Nintendo Soars As ‘Pokemon Go’ More Popular Than Porn

When your app is "more popular than porn" it is hard to argue with Nintendo's stock prices surge following the unprecedented success of the launch of Pokemon Go – the augmented reality app taking the world by storm.

A quick search of Google trends shows, as ValueWalk.com notes, that the game has even beaten one of the most popular search terms and looks to be pulling ahead today, a feat which Brexit also recently pulled off, and supposedly does not happen often…

 

While we await out first fatality from the game's zombification of its players, MacRumors reports a couple of incidents related to the game have already begun sprouting up over the past few days, bringing to light a few cautionary tales for everyone delving into the game.

Because it requires players to travel to real-world destinations in order to stock up on Poké Balls, eggs, and potions, and compete at gyms, some individuals have been capitalizing on the game's mechanics to trap and rob its players. According to a Facebook post from the O'Fallon Police Department in Missouri, four people were arrested over the weekend after using a Lure Module at a PokéStop to draw in unsuspecting players and rob them at gunpoint.

Pokemon Go gameplay

"Many of you have asked how the app was used to rob victims, the way we believe it was used is you can add a beacon to a pokestop to lure more players," the police department said in a statement on Facebook. "Apparently they were using the app to locate [people] standing around in the middle of a parking lot or whatever other location they were in."

The Lure Modules work as ways to bait more Pokémon into showing up to any PokéStop for 30 minutes, and enhances the Stop's visibility to a glowing pink color when in use, so it's easy for other players nearby to notice. Due to this, other cities across the United States have reported Pokémon Go-related thefts since the game launched last week, including a few in Philadelphia.

Other users playing the game have been lead to a few scary discoveries, including one woman who found a corpse while traveling to a PokéStop in Wyoming. Nineteen-year-old Shayla Wiggins jumped a fence to capture a nearby Pokémon, but instead discovered the dead body of a man who is believed to have drowned in the Big Wind River. According to the local police department, "There is no evidence at this time that would indicate foul play."

Nintendo reminds users to be aware of their surroundings every time the app is opened, and a few states have issued specific warnings as well, but there have also been some driving-related incidents since the game launched. While Pokémon Go encourages players to strike off the beaten path to discover wild Pokémon nearby, most have discovered — especially in cities where walking is inhibited — that it's easy to idle past nearby PokéStops and Gyms, already leading to more than a handful of Pokémon Go-influenced accidents.

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Three Dead, Police Officer Shot At Michigan County Courthouse

At least three people are dead at the Berrien County Courthouse following a shooting, an employee at the county prosecutor’s office said. Local news add that a police officer was also shot in the left arm and finger after shots were fired. According to media reports, at least 4 people have been shot. 

Three people are dead and one person is injured, said the employee, who wished not to be named. Michigan State Police confirmed the shooting around 2:30 p.m. Monday, July 11.

WXYZ adds that the shooter is also dead.

Two of the people dead are court bailiffs. The other person dead is the shooter, the employee told the Detroit Free Press.

State police have not confirmed those numbers nor the status of the shooter. The employee at the prosector’s office said the courthouse is under lockdown, and employees are being kept in their offices.

According to David Bailey from WZZM, three people were killed in the shooting. He reported that two court employees were shot.

There is heavy police presence at the courthouse, according to Berrien County police dispatch. The courthouse has been evacuated, WSJM reported.

The incident took place outside the courtroom of Judge Charles LaSata, a witness told WSJM.

“They had a gentleman in there, in his jail greens and handcuffs,” witness Mark Laukus said. “One of the sheriff’s bailiffs took him into another hallway, and you heard a scuffle, you heard someone hit the floor. Then the courtroom bailiff went into that room, and you heard a gunshot.”

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Seattle Is Hiring: “A Race And Social Justice Manager To Achieve Racial Equality”

This is how the government appartus operates: first it creates a "problem", then it creates (well-paid) jobs to "fix" said problem. Case in point: a posting on governmentjobs.com according to which "the City of Seattle's Race and Social Justice Manager will provide leadership and vision to ensure innovative, effective strategies to achieve racial equity in the City of Seattle."  The job will pay anywhere between $90,000 and $115,000. 

Don't have a university degree? Fear not: clearly geared at millennial candidates, the posting seeks "any combination of education, experience and measurable performance that demonstrates the capability to perform the duties of this position."

Any aspiring race-equality crusaders must be ready to answer the following questions:

  1. Briefly, share an example of the most impactful work you have done to eliminate institutional racism. What was your role?
  2. Describe your approach to working with fearful and resistant individuals and groups on social justice issues.
  3. Give an example of how you have helped elected officials and/or executives to recognize the race-based disparities currently in their organizations and/or communities. Once learned, how were you able to leverage this new perspective to make change?
  4. What have you done to develop your own racial equity skills as well of those of your staff?
  5. Tell us about the most important partnerships you have built in order to eliminate institutional racism?
 
From the posting:
 
Position Description

The City of Seattle's Race and Social Justice Manager will provide leadership and vision to ensure innovative, effective strategies to achieve racial equity in the City of Seattle.
 
History of the Seattle Race and Social Justice Initiative
 
The Race and Social Justice Initiative (RSJI) is the City of Seattle's long-term commitment to end institutional and structural racism and achieve racial equity in Seattle. RSJI builds on the work of the civil rights movement and the ongoing efforts of people and groups in Seattle to confront racism. The Initiative's long-term goal is to change the underlying system that creates race-based disparities in our community and to achieve racial equity.
 
When RSJI began eleven years ago, no U.S. city had ever undertaken an effort that focused explicitly on institutional racism. Since then, Seattle has been a national leader in a growing effort by local governments to support the movement for racial justice by working to change their own practices and building partnerships with grassroots community groups, non-profit organizations, philanthropy and other institutions. Across the United States, local governments are acknowledging that institutional and structural racism restrict opportunities for people of color, including immigrant and refugee communities. At the same time, RSJI recognizes the intersectionality of oppression and centers its efforts on racial equity while also working to eliminate other barriers to equity.
 
In 2015, RSJI unveiled a new three year plan to achieve racial equity, particularly in education, equitable development and criminal justice. Over the next three years, RSJI is committed to changing the City of Seattle as an institution and supporting the community's vision of systemic change.
 

Job Responsibilities

Details of this Opportunity
 
The ideal candidate is an experienced and effective advocate for structural change, grounded in principles of racial equity and social justice; a creative thinker; and an effective collaborator, supervisor and project manager.
 
The RSJI Manager reports directly to the Director of the Seattle Office for Civil Rights (SOCR), which coordinates RSJI across Seattle city government. The RSJI Manager and the SOCR Director serve as the primary public faces of the Initiative, establishing and ensuring the integrity and impact of the Initiative within City government and the community. The RSJI Manager supervises 5-7 SOCR staff members who work directly on the Initiative.
 
Key Roles and Responsibilities
 
Visionary, strategic leadership and oversight.

  • Work to eliminate institutional and structural racism and its intersections with other forms of oppression, including sexism, heterosexism, classism and ableism.
  • Provide vision and coordination to the Mayor, City Council and City departments on Race and Social Justice.
  • Develop and oversee high impact RSJI-related policies and programs to further the Initiative.

 
Team leadership and collaboration.

  • Lead the RSJI Team to develop and implement citywide strategies for the Initiative's four spheres of influence: Internal City, City-funded, other governments and institutions, and community. This includes training, communication, policies, partnerships and coordination of interdepartmental efforts in education, equitable development, criminal justice and other key equity areas.
  • Support the RSJI Team's anti-racism leadership and growth.

Strengthen and build partnerships.

  • In addition to City government partners, work closely with community leaders, community-based organizations, other jurisdictions and philanthropic institutions.

 
Grounded in principles of racial equity and social justice.

  • Understand the history of racism and the impacts of institutional and structural racism.
  • Recognize the unique role of government to address institutional and structural racism.
  • Honor the leadership of people of color and other marginalized communities.
Qualifications

Qualifications
 
The following qualifications in education and experience will help the RSJI Manager thrive on our team.

  • Education: requires one of the following:
a) At least five years of experience in a government or related setting with at least three years of experience supervising staff and leading programs that build racial equity and inclusiveness OR
b) Bachelor's degree in public administration, social work, political science or a related field and three years of experience in government or related setting, including at least two years of experience supervising staff and leading programs that build racial equity OR
c) Any combination of education, experience and measurable performance that demonstrates the capability to perform the duties of this position.
  • Experience managing a high-powered team using an anti-racist, pro-equity, collaborative decision making approach.
  • Strong interpersonal skills, humor and compassion. 
  • Outstanding administrative skills, including the ability to produce, track and manage multiple deliverables with overlapping deadlines in a high-performing environment.
  • Excellent oral and written communication.
  • Proven ability to analyze situations with a racial equity lens and utilize effective organizing strategies.
  • Demonstrated leadership within the racial justice community.
  • Demonstrated ability to develop collaborative, productive and respectful relationships with leaders and other institutions and groups, including but not limited to communities of color, immigrant and refugee communities, business and philanthropy. 
  • Experience developing and managing programs to address institutional and structural racism.
  • Experience developing partnerships between government, non-profit organizations, educational institutions and grass roots community groups.
  • Experience working within local or state government a plus.
  • Bilingual language skills a plus.
Additional Information

In addition to completing the online application, please attach:

  • A cover letter explaining your qualifications for this role as well as your thoughts on the role government should play in addressing institutional and structural racism
  • A resume
  • Examples, with links if appropriate, of racial equity work product – presentations, blogs, videos, editorials, policies, etc.

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Behind The IEX Crusade To Fix The Market, In Its Own Words

First, congratulations to IEX on their approval as a US stock exchange, against Nasdaq's and the rest of the industry's best efforts. In June the SEC said IEX's proposal to launch a national exchange had been approved. The SEC determined that IEX's "speed-bump", or the delay a longer wire would introduce when connecting traders to the matching engine, "will not prevent investors from accessing stock prices in a fair and efficient manner consistent with the goals of the Order Protection Rule."

IEX has taken a lot of risk to stand up and actually build something that would help break down the wall that was created around the high-powered and well-funded cabal of insiders who have chopped-up and staked-claim to various market centers. As Brad Katsuyama, CEO of IEX, says in the video below "this was mostly going to be my last job on Wall Street. You know, you can't fight the system and fail and expect the system to accept you back." That comment comes as a video plays of then Direct Edge CEO William O'Brien losing his mind in a then-live debate as he realized his "good faith effort" to explain market structure was failing in the midst of Kasuyama's cool demeanor and ability to clearly explain a complex topic such as how a trade is made in the US equity market.

Now as the world races around in a cloud of uncertainty trying to figure out where the next QE will come from, whether Italy will need a bailout, how big the next China bailout will, or whether the UK will actually leave the EU, IEX has fought to become a venue where fair trading takes place. It is harsh already for main-street to understand and stay on top global developments. They should not need to struggle between choosing a Post No Preference Blind Limit Order or a Routed Peg Order.

Complexity in finance acts as a barrier and IEX has been taking on career risk as the employees fought back against the system. Indeed, as we said, we were surprised that the SEC recommended approving IEX's application. Just shy 1 minute into the video Katsuyama discusses fairness and taking action over just speaking. This is Wall Street cleaning itself up from the inside out.

If IEX could smash together this group and take on the system that nearly ruined Haim Bodek, imagine if someone within the central bank stood up against the insane manipulation we've witnessed. And just in case you forgot how markets respond to the Fed, there are still some 12 to 14 more Fed head discussions taking place before Midnight on Friday in which to experience real manipulation done in a way the exchanges can only dream of.

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Distraction, Dysfunction, & Dissonance

Submitted by James Kunstler via Kunstler.com,

You can see where the trajectory of events is leading. The country will be distracted by racial strife this summer while the global banking system implodes, disabling trade relations and the super-long supply chains we depend on for all common goods from oil to fresh food. Unless the remnants of the Republican Party act responsibly and find a way to replace Trump with a capable candidate, the nation will get what it deserves: a clown in the white house at the climax of the Fourth Turning.

The racial events of recent days resonate in a fog of cognitive dissonance. What really happened in those two incidents involving Philando Castile in Falcon Heights, Minnesota, and Alton Sterling in Baton Rouge Louisiana? Too many people pretend to know exactly why these two men were shot by cops. The video recordings of the incidents are ambiguous. In the Castile case, the recording doesn’t start until just after the deed is done.

Given the universal hyper-awareness of the current mood around the country, I doubt that policemen would throw away their livelihoods for a few thrilling seconds of malice. They know exactly what happens after the gun comes out: suspension, investigation, end-of-career, possibly civil prosecution, lawyers and more lawyers, a special hell of lawyers, and no way to make a living in the meantime. In a word: ruin.

These two incidents were followed by the shootings in Dallas by one Micah Johnson of twelve cops, five of whom died. That matter was not so ambiguous. The authorities quickly determined what happened and why. It is likely to lead to more assassinations and bushwhackings of police because a peculiar social mechanism gives people permission to re-enact atrocities once certain lines are crossed. We saw that in the political assassinations that commenced in the 1960s. The Jihadi beheadings and other monstrosities work similarly.

The possibilities for mayhem around the upcoming party conventions (Philadelphia and Cleveland) now look much darker than just a few weeks ago. Hillary took advantage of last week’s racial strife to deflect the blows she took from FBI Director James Comey in his public remarks about Hillary’s email problem. She went into full pander mode, blaming “white privilege” for the recent enormities involving guns and police. Of course, that will only fuel the “narrative” that whites are wholly responsible for black dysfunction, a false story that will lead to more conflict.

The legal spectacle surrounding Hillary and the FBI left many thoughtful Americans scratching their heads. The most superficial angle was how FBI Director Comey let Hillary off the hook because her “extremely careless” actions involving the email server did not include any “intent” to break the laws. The trouble is, the federal statutes pertaining to the case do not require any evidence of intent; the actions alone are enough to warrant a criminal referral. Mr. Comey skated over this matter. One cute theory circulating is that he didn’t dare to alter history by setting in motion events that would elevate Trump to power. Who knows…?

Much more remains to be seen in the Hillary email matter, because the real issue is not whether she maintained a private email server against regulations but whether she used that email server to stuff the bank account of the Clinton Foundation with money grifted while serving as Secretary of State. You can be sure we have not heard the end of that issue, and beyond that are the questions surrounding her gigantic speaking fees from Too-Big-Too-Fail banks, the texts of which she has resolutely refused to publically disclose.

This latter issue will become increasingly of interest to voters this summer and fall as trouble in the European banks provokes a contagion of banking failures that will thunder around the planet and begin to cause very serious practical problems for daily life in all the so-called advanced economies. Nobody in and around power in America these days is equipped to manage this epochal calamity, especially while we stumble and blunder our way into race war.

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Trump: “I Am The Law And Order Candidate; Without Safety We Have Nothing”

In the aftermath of last week’s tragic escalating shootings, which culminated with the deaths of 5 Dallas police officers, several political fireworks erupted in the political realm as well when Trump’s Virginia state campaign chairman said in a Facebook post that Hillary Clinton is to blame for “essentially encouraging the murders” of Dallas officers, a statement which Trump promptly distanced himself from. So moments ago, in his first official statement, Trump took the opportunity to explain to the electorate how he is positioning himself after last week’s tragic events: namely the candidate of law and order.

In a just concluded speech, Trump declared himself the “law and order candidate” while criticizing Hillary Clinton over her use of the now infamous private email server. “I am the law and order candidate,” Trump said at the top of his speech in Virginia Beach, Va., which was billed as a policy speech. He was also expected to talk about veterans issues.

“I’m also the candidate of compassion — believe it,” Trump added. “But you can’t have true compassion without providing safety,” he continued. “Without safety, we have nothing.”

He also said that he vows to protect citizens equally and “without prejudice” and more importantly, to “protect all Americans” while addressing veterans, Trump says, “you defend America and America will defend you. That promise has been broken by our politicians.”

Wrapping up his commentary on the Dallas shooting, Trump vowed to “ensure safe homes, communities and schools”, repeating that “hostility toward US law enforcement must end now” and that the ambush of police officers in Dallas “is an attack on our country.”

Trump described Clinton as “weak, ineffective, pandering” and said an investigation into her handling of classified material shows she is “either a liar or grossly incompetent.” 

“One or the other. Very simple,” Trump said, adding, “Personally, it’s probably both.” FBI Director James Comey last week said Clinton and her aides were “extremely careless” with classified information but said he couldn’t justify recommending criminal charges against her.

Trump argued that Clinton would pursue policies benefitting only the nation’s elites. For others, “she couldn’t care less,” Trump said.

The brunt of his attacks on her, however, focused on her email server and the refusal of federal officials to pursue a criminal case over her handling of classified material. “What she did was so wrong,” Trump said, adding that people who did “far less” were “paying a tremendous price right now.”

“Her conduct was willful, intentional and unlawful,” Trump said. “She knew it. She’s probably the most surprised person that she was able to get away with it.”

“This was not just extreme carelessness with classified material,” Trump said, referring to Comey’s remarks, describing her action as calculated, deliberate and “premeditated.” He also seized on the FBI’s admission that an interview with Clinton wasn’t recorded nor administered under oath. The FBI did complete a federal form summarizing the interview, Comey said last week. Trump said Clinton carried out a “cover up” with her email arrangement, and said doing it without facing charges “could be her single most impressive accomplishment,” adding, “To me it is.”

Trump also said Clinton would be the first president elected who “wouldn’t be able to pass a background check.”

“Come November, the American people will show her that she is not above the law,” Trump said.

Alternatively, the American people may just not care because what difference does anything make anymore.

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Why Gundlach Thinks It’s Going To Get Worse, And Why He Is “Pretty Sure That Trump Will Win”

Yesterday, when referring to the latest interview Jeff Gundlach gave Barron’s, we presented the bearish DoubleLine “bond king’s” portfolio which he broke down as follows: “high-quality bonds, gold, and some cash.” He promptly added the following rhetorical response to inbound inquiries: “People say, “What kind of portfolio is that?” I say it’s one that is outperforming everybody else’s. I mean, bonds are up more than 5%, gold is up substantially this year [28%], and gold miners have had over a 100% gain. This is a year when it hasn’t been that tough to earn 10% with a portfolio. Most people think this is a dead-money portfolio. They’ve got it wrong. The dead-money portfolio is the S&P 500.”

 

Today, the market is doing its best to prove Gundlach wrong, with the S&P breaking out to new all time highs while gold takes a modest leg lower.

But while the market remains entirely reliant on the actions of central banks, and as we noted earlier, the latest push higher appears to have come from Bernanke whispering in Abe and Kuroda’s ear about the fringe benefits of helicopter money, Gundlach does not see the gains in the market trickling down into the broader economy. Just the opposite, because in another part of the same Barron’s interview, when asked if things are going to get worse – both in the economy and society – Gundlach responds as follows:

What is really happening here is that there’s massive technological change, and big changes almost always lead to political instability. People who benefit from the old construct are loath to see it change, because they don’t want to lose their power and economic advantage. And so they dig their heels in even harder. That’s what we’re seeing in Britain right now. People who remember the good old days when they had factory jobs and made a good living—that’s been taken away, and they want to do something about it… Robots are taking an awful lot of jobs. Driverless cars are coming; just think about how many jobs that is going to take away. Think of all the taxi drivers; think of all the Uber drivers who have found a source of income. How about the truck drivers? How about the livery people? A lot of people are out there driving around and getting paid for it. You get a driverless car, and all of a sudden they’re unemployed. Not all of them, of course, and not all at once. This is all part of this process.

It’s not just technology, though. Gundlach is just as worried about slumping demographics, not only :

One of the big problems in parts of Europe is a collapsing labor force. In Italy, the fertility rates are so low, and the baby-boom piece so big, that their labor force will plunge, absent immigration. Demographics are a problem that takes a generation to go away. And then you’ve got the robots, and they’re never going away. And you’ve got all this debt—the world’s debt-to-gross-domestic-product ratio is 240%—so you’re already putting a big headwind onto economic growth. Pair that with the demographics, and you get slow global growth.

When asked if he expects more political risk in the market, Gundlach responds as follows: “This is a train that’s moving down the tracks, and I don’t see it stopping until substantial change occurs. Minor fixes—like raising the top tax bracket to 39% from 36%—are not going to create an enduring solution. We are going to see it in the U.S., in our presidential election.”

Which finally brings Gundlach to the topic of Trump, and why he thinks The Donald will be America’s next president.

One of the reasons I believe Trump might win is that Brexit won. The parallels are far too great to be coincidental. They are identical in time. They are identical in mood, in the attitude of “I’m not doing what you say anymore.” People don’t want to admit that they support Trump. They hide it. A lot of people in Britain didn’t want to admit that they were voting to leave. My suspicion is that if Trump is even within the margin of error come November, he’ll win by a few percentage points.

 

* * *

 

The establishment media is putting out a lot of scare pieces about how Trump is going to destroy the world economy; that [his presidency] could lead to protectionism, noncooperation, tariffs, and stuff like that. And, in Europe, you are having a new uptrend in noncooperation. But I’m pretty sure that if Trump wins—and I do think he is going to win—he is going to increase the deficit. He talks about building up the military, building walls. These things cost money. And if the deficit goes up, which it would under a President Trump, that will give a short-term bump to economic growth. So maybe it is not as scary as people think.

Perhaps Gundlach is right, and if indeed Japan is the Gunniea pig for Helicopter money, who better to have on top of the US economy than a president who will follow closely in Japan’s footsteps, and boost fiscal spending, expand the deficit, and in the process greenlight the Fed to do even more QE, courtesy of hundreds of billions in more Treasurys that someone has to backstop will be bought in the coming years.

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Chasing Fools Gold (aka Central Banker Alchemy)

Authored by Mark St.Cyr,

Remember the story of “The Philosopher’s stone?” In a nut shell it was an alchemical substance capable of turning worthless metals into gold. Today, much like those of yore, central bankers across the globe are engaging in that never-ending quest for the ability to turn the worthless – into the precious.

And to the ill-informed it seems they have indeed achieved it. That is, as long as you wrap it in the same cloth as found in “The Emperor’s New Clothes.” For if not – the naked truth becomes appalling clear. And it ain’t pretty.

Case in point: Brexit? What Brexit? To those not actively involved in European politics, or the needing to understand the fallout – It’s like it never happened.

However, if you want to take absurdity “up to 11” I propose you’ll hear something along these lines in the coming days from some next in rotation fund manager, economist, or Ivory Tower alchemist at large.. Ready?

“Brexit showed the market was just waiting for a market clearing catalyst to vault higher. With earnings season set to begin, the Fed. now on hold indefinitely for 2016, the ECB at the ready with its own “whatever it takes,” employment growth continuing and at near statistical full employment, stocks appear reasonably priced to extend their gains well above current levels.” Rinse, repeat.

That said, here’s what I’m more than sure you won’t hear: Brexit triggers an upheaval to the entire European Union dynamic where its certainty in remaining solvent, let alone standing past 2016 is now an open question. Further details for possible upheavals and contagion effects are currently unknown. Caution and solvency should be of the first order.

No, it’ll be more along the lines of the former with additives such as: “Employment numbers in the U.S. printed 280K plus smashing the expected 175K consensus. This proves we’re on the right track, and see – May was an outlier. Blah, blah, blah…”

Again, just for perspective: June’s 287K print is being touted “as proof” that May’s print of 38K was indeed “the outlier.”

Fair enough, however, with that 38K now being revised down by some 2/3rds to just 11K. Wouldn’t that mean the “outlier” was just proved to be even worse?

Think that last point through: 38K is revised down by so much it is within a statistic rounding error of a negative print. Now, a month later, where one is to believe the BLS (which very few do) has had a better look, as well as received more plausible and calculable statistics, has concluded the “outlier” is not to even remain the same or revised higher. No, it’s lower, and not by just a few thousand. More than two-thirds of the entire figure was jettisoned. Again, 38K (now 11K) is the “outlier?” What type of sorcery is this?

Only in the so-called “smart crowd” of statistical magicians can such a claim be made with a serious face. To anyone else – it’s laughable. However, the fool’s arguments don’t stop there. In fact – they just begin.

I was left both confounded and slack-jawed more often than not over the last week as I listened too, or read one after another financial pundit explain their thesis as to why all this bad is now good. And all of it, and I do mean, all – of – it revolves around one base case: “Gold.”

Oh no, not the gold you’re thinking of. Heaven forbid, that gold is only for “kooks” and others of that mind-set we’re told. No, the “gold” they are touting which needs to accepted and held closest to one’s heart is: equities. i.e., stocks. After all, central bankers have once again proved they have “the stone.” And as proof? Just look at equities as today’s acid test is the clarion call.

Many an index is once again at never before seen in human history highs. The obvious conclusion implied? Central bankers have the alchemy secret. So just buy, buy, buy!

And when a BTFD (buy the f’n dip) moment such as what happened once Brexit was voted on? (i.e., when there’s a legitimate concern uneasiness may morph into a complete upheaval) Buy even more! For it’s just another opportunity of a lifetime laid out on a silver platter.

At least, that’s how it’s all being peddled across the financial media, once again implying: it would be you that’s foolish not to buy their “gold.”

I listened as one “expert” tried laying out the alchemic process now being employed by central banks. He went into great detail as to how using “this test tube” and “this combination” of economic ingredients have been administered by central banks. The real issue I took with this whole chemistry lesson of current monetary policy was how naive the conclusions were. The issue for me was this…

Central bankers are concluding much of the same as this person was as evidenced by their very actions. Or, stated differently: They are convinced with every monetary “test tube” experiment that they have successfully done it – this time. Then, once the smoke clears and the fumes dissipate – so too does the illusion of any economic miracle, and all that remains is a bright shiny looking substance – which is worthless. And after each experiment the pile of worthless economic mirages vanishes much like how they were created: in a puff of smoke.

Again, this scenario being explained as to express current central bank thinking using “test tubes” as the analogy was quite telling. Forgive me for I can’t recall his name although I did conclude by how many times I heard him referred to as “Dr.” that he must be of the “in crowd.”

Here the presenter went into detail about how central banks have used an array of monetary “test tubes” containing certain economic ingredients or components, then, adding specific monetary additives, the results were in line with what the text books concluded should happen. The real issue at hand as expressed was this, “it wasn’t working beyond the walls of the test labs.” And here is precisely where (in my opinion) the rubber-hits-the-road as to prove my point in why central bankers have more results resembling a sorcerer’s apprentice than anyone in possession of a “philosopher’s stone.”

Let me illustrate using a few examples. Yes, they are extremely over-simplistic and generic, but that doesn’t mean they aren’t relevant.

The whole problem for central bankers is they view the economy (e.g., a free market capitalistic one to be precise) as something which can be dissected, as in, separated and putting its essential components into “test tubes” for both observation and manipulation. Then, reforming the amalgamation into whatever performance quantity they desire. These “test tube” manipulations, granted, do have a high rate of observable success to their manipulations in isolation. However, it’s when the whole concoction is mixed together is where expected results morph into uncontrollable monsters. Here’s an example…

Lowering interest rates stimulates an economy. (i.e., test tube 1) Higher stock prices generate “a wealth effect.” (i.e., test tube 2) The first one for the sake of simplicity let’s say uses monetary “ammonia” as its catalyst. And let’s use “bleach” for the second. Both can be isolated, both can be manipulated, and both can have a fantastic end use when it applies to the overall purpose of cleaning (i.e., the economy.) But remember that “in isolation” detail I expressed?

As some of you already understand, this is where the combination of the two (bleach and ammonia) combines to make a very toxic, and in many cases deadly mixture depending on just how large the quantity. That is – if you come into contact with it. And there lies another rub.

If you were to observe this combination only from afar and how it was performing that “cleaning” only through its resulting application via robots (i.e., HFT, algorithmic, headline reading, front running parasitic trading bots) the conclusion would be it’s doing just a bang up job of removing any past stains (i.e., crash of ’08 and such) the combination has worked spectacularly and the sum is more effective than the parts in isolation. That is: as long as you remain both afar, as well as one step removed.

Anyone who would venture in where such a brew was being unleashed would find themselves in grave peril. This is the equivalent representation of today’s capital markets: Not only does nothing make sense – everything has become engulfed in a toxic cloud of monetary witches brew. So toxic, so disorienting, so deadly to anyone who enters (i.e., try being a pension fund, insurance company, saver _______fill in the blank) your only recourse is to not breathe, or better yet, not go near the place at all.

However, if one only sees or views the “markets” remotely. Say only via a “cleaning report” i.e., ________(place your report of choice here) while pontificating on those results from afar via cameras, microphones, keyboards, etc., etc. All while those whom supply those devices do nothing more but comment on just how well of a “cleaning” process is taking place via reports that are more sanitized of bad news than a redacted pentagon paper. Then yes, things are going just splendid and steady is the course. Or, should I say, steady as the formulation.

Just don’t ask anyone to touch the thing let alone enter into the same room because they won’t, and aren’t. And the week after week of record outflows prove it to be the case.

Add the following to this latest alchemic mixture…

A referendum breaking up of the European Union (e.g., Brexit) has just taken place. So far the fallout in just the real estate sector in the course of a week has caused 8 (and counting) funds to gate investors from accessing their funds. (i.e., Want your money back? Hurry up and wait behind the gate) GDP figures across the globe are continuing to collapse. Negative interest rates are now being applied to trillions upon trillions of government debt worldwide. China is devaluing at a record pace, the more Japan tries to devalue, the stronger its currency gets. The list of concerns goes on and on like; Italian banks; Spanish banks; German banks; etc., etc.

Here in the U.S. more people are on government assistance than ever before, civil unrest as is being witnessed will inevitably dampen or curtail future retail sales aggregates. Without Non-GAAP reporting being employed ever the more creatively this earnings season is now being looked upon as “cross your fingers and pray the bars are low enough” reporting season, as opposed to “more should surprise to the upside.” And this list of potential deadly GDP affecting ingredients itself is growing ever the longer by the day.

And what is the result of such ingredients one might ask?

Unemployment reports statistically near full. The U.S. stock market is once again printing record highs. One of the largest political upheavals in modern-day history (Brexit and the disintegration of the E.U. as known) when viewed via the stock markets is not only non-existent as for relative price action, it’s now arguable to have been a catalyst for ever higher market prices. Central banker alchemy at it’s finest. Solid “gold.”

However, if you would like to perform some “acid test” as to check for its purity before buying more? Sorry – you just have to take their word for it. Just like China’s GDP projections, which, by-the-way; makes western alchemy look like child’s play.

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US Consumers No Longer “Eating Out” – Restaurant Guest Counts Tumble To Three Year Lows

If one follows the government’s retail spending data for “retail food and services sales” segment, the data is not bad. Yes, the annual pace of increases is declining as shown in the following St. Louis Fed chart, but at 2.5% Y/Y, it hasn’t moved much over the past two years, suggesting flat overall spending trends.

 

A different tracker of US Restaurant sales, that of the National Restaurant Association’s Restaurant performance index, shows a more troubling picture. As the NRA reports for its latest data, restaurant sales softened in May, along with operator expectations, as the industry continued its choppy 2016. The monthly indication of the health of the industry fell 0.9 percent to 100.6 in May, from 101.6 in April. 

“The RPI continued along a choppy trend line in May, with the index bouncing between moderate gains and losses in recent months,” Hudson Riehle, senior vice president of research for the NRA, said in a statement. “Much of the May dip came from declines in the same-store sales and customer traffic indicators, which softened from their stronger April performance.” The index is comprised of two parts: one that measures the current situation, and another that measures operators’ expectations. The index is calculated using responses to the association’s monthly operator survey.

Operators reported a net decline in same-store sales in May — 40 percent said their same-store sales increased in May, while 42 percent said same-store sales fell. By comparison, 58 percent of operators said their same-store sales increased in April.

 

Traffic was worse. Only 27 percent of operators said traffic increased in May, and 46 percent said traffic fell. In April, 52 percent of operators said traffic increased.

 

May was the first time in five months that operators reported a net same-store sales decline — which likely indicates a broad weakening in the sales environment.

But the worst news for the restaurant industry came from the closely followed, and only available to subscribers, Knapp-Track index, created by Malcom Knapp. A brief history:

Since 1991, I have provided KNAPP-TRACK™ for the chain dinner house/theme restaurant market. In 1993, I started providing KNAPP-TRACK:FLASH™, a weekly companion to the monthly KNAPP-TRACK™. KNAPP-TRACK™ monthly data on a USA geographic level only is published monthly with industry analysis in Nations Restaurant News.

 

KNAPP-TRACK™ is a monthly sales and guest count tracking service for comparable restaurants and separately, for all restaurants monthly over month year ago. The reporting of data is for USA, USA year to date, the USA broken into 11 regions and 61 ADI TV markets.

 

KNAPP-TRACK:FLASH™ is a weekly sales and guest count tracking service, reporting comparable restaurant data. The reporting of data is for USA, California and 20 ADI TV markets. KNAPP-TRACK™ monthly data on a USA geographic level only is published monthly with industry analysis in Nations Restaurant News.

 

Current subscribers account for over $32.1 billion in sales and over 10,400 restaurants. See attached list for current subscribers. Our subscribers account for over 87.8% of the dollar volume of the 47 casual dining chains in NRN top 100 and second 100.

The latest data, courtesy of Bank of America, was particularly disturbing, because unlike the government data, and even the NRA’s more realistic index, it showed sales and guest counts in June tumbling to new multi-year lows. In fact, as of June, the number of guest counts was the worst in since February 2013. Here are the key takeaways from BofA’s Joseph Buckley:

  • Knapp-Track casual dining same store sales in June were soft with comps down 2.3% and guest counts down 4.8%.
  • Sales and guest counts in June set multi-year lows. Guest counts were especially soft running down 5.9% on a 2-year basis
  • Restaurant sales were soft through 2Q but ended the quarter weakly which increases concerns for 2Q earnings.

More details on June’s “especially soft” guest counts:

Knapp-Track casual dining same store sales for the month of June were down 2.3% with guest counts down 4.8%. These results compare against same store sales that were up 1.5% and guest counts that were down 1.1% in June 2015. The June Knapp-Track sales results imply a 2.5% check increase.

 

Sales and guest counts in June were the weakest since January 2014 (more than two years) and February 2013 (more than three years), respectively. On a two-year basis, same store sales were down 0.8% with guest counts down 5.9%. All four weeks in June had both negative same store sales and guest counts. The best week of the month was the final week with week 1 the softest.

 

Restaurant sales softened during 2Q and Knapp-Track casual dining data signals a weak end to the quarter.

And while the fundamentals clearly continue to deteriorate, we disagree with BofA’s conclusion: “These sales results are a worry point for investors as 2Q earnings season approaches.”  Just one look at today’s all time high S&P 500 shows that investors are not worried about anything at all.

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“Greed And Fear” Index Soars To Highest Since 2014

Having tumbled to its "fear-iest" in 4 months the day after the Brexit vote, CNN's Fear & Greed indicator has roared higher to 82…

 

The "greed-iest" since mid-2014… the last time that The BoJ went full crazy with QQE2 (as The Fed ended QE2) and was rapidly followed by Jim Bullard's QE4-hint-driven bounce…

 

What "wall of worry"?

 

Source: CNN

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