate Small Business Cmte holds hearing on nomination of Linda McMahon for SBA administrator; 428-A Russell Senate Office Building
  • 12:15pm: Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer, other top Democratic sens. hold press conference to unveil infrastructure proposal; Senate Radio-TV Gallery
  • 2:30pm: Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Cmte holds hearing Rep. Mick Mulvaney for OMB director; 342 Dirksen Senate Office Building
  • Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Cmte pushed confirmation vote to Tuesday, Jan. 31, for Education secretary nominee Betsy DeVos; updates entry published in Jan. 20 Weekly Agenda

DEFENSE:

  • 8:30am: Center for Strategic and International Studies holds discussion “In Defense of the Arctic: Assessing U.S. Security Concerns” with speakers including Sen. Dan Sullivan and former Deputy Assistant Defense Secretary for European and NATO Policy James Townsend Jr.; 1616 Rhode Island Avenue NW

A closer look at select events:

  • Finance committee hearing for health and human services secretary

Georgia Rep. Tom Price has already had his confirmation hearing with the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions. Now, he testifies before the Senate Finance Committee at 10 a.m. The congressman and orthopedic surgeon has been a significant critic of the Affordable Care Act, and has worked to dismantle the law in the past. Price is now also under scrutiny after CNN reported on a questionable stock purchase.

  • Judiciary committee vote on attorney general

Also at 10 a.m. on Capitol Hill, the Senate Judiciary Committee will meet to vote on whether to confirm Alabama Sen. Jeff Sessions to be attorney general. Sessions sat before the committee last Tuesday where he drew a number of Democratic opponents due to his record. However, Republicans hold a majority in the Senate and the nomination is expected to pass.

  • Commerce Committee vote on commerce and transportation secretaries

Another 10 a.m. meeting will be for the Senate Commerce Committee to vote on the nominations of Elaine Chao for transportation secretary and Wilbur Ross for commerce secretary.
Both had their hearings before the committee last week and while both are expected to pass, some are concerned about Ross’s business interests.

  • Budget Committee hearing for OMB head

South Carolina Rep. Mick Mulvaney is set to testify before the Senate Budget Committee at 10:30 a.m. after being nominated by President Donald Trump to head the Office of Management and Budget. Last week, it was revealed that Mulvaney did not pay more than $15,000 in payroll taxes for a household employee.

  • Small Business and Entrepreneurship committee hearing

Also at 10:30 a.m., the Senate Small Business and Entrepreneurship Committee will meet for their hearing on Linda McMahon, who Trump nominated to lead the Small Business Administration.
McMahon, the former CEO of World Wrestling Entertainment, gave millions to Trump to support his presidential campaign, including a $1 million donation just before the election.

  • Foreign Relations committee vote on UN Ambassador

At noon, the Senate Foreign Relations Committee will vote on the nomination of South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, Trump’s choice for UN ambassador. During her confirmation hearing last week, Committee Chair Tennessee Sen. Bob Corker said that Haley is expected to be confirmed “overwhelmingly.” The committee questioned Haley about her lack of dealing with foreign affairs, but commented her time as governor of South Carolina has made her ready for this position.

  • Closed Senate Intelligence committee hearing

A closed-door Senate Intelligence Committee hearing will take place at 2:30 p.m.

  • House vote on taxpayer-funded abortions

On Tuesday, the House will vote on H.R. bill “No Taxpayer Funding for Abortion and Abortion Insurance Full Disclosure Act of 2017.” The bill would ban federal funding of abortions, as well federal funding for health benefits plans that cover abortions. It would also ban federal facilities and federal employees from providing abortions.

Source: Bloomberg, CNN

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Frontrunning: January 24

  • Dollar steadies after stumble, sterling rides out Brexit ruling (Reuters)
  • After U.S. exit, Asian nations try to save TPP trade deal (Reuters)
  • U.K. Court Rules Brexit Trigger Needs Parliamentary Vote (BBG)
  • Brexit plans unlikely to be slowed by Article 50 defeat (Reuters)
  • Health Secretary Nominee Proposed Bill Benefiting Puerto Rico Investments (WSJ)
  • How Trump Would Rework Nafta—and What Mexico, Canada Want in Return  (BBG)
  • Trump calls for more U.S. auto jobs, factories ahead of CEO meeting (Reuters)
  • Belarus Businessman Said to Be Indirect Source on Trump Dossier? (WSJ)
  • Canadian Drillers Brave Deep Freeze as Oil Patch Revives Growth  (BBG)
  • A $90 Billion Wave of Debt Shows Cracks in U.S. Real Estate Boom  (BBG)
  • China pushes back at U.S. over South China Sea (Reuters)
  • This 36-Year-Old May Be Running America  (BBG)
  • China’s Efforts to Stem Capital Outflows Are Starting to Pay Off  (BBG)
  • Iran, Russia, Turkey say will jointly enforce Syria ceasefire (Reuters)
  • Generali Jumps on Report Intesa Plans to Mount Takeover Bid  (BBG)
  • Bankers Cash In on Postelection Stock Rally (WSJ)
  • BT Plunges After Cutting Outlook, Tripling Italy Writedown  (BBG)
  • After Bond Chief’s Exit, Millennium’s Englander Left Alone Again  (BBG)
  • Verizon Misses Profit Estimates as Holiday Promos Take Toll  (BBG)
  • At Wells Fargo, Bank Branches Were Tipped Off to Inspections (WSJ)
  • DuPont Pushes Back Expected Closing of Dow Merger to First Half  (BBG)
  • Goldman Hails Global Rebound as Currie Sees Commodity Demand  (BBG)

 

Overnight Media Digest

WSJ

– President Donald Trump started his first full workday at the White House focused on the economy, trade and jobs, withdrawing from the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) agreement and promising to tax firms that move operations overseas. http://on.wsj.com/2klQzOb

– A federal judge Monday blocked the proposed merger of health insurers Aetna and Humana on antitrust grounds, a potentially fatal legal blow to the $34 billion deal. http://on.wsj.com/2klXsis

– The Senate confirmed Representative Mike Pompeo of Kansas as director of the Central Intelligence Agency, putting a Republican lawmaker in charge of the nation’s top spy agency. http://on.wsj.com/2km04wI

– A government watchdog group filed a lawsuit alleging President Trump is violating the U.S. Constitution by maintaining ownership of businesses that accept payments from foreign governments. http://on.wsj.com/2km3yzq

– Yahoo, subject of two huge data breaches that have cast a shadow over its deal with Verizon Communications., pushed back its expected closing date for the transaction, citing “work required to meet closing conditions.” http://on.wsj.com/2km3Ar2

– The lending arm of Ford Motor Co has tapped a San Francisco startup to make it easier for its customers to buy and finance a car without going into a showroom. http://on.wsj.com/2km2c7R

– Sprint Corp will buy one-third of Tidal, the streaming-music service run by rap mogul Jay Z, the latest content deal secured by a network provider. http://on.wsj.com/2klTrue

– The Syrian regime and the rebel opposition ended the first day of peace talks on Monday without reaching agreement on how to monitor a shaky cease-fire, but the sides continued trying to hammer out details of a potential deal. http://on.wsj.com/2klUZV7

 

FT

British Prime Minister Theresa May said on Monday she was briefed about the successful certification of a nuclear submarine as she came under increasing pressure over her handling of reports its unarmed Trident missile misfired.

Bernie Ecclestone’s 40-year reign as Formula One’s commercial supremo ended on Monday with the sport’s new owners Liberty Media replacing the 86-year-old Briton with American Chase Carey.

British spy chief Robert Hannigan said on Monday he was stepping down as head of Britain’s intelligence eavesdropping service GCHQ. Sources close to Hannigan, 51, said the decision was taken for personal reasons

 

NYT

– President Donald Trump upended America’s traditional, bipartisan trade policy on Monday as he formally abandoned the ambitious, 12-nation Trans-Pacific Partnership brokered by his predecessor. http://nyti.ms/2jWq1lP

– At a meeting with the leaders of several construction and building trade unions, President Trump reiterated on Monday his interest in directing hundreds of billions of dollars to infrastructure investments, some of it from the federal government, union officials said. http://nyti.ms/2jWuEfE

– Yahoo Inc said on Monday that it now expected the sale of its core businesses to Verizon Communications Inc to close no sooner than April, a delay from its earlier intention to conclude the deal in the first quarter. http://nyti.ms/2jWzA4h

– A federal judge ruled on Monday that a $37 billion merger between the health insurance giants Aetna Inc and Humana Inc should not be allowed to go through on antitrust grounds, siding with the Justice Department, which had been seeking to block the deal. http://nyti.ms/2jWr05K

– President Trump used his first official meeting with congressional leaders on Monday to falsely claim that millions of unauthorized immigrants had robbed him of a popular vote majority. http://nyti.ms/2jWyUf7

– Representative Mike Pompeo of Kansas earned approval to lead the Central Intelligence Agency and Rex Tillerson, the secretary of state nominee, cleared a key Senate hurdle to all but assure his own confirmation. http://nyti.ms/2jWHDOn

 

Canada

THE GLOBE AND MAIL

** Japan-based automakers in Canada are urging the federal government to resume talks with Japan on a bilateral trade deal in the wake of the new Trump government pulling out of the Trans-Pacific Partnership trade agreement. https://tgam.ca/2jTK6Ja

** Potential private equity buyers appear to be steering clear of hockey and baseball equipment maker Performance Sports Group Ltd, clearing the field for a $575 million bid for the company from Sagar Capital Partners LP and Fairfax Financial Holdings Ltd. https://tgam.ca/2jTHk6P

** Vancouver’s Kindred Systems Inc has hired Jim Liefer, who was vice president of operations for Wal-Mart’s online business from 2004-10 before spending six years as COO of U.S. online furniture retailer One Kings Lane Inc. Mr. Liefer will work out of Kindred’s San Francisco office, where most of its 37 employees are located. https://tgam.ca/2jTKQ0G

NATIONAL POST

** An ongoing dispute between Uber Technologies Inc and its drivers has reached Canada, with a proposed class-action lawsuit that claims Uber drivers are employees who are entitled to minimum wage, overtime and vacation pay. http://bit.ly/2jTUpwH

** The federal New Democratic Party has scheduled a leadership debate for early March, even though there are still no official candidates to lead the party. http://bit.ly/2jTL2NI

** The department of Indigenous and Northern Affairs is one of two ministries – the other is democratic reform – that did not get a passing mark on a “deliverology” report card that Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his cabinet were expected to review as they began two days of meetings on Monday in Calgary. http://bit.ly/2jTTcFH

 

Britain

The Times

* EDF has raised the spectre of delays or cost overruns to its 18 billion pound ($22.52 billion) Hinkley Point nuclear plant as a result of Brexit, warning that any restrictions to trade and movement of labour could hamper the delivery of energy projects. http://bit.ly/2jqJAPN

* Royal Dutch Shell’s exploration chief, Ceri Powell, is to step down after seven years, as the energy company cuts back on drilling new wells. http://bit.ly/2jqGWJI

The Guardian

* Amsterdam mayor’s office has been in negotiations with American and Japanese banks, along with fintech firms and other specialist finance firms, about moving staff and operations from London as a consequence of the UK’s vote to leave the European Union, the city’s deputy mayor told the Guardian. http://bit.ly/2jqJZ4L

* Lloyds Banking Group suffered 48-hour online attack this month as cybercriminals attempted to block access to 20 million UK accounts. http://bit.ly/2jqFpUd

The Telegraph

* Sports Direct has cut its ties with three City banks amid speculation that tycoon Mike Ashley is reining in his appetite for dealmaking and conquering overseas markets. The sportswear giant announced that it had dumped Goldman Sachs, Citi and Haitong (formerly known as Espirito Santo) from its roster of brokers. http://bit.ly/2jqMbcA

* BP has started up one of its first major projects in the Gulf of Mexico since the Deepwater Horizon disaster, almost a year ahead of schedule and $150 million under budget.http://bit.ly/2jqPNLu

Sky News

* Bernie Ecclestone is no longer in charge of Formula One after almost 40 years in the driving seat. The news was confirmed by Liberty Media as it said it had completed its takeover of the sport after snapping up shares from private equity firm CVC last year. http://bit.ly/2jqNBDQ

* M&G Investments, the giant asset manager owned by Prudential, will end its headline sponsorship of the Chelsea Flower Show after this year’s event in May, according to Sky News. http://bit.ly/2jqQXH5

The Independent

* British Prime Minister Theresa May will be ready to publish the key piece of legislation that will set Britain on the road to Brexit by the end of this week, according to the Independent. http://ind.pn/2jqHRdj

* Britain is facing three years of slow growth, rising unemployment and squeezed consumer spending as the Brexit-induced collapse in the pound triggers a radical rebalancing of the economy, according to a report by think tank EY Item Club. http://ind.pn/2jqyESo

 

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Trump Says “Illegal” Voters Cost Him Popular Vote

Sparking his latest confrontation with the media, mostly the NYT, CNN and WaPo, overnight president Trump told members of Congress on Monday in a private reception that he lost the popular vote in the election because millions of undocumented immigrants cast votes for his opponent.

Trump’s claim, which much of the mainstream press has determined to be “fake news” despite occasional evidence to the contrary, was first made by Trump before his election, and drew widespread criticism by the press overnight.

According to a Bloomberg report, Trump told Republican and Democratic congressional leaders at the White House reception that he would have won the popular vote had three to five million undocumented immigrants not cast ballots for Democrat Hillary Clinton, three people familiar with the remark said. Two of the people said Trump used the term “illegals” to describe the alleged immigrant voters. As a reminder, Hillary Clinton won the national popular vote by about 2.9 million ballots.

A White House spokesman, Marc Short, told Bloomberg that the administration would not comment because the reception was off the record. The White House press secretary, Sean Spicer, later said that he would “look into” the report.

Naturally, it is illegal for anyone but citizens to vote in most U.S. elections. Various reports during and after the election, especially during the infamous Jill Stein recount, found irregularities in voting which suggested that illegal voters were indeed allowed to cast votes, however not to the extent claimed by Trump, who suggested that at least 3 million undocumented immigrants voted in the 2016 election. There were sporadic reports of people voting illegally, as there are in nearly all elections, but federal and state officials of both parties said that the election’s integrity was overwhelmingly secure.

Trump first asserted that illegal ballots had tilted the popular vote in Clinton’s favor in a Nov. 27 tweet. “In addition to winning the Electoral College in a landslide, I won the popular vote if you deduct the millions of people who voted illegally,” he said. He provided no evidence for the claim. Elections officials in California, New Hampshire and Virginia said it was baseless. 

Subsequently Trump said he would have won the popular vote had he campaigned for the most votes in the election, rather than focusing on an Electoral College victory.

For now, however, the media has found a new Trump “scandal” over which to obssess, as the president continues to dominate the newsflow with secondary and otherwise irrelevant stories, which preoccupy the US press, while the important stuff remains largely uncovered and leads to increased “uncertainty” in markets about the future about Trump’s policies.

Meanwhile, the NYT’s text and headline, speak for themselves :

President Trump used his first official meeting with congressional leaders on Monday to falsely claim that millions of unauthorized immigrants had robbed him of a popular vote majority, a return to his obsession with the election’s results even as he seeks support for his legislative agenda.

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Johnson & Johnson Slides On Top-Line Miss, Disappointing Drug Sales, Soft Outlook

On the surface, key Dow component Johnson & Johnson reported strong earnings, with EPS of $1.58 coming stronger than the $1.56 consensus expectation, despite revenue of $1.81BN missing consensus of $18.28BN. Among the key notables in the earnings report was the company’s announcement it was in a process to evaluate potential strategic options for the Johnson & Johnson Diabetes Care Companies, specifically LifeScan, Animas, and Calibra. Such option  “may include the formation of operating partnerships, joint ventures or strategic alliances, a sale of the businesses.”

However, the reason why the stock was over 2% lower in the pre-market, and pressing the entire Dow average as a result, is because Dow took a page out of the IBM playbook, when it used yet another sharply reduced effective tax rate, which in Q4 dropped to 14.5%, on an adjusted basis (and 11.8% unadjusted), down from 17.7% the prior quarter. Had JNJ used its previous tax rate, it would have missed both the top and bottom line.

Additionally, Wall Street appears to be further disappointed with the company misses across virtually all key drug sale categories, as follows:

  • 4Q Remicade rev. $1.62b, est. $1.64b
  • 4Q Stelara rev. $879m, est. $881.7m
  • 4Q Zytiga rev. $519m, est. $588m
  • 4Q Imbruvica rev. $346m, est. $377m
  • 4Q Invokana rev. $371m, est. $387.7m
  • 4Q Simponi rev. $426m, est. $445m
  • 4Q Olysio rev. $10m, est. $33m (1 est.)
  • 4Q Xarelto rev. $598m, est. $559.7m

Completing the disappointing trifecta was JNJ’s outlook, which came in below the Wall Street consensus estimate: the company now sees FY17 sales $74.1b to $74.8b, and FY adj. EPS $6.93 to $7.08.

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US Futures, Oil Flat As Greenback Rises Despite Mnuchin’s “Strong Dollar” Warning

US equity futures were flat, European stocks rose and Asia was mixed after the dollar posted a modest rebound overnight despite Mnuchin’s “strong dollar” comments, while oil was flat and gold fell, as investors focused on President Donald Trump’s plans to boost growth. The pound fell after a U.K. court ruled that Parliament must vote on triggering Brexit.

The dollar struggled in Asia on Tuesday as U.S. President Donald Trump’s focus on protectionism ahead of fiscal stimulus fueled suspicions his administration might be content to gain a competitive advantage through a weaker currency. However, early European trading saw modest gains in the USD, which rose to 113.4 in the USDJPY after dropping as low as 112.52, while the EURUSD declined to 1.73 after rising as high as 1.77 in Asian trading.  The talk of trade wars came even as more data pointed to a welcome revival in activity worldwide. A survey of Japanese manufacturing out Tuesday showed the fastest expansion in almost three years as export orders surged. Indeed, sentiment took an early knock when Mnuchin told senators that he would work to combat currency manipulation but would not give a clear answer on whether he views China as manipulating its yuan.

Still, the recent euphoria surrounding the Trumpflation trade now appears largely gone: “It’s interesting that markets did not respond positively to a reaffirmation of lower taxes and looser regulation, reinforcing the impression that all the good news is discounted for now,” wrote analysts at ANZ in a note. “As week one in office gets underway, there is a growing sense of scepticism, not helped by the tone of Friday’s inaugural address and subsequent spat with the media.”

Doubts about exactly how much fiscal stimulus might be forthcoming helped Treasuries rally. Yields on 10-year notes eased to 2.39 percent, having enjoyed the steepest single-day drop since Jan. 5 on Monday.  “The driver of a shift higher will be optimism that President Trump’s policies deliver more growth,” Juckes said. “If he starts tweeting about fiscal policy instead of trade policy maybe the bond bears can come out of hibernation again.” As the chart below shows, the dollar continues to trade in lockstep with 10Y TSY yields.

As traders arrive at their desks in the US, the greenback has managed to advance against most major currencies, reversing declines sparked after Treasury Secretary nominee Steven Mnuchin said on Monday afternoon that a strong U.S. currency could have a negative short-term effect on the economy.  In written answers to a Senate Finance Committee, Mnuchin also reportedly said an excessively strong dollar could be negative in the short term.

The pound extended losses after judges ruled Prime Minister Theresa May must ask Parliament to trigger the two-year countdown to the U.K.’s departure from the European Union, handing lawmakers a chance to soften the plan. Gold fell after touching the highest since November while oil climbed above $53 a barrel.

MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan edged up 0.4 percent, while Shangahi was flat and the Nikkei slipped 0.4 percent.  European stocks halted a three-day decline, led by Italian shares amid reports that Assicurazioni Generali SpA may get investment from Intesa Sanpaolo SpA and Allianz SE.

S&P500 futures were lower by 1 point at publication.

The yield on the 10-year Treasury rose three basis points to 2.42 percent.

Market Snapshot

  • S&P 500 futures down less than 0.1% to 2261
  • Stoxx 600 up 0.2% to 362
  • FTSE 100 up 0.2% to 7167
  • DAX up 0.2% to 11567
  • German 10Yr yield up 2bps to 0.38%
  • Italian 10Yr yield up 1bp to 2%
  • Spanish 10Yr yield up 3bps to 1.46%
  • S&P GSCI Index up 0.7% to 401.5
  • MSCI Asia Pacific down less than 0.1% to 140
  • Nikkei 225 down 0.5% to 18788
  • Hang Seng up 0.2% to 22950
  • Shanghai Composite up 0.2% to 3143
  • S&P/ASX 200 up 0.7% to 5650
  • US 10-yr yield up 2bps to 2.42%
  • Dollar Index up 0.12% to 100.28
  • WTI Crude futures up 0.9% to $53.22
  • Brent Futures up 0.9% to $55.75
  • Gold spot down 0.4% to $1,213
  • Silver spot down 0.6% to $17.13

Top News

  • Mnuchin Says Excessively Strong Dollar May Hurt U.S. Economy
  • Australia Pushes for TPP Without U.S. After Trump Exits Deal
  • Trump Said to Tell Lawmakers ‘Illegals’ Cost Him Popular Vote
  • Brexit vote
  • Goldman Hails Global Rebound as Currie Sees Commodity Demand
  • Emirates Stokes Ire of U.S. Airlines With Flights Through Greece
  • OPEC Helps Cheap U.S. Oil Find Its Way to Group’s Top Buyers
  • Nike and Ford Caught in Crossfire of Trump’s Trade Overhaul

Asia stocks traded mixed following a subdued lead from Wall St. where US indices finished mostly lower amid investor uncertainty during Trump’s first day in office. ASX 200 (+0.7%) outperformed led by mining names following gains across the metals complex on the back of a weaker USD, while Nikkei 225 (-0.6%) was pressured by recent JPY strength in which USD/JPY declined below 113.00. Shanghai Comp. (+0.2%) and Hang Seng (+0.2%) traded with an indecisive tone following a weaker liquidity operation by the PBoC and as participants look ahead to Lunar New Year. 10yr JGBs were higher and tracked the gains seen in T-notes amid outperformance in the long-end, while participants also digested the latest results of the 40yr auction which resulted in a slightly higher b/c

Top Asian News

  • Australia Pushes for TPP Without U.S. After Trump Exits Deal
  • Trump Withdrawal From Asia Trade Deal Could Boost China Clout
  • BOJ Is Said to Be Wary of Yield Target Hike Even If CPI Hits 1%
  • China Small-Cap Stocks Extend January Slump on Liquidity Squeeze
  • Toshiba to Report Writedown Amount on Feb. 14 With Earnings
  • Top Goldman Forecaster Urges China to Tighten Monetary Policy
  • $12,000 Trips Abroad Replace Chinese New Year Treks to Grandma’s

European equities trade mostly higher with some mild underperformance in the FTSE 100 with BT Group on track for its biggest ever intra-day drop after cutting profit forecast for 2017, 2018 amid Italian accounting scandal. EasyJet fell in the wake of its earnings update, in which they stated that the fall in GBP will likely reduce PBT by over GBP 100mIn. Intesa Sanpaolo falls in the wake of reports that the bank may be considering a share swap offer for Generali. Notable US pre-market earnings today include 3M, Alibaba, Du Pont, Johnson & Johnson, Kimberly Clark, Lockheed Martin, Travelers and Verizon. Gilts slipped after the aforementioned Article 50 Supreme Court ruling in favour of parliament. Eurozone debt sees a marginally pull back from yesterday’s gains with bond yields creeping higher. Slight outperformance in peripheral bonds with focus for Italy on the constitutional court hearing regarding the new electoral reform for the lower, which may increase expectations of an early snap election.

Top European News

  • Supreme Court Rules Brexit Trigger Needs Parliamentary Vote
  • Euro Area Starts 2017 on Strong Note as Price Pressures Build
  • Generali Jumps on Report That Intesa Plans to Mount Takeover Bid; Generali’s Move Defensive, Intesa Unlikely Buyer: Citi
  • BT Plunges After Cutting Outlook, Tripling Writedown in Italy
  • Philips Falls After Disclosing DoJ Talks on Defibrillators
  • EasyJet Drops After Weak Pound, Fuel Costs Hurt 2017 Outlook
  • Busch Seeks Rest of Vacuum Peer in Deal Valued at $1 Billion
  • Etihad CEO Hogan to Go as Carrier Struggles With Investments
  • EU Courting of London Banks May Derail 5-Year Tobin Tax Push

In FX, the UK supreme court ruling was pretty largely as expected, barring a few last minute jitters which saw the latter (devolution) qualification in question. Cable initially rallied towards the Asian highs just ahead of 1.2550, but held off these levels to dip back under 1.2500 figure. Bids seen ahead of 1.2400 to support, but the USD perspective takes over from here. EUR/GBP has seen choppy trade either side of 0.8600, but 0.8500-0.8700 looks safe for now. Elsewhere USD/JPY shows clear signs of basing out in the mid 112.00’s having targeted this level twice now and finding yield-play dip buyers. We are unlikely to get a major push north just yet, but we sense any form of sobriety from president Trump could facilitate a modest push back to 114.00-115.00 for now. However, EUR/USD is pretty unrelenting alongside this, with the corrective moves perhaps not yet exhausted despite some softness in the German PMIs this morning.

In commodities, consolidation prices across the board is the dominant theme, with the wait-and-see approach on president Trump’s agenda going forward puts much of the market on the sidelines for now. Gold is the first point of focus in direction relation to the greenback, but with equity markets fading a little, the risk element is also proving supportive for now. The yellow metal still trades on a USD 1200 handle, but has come off slightly in recent trade. $50.00 remains the comfort zone for Oil prices, with the backdrop of the OPEC agreement maintaining stability for the foreseeable future here. Copper outperforms Iron ore. West Texas Intermediate crude was unchanged, erasing earlier gains as Iraq said it’s close to implementing its share of pledged output curbs agreed with OPEC to trim bloated global inventories and stabilize the market. Oil slid 0.9 percent the previous session after U.S. drillers added the most rigs in more than three years.

In terms of the day ahead, we’ll also get the flash US manufacturing PMI for January while existing home sales and the Richmond Fed manufacturing survey will also be released.The Italian constitutional court is also due to rule on ex-PM Renzi’s electoral law for the Lower House known as Italicum. Central bank wise we’re due to also hear comments from the ECB’s Villeroy and Lautenschlaeger today. Meanwhile on the earnings front we’re due to get results from 21 S&P 500 companies today including Verizon and Johnson & Johnson at or prior to the open.

US Event Calendar

  • 8:55am: Redbook weekly sales
  • 9:45am: Markit US Manufacturing PMI, Jan. P, est. 54.5 (prior 54.3)
  • 10am: Existing Home Sales, Dec., est. 5.51m (prior 5.61m)
  • 10am: Richmond Fed Manufacturing Index, Jan., est. 7 (prior 8)
  • 4:30pm: API weekly oil inventories

Government:

  • President Trump meets with CEOs of Fiat Chrysler, GM, Ford
  • 9:30am: Senate Energy and Natural Resources Cmte votes on nomination of Rep. Ryan Zinke for Interior secretary and Rick Perry for Energy secretary
  • 10am: Senate Judiciary Cmte votes on nomination of Sen. Jeff Sessions for attorney general
  • 10am: Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Cmte votes on nomination of Ben Carson for HUD secretary
  • 10am: Senate Finance Cmte holds hearing on nomination of Rep. Tom Price for HHS secretary
  • 10am: Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Cmte to vote on nominations of Elaine Chao for Transportation secretary and Wilbur Ross for Commerce secretary
  • 10:30am: House Ways and Means Cmte Chairman Kevin Brady details panel’s 2017 agenda
  • 10:30am: Senate Budget Cmte holds hearing on nomination of Rep. Mick Mulvaney for OMB director
  • 12pm: House considers H.R.7, which would amend Affordable Care Act to bar expenditure of federal money to purchase insurance that covers abortion services

DB’s Jim Reid concludes the overnight wrap

Today sees the UK Supreme Court appeal ruling after the Government lost their case to trigger Article 50 without a parliamentary vote. The decision has lost some of its potential impact as the expected loss is likely to be followed by PM May attempting to pass a narrow bill (with no restrictions on the government’s negotiating position) through both houses. It’s expected that such a bill passes but there are risks that last week’s speech where May admitted that leaving the single market was likely may have upset the moderates in her party and also that the Labour Party somehow manages to successfully unite behind a particular amendment that gets wider support but that the government won’t tolerate. This could lead to early elections if no bill can pass but is it really in the Labour Party’s interest to have one now? Probably not so we would expect a bill to pass. The threat hanging over a rejection in the House of Lords is reform of the chamber that might remove their influence so PM May has got leverage over both the opposition and the House of Lords.

The potential curveball from today is whether the court extends the judgement to the devolved regional assemblies (eg Scottish and Welsh) thus creating a constitutional crisis. An equally big curveball would be the court referring the whole matter to the European Court of Justice which would be heavily ironic. So a lot to look for today albeit with a clear central scenario. We’re expecting the outcome of the case around 9.30am GMT.

From my side, thinking about Brexit and also Mr Trump at a very top level, it’s fascinating to contrast Theresa May’s and Donald Trump’s big speeches last week. Simplistically the UK PM accepted that the UK will leave the EU and the single market but wants Britain to be global and seems prepared to do free trade deals with everyone who would want and allow one. In contrast Mr Trump’s main theme was nationalistic and to put “America first”. The contrast was sharp. The interesting thing though is that most economists are pretty optimistic on US growth and concerned about UK growth going forward and yet if you take both leaders at face value then the UK will be far more open to the global economy than the US. However I suppose this masks the fact that a trade shock to the UK could be bigger than the US due to its larger reliance on trade. Also it’s all very well for the UK to look to be global but it’s another thing actually getting free trade agreements, especially with the EU. Nevertheless it is interesting that at face value the UK’s official line is far more open to the rest of the world than the US at the moment. We’ll see how this evolves over the coming months.

That leads us nicely into what was a very busy and eventful first 24 hours in the new Trump administration. The most significant news yesterday was the announcement that Trump had pulled the US out of the 12-nation Trans-Pacific Partnership, calling the move a “great thing for the American worker”. The withdrawal wasn’t a huge surprise given how vocal Trump had been about the TPP during his campaign but it still evoked a wide range of reactions from various business heads and political leaders. Indeed Republican senator John McCain said that the move was a “serious mistake” and that “it will create an opening for China to rewrite the economic rules of the road at the expense of American workers”. The President also appeared to target Japan as a country which makes it difficult to sell US products there. In any case the speed with which Trump moved may have been a bit of a surprise and it now means that the focus will turn over to a likely renegotiation of NAFTA with Canada and Mexico.

Trump didn’t just stop with the TPP though. Indeed there was plenty of focus on a meeting with various business leaders in which he said that he would impose a “very major border tax” on US companies that move overseas and export back into the US. The President also said that regulations have “gotten out of control” and that he wanted to reduce regulation by at least 75%. According to the WSJ among the CEO’s in attendance at the meeting were those from Ford Motor, Lockheed Martin, Under Armour, Dow Chemical and Whirlpool. The article also suggested that Trump had asked the various leaders to come back  within 30 days with ideas aimed at boosting manufacturing in the US. Away from that Trump also ordered a federal hiring freeze excluding the military while Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin reignited the Dollar debate again by saying that “from time to time, an excessively strong dollar may have negative short-term implications on the economy”.

While that comment sent the Greenback down further in later trading in reality it had been a fairly rough day from the get go for the US Dollar with the market clearly jittery in the face of the early protectionist policies being put through by Trump. The Dollar index ended the day down -0.58% with the index closing at the lowest level since December 5th. It’s down another -0.14% this morning. Risk assets got the jitters too although in fairness a late bounce into the close limited the decline for the S&P 500 to only -0.27% compared to -0.64% at the day’s lows. That said it’s clear that equity markets continue to remain  fairly directionless. If you exclude the 0.00% return on January 10th then the index has now bounced between a gain and a loss day-to-day for 12 consecutive sessions. Meanwhile it had been much the same in Europe with the Stoxx 600 ending -0.43% while it was rates which really benefited from the risk off tone with 10y Treasury yields rallying 7.0bps to close below 2.400% again and 10y Bund yields finishing down 6.0bps at 0.358%. Gold (+0.65%) also continued its remarkable start to the year which has seen it rally over +6% already this month.

This morning in Asia we’ve seen bourses get off to yet another mixed start. While the Nikkei (-0.46%) and Kospi (-0.11%) have followed the lead from Wall Street, the Hang Seng (+0.29%), Shanghai Comp (+0.18%) and ASX (+0.37%) have edged higher. Meanwhile most Asian currencies are stronger reflecting the latest leg lower for the Dollar while Oil has largely pared yesterday’s decline. Moving on. There wasn’t much in the way of economic data out yesterday with the sole release being the flash January consumer confidence reading for the Euro area which improved a touch to -4.9 from -5.1. More notable was the latest CSPP holdings data out of the ECB. The data revealed that total holdings now stand at €56.886bn which implies net purchases settled last week of €2.876bn or an average daily run rate of €575m in that week. Not only is that well above the daily run rate since the programme started (at €362m) but it is also the strongest CSPP week since the start of the programme. We would guess though that given December was a softish month for purchases as a result of the holiday season, we may be seeing a bit of catch up in last week’s numbers.

Staying in Europe, in yesterday’s EMR we highlighted the Socialist Primary result in France where Hamon came out on top with a little over 36% of the vote. In addition, our economists noted that the turnout was disappointing on Sunday with between 1.5 and 2 million voters. They go on to say that without a higher turnout next Sunday the Socialist candidate’s campaign in the Presidential race could be called into question and senior centre-left politicians may reconsider their support. They also note that since the beginning of December, Hollande’s execonomy minister Macron has surprised many with the momentum and support he has been gathering as an independent Presidential candidate. As far as the polls are concerned they note that Le Pen is just ahead of Fillon in the first round, with both slightly above 25%.

However, based on the polls, Fillon would defeat Le Pen in the second round of the Presidential election. However, Macron could benefit from wider support of left-wing supporters and beat Le Pen as well as Fillon in the second-round. That is, the potential re-alignment of political forces in the centre and centre-left should be monitored carefully in the next few weeks as it could turn the first-round of the election campaign from a two-person to a three-person race.

In terms of the day ahead, this morning in Europe the focus will be on the January flash PMI’s where we’ll get manufacturing, services and composite readings for the Euro area, Germany and France. The UK will also release December public sector net borrowing data. Over in the US this afternoon we’ll also get the flash manufacturing PMI for January while existing home sales and the Richmond Fed manufacturing survey will also be released. Away from the data the key event today is the aforementioned Supreme Court ruling in the UK concerning the ability of the UK government to trigger article 50 without parliamentary approval. The Italian constitutional court is also due to rule on ex-PM Renzi’s electoral law for the Lower House known as Italicum. Central bank wise we’re due to also hear comments from the ECB’s Villeroy and Lautenschlaeger today. Meanwhile on the earnings front we’re due to get results from 21 S&P 500 companies today including Verizon and Johnson & Johnson at or prior to the open.

 

 

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Turkish Lira Crashes After Central Bank Unexpectedly Keeps Benchmark Repo Rate Unchanged

With Wall Street consensus expecting the Turkish central bank to hike its benchmark repo rate by 50bps (in two cases by as much as 75 bps and five analysts were expecting as much as a 100 bps increase) in hopes of arresting the recent record collapse in the Turkish Lira, this morning the central bank again proved it has become a political appendage of Erdogan, who has repeatedly stated he is against any rate hikes, when the central bank kept its overnight benchmark repo rate unchanged at 8%, even as it raised its less relevant overnight lending rate by the expected 75 basis points.

The latest breakdown of Turkey’s rates:

  • Benchmark repo rate: 8%
  • Overnight lending rate: 9.2%
  • Overnight borrowing rate: 7.25%

The disappointment was particularly acute following a November decision to hike rates by 50 bps, the first such increase in more than two years.

As a result, the lira plunged nearly 2% with USD/TRY surging as much as 1.9% to session high of 3.8284.

In its justification, the central bank said that it can deliver further tightening if needed, noting “inflation expectations, pricing behavior and other factors affecting inflation will be closely monitored and, if needed, further monetary tightening will be delivered.”

“Moreover, necessary liquidity measures will be taken in case of unhealthy pricing behavior in the foreign exchange market that cannot be justified by economic fundamentals.”

“Recent data indicate partial recovery in economic activity, which is “expected to continue at a moderate pace. Yet, excessive fluctuations in exchange rates since the previous meeting have increased the upside risks regarding the inflation outlook”

It concluded that “significant rise in inflation is expected to continue in the short term due to lagged pass-through effects and the volatility in food prices.”

In other words, expect Turkish inflation to soar in the near future as the currency crash accelerates, all the while Erdogan blames some vast foreign conspiracy to overthrow him.

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In Blow To Theresa May, UK Supreme Court Rules Parliament Must Vote Before Brexit Can Start

In a blow to Theresa May’s ambitions to implement a “clean Brexit”, on Tuesday morning UK’s Supreme Court ruled the UK Prime Minister can’t start the Brexit process without approval from Parliament, a decision that could potentially complicate her path toward a clear break from the European Union. Eight justices voted against the government and three voted in favor of it, in a decision that was widely expected.

The case had been brought by a group of British citizens opposed to Brexit with the help of some of the U.K.’s top constitutional lawyers. Spearheading the legal challenge were British businesswoman Gina Miller and hairdresser Deir Dos Santos. Grahame Pigney, a France-based expatriate who used crowdfunding from more than 4,000 people to pay for lawyers, joined the suit as a co-party

The government responded that the ruling wouldn’t affect May’s plans to trigger talks to leave the EU by the end of March and the opposition Labour Party said after the judgment it wouldn’t seek to stop Brexit from happening. But Labour said it would try to amend any bill introduced by Mrs. May to kick off the Brexit process, possibly influencing how the U.K.’s new relationship with the EU will look.

According to the WSJ, while a majority of lawmakers voted to stay in the EU, many have said they won’t seek to block Article 50, which formally starts Britain’s exit from the EU, given the popular vote, in which 52% voted to leave. “The British people voted to leave the EU, and the government will deliver on their verdict—triggering Article 50, as planned, by the end of March,” a U.K. government spokesman said. “Today’s ruling does nothing to change that.”

Lord David Neuberger said any change in the law to put Brexit into effect must be made by an act of Parliament. “To proceed otherwise would be a breach of settled constitutional principles stretching back many centuries,” he said. He said the Supreme Court justices were ruling on the process of legally bringing the result into effect, and that the ruling had nothing to do with whether the U.K. should exit from the EU or the timetable.

While the outcome was not surprising, the case has been one of the most politically charged in decades. After the High Court ruled against the government in November, pro-Brexit activists called the decision an attempt to overturn the will of Britons who chose to break away from the bloc in a June referendum. The Daily Mail newspaper said the three High Court judges who ruled on the case were “enemies of the people.” But the landscape has shifted since then.

As previously reported, in December, Mrs. May won lawmakers’ backing to trigger the start of Brexit by the end of March after promising to give Parliament, the majority of whom backed staying in the EU, an opportunity to scrutinize her plan first.

Mrs. May has outlined a plan for a definitive break from the EU, saying she intends to take the country out of the EU’s single market for goods and services. Leaving the single market will create uncertainties for U.K. businesses that rely on trade with Europe, particularly financial markets, auto makers and aerospace.

 

Asked in an interview with a German newspaper this month whether the U.K. was seeking to become a tax haven with low levels of corporate tax, U.K. Treasury Chief Philip Hammond said the U.K. could change its economic model if it isn’t granted access to trade in the EU after it leaves the bloc.

 

Jeremy Corbyn, Labour leader, said in a statement after the ruling that Labour “will not frustrate” the process for trigger the U.K.’s exit.

 

“However, Labour will seek to amend the Article 50 bill to prevent the Conservatives using Brexit to turn Britain into a bargain basement tax haven off the coast of Europe,” Mr. Corbyn said. “Labour will seek to build in the principles of full, tariff-free access to the single market and maintenance of workers’ rights and social and environmental protections.” He added that the party would demand that the U.K. government lays out a plan for negotiations so parliamentarians could hold it to account.

 

Kelvin Hopkins, a Labour member of Parliament, urged his party not to seek to complicate the process of leaving.

 

“My colleagues in the House of Commons need to realize that if we are seen to frustrate the will of the British people, by opposing or delaying Brexit we could find ourselves in a position where we will never see a Labour government again,” Mr. Hopkins said in a statement.

Over four days of hearings before the Supreme Court last month, the government said it had the right to trigger Brexit because of the so-called royal prerogative, in which executive authority is given to ministers so they can govern on the monarch’s behalf.

The market’s reaction has been subdued, with the resulting modest decline in sterling – the opposite of what would be expected from the adverse ruling – suggesting that the court’s decision had been fully priced in by the market. In fact, as HSBC predicted ahead of the decision, “if ruling states that Parliamentary approval will be needed to start the Brexit process it will be “mildly negative” for the pound.” as the government is prepared for this and “should be able to table a short and simple Parliamentary Bill in the coming days” meaning Article 50 could still be triggered before the end of March.

Sure enough, GBPUSD is now modestly lower following the announcement.

And indeed, as Reuters writes, Theresa May’s plans to start the process of Britain leaving the European Union by the end of March are unlikely to be hindered or slowed by Tuesday’s Supreme Court ruling the government must seek parliamentary approval. In the ruling, judges on Britain’s top judicial body upheld an earlier High Court decision that lawmakers had to give their assent before May can invoke Article 50 of the Lisbon Treaty which formally starts two-years of divorce talks.

However, the legal defeat, while an inconvenience and embarrassment for the government, is not expected to delay its Brexit timetable or, as some investors and pro-EU supporters hope, make it possible to stop Britain leaving the bloc. Part of this is because the opposition is divided.

 

“We will not block Article 50,” Jeremy Corbyn, leader of the main opposition Labour Party which campaigned against Brexit, said last week. “All Labour MPs (members of parliament) will be asked to vote in that direction next week, or whenever the vote comes up.” Not all Corbyn’s colleagues may go along, but May can get the votes she needs for overall passage.

 

However, what the decision could do is give an opportunity for Labour and other lawmakers who oppose a “hard Brexit” – an agreement with the EU that puts immigration curbs above access to the single market – to have a greater influence on what the final deal should look like.

The greatest potential threat to May comes from parliament’s unelected upper chamber, the House of Lords, where many peers remained strongly opposed to Brexit and do not have voters to worry about. If the Lords were to vote against approving the triggering of Article 50, the Brexit timetable could be severely delayed.

However, the government is confident the bill will pass through the Lords because there would be a constitutional crisis if unelected peers were to thwart the will of the people expressed both through the referendum and from their representatives in the Commons.

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Charlie Gasparino And Scott Baio Attacked By Antifa A$$holes While Kellyanne Conway Thumps Some Fool

Charlie Gasparino, the Fox Business News senior correspondent who told the market to calm it’s tits before the election over a Trump presidency, made a really interesting post on Facebook today about two tales of Inaugural altercations. One involved Gasparino and fellow Trump supporter Scott Baio being attacked by a couple of rioting snowflakes, and the other involving the President’s top counselor Kellyanne Conway!

gas2

DO NOT DISTURB

george23

Let me get this straight… Conway charged into a fight between two guys and started punching one of them? Just when I thought she couldn’t get any more formidable, Kellyanne reveals herself to be a straight up brawler. That man in the picture above, George Conway III, has been married to Kellyanne for 16 years and they have 4 kids together. George is also a really smart dude. After earning his law degree from Yale (where he was the editor of the Yale Law Journal), he joined prestigious Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz law firm and made partner 6 years later – kicking legal ass up to and including in front of the Supreme Court. My guess is he’s quite the force of nature. And, something tells me he’s smart enough to slip away into the garage and rearrange the Christmas storage when Kellyanne is pissed.

Uma-Thurman

 

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Swedish Politician Resigns After Calls To “Shoot Trump”

A municipal council lawmaker in the Swedish city of Kalmar, Roland Pettersson, member of the biggest Swedish Social Democratic Party, resigned on Monday after asking on Facebook if someone could “shoot” America’s president, Donald Trump.

“I believed that Donald Trump would calm down after he became the president [of the US]. But how wrong I was! He exceeded my worst fears! Could anyone shoot him?” Swedish Social Democratic Party member Roland Peterson, a municipal official in Kalmar’s Soedermoere district, wrote on his Facebook page on Sunday.

Although he later removed the post a few hours later, on Monday Peterson decided to step down as member of both his party and the Soedermoere Municipal Council and Planning Board, RT reported.

“After my blunder on Facebook, there is a risk that I will become a burden for the Social Democrats in Kalmar. I do not want it, so I chose to leave all my posts,” Peterson wrote in a letter to his party members, as quoted by the Oestra Smaland newspaper.

Person’s post provoked an angry reaction from his party members and fellow councilors. “It is good that he [Peterson] removed it [the post],” councilor Johan Persson told Oestra Smalan, adding that people should “never call for violence” regardless of their opinion of Donald Trump or other issues.

The Social Democrats’ leader in Kalmar, Roger Holmberg, denounced the post as “inappropriate” and “idiotic,” while stressing that “even thinking about the idea of violence is completely wrong.” He told Swedish broadcaster STV that he had had a conversation with Peterson and said that new party members would receive training in working with social media.

Holmber said that Peterson “is deeply remorseful,” explaining that he “did not understand the impact of the post in the social media.”

Peterson told local STV that he “would have never written” the post if he had considered the consequences, while promising he “will never do it again.” He also explained to Oestra Smalan that it was Trump’s environmental policy that had deeply upset him. “[Trump] risks the future of the entire Earth,” he said adding that “now, when the world has started going in the right direction,” Trump plans to increase oil and coal production.

While Trump’s ideas about the environmental are a source of controversy in the US, and social media went into meltdown after Trump’s inauguration when certain hot topic issues disappeared from the White House website, including climate change, we wonder if Pettersson has heard of China’s “environmental” problems, and whether the tolerant, enviornmentally savvy liberal would urge someone to nuke the entire country out of orbit if so. 

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