ECB Leaves Rates Unchanged, Keeps QE At €60BN But May Revise It Higher Or Lower

With the market not expecting any changes from the ECB this morning, so far that is precisely what it got, when moments ago the ECB announced that it kept all of its rates unchanged as expected, keeping the rate on the main refinancing operations and the interest rates on the marginal lending facility and the deposit facility at 0.00%, 0.25% and -0.40%, respectively.

In additional language relating to non-standard measures, the ECB also said that “it will continue to make purchases under the asset purchase programme (APP) at the current monthly pace of €80 billion until the end of March 2017 and that, from April 2017, the net asset purchases are intended to continue at a monthly pace of €60 billion until the end of December 2017, or beyond, if necessary” and “in any case until the Governing Council sees a sustained adjustment in the path of inflation consistent with its inflation aim.

It also said that “the net purchases will be made alongside reinvestments of the principal payments from maturing securities purchased under the APP” and cautioned that “if the outlook becomes less favourable, or if financial conditions become inconsistent with further progress towards a sustained adjustment in the path of inflation, the Governing Council stands ready to increase the programme in terms of size and/or duration.”

In other words, it may move QE up or down, depending on what happens with inflation, in line with the ECB’s December announcement.

Full ECB statement below.

Monetary policy decisions

 

At today’s meeting the Governing Council of the ECB decided that the interest rate on the main refinancing operations and the interest rates on the marginal lending facility and the deposit facility will remain unchanged at 0.00%, 0.25% and -0.40% respectively. The Governing Council continues to expect the key ECB interest rates to remain at present or lower levels for an extended period of time, and well past the horizon of the net asset purchases.

 

Regarding non-standard monetary policy measures, the Governing Council confirms that it will continue to make purchases under the asset purchase programme (APP) at the current monthly pace of €80 billion until the end of March 2017 and that, from April 2017, the net asset purchases are intended to continue at a monthly pace of €60 billion until the end of December 2017, or beyond, if necessary, and in any case until the Governing Council sees a sustained adjustment in the path of inflation consistent with its inflation aim. The net purchases will be made alongside reinvestments of the principal payments from maturing securities purchased under the APP. If the outlook becomes less favourable, or if financial conditions become inconsistent with further progress towards a sustained adjustment in the path of inflation, the Governing Council stands ready to increase the programme in terms of size and/or duration.

 

The President of the ECB will comment on the considerations underlying these decisions at a press conference starting at 14:30 CET today.

And now all eyes on Draghi at 8:30am Eastern.

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Frontrunning: January 19

  • Yellen speech bolsters dollar after Trump’s mixed messages (Reuters)
  • Draghi Set to Face Questions on ECB Bond Purchases (WSJ)
  • Davos CEOs ‘go local’ on supply chain in Trump era (Reuters)
  • Oil and Trump: Russians full of optimism (Reuters)
  • Biggest Opposition Party Ready to Topple Swedish Government (BBG)
  • The Mortgage Market’s $1 Trillion Pocket of Worry (WSJ)
  • Ex-VW CEO Winterkorn Deflects Blame for Diesel-Cheating Scandal (BBG)
  • George Soros, Mastercard to partner to aid migrants, refugees (Reuters)
  • Don’t Assume Canada Will Rally With U.S., Poloz Warns Investors (BBG)
  • Mnuchin to Address IndyMac, Tax Policy at Senate Hearing (WSJ)
  • On Davos sidelines, banks expecting three-year transition after Brexit (Reuters)
  • Safran to Buy Zodiac for $10 Billion in All-French Aero Deal (BBG)
  • These Automakers Could be Trump’s Next Targets (BBG)
  • Exclusive: Pentagon, Lockheed near deal on $9 billion F-35 contract (Reuters)
  • How Deutsche Bank Made Minus €367 Million Disappear (BBG)
  • Syria’s Assad hopes for ‘reconciliation’ deals from Astana talks (Reuters)
  • How Well Does Running Vanguard Pay? (BBG)
  • GOP Governors Warn Lawmakers About Repeal of Affordable Care Act (WSJ)
  • U.S exchanges rent helicopter, drape banner in pursuit of Snapchat IPO (Reuters)
  • Netflix’s Global Growth Fuels Surge in Subscribers (WSJ)

 

Overnight Media Digest

WSJ

– Netflix Inc’s subscriber additions surged in the fourth quarter, fueled by an aggressive international expansion, beating both internal and Wall Street targets. http://on.wsj.com/2k5VNNG

– Hunter Harrison, the railroad veteran who announced his early departure from Canadian Pacific Railway Ltd Wednesday, is joining with an activist investor in an attempt to shake up management at rival railroad CSX Corp. http://on.wsj.com/2k5TZV1

– Alphabet Inc’s Google agreed to acquire a unit from Twitter Inc that runs a tool for developers to make mobile apps, the latest step in Twitter’s efforts to streamline its business. http://on.wsj.com/2k5FwZc

– A South Korean court denied an arrest warrant for Lee Jae-yong, the scion of the Samsung Group conglomerate, for his alleged involvement in a national corruption scandal. http://on.wsj.com/2k5NP7s

– Irish drugmaker Mallinckrodt PLC and a U.S. subsidiary will pay $100 million and agree to other conditions to settle government antitrust allegations they unlawfully prevented competition for Acthar, a drug that has seen enormous price spikes in recent years. http://on.wsj.com/2k5Vq5G

– Sumner Redstone’s ex-girlfriend has asked a California court to appoint an independent doctor to assess his health and, if he lacks mental capacity, appoint a guardian for him, according to documents filed Wednesday. http://on.wsj.com/2k60NSm

– Target Corp warned of weak profits and sales during the critical holiday period, the latest retail chain to acknowledge its struggle to attract shoppers to its stores and compete with online sellers such as Amazon.com Inc. http://on.wsj.com/2k5YNtr

 

FT

* British financier Edi Truell is pushing the government to eliminate tax relief for pension savers for the creation of “SuperFunds” that would make investments in infrastructure.

* Deutsche Bank will cut 2016 bonus payments for their top managers confirmed by chief executive John Cryan in a note to the company’s staff.

* Greece on Wednesday concluded the sale of its rail company TRAINOSE to Italy’s state railways Ferrovie dello Stato for 45 million euros ($48.1 million), the country’s privatisation agency said.

* Clydesdale Bank Plc is planning to close about a third of its bank branches and fire more than 400 employees to reduce costs. The Glasgow-based lender is planning to shut 79 branches, taking its total number of branches to fewer than 169.

* EU leaders on Wednesday welcomed clarity from Britain over what it wants from Brexit talks, with Germany’s Angela Merkel promising a united front in what will be “very intensive” negotiations.

 

NYT

– Representative Tom Price, President-elect Donald Trump’s pick to lead the Department of Health and Human Services, promised on Wednesday to make sure people do not “fall through the cracks” if the Affordable Care Act is repealed. http://nyti.ms/2k2rLX7

– JPMorgan Chase has agreed to pay $55 million to settle an investigation into whether it charged thousands of African-American and Hispanic borrowers higher interest rates on mortgages than white customers. http://nyti.ms/2jzORYx

– President-elect Trump will take office on Friday with less popular support than any new president in modern times, according to an array of surveys, a sign that he has failed to rally Americans behind him. http://nyti.ms/2iTRfIC

– A South Korean court on Thursday blocked a prosecutor’s attempt to arrest Jay Y. Lee, the leader of Samsung, saying there was not enough evidence that Lee had bribed President Park Geun-hye, in a scandal that led to her impeachment. http://nyti.ms/2jBlmFz

– Trump, in a free-flowing speech Wednesday night at a dinner honoring his running mate, Mike Pence, jabbed at his new Republican allies and his critics alike, questioned the ethics of “super PACs” and talked about creating a “merit-based” immigration system. http://nyti.ms/2k2eT36

– President Obama made clear on Wednesday that he finds some ideas advanced by Trump so alarming that he laid out markers that would draw him back into the fray. http://nyti.ms/2iDSdu1

 

Canada

THE GLOBE AND MAIL

** Hunter Harrison is leaving Canadian Pacific Railway Ltd more than five months ahead of schedule, and the bombastic 72-year-old executive appears to be vying for a job at a major U.S. railroad, CSX Corp. https://tgam.ca/2jOtcZO

** A 2017 pension forecast by consulting firm Mercer Canada anticipates big growth in annuity purchases, with Canadian pension plans forecast to buy C$4 billion ($3.01 billion) to C$5 billion in annuity contracts in 2017, an increase from a record C$3 billion in 2016 and C$2.2 billion in 2015. https://tgam.ca/2jOw5K7

** Vancouver is preparing to spend C$3.5 million on a drug-overdose crisis with no end in sight, pouring money into a new medic unit, an additional community-policing station and training for staff to administer the anti-overdose medication naloxone. https://tgam.ca/2jOssnK

NATIONAL POST

** Genworth Canada said late Tuesday that it would be increasing its transactional mortgage insurance premium rates for homebuyers, essentially duplicating the increases brought in by Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. http://bit.ly/2jOxuke

** Beauty retailer Lush Cosmetics is tripling its average store size over the next three years, bucking the downsizing trend of many bricks-and-mortar storefronts across North America. http://bit.ly/2jOwxs1

** The world’s largest gold mining companies expect more consolidation in the sector ahead – even if their own companies are more interested in partnerships, top executives at the TD Securities Mining Conference said Wednesday. http://bit.ly/2jOtXCh

 

Britain

The Times

Four hundred jobs go as Clydesdale and Yorkshire banks cut branches by third

Clydesdale Bank Plc and Yorkshire Bank are to close one third of their branches this year with the loss of 400 jobs and potential inconvenience to tens of thousands of account-holders. CYBG, the owner of both banks, said that it was cutting 79 branches, reducing its network to only 168. The cull is more radical that when first flagged in September. Then CYBG said only that it would reduce branch numbers to below 200. http://bit.ly/2jyRVEd

The Guardian

Deutsche Bank takes the axe to staff bonuses

Deutsche Bank AG announced massive cuts to its annual bonus scheme on Wednesday, as it looks to absorb the impact of a record $7.2bn fine in the United States. Around 25,000 of the bank’s most senior staff will receive no individual bonus for 2016. The cuts will apply worldwide, and will affect bankers in London and New York. http://bit.ly/2iJpEqj

EE fined 2.7 mln stg by Ofcom for overcharging customers

The telecoms watchdog has slapped mobile phone giant EE with a 2.7 million pound fine for overcharging almost 40,000 customers. Ofcom accused EE of “fundamental billing mistakes” in charging mobile phone users too much when they dialled its customer service number 150 from abroad. http://bit.ly/2jMV2G1

The Telegraph

Calls for ex-Rolls-Royce CEO to lose knighthood after firm admits bribery

Labour called for the former chief executive of Rolls-Royce Holdings Plc to lose his knighthood, after the company admitted “extensive systemic bribery and corruption” during the period in which he ran the jet engines manufacturer. John Rose held the job at the Derby-based corporation, which was forced on Tuesday to admit that it was responsible for “egregious criminality over decades” between 1996 and 2011. http://bit.ly/2iTaUZ4

Sky News

Cyber-security firm NCC ousts chairman after profit warnings

The troubled cyber-security firm NCC Group Plc will announce on Thursday that one of the longest-serving chairmen of a listed UK company is stepping down following a pre-Christmas profit alert. Paul Mitchell, who has chaired NCC since 1999, is to depart in the coming months amid shareholder concerns about the company’s performance. http://bit.ly/2jAaCHn

BP risks fresh pay row in 2017 over boss Dudley’s share award

BP Plc is facing a renewed showdown with shareholders over its chief executive’s multi-million pound pay package, 12 months after an investor revolt at the company triggered a move by the Government to curb excessive boardroom remuneration. A number of big City shareholders in BP have expressed opposition to proposals by the oil giant’s board to trim the maximum sum payable to Bob Dudley under a long-term incentive plan. http://bit.ly/2k4LGsp

HSBC and UBS issue new warnings over Brexit jobs exodus

HSBC Holdings Plc and UBS Group AG have issued fresh warnings over an exodus of staff following Brexit, a day after Theresa May confirmed the UK would leave the single market. The remarks by the two global banks at the World Economic Forum in Davos suggested each could move 1,000 workers out of London, echoing warnings from the sector before last June’s vote. http://bit.ly/2jaypul

The Independent

Sadiq Khan expected to attack Theresa May’s hard Brexit plans at World Economic Forum

The Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, will use a planned speech at the World Economic Forum in Davos to warn that a ‘hard Brexit would be a lose-lose situation’. http://ind.pn/2iRbeHZ

UK post-Brexit trade deal with India threatened by Theresa May’s visa crackdown

One of Britain’s most important post-Brexit trade partnerships could be at risk due to Theresa May’s refusal to reform visa restrictions for Indian citizens. The Prime Minister has insisted leaving the EU would allow Britain to find other partners abroad and India, the world’s fastest growing major economy, was the first country she visited, accompanied by a large business delegation, outside Europe after the referendum. http://ind.pn/2iRHXNh

 

 

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CIA Unveils New Rules For “Collecting, Analyzing And Storing” Information On American Citizens

In a burst of transparency, one day after it made available some 13 million pages of archives documents online for the first time, on Wednesday the Central Intelligence Agency unveiled revised rules for collecting, analyzing and storing information on American citizens, publishing them in full for the first time.

As Reuters reported,  the new rules were released amid continued public concern about the government’s surveillance powers, and were published two days before President elect-Donald Trump is sworn into office and may be changed by the new administration. Trump has said he favors stronger government surveillance powers, including the monitoring of “certain” mosques in the United States.   

The new procedures, under development for years, were signed on Tuesday by CIA Director John Brennan and Attorney General Loretta Lynch.

While the CIA (if not the NSA) has been largely barred from collecting information inside the United States or on U.S. citizens, a 1980s presidential order provided for discrete exceptions governed by procedures approved by the CIA director and the attorney general. Known as the “Attorney General Guidelines,” the original rules over time became a “patchwork of policies and procedures” that failed to keep pace with the development of technology that can store massive amounts of digital data, said Krass. While the 1982 guidelines were made public two years ago, sections were blacked out. The updated procedures were posted in full for the first time on the CIA’s website on Wednesday.

The updated procedures include what the CIA must do when it clandestinely obtains a computer hard drive holding millions of pages of text, hours of videos and thousands of photos containing information on foreigners and U.S. citizens. As Reuters adds, because extensive time and many analysts are required to assess such large volumes of data, the new rules regulate the handling of material whose intelligence value cannot be promptly evaluated.

They also regulate how such data can be searched and create strict requirements for dealing with unevaluated electronic communications, which must be destroyed no later than five years after the are first examined.

The rules were unveiled a week after civil liberties groups decried new guidelines approved by the Obama administration expanding the NSA’s ability to share communications intercepts with other U.S. intelligence agencies, including the CIA.

In an ironic statement, CIA General Counsel Caroline Krass told a briefing at the agency’s headquarters in Langley that the guidelines are designed “in a manner that protects the privacy and civil rights of the American people.” In the aftermath of the Snowden revelations, it is unclear who if anyone will believe this canned statement.

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Dozens Feared Dead After Huge Avalanche Buries Luxury Italian Hotel After Series Of Earthquakes

Following a series of strong earthquakes, a huge avalanche ploughed into a luxury mountain hotel in central Italy with up to 30 people feared to be buried under the snow, officials said on Thursday.

The disaster happened at the base of the Gran Sasso mountain range near the Rigopiano di Farindola hotel. The avalanche struck on Wednesday evening, just hours after four earthquakes with a magnitude of above 5.0 hit central Italy, sparking fears about possible avalanches. In addition to the quakes, the country has been pounded by heavy snowfall and rain.

The Gran Sasso Resort Farindola (Pescara) is a situated  some 1,200 meters above sea level.

Rescue battled blizzard conditions during the night to reach the isolated hotel on skis. They arrived in the dark to find most of the four-storey structure submerged under a mountain of snow and debris Reuters reports.

“Around 30 people are unaccounted for, between guests and workers at the Hotel Rigopiano in Farindola,” Fabrizio Curcio, head of Italy’s civil protection department, told reporters. Italy’s ANSA news agency reported that one body had been recovered, but there was no immediate confirmation of this. The civil agency added that there were up to 20 guests, some of them children, and seven staff members in the three-story hotel.

The head of a rescue squad that reached the hotel reported that “there are many dead,” as cited on the Italian news agency ANSA’s website.

More than 12 hours after the wall of snow smashed into the four-star hotel, which is some 1,200 metres (4,000 ft) above sea level, only two survivors had been accounted for.

“I am alive because I went to get something from my car,” one of the two, Giampiero Parete, told medical staff, according to la Repubblica website.

The rescue operation has been hampered by up to 5 metres (16 ft) of snow which has fallen on the Gran Sasso mountain range in the central Abruzzo region in recent days, blocking access roads.

“We haven’t been able to do too much. The structure has collapsed. It’s more like a pile of rubble than a hotel,” said Antonio Crocetta, a member of the Alpine Rescue squad who was on the scene. “What is left of the hotel is in danger of collapse. The hotel is almost completely destroyed. We’ve called out but we’ve heard no replies, no voices. We’re digging and looking for people,” he told Reuters speaking by telephone.

On Thursday, the president of Pescara province wrote on Facebook that there were 20 guests at the hotel when it was buried by the avalanche, as cited by AP. “What is certain is that the building took a direct hit from the avalanche, to the point that it was moved by 10 meters,” he added, as quoted by AFP.

A base camp for rescue workers was set up in the town of Penne, some 10 km (6 miles) away, where ambulances waited for earth-moving vehicles to clear the winding, snow-clogged road leading to the hotel.

The avalanche collapsed part of the four-storey hotel, which had 43 rooms, shunting it some 10 metres (30 ft) down the hill, according to media reports.

The first rescuers only managed to arrive at 4.30 a.m. (0330 GMT) after they had to ski through a heavy snow storm to reach the site. After dawn broke, emergency services sent in helicopters. “We’re dropping our rescue units down by helicopter and they are starting to dig,” said Luca Cari, spokesman for the national fire brigades.

An aerial shot of the hotel released by the fire brigade showed just the last floor and the roof visible above a thick blanket of snow.

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Global Stocks Dip; Bond Yields, Dollar Rise After Yellen’s Rate Guidance; All Eyes On Draghi

After yesterday’s speech by Janet Yellen which signaled a path of steady interest rate increases and was perceived as hawkish, the dollar rebounded, Asian shares slipped and government bond yields jumped to multi-week highs on Thursday.

European, Asian stocks and US equity futures all decline together with commodity metals while oil rises on the API reported drop in crude inventories. The euro rebounded as investors look to Mario Draghi to address quickening inflation that make his stimulative policies look increasingly out of sync, even if the market is confident the ECB won’t make any changes to its policy today. That said the ECB may struggle to downplay the recent spike in Eurozone inflation.

Top news stories include Netflix reporting its biggest quarter ever, Credit Suisse resolving U.S. mortgage probe, France’s Safran buying Zodiac in $10 billion aviation deal.

In markets, the main focus for the past 24 hours has been once again on the fairly large moves across rates and FX, albeit moves which largely ended up being a reversal of the previous day’s price action. 10y Treasury yields closed a shade over 10bps higher yesterday at 2.430% while the USD index rebounded +0.60% and finished higher for the first time in over a week. Those moves were given a late boost by comments from Fed Chair Yellen who said that “it is fair to say the economy is near maximum employment and inflation is moving toward our goal”. She also said that while “it makes sense to gradually reduce the level of monetary policy support” the actual timing of the next Fed rate hike “will depend on how the economy actually evolves over coming months”. So a fairly straight bat approach.

As a result, the dollar gained almost one percent from Thursday’s lows against a basket of currencies, yields climbed in Europe, catching up with Treasuries which sold off yesterday after Fed chair Janet Yellen said the American economy is strong enough to warrant higher interest rates, bringing the ECB’s quantitative easing into sharper relief as policymakers led by Draghi meet today. Stocks fell, led lower by real estate after an indicator of U.K. house prices fell for the first time in five months in December as values slumped in London. 

Yellen’s hawkishness appeared to be wearing off on Thursday, though, as investors, looking for further details on Trump’s plans to boost growth, remained cautious before the President-elect’s inauguration on Friday. As a reminder, Yellen will speak again later on Thursday, after European markets close, about the economic outlook and monetary policy.

The ECB is set to meet as the euro recovered some of the ground it lost overnight, but with no policy changes expected. However, hints of disagreements among the region’s monetary guardians could ruffle markets.

European stocks opened a tad higher with some big moves in single stocks, as Zodiac Aerospace surged following a takeover offer, and Moneysupermarket.com jumped after it reported strong results.

Asian shares edged down 0.2 percent, knocked back by the dollar. Bucking the trend of weaker Asian shares, Japan’s Nikkei stock index ended up 0.9 percent, helped by weaker yen.

“Of all the speakers we’re getting, either from Davos or from less ostentatious spots, the one I’m going to listen to most for now will probably still be Janet Yellen,” Societe Generale’s currency strategist Kit Juckes said cited by Reuters. “As the U.S. economy approaches full employment, as wages rise but inflation rises nearly as quickly, how hawkish the Fed dares to be will determine how much the dollar rises.”

Euro zone government bonds were still moving in the slipstream of Yellen’s speech with benchmark German bond yields spiking to one-month highs after U.S. equivalents rose to their highest since Jan. 9. Yields on 10-year German bunds jumped 3 basis points to 0.38 percent by 9:40 a.m. in London. Treasury yields were steady at 2.43 percent.

As Reuters adds, and as we previewed overnight, earlier in Asia, short-term funding costs in China shot to their highest in nearly 10 years on fears that liquidity was tightening heading into the Lunar New Year holidays at the end of this month.  “The market is typically short of liquidity ahead of the Lunar New Year,” said Gu Weiyong, chief investment officer at bond-focused hedge fund Ucom Investment Co, adding that a cash injection by the central bank was insufficient.

Crude oil prices regained some ground lost in the previous session when the dollar strengthened as investors turned their attention to upcoming government data on U.S. inventories. A stronger dollar makes dollar-denominated commodities more expensive for those holding other currencies. U.S. crude added 0.8 percent to $51.50 per barrel, after shedding 2.67% on Wednesday. Brent crude rose 0.7 percent to $54.32 after slipping 2.79%.

Market Snapshot

  • S&P 500 futures down 0.2% to 2263
  • Stoxx 600 down 0.3% to 362
  • FTSE 100 down 0.6% to 7206
  • DAX down 0.1% to 11585
  • German 10Yr yield up 2bps to 0.38%
  • Italian 10Yr yield up 3bps to 1.99%
  • Spanish 10Yr yield up 3bps to 1.48%
  • S&P GSCI Index up 0.2% to 395.9
  • MSCI Asia Pacific down 0.2% to 140
  • Nikkei 225 up 0.9% to 19072
  • Hang Seng down 0.2% to 23050
  • Shanghai Composite down 0.4% to 3101
  • S&P/ASX 200 up 0.2% to 5692
  • US 10-yr yield down less than 1bp to 2.42%
  • Dollar Index up 0.18% to 101.11
  • WTI Crude futures up 0.6% to $51.40
  • Brent Futures up 0.7% to $54.28
  • Gold spot down less than 0.1% to $1,204
  • Silver spot down 0.5% to $16.98

Top Global News

  • Netflix Soars, Esquire Goes Dark as More TV Viewers Move Online: Online video leader beats projections in U.S., foreign markets
  • Credit Suisse Resolves U.S. Mortgage Probe for $5.3 Billion: Bank to pay $2.5 billion fine, $2.8 billion in consumer relief
  • Safran to Buy Zodiac for $10 Billion in All-French Aviation Deal: Struggling seat supplier accepts bid from aero-engine maker
  • Goldman Says Aluminum Poised for Big Gains If China Widens Cuts: China seen widening capacity cuts to aluminum from steel, coal
  • Kremlin Said to Fear Trump Won’t Be a Great Deal After All: Top officials fret furor in U.S. over hacking could hurt thaw
  • Russia Weighs FX Purchases as Strong Ruble Hits Exporters: Russia considers how to cut volatility of real exchange rate
  • Vegemite Heads Back to Australia in $345 Million Bega Deal: Bega Cheese to acquire global trademark rights for Vegemite
  • CSX Jumps on Report Hilal, CP Rail’s Harrison Targeting Company: WSJ reports, citing unidentified people familiar
  • Oclaro Jumps 5.5% After 2Q Preliminary Revenue Tops Estimate
  • Plexus Drops 2.6% Post-Mkt; Sees 2Q Revenue Below Estimates
  • Canadian Pacific Railway 4Q Adj. EPS Misses Est.

Looking at regional markets, Asia stocks traded mixed following a similar lacklustre lead from Wall St, although exporters in Japan have been buoyed by a weaker JPY. This saw the Nikkei 225 (+0.9%)  outperform with the power sector underpinned by TEPCO plans to resume bond issuances for the 1st time since the 2011 Fukushima disaster, while there were also reports that the nuclear regulator passed safety screenings for 2 Kyushu reactors. Elsewhere, ASX 200 (+0.2%) was marginally positive with healthcare outperforming after CSL upgraded its FY net guidance, while Hang Seng (-0.5%) and Shanghai Comp. (-0.4%) had been dampened following a reduced liquidity operation by the PBoC. Finally, 10yr JGBs saw spill-over selling to track T-notes lower amid heightened risk appetite for Japanese stocks, while a discouraging 5yr auction also pressured in which b/c fell from prior and lowest accepted price missed the consensus.

Top Asia News

  • Takata Bidders Said to Favor Japan Bankruptcy; Shares Tumble: Takata says no decision has been made on turnaround plan
  • Asia’s Worst EM Currency Seen Most Resilient in 2017 Survey: Philippine peso is forecast to be the most resilient to external risks this year
  • Toshiba Drops 16 Percent on Reported Writedown Losses: the writedown may exceed 700 billion yen, Kyodo reports
  • Indonesia, Malaysia Hold Rates as Fed Fuels Currency Weakness: Most economists predicted decision by the two central banks
  • China Signals It May Aim Lower on Cleaner-Burning Fuel Target: Natural gas share in total energy mix will be 8.3% to 10%

European equities (Euro Stoxx 50: -0.2%) trade modestly in the red after a choppy start to the session. Earnings are beginning to come into focus, with Royal Mail (-5.2%) the notable laggard in the FTSE 100, with the Co.’s shares at 11 month lows. Similarly, Carrefour (1.3%) are among the worst performers in the CAC in the wake of their pre market earnings. Elsewhere, on a sector specific basis, commodities dictate play with materials seeing upside this morning, while energy names weigh on European indices. Fixed income markets have seen pressure throughout the morning, with Bunds back below the 163 level in tandem with some of the softness seen in T-Notes in the wake of comments from Fed’s Yellen yesterday, who suggested she sees a few hikes a year as the economy continues to recover. Elsewhere, ahead of today’s ECB rate decision and press conference, source reports have emerged that the ECB lacks a deal on how to buy bonds below deposit rate but will do so despite the lack of a deal.

Top European News

  • ECB Said to Lack Agreement on How to Buy Debt Below Deposit Rate: Hold-up linked to complexity of $2.4 trillion QE program
  • Goldman May Cut London Staff by 50% on Brexit, Handelsblatt Says: Firm says no decision has been made, doesn’t recognize figures
  • U.K. House Price Gauge Declines for First Time in Five Months: Home prices in London decrease for 10th consecutive month
  • May Says U.K. Must Accept the Road Ahead Will Be Uncertain

In currencies, much of the FX price action from Fed chair Yellen’s comments late yesterday played out through NY and Asia, while London tried to push USD/JPY towards 115.00, though sellers here have contained the move for now. The limited pullback shows intent on retesting these levels and higher, with higher UST yields recovering well as ‘skew’ moves to the right of the 2-3 rate hike expectation range for this year. Headwinds for EUR/USD though as the market remains wary of any taper talk at today’s ECB meeting. Sellers above 1.0700 will be a little unnerved by the lack of follow through on the downside, as we held off 1.0600 before the latest modest recovery, but this may all change past the press conference later today. The post Brexit speech analysis continues to pull Cable either side of 1.2300 in the meantime, but widespread reports of investment banks transferring some of their operations over to the continent have added some weight, helping to contain the short squeeze in the low 1.2400’s. EUR/GBP is now also in consolidation mode, trading the .8600-.8700 range over the last 24 hours.

In commodities, oil prices have have staged a modest rebound with no major catalyst seen other than longs perhaps unnerved by the US inauguration ahead. The API report suggested an inventory drawdown, but to little effect, offset by a surge in gasoline stocks, as such WTI maintains a USD51.00 handle. Gold has taken a hit after the USD rallied on Fed Chair Yellen’s comments late yesterday alluding to a steeper rate path as she highlighted the dangers of allowing the economy to overheat. Silver is down 1.5% this morning. This does not seem to have done the rest of the commodity complex much harm (the USD rise), with copper more or less flat on the day.

Looking at the day ahead, this morning in Europe there’s little in the way of data which instead clears the path to the aforementioned ECB policy meeting outcome at 7.45am ETwith Draghi due at 8.30am ET. Over in the US the data consists of December housing starts and building permits numbers, initial jobless claims and the Philly Fed business outlook. In addition to the data, the corporate reporting calendar today consists of American Express, IBM and Schlumberger, all after the close. Away from that, keep one eye on the apparent press briefing from Trump’s team at 2.15pm GMT. Finally after the US close Fed Chair Yellen will speak again, this time on Thursday evening (8pm) when she speaks to the Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research. Any reaction to that will come during the Asia session.

US Event Calendar

  • 8:30am: Housing starts, Dec., est. 1.188m (prior 1.090m)
  • 8:30am: Building permits, Dec., est. 1.225m (prior 1.201m)
  • 8:30am: Initial jobless claims, Jan. 14, est. 252k (prior 247k)
  • Continuing claims, est. 2.075m (prior 2.087m)
  • 8:30am: Philadelphia Fed Business Outlook, Jan., est. 15.3 (prior 21.5)
  • 9:45am: Bloomberg Consumer Comfort, Jan. 15 (prior 45.1)
  • 10am: Freddie Mac mortgage rates
  • 10:30am: EIA natural-gas storage change
  • 11am: DOE Energy Inventories
  • 8pm: Fed’s Yellen Speaks at Stanford

US Government events

  • President-elect Donald Trump inaugural festivities begin
  • 9:30am: Senate Energy and Natural Resources Cmte hearing on nomination of Rick Perry for Energy secretary
  • 10am: Senate Finance Cmte hearing on nomination of Steven Mnuchin for Treasury secretary
  • 1pm: Sen. Patty Murray, top Democrat on Senate Health Cmte, joins Democratic Sens. Debbie Stabenow of Mich. and Elizabeth Warren of Mass. to discuss “who would be hurt” by Obamacare repeal

DB’s Jim Reid concludes the overnight wrap

Today is ECB day and with that it means another Draghi press conference at 1.30pm GMT. Given the big tapering story at the last meeting in December, it’s hard to see this one as being quite as exciting. In terms of the message, our economists are expecting patience to be the key theme today. They don’t think that the ECB will feel challenged by recent strong data but if the current data trends continue, the outright taper decision could accelerate to June rather than September – although the latter remains their baseline for now. The key on this front is whether inflation, especially core, is becoming more likely to exceed ECB  forecasts.

Yesterday we got confirmation that headline inflation rose to +1.1% yoy in December and +0.9% yoy at the core. Headline CPI could rise to +1.6% yoy and +1.8% yoy in January and February, respectively, according to our colleagues, although the earliest that the core will satisfy the minimum conditions for tightening is likely mid-year. That said the ECB won’t be afraid to change plans if necessary but today seems far too early but we’ll see what Draghi has to say later.

Interestingly, Draghi’s press conference coincides with another press briefing from the Trump camp at 2.15pm GMT. That said it appears that it won’t actually feature the President-elect himself and will instead be left to his team to brief the media so it remains to be seen how market moving this will actually be. At this stage there are no details about what is to be discussed but it’s possible that some questions are directed at the recent confusion over both the border tax and about the incoming administrations’ views on the dollar.

Yesterday’s comments out of the Davos shindig and in particular from commerce secretary nominee, Wilbur Ross, may have also added some spice to proceedings. Ross directed some tough talking at China, saying that the nation is the “the most protectionist country” amongst the large nations. He also said that “they talk much more about free trade than they actually practice” and “we would like to levelize that playing field and bring the realities a bit closer to the rhetoric”. Away from China Ross also said that the NAFTA discussion will happen very soon after Friday’s inauguration while also pitching that his “number one objective will be expanding our exports”. So it’ll be interesting to see if any of this gets brought up too.

Over in markets the main focus for the past 24 hours has been once again on the fairly large moves across rates and FX, albeit moves which largely ended up being a reversal of the previous day’s price action. 10y Treasury yields closed a shade over 10bps higher yesterday at 2.430% while the USD index rebounded +0.60% and finished higher for the first time in over a week. Those moves were given a late boost by comments from Fed Chair Yellen who said that “it is fair to say the economy is near maximum employment and inflation is moving toward our goal”. She also said that while “it makes sense to gradually reduce the level of monetary policy support” the actual timing of the next Fed rate hike “will depend on how the economy actually evolves over coming months”. So a fairly straight bat approach.

Meanwhile equity markets continue to trudge along in a fairly directionless pattern. The S&P 500 finished +0.18% with gains for financials offset by losses for telecoms and energy stocks. The latter were under pressure after WTI Oil tumbled -2.67% and back to $51/bbl after the IEA Chief warned that OPEC reigning in supply will likely result in a “significant” boost to US shale output. With regards to the gains for financials it was interesting to see that both Goldman Sachs (-0.62%) and Citigroup (-1.70%) closed in the red despite both banks adding to what has been a decent reporting season for US banks. Both reported beats at the profit line with the theme of stronger than expected FICC revenues once again playing out.

Over in Europe the Stoxx 600 also closed +0.18% while there was a similar weak theme in rates where 10y Bund yields crept up 3.3bps to close at 0.351%. Staying in Europe, another comment which caught our eye yesterday was that from JP Morgan CEO, Jamie Dimon. Commenting about the impact of Brexit and the potential for further nationalist politicians to come to power, Dimon said that the “eurozone may not survive” in an interview with Bloomberg TV. Quite fascinating for such a high profile banker to doubt it publically.

This morning in Asia we’ve seen the US Dollar continue to press on (+0.30%) which is putting some pressure on currencies in the region. Away from that equity bourses have been mixed once again, albeit on limited newsflow. The Nikkei is currently +0.81% with the Yen retreating a touch, while the Hang Seng (-0.59%) has weakened. Bourses in China, Korea and Australia are flat as we type. Moving on. Yesterday’s economic data didn’t sway too much from market expectations. In terms of the US December inflation report, headline CPI was reported as rising +0.3% mom which matched the consensus estimate and helped push the YoY rate up to +2.1% from +1.7%. The core rose +0.2%, also as expected, and helped nudge the YoY rate back up one-tenth to +2.2%. Away from that, industrial production was confirmed as rising +0.8% mom in December following a downwardly revised -0.7% mom in November. Finally the NAHB housing market index was a little softer than consensus, falling 2pts to 67. In the UK the ILO unemployment rate was unchanged at 4.8% in the three months to November, which matched expectations.

Before we look at today’s calendar, yesterday we got confirmation that the UK Supreme Court appeal decision about whether or not the UK Government has the authority to trigger Article 50 without  parliamentary appeal, will be made next Tuesday (on January 24). One to mark in the diary for next week.

Looking at the day ahead, this morning in Europe there’s little in the way of data which instead clears the path to the aforementioned ECB policy meeting outcome at 12.45pm GMTwith Draghi due at 1.30pm GMT. Over in the US the data consists of December housing starts and building permits numbers, initial jobless claims and the Philly Fed business outlook. In addition to the data, the corporate reporting calendar today consists of American Express, IBM and Schlumberger, all after the close. Away from that, keep one eye on the apparent press briefing from Trump’s team at 2.15pm GMT. Finally after the US close Fed Chair Yellen will speak again, this time early on Friday morning (1am GMT) when she speaks to the Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research. Any reaction to that will come during the Asia session so we’ll have a review on Friday morning.

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What Can Americans Learn from Chinese Government Propaganda?

Submitted by Mike Krieger via Liberty Blitzkrieg blog,

Under the relentless thrust of accelerating over-population and increasing over-organization, and by means of ever more effective methods of mind-manipulation, the democracies will change their nature; the quaint old forms—elections, parliaments, Supreme Courts and all the rest—will remain. The underlying substance will be a new kind of non-violent totalitarianism. All the traditional names, all the hallowed slogans will remain exactly what they were in the good old days. Democracy and freedom will be the theme of every broadcast and editorial—but Democracy and freedom in a strictly Pickwickian sense. Meanwhile the ruling oligarchy and its highly trained elite of soldiers, policemen, thought-manufacturers and mind-manipulators will quietly run the show as they see fit.

 

– From Aldous Huxley’s, Brave New World Revisited, published 1958

We live in a world like no other in human history. We’re mercilessly bombarded by intense and sophisticated propaganda virtually 24/7, whether it be from government officials, media outlets or multi-national corporations with endless budgets. The barrage is relentless, and unless you feel like ditching it all and moving into a cave, pretty much inescapable. For those of us dedicated to living on the outside, the only offense is a good defense, and a good defense requires understanding.

Most of us assume that for propaganda to be most effective it must remain undetected by its intended victims. While this is true on some level, it’s also an unsophisticated understanding of how this stuff really works here in the U.S. on a far more clever and pernicious level.

To get a deeper understanding, I want to highlight a few passages from an excellent article published at CounterPunch titled, Why Ridiculous Official Propaganda Still Works:

Chief among the common misconceptions about the way official propaganda works is the notion that its goal is to deceive the public into believing things that are not “the truth” (that Trump is a Russian agent, for example, or that Saddam had weapons of mass destruction, or that the terrorists hate us for our freedom, et cetera). However, while official propagandists are definitely pleased if anyone actually believes whatever lies they are selling, deception is not their primary aim.

 

The primary aim of official propaganda is to generate an “official narrative” that can be mindlessly repeated by the ruling classes and those who support and identify with them. This official narrative does not have to make sense, or to stand up to any sort of serious scrutiny. Its factualness is not the point. The point is to draw a Maginot line, a defensive ideological boundary, between “the truth” as defined by the ruling classes and any other “truth” that contradicts their narrative.

 

Imagine this Maginot line as a circular wall surrounded by inhospitable territory. Inside the wall is “normal” society, gainful employment, career advancement, and all the other considerable benefits of cooperating with the ruling classes. Outside the wall is poverty, anxiety, social and professional stigmatization, and various other forms of suffering. Which side of the wall do you want to be on? Every day, in countless ways, each of us are asked and have to answer this question. Conform, and there’s a place for you inside. Refuse, and … well, good luck out there.

 

In openly despotic societies, the stakes involved in making this choice (to conform or dissent) are often life and death. In our relatively liberal Western societies (for those of us who are not militant guerillas), the consequences of not conforming to the official narrative are usually subtler. Despite that, the pressure is still intense. Conforming to the consensus “reality” generated by these official narratives is price of admission to the inner sanctum, where the jobs, money, professional prestige, and the other rewards of Capitalism are. Conforming does not require belief. It requires allegiance and rote obedience. What one actually believes is completely irrelevant, as long as one parrots the official narrative.

 

In short, official propaganda is not designed to deceive the public (no more than the speeches in an actor’s script are intended to deceive the actor who speaks them). It is designed to be absorbed and repeated, no matter how implausible or preposterous it might be. Actually, it is often most effective when those who are forced to robotically repeat it know that it is utter nonsense, as the humiliation of having to do so cements their allegiance to the ruling classes (this phenomenon being a standard feature of the classic Stockholm Syndrome model, and authoritarian conditioning generally).

 

The point of all this propaganda is to delegitimize Donald Trump, and to prophylactically reassert the neoliberal ruling classes’ monopoly on power, “reality,” and “truth.” In case this wasn’t already abundantly clear, the neoliberal ruling classes have no intention of giving up control of the global capitalist pseudo-empire they’ve been working to establish these last sixty years. They’re going to delegitimize and stigmatize Trump (and any other symbol of nationalist backlash or resistance to transnational Capitalism), bide their time for the next four years, and then install another of their loyal servants … after which life will go back to “normal,” and liberals will do their best to forget this unfortunate period where they pretended to believe this insipid neo-McCarthyite nonsense.

That’s the first point about the complexities of propaganda I want to highlight today, but it’s not the only one. The second example comes from the Chinese government, as outlined in a post published at Marginal Revolution titled, Authoritarians Distract Rather than Debate. Here’s what we learned:

It’s long been known that the Chinese government hires people to support the government with fabricated posts on social media. In China these people are known as the “50c party”, so called because the posters were rumored to be paid 50 cents (5 jiao or about $.08) to write the posts. The precise nature and extent of the 50c party has heretofore been unknown. But in an amazing new paper, Gary King, Jennifer Pan and Margaret Roberts (KPR) uncover a lot of new information using statistical sleuthing and some unusual and controversial real world sleuthing.

 

KPR’s data-lever is an archive of leaked emails from the Propaganda Office of Zhanggong. The archive included many 50c posters who were sending links and screenshots of their posts to the central office as evidence of their good work. Using these posts, KPR are able to trace the posters though many social media accounts and discover who the posters are and what they are posting about. Both pieces of information reveal surprises.

 

First, the posters are government workers paid on salary not, as the 50c phrase suggests, piece-rate workers. Second, and more importantly, it has long been assumed that propaganda posts would support the government with praise or criticize critics of the government. Not so. In fact, propaganda posts actively steer away from controversial issues. Instead, the effort appears to be to distract (especially to distract the people from organizing collective action; thus distraction campaigns peak around times and places where collective action like marches and protests might become focal). KPR write:

 

Distraction is a clever and useful strategy in information control in that an argument in almost any human discussion is rarely an effective way to put an end to an opposing argument. Letting an argument die, or changing the subject, usually works much better than picking an argument and getting someone’s back up…

 

Debate is about appealing to an individual’s reason; debate is thus implicitly individualistic, respectful of rights and epistemically egalitarian. (As I argued earlier, respect for the truth is tied to individualism because any person may have truth and reason on their side.) Authoritarians don’t care about these things and so they lie and distract with impunity and without shame. In this case, the distraction is done subtly.

If you come away from the above with the conclusion “good thing we aren’t China,” you aren’t thinking hard enough. We live in a world in which eight men own as much wealth as the bottom 50%. This is clearly not a stable world, so how is it kept in place by those in power against the best interests of so many? Distraction is certainly a huge part of it.

Distraction can take many forms of course. A particularly noxious way to distract people is to make sure you work them to death. People who work two jobs and still need foodstamps to survive will be so demoralized and exhausted, staying informed about the world around them becomes nearly impossible, let alone being part of any sort of organized popular movement. For those who do have free time to be productive members of society there’s an overabundance of sports, video games, TMZ, and reality tv. Distraction is an essential part of keeping this destructive, predatory society intact, and in order to break free, it’s essential we understand this and adjust our behavior wherever and whenever possible.

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Tucker Carlson Cucks Huffington Post Contributor Alex Mohajer So Mercilessly He’s Forced To Disavow Journalism

Bloodless gladiator Tucker Carlson delivered a cucking of such epic proportions that the guest had to append his recent anti-Trump HuffPo article with a disclaimer!

ec6002caea1f946484d396589ed792caAlex Mohajer is a self described “Political writer and commentator for Huffington Post” and founder of “Bros4America,” a 36,000 member former Hillary Clinton PAC which “lobbies and supports progressive policies and candidates…  through social media outreach, volunteerism, fundraising, and by creating original video and digital content.”

Mohajer recently wrote an article in the Huffington Post which went viral entitled “The Legitimate President” with the sub-headline (which he’s altered since publication):

The evidence is clear. Hillary Clinton is the rightful president-elect, and courts must use the broad discretionary powers with which they are vested to enjoin an illegitimate president from taking office

It’s your typical “muh popular vote” tantrum with the added twist of desperate “evidence” attempting to illustrate why Trump is illegitimate. When Tucker calls Mohajer out for citing a garbage source, shit gets real. As Mohajer continues to stammer out bits and pieces of Democrat talking points, Carlson exclaims: “You don’t have a point… your point is stupid!”

It looks like the editors at the Huffington Post agreed – as it looks like the poor Clinton PAC founder (professional shill) was forced to add this little update to his hit-piece:

notajournalista

 

Video here:

 

 

Mohajer, in his defense, had this to say:

 

 

Content originally generated at iBankCoin.com * Follow on Twitter @ZeroPointNow

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“It’s Probably Nothing…”

As Donald Trump’s inauguration looms ever closer, the last few days have seen the honeymoon in markets starting to fade as the reality of economic policy uncertainty suddenly seems to matter again.

If the past 20 years of global historical data is anything to go by, that ‘awakening’ of uncertainty is very bad news…

 

But, as your friendly local asset-gatherer will tell you – “it’s probably nothing” and “the market is not the economy.”

Even Janet Yellen is starting to notice…

  • YELLEN: IT’S IMPORTANT TO TAKE UNCERTAINTY INTO ACCOUNT

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UN Reports Death Toll In US-Sponsored Yemen War Reaches 10,000

Submitted by MiddleEastEye.net via TheAntiMedia.org,

A UN envoy held talks with Yemen’s President Abd Rabbuh Hadi on Monday as the United Nations said the death toll from the war had reached 10,000.

The envoy, Ismail Ould Cheikh Ahmed, was in Aden for the meeting that focused on a return to a ceasefire and to political talks to end the nearly two-year war.

The talks came as fighting in the southern Shabwa area on Monday reportedly killed 34 people and wounded 16 others during clashes between Houthi fighters and pro-government forces.

The United Nations said the civilian death toll in fighting since a Saudi-led force intervened in March 2015 had reached 10,000, up from the previous figure of 7,000.

The Saudi-led coalition has been blamed for most of the civilian casualties. The devastation has also drawn attention to the role of western powers who have continued to provide Riyadh with weapons, logistical support and intelligence. The Houthis have also been accused of human rights violations.

The higher toll “underscores the need to resolve the situation in Yemen without any further delay”, said UN spokesman Farhan Haq in New York. “There is a huge humanitarian cost.”

Jamie McGoldrick, humanitarian coordinator of the UN Development Programme, said the latest death toll is based on lists of victims gathered by hospitals and the true figure could be higher.

McGoldrick said up to 10 million Yemenis were also in urgent need of humanitarian assistance.

Ould Cheikh Ahmed is hoping to revive peace prospects in Yemen after Hadi rejected his proposed roadmap. He is due to report to the UN Security Council later this month.

The roadmap provides for a new unity government in Yemen and a rebel withdrawal from the capital and other cities.

“A peace agreement, including a well-articulated security plan and the formation of an inclusive government, is the only way to end the war that has fuelled the development of terrorism in Yemen and the region,” Ould Cheikh Ahmed said in a statement.

 

“I asked the president to act swiftly and engage constructively with the UN’s proposal for the sake of the country’s future.”

 

The current political stalemate is causing death and destruction every day. The only way to stop this is through the renewal of the cessation of hostilities followed by consultations to develop a comprehensive agreement.”

Under the proposal, Hadi’s powers would be dramatically diminished in favour of a new vice president who would oversee the formation of the interim government that will lead a transition to elections.

Houthi rebels and forces loyal to former president Ali Abdullah Saleh, who control the capital, Sanaa, have faced a military campaign by the Saudi-led coalition to restore President Hadi as the recognised government.

The campaign has been unable to dislodge the Houthis from the capital and their strongholds in the north of the country and has been criticized for causing widespread civilian casualties and destruction of infrastructure.

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