Frontrunning: May 19

  • Fed Puts June Rate Increase on Table Provided Economy Says Go (BBG)
  • European shares drop as mining stocks weaken, airlines fall (Reuters)
  • Oil drops below $48 on Fed hike speculation, fading support from outages (Reuters)
  • Violent Struggle Over Oil and Money Rattles Global Energy Market (BBG)
  • Bayer Proposes to Acquire Monsanto (WSJ)
  • How Wall Street Led LendingClub Into Crisis (BBG)
  • Fewer Shareholders Pay U.S. Taxes on Dividends (WSJ)
  • Turkey to miss end-June deadline for EU visa-free travel (Reuters)
  • Trading Floors ‘Quiet’ as Revenue Drops, JPMorgan Analysts Say (BBG)
  • Netanyahu pulls off coalition surprise to upend Israeli politics (Reuters)
  • Najib’s Stepson Bought House in London With 1MDB Funds (BBG)
  • EU to compile common blacklist of tax havens, sanctions against them (Reuters)
  • China steelmakers attack U.S tariff move; say need more time (Reuters)
  • FMC Technologies, Technip Agree to $13 Billion Oil-Services Merger (WSJ)
  • Donald Trump Releases Names of 11 Potential Supreme Court Choices (WSJ)
  • Trump’s Dodd-Frank Plan Will Be Early Test of Republican Unity (BBG)

 

Overnight Media Digest

WSJ

– EgyptAir said one of its aircraft disappeared early Thursday while flying from Paris to Cairo with 66 people aboard. (http://on.wsj.com/1Vawc1j)

– Bayer AG has approached Monsanto Co about a takeover that would fuse two of the world’s largest suppliers of crop seeds and pesticides, the companies said.(http://on.wsj.com/1Vawq8K)

– Theranos Inc has told federal health regulators that the company voided two years of results from its Edison blood-testing devices, according to a person familiar with the matter. (http://on.wsj.com/1VawdlV)

– Presumptive Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump on Wednesday listed 11 candidates he would consider to fill the vacancy at the Supreme Court, a move aimed at easing concerns on the right about his commitment to conservative judges. (http://on.wsj.com/1VawjtU)

 

FT

* Streaming service like Netflix and Amazon’s video service could be forced to devote “at least” 20 percent of their catalogues to European Films and shows, according to a draft of the European Commission proposal.

* Chinese businessman Tony Xia has agreed to buy Aston Villa, the club said on Wednesday.

* Federal Reserve officials felt the U.S. economy could be ready for another interest rate increase in June, according to the minutes from the central bank’s April policy meeting released on Wednesday.

 

NYT

– Monsanto Co said it had received a takeover bid from Bayer AG, potentially signaling another huge merger in the business of crop seeds and pesticides. (http://nyti.ms/1U0URjU)

– The Federal Reserve sent a sharp, simple message to financial markets that it is thinking seriously about raising its benchmark interest rate at its next meeting, in June. (http://nyti.ms/1U0VdqK)

– Tesla Motors Inc said it would offer about $2 billion in stock, mainly to help it ramp up production of its new Model 3 electric car over the next two years. (http://nyti.ms/1U0WaiJ)

– Ailing media mogul Sumner Redstone will no longer draw a salary from Viacom Inc, one of the big media companies he controls. Eliminating his pay is a gesture toward acknowledging that he is no longer involved in operations and deserving pay as a company executive. (http://nyti.ms/1U0Wm1o)

 

Canada

THE GLOBE AND MAIL

** The Canada Pension Plan Investment Board is expected to announce the promotion of Mark Machin as its CEO on Thursday, alongside releasing annual results. Machin, 49, currently senior managing director and head of international and Asia at CPPIB, will take over from chief executive Mark Wiseman. (http://bit.ly/1NzOt6J)

** Essar Group, which paid C$1.85 billion ($1.41 billion) to buy Algoma Steel Inc in 2007, has been ruled out as a potential buyer of the company it put into creditor protection last November, sources familiar with the steel company’s restructuring said. (http://bit.ly/1OBbUaE)

NATIONAL POST

** Via Rail was in talks with Quebec’s pension fund about building a dedicated set of passenger tracks between Quebec City and Toronto, but that fell apart after the Caisse de depot et placement du Quebec proposed a C$5.5 billion ($4.20 billion)commuter line for Montreal instead. (http://bit.ly/1TlyYwa)

** Tensions boiled over in the House of Commons on Wednesday during the lead-up to a vote to restrict debate on physician-assisted dying. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau was accused of charging across the floor, swearing, elbowing an NDP MP, “manhandling” the chief opposition whip, Gordon Brown, and exchanging angry words with NDP Leader Tom Mulcair. (http://bit.ly/1WF2t1A)

** More than 100 million LinkedIn users might be more vulnerable on Wednesday, after their email and passwords have been uploaded online and reportedly for sale. LinkedIn issued a statement saying it is aware of the situation, but added that this is not a new data breach as the information was taken during a hack in 2012. (http://bit.ly/1XmraiA)

 

Britain

The Times

Britain’s second biggest retail energy supplier SSE is considering the sale of a 1 billion pounds stake in its gas distribution division. (http://bit.ly/1U0fI9P)

The Guardian

Burberry is to cut jobs and reduce its product range by up to one-fifth in an attempt to save at least 100 million pounds a year, following a 10 percent fall in profit. (http://bit.ly/1U0ffEz)

Britain’s employment rate reached a record high and wages ticked up in March, dashing government claims that the job market was being seriously damaged by the threat of a leave vote in the EU referendum. (http://bit.ly/1U0eYS6)

The Telegraph

Vauxhall is preparing to recall 235,000 Zafira cars for a second time as it can now install a long-term fix to a problem which had been causing as many as several hundred fires. (http://bit.ly/1U0eY4g)

Spanish businessman Javier Ferrán has been named the next chairman of Diageo, bringing to an end speculation over who will lead the board of the FTSE 100 drinks giant. (http://bit.ly/1U0fb7N)

Sky News

Policy makers at the US Federal Reserve indicated that most felt it would be “appropriate” to raise rates at their meeting of 14-15 June if the jobs market and economic growth strengthens, and inflation shows signs of moving towards its 2 percent target. (http://bit.ly/1U0etXZ)

The U.S. has raised the import duty on Chinese cold-rolled steel, which is used in car manufacturing, shipping containers and construction, by more than 520 percent. (http://bit.ly/1U0eOtT)

The Independent

Excessive pay for top bosses is holding back economic growth in Britain, the chief economist of the Bank of England, Andy Haldane, has warned. (http://ind.pn/1U0dhE6)

Mitsubishi Motors President Tetsuro Aikawa will step down as the Japanese automaker looks to regroup from its widening fuel economy testing scandal with the backing of Nissan Motor. (http://ind.pn/1U0dI19)

via http://ift.tt/27D9V1g Tyler Durden

The Dreaded Death Cross Formation Just Hit Stocks

Smart investors have noted that the S&P 500 just staged a very dangerous looking move.

That move was when S&P 500’s 50-week moving average broke below its 100-week moving average. You can see this in the green circle below.

 

 

This move is called a “Death Cross” and for good reason. The last time it happened was in 2008, right before the entire market CRASHED.

 

 

The time before that was right before the Tech Bubble burst, crashing stocks.

 

 

In short, going back over 16 years, this Death Cross formation has only hit TWICE before. Both times were when major bubbles burst and stocks Crashed.

 

On that note, we are already preparing our clients for this with a 21-page investment report titled Stock Market Crash Survival Guide.

 

In it, we outline precisely how the crash will unfold as well as which investments will perform best during a stock market crash.

 

We are giving away just 1,000 copies for FREE to the public.

 

To pick up yours, swing by:

http://ift.tt/1HW1LSz

 

Best Regards

 

Graham Summers

Chief Market Strategist

Phoenix Capital Research

 

via http://ift.tt/1YEY6S6 Phoenix Capital Research

Walmart Surges 9% After Beating EPS Expectations, Comp Sales

In what is the traditional end to earnings season, moments ago the second biggest employer in the US after the government, Walmart reported results which after several quarters of disappointment solidly beat expectations, reporting Q1 EPS of $0.98 (down 4.9% Y/Y), higher than the $0.88 expected even as revenue of $115.9 billion (up 0.9% Y/Y) missed expectations of $133.3 billion. However, the reason the stock is soaring over 8% in the premarket is WMT’s big beat in comp stores, which same store sales rising 1.0%, double the 0.5% expected, driven by the sixth consecutive quarter of positive traffic, up 1.5%. Comps ex-fuel rose 0.8%, also double the 0.4% expected.

It wasn’t all good: operating income tumbled 7.1% to $5.2 billion (down -4.6% in constant currency even though the dollar was weaker in Q1 Y/Y). This however was offset by a surge in Free Cash Flow, which rose by $1.7 billion to $4 billion in Q1.

Perhaps one of the reasons for the dramatic improvement in margins is the loss of quality control, because in the official press release the company was so excited to release its report it was unable to even do a rudimentary spell-check.

That said the guideance was good, and the company expected to report Q2 EPS of $0.95-$1.08, above the $0.98 expected.

“We are proud of the overall results in the first quarter, and there is momentum in many parts of the business. Based on our views of the global operating environment, and assuming currency exchange rates remain at current levels, we expect second quarter fiscal 2017 earnings per share to range between $0.95 and $1.08,” said Brett Biggs, Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. executive vice president and CFO. “Additionally, we expect comp sales for Walmart U.S. to be about +1.0 percent, and Sam’s Club, without fuel, to be slightly positive for the 13-week period ending July 29, 2016,” added Biggs.

Walmart also announced that it spent $4.3 billion in buybacks and dividends in the quarter, even as it created $4.0 billion in Free Cash Flow.

But the main reason why the stock is up 10% in the premarket, adding nearly $20 billion in market cap, is that in light of a terrible retail environment, many had expected WalMart’s results to be far worse, which in turn has resulted in another short squeeze. And since WMT is such a big component of various indexes, the WMT reaction has managed to push up futures substantially from their morning lows.

Source

via http://ift.tt/1qw2wil Tyler Durden

Global Stocks Slide, S&P Set To Open Red For The Year As Hawkish Fed Ignites “Risk Off”

After yesterday’s algo-driven mad dash to close the S&P green both for the day and for the year following Fed minutes that came in shocking hawkish, the selling has continued overnight, led by the commodity complex as rate hike fears have pushed oil back down some 2% from yesterday’s 7 month highs, which in turn has dragged global stocks lower to a six-week low, while pushing bond yields higher across developed nations as the market suddenly reprices the probability of a June/July rate hike.

For now the critical S&P500 support level at 2030 continues to hold, however that may be put in test today, leading to the next leg lower in the S&P. Should stocks open here, the S&P will be red for the year.

The dollar continued to rise overnight after its biggest jump in 6 months, which led to a substantial devaluation of the Chinese Yuen as a result, which in turn may have spooked the global markets who still remember that China was the primary catalyst that unleashed the wave of selling in December and January.

The hawish Fed minutes pressed the MSCI All Country World Index which declined for a third day, and dropped to the lowest level since April 8. U.K. gilts and German bunds fell, after Treasuries posted their biggest losses of the year. Currencies in Australia, China and South Korea sank to two-month lows against the dollar, while crude oil retreated and copper fell toward levels last seen in February. Gold and silver slipped to this month’s lows.

Many were shocked by the Fed’s minutes which come from a meeting where Yellen was said to be fully dovish. “There is this enormous policy uncertainty,” said Randal Jenneke, Sydney-based fund manager at T. Rowe Price. “The Fed has changed the goal posts so many times, everyone is confused. No one knows when they’re going to raise rates and no one knows what’s going to be the key thing to trigger the decision.

This is what the Fed calls successful communication. There will be more of it today.

Comments from Fed Vice-Chair Fischer and President Yellen will likely be crucial in terms of really hammering home expectations and we’ll hear from the former this afternoon. Fischer’s event is closed to media so it remains to be seen how much he’ll delve into policy outlook but we will also hear from Dudley this afternoon who’s views are closely aligned to those of Yellen so that could be worth watching out for. As a reminder Dudley last said about two weeks ago that two rate hikes this year was a ‘reasonable’ expectation.

According to Bloomberg calculations, Fed Funds futures show the odds of a move surged to 32 percent on Wednesday, after tripling to 12% from 4% in the prior session as data on inflation, housing starts and industrial production beat forecasts. Following months of expectation and fluctuations last year, including a selloff caused by China’s unexpected devaluation of the yuan, markets reacted calmly when the Fed finally raised rates in December for the first time since 2006, reflecting investor conviction in the U.S. recovery’s ability to withstand tighter monetary policy.

“The markets were getting a little too complacent for the scope for rate hikes this year and next year but the fed minutes were on the hawkish side yesterday so that made investors nervous,” said Allan von Mehren, chief analyst at Danske Bank told Bloomberg. “We see some repricing on bond yields and it’s also having a negative spill-over on equity markets.”

In other, otherwise very bullish news, Moody’s lowers US growth outlook to 2.0% from 2.3% and cuts G20 EM growth to 4.2% vs. Prey. 4.4%, sees China growth slowing gradually to around 6.3% this year. However this time not even a major growth forecast cut was enough to send stocks soaring.

The Stoxx Europe 600 Index dropped 0.8 percent, with BHP Billiton Ltd. and Rio Tinto Group leading miners lower as commodities retreated. The European equity gauge has gone a month without posting a daily gain of at least 1 percent, and is down 4.5 percent from its April 20 peak. Futures on the S&P 500 lost 0.3 percent, indicating equities will decline after Wednesday closing little changed. Investors will look Thursday to an index of leading indicators in the U.S. for signs of the economy’s strength. Fed Vice Chairman Stanley Fischer and New York Fed chief William Dudley are scheduled to speak, while Wal-Mart Stores Inc. is among American companies reporting earnings.

Oil fell below $48 a barrel on Thursday, pressured by a stronger dollar and as a surprise increase in U.S. crude inventories served as a reminder that supply remains ample despite output problems. As Reuters recaps, supply losses in Canada and Nigeria have lent support, but cooler weather was expected to help firefighters battling Canadian wildfires. Traders said Exxon Mobil is boosting output at Nigeria’s largest crude stream.

“The main factor weighing on prices is the much appreciated U.S. dollar,” said Carsten Fritsch, analyst at Commerzbank. “What is more, rain forecast in the Canadian oil province of Alberta is giving rise to hopes that the devastating wildfires there could be brought under control.”

Elsehwere, Egyptian stocks slipped for the first time in four days, falling 2 percent. The government has deployed naval ships to search for an EgyptAir Airbus A320 en route to Cairo from Paris that went missing off the coast overnight.

Market Wrap

  • S&P 500 futures down 0.3% to 2035
  • Stoxx 600 down 0.8% to 335
  • FTSE 100 down 1.5% to 6075
  • DAX down 1.5% to 9797
  • S&P GSCI Index down 1.6% to 364
  • MSCI Asia Pacific down 0.9% to 125
  • Nikkei 225 up less than 0.1% to 16647
  • Hang Seng down 0.7% to 19694
  • Shanghai Composite down less than 0.1% to 2807
  • S&P/ASX 200 down 0.6% to 5323
  • US 10-yr yield up 1bp to 1.86%
  • German 10Yr yield up 2bps to 0.19%
  • Italian 10Yr yield up less than 1bp to 1.5%
  • Spanish 10Yr yield up 1bp to 1.61%
  • Dollar Index up 0.1% to 95.17
  • WTI Crude futures down 2% to $47.22
  • Brent Futures down 2.3% to $47.82
  • Gold spot down 0.3% to $1,254
  • Silver spot down 1.5% to $16.65

Top Global News

  • Stocks, Bonds, Commodities Slide as Fed Weighs June Rate Hike
  • Bayer Bids for $42 Billion Monsanto to Form Life Sciences Giant
  • Moody’s Cuts 2016 U.S. Growth Forecast, Cites Weak Global Demand
  • Technip to Combine With FMC Technologies in All-Share Deal
  • Theranos Corrects Tens of Thousands of Blood-Testing Results
  • Dollar Climbs to Seven-Week High as Templeton Backs Divergence
  • Trump Invested in Outsourcing Companies He Denounced in Campaign
  • Zuckerberg Acknowledges Trust Gap After Meeting on Bias
  • Apple, Not China, Is JPMorgan’s Biggest Risk for Taiwan Stocks

Looking at regional markets, Asia stocks traded mostly lower following a subdued lead from Wall Street where US equities pared gains following a hawkish FOMC minutes in which most Fed officials saw a June hike likely if the economy warranted. This initially set the tone across the region with the ASX 200 (-0.6%) dragged by basic materials and energy as a firmer USD post-FOMC minutes weighed on commodities. Nikkei 225 (flat) fluctuated between gains and losses as JPY weakness and strong machine orders provided some optimism in Japan, while Shanghai Comp (flat) outperformed for a bulk of the session after the PBoC continued to up liquidity injections and China continued its supportive sector adjustments. 10yr JGBs saw some spill-over selling, with demand subdued as BoJ refrained from conducting its bond purchase program, while further pressure was seen after the 20yr auction in which the b/c ratio declined from prior.

Top Asian News

  • Suzuki Says Improper Mileage Tests Used on 2.1 Million Cars: Testing didn’t follow protocol due to concerns about weather
  • Australia Adds More Jobs as Unemployment Rate Holds at 5.7%: Employment data comes in slightly under economist forecasts
  • Apple, Not China, Is JPMorgan’s Biggest Risk for Taiwan Stocks: Foreign investors pull $2.2 billion as Apple suppliers fall
  • BEA Union Cuts China Property Bond Exposure on Valuation Concern: Holdings in key fund 33 percent versus 55 percent last year
  • Two Chinese Fighters Intercept U.S. Plane Over South China Sea: Encounter in international airspace could further strain ties
  • Modi Set for Lone India State Win as Regional Parties Dominate: Modi’s BJP is ahead in Assam in 126-member state assembly
  • Vale Delivers Warning on Iron Ore After China Frenzy Fades Away: Watch out for bumpy road ahead as low-cost supply is set to pick up

European equities have slipped this morning following the fallout of the more hawkish than expected FOMC meeting minutes, having kept June as a live possibility to tighten monetary policy. Subsequently, FFR futures are now pricing in a 32% chance of a hike next month, as such financials outperform amid the prospect of higher borrowing costs for consumers. However, failed to offset the weakness across material names as they are hampered by the fall in commodity prices in reaction to the upside in the greenback. Additionally, notable weakness has been seen across airliners in the wake of reports of a missing EgyptAir flight, while Thomas Cooks underperforms in relation to other airliners after their CEO stated that FY underlying earnings is at the lower end of guidance. Despite the downside in equities European bonds have been pressured this morning amid the rise in yields, with Bunds yields bear steepening across the curve, which comes after the aforementioned hawkish FOMC minutes. Furthermore, desks are also attributing some of the price action to technical factors with downside limited by support holding around 163.00.

Top European News

  • European Stocks Slide as Fed Minutes Signal June Hike Possible: Stoxx Europe 600 Index lost 0.5 percent at 9:23 a.m. in London, with commodity producers declining the most
  • Bayer Eyes $42 Billion Monsanto in Quest for Seeds Dominance: bold attempt by Bayer to snatch the last independent global seeds producer and become the world’s biggest supplier of farm chemicals
  • Investec’s Full-Year Profit Rises 3% as Bank Lending Increases: Net income for the 12 months ended March 31 rose to 423 million pounds ($616 million) from 410 million pounds a year earlier

In FX, the Japanese yen has been modestly stronger overnight, with the USDJPY trading closely around 110, following a 1 percent slide in the last session when it hit 110.40 following the Fed minutes.  Australia’s dollar weakened as much as 0.5 percent, and the MSCI Emerging Markets Currency Index fell 0.5 percent, taking its retreat in May to 3 percent. Indonesia’s rupiah and South Korea’s won led declines on Thursday, weakening at least 0.8 percent.

But the overnight highlight as previosly reported was China’s yuan which declined as much as 0.1 percent in Shanghai’s onshore market. It was more volatile in offshore trading, rebounding 0.3 percent after a 0.5 percent loss on Wednesday that marked its biggest decline since January. South Africa’s rand climbed 0.4 percent, paring this month’s slide to 10 percent, the worst performer among 31 major currencies worldwide. While the central bank will probably keep interest rates unchanged on Thursday, six of the 25 estimates from economist in a Bloomberg survey predict a quarter-point increase. The rest see the benchmark remaining at 7 percent.

In commodities, WTI dropped 2.2% to $47.15 a barrel, extending Wednesday’s retreat from a seven-month high. The dollar’s increase coupled with renewed concern over the global oil glut unsettled markets, with U.S. crude inventories unexpectedly rising by 1.3 million barrels last week, according to data issued on Wednesday. Rain in Canada may have also slowed fires that have shifted back toward the province of Alberta’s oil-sands operations. Copper, nickel and zinc fell by at least 0.8 percent in London. Gold slid to a three-week low on concern the Fed is moving closer to raising interest rates. Metal for immediate delivery fell as much as 0.5 percent to $1,252.42 an ounce.

On the US calendar today we have the Philly Fed’s manufacturing survey will be closely watched especially considering the weakness in the NY Fed survey earlier this week. We’ll also get the latest initial jobless claims numbers which are expected to come back down again following the big spike higher in the last reading, while the Conference Board’s leading index for April rounds off the data. Fedspeak wise we will hear from Vice-President Fischer who is due to speak at 2.15pm BST, while Dudley (at 3.30pm BST) is also scheduled for comments today.

Bulletin Headline Summary from Bloomberg and RanSquawk

  • European equities follow suit from the fallout of the hawkish FOMC minutes release, with Bunds also softer despite capping losses after finding support at 163.00
  • GBP has been another source of focus for FX markets in the wake of upbeat UK retail sales while USD remains firmer against its major counterparts
  • Looking ahead, highlights include ECB Minutes, Initial Jobless Claims, Fed’s Fischer (Voter, Neutral), Dudley (Voter, Soft Dove) and BoE’s Vlieghe (Dove)
  • Treasuries fall during overnight trading, with global equities dropping to six-week low and commodities lower against a stronger U.S. dollar as the world braces for the possibility that the Fed may raise rates in June.
  • An EgyptAir Airbus A320 en route from Paris to Cairo with 66 people on board went missing over the Mediterranean Sea in cloudless stable weather, raising concerns of a crash caused by a deliberate act or mechanical failure
  • Federal Reserve officials want to raise interest rates in June. Now, it is up to the U.S. economy to confirm their view that slow growth in the first quarter was temporary;
  • Moody’s Investors Service lowered its growth forecast for the U.S. economy this year to 2 percent from 2.3 percent to account for a weak first quarter, while anticipating underlying resilience through 2017
  • Is the link between monetary policy and inflation broken? The central bank governor of Denmark, where nominal rates have been negative longer than anywhere else in the world, says there may be signs that the link has grown weaker
  • The BOJ must drastically lower its presence in the nation’s stock market if it wants to preserve the ability to one day unwind its massive position, according to the Democratic Party’s Tsutomu Okubo, a former vice finance minister
  • Given the uncertainty of Brexit’s potential impact, a vote to leave is a risk. The question is: Is the risk worth taking?
  • Euro-area officials are weighing a proposal to purchase loans that member states made to Greece in a move that would ease the nation’s debt burden, a precondition for the International Monetary Fund’s involvement in a bailout program
  • Quiet trading floors are set to depress global investment banks’ second-quarter revenue 24 percent, with the underwriting and equities businesses facing the biggest drops, according to analysts at JPMorgan Chase & Co
  • Sovereign 10Y yields lower; Asian, European equities mostly lower; U.S. equity-index futures lower; WTI crude oil, precious metals fall

US Event Calendar

  • 7:30am: ECB issues policy meeting minutes
  • 8:30am: Chicago Fed Nat Activity Index, April est. -0.20 (prior -0.44)
  • 8:30am: Initial Jobless Claims, May 14, est. 275k (prior 294k)
  • 8:30am: Philadelphia Fed Business Outlook, May, est. 3.0 (prior -1.6)
  • 9:45am: Bloomberg Economic Expectations, May (prior 44.5)
  • 10am: Leading Index, April, est. 0.4% (prior 0.2%)
  • 10am: Freddie Mac mortgage rates
  • 10:30am: EIA natural-gas storage change
  • 10:30am: Fed’s Dudley speaks in New York

DB’s Jim Reid concludes the overnight wrap

Before we move onto a hawkish Fed and a continuation of the sudden and sharp re-pricing of interest rate risk, this morning we have published the fifth edition of DB’s annual survey of global prices of goods and services which my team has now taken over. This year we have added a number of extra European cities. In adding these it confirms that Europe is an expensive place to buy things. Indeed Swiss and Nordic/Scandinavian cities are generally the most expensive in the world. Sydney and London also require a bulging wallet. EM countries remain the cheapest places overall though and the gap between DM and EM prices has mostly widened over the past 4 years helped by the latter’s currency and economic weakness.

Our weekend getaway index neatly reflects the general cost of living around the world. Zurich leads the way, followed by Sydney, London, Milan, Stockholm, Copenhagen, NYC, San Francisco, Amsterdam and Madrid. Our cheap date index sees Zurich, Copenhagen, Tokyo, Stockholm and Amsterdam as the most expensive cities to woo a partner. At the other end of the scale, cities in Malaysia, India and South Africa are the cheapest for a weekend away and around a third of the cost of the most expensive places. For those wanting a real cheap ‘cheap date’, India, Indonesia, the Philippines and South Africa are the places to go. Indeed in all of these places you can have at least 4 dates for the price of one in Zurich but please don’t tell the other 3 people! Indeed if someone asks you out on a date in Zurich please clarify who is paying before accepting.

Elsewhere we look at the price of numerous goods and services across the world including iPhones, jeans, trainers, cars, Coke, meals out, cinema tickets, taxis, public transport, beers, cigs, gym membership, a haircut, the economist and the price of attending business school. Is your country cheap or expensive in these areas? See the report published in the last hour to find out.

So the merry dance starts. The Fed minutes last night highlight a committee that continues to want to raise rates whenever they can push it through. However what normally happens after such hawkishness in the current environment is either the data doesn’t ever quite get there for them to pull the trigger or the global market takes fright by enough for them to have to postpone their plan. I’m not sure this time is any different but clearly you can try to trade the volatility between the two points. Indeed the probability of a June hike has moved from 4% on Monday to 32% after last night’s minutes. Contracts further out in the year have also seen a reasonable re-pricing. The probability of a July move is now up to 47% from 28% just prior to the minutes and 19% on Monday, while a move by December has gone from 56% at the start of the week to 65% on Tuesday and to 75% post minutes.

Fixed income markets were the big mover yesterday. Looking at Treasuries the 2y yield was up another 6bps yesterday to 0.894% which is the highest yield since mid-March. In fact yields at the short-end of the curve are up an impressive 15bps since the close last Friday. The 10y yield yesterday was actually up 8bps by the end of play at 1.855% and approaching the top end of the recent range. FX markets were also particularly active and unsurprisingly it was a relatively strong day for the US Dollar with the Dollar index up +0.56% with EM currencies hit hardest across the board.

In terms of the important stuff, much of the focus was on the line concerning that ‘most participants judged that if incoming data were consistent with economic growth picking up in the second quarter, labour market conditions continuing to strengthen, and inflation making progress towards the Committee’s 2 percent objective, then it likely would be appropriate for the Committee to increase the target range for the federal funds rate in June’. That said there was a bit of balance in that comment with the sentence that ‘participants expressed a range of views about the likelihood that incoming information would make it appropriate to adjust the stance of policy at the time of the next meeting’ with some officials expressing confidence that the incoming data would be sufficient enough to make a June increase appropriate, but offset by ‘several participants’ who seemed more concerned that the data would not provide ‘sufficiently clear signals’ to determine if a move next month is warranted. Some also cited concern about the low implied pricing in futures markets, while it was noted that participants viewed downside risks from abroad as having reduced, but that close monitoring is still warranted’.

So it’s over to the data now and the continued flow of Fedspeak. As we highlighted yesterday comments from Fed Vice-Chair Fischer and President Yellen will likely be crucial in terms of really hammering home expectations and we’ll hear from the former this afternoon. Fischer’s event is closed to media so it remains to be seen how much he’ll delve into policy outlook but we will also hear from Dudley this afternoon who’s views are closely aligned to those of Yellen so that could be worth watching out for. As a reminder Dudley last said about two weeks ago that two rate hikes this year was a ‘reasonable’ expectation.

Refreshing our screens this morning, aside from China the vast majority of bourses in Asia are in the red this morning. There are modest losses for the Nikkei (-0.05%) and Hang Seng (-0.24%), although the Kospi (-0.54%) and ASX (-0.70%) are down a bit more. China is the outlier again with the Shanghai Comp currently +0.58% with Bloomberg reporting that steelmakers in particular have surged following the news that President Xi is to push ahead with plans to reduce overcapacity at SOE’s and so support commodity prices. US equity index futures are modestly lower this morning, while the US Dollar has continued to gain.
Recapping the rest of the moves in markets yesterday. US equities were initially putting in a relatively strong performance leading into the minutes with the S&P 500 up as much as +0.6%. That quickly changed once the text was released however with the index actually plummeting to a -0.6% loss before paring that move to finish pretty much unchanged (+0.02%) by the end of play as a strong session for banks helped to offset weakness for utility and telecom names. The commodity complex was also hit hard with WTI creeping back below $48/bbl this morning (down about 2.5% from just prior to the minutes) after being weighed down by those US Dollar gains, while in the metals space it was precious metals which declined the sharpest. Gold, Silver and Platinum ended -1.60%, -1.99% and -2.45% respectively.

Moves for European equities look a bit outdated now although we did see bourses finally break out with the Stoxx 600 closing +0.85% with Banks gaining on the prior day’s Fedspeak. Meanwhile there was some data released in Europe yesterday to mention. There were no changes in the final revisions to Euro area CPI in April with the monthly headline reading of 0.0% mom meaning the YoY rate was confirmed at -0.2% and down two-tenths from March. The core print was also confirmed +0.7% yoy which is down three tenths and is the lowest print in 12 months. The other data was out of the UK yesterday with the release of the latest employment report. The ILO unemployment rate was unchanged in March as expected at 5.1%. Employment was reported as rising 44k in the first quarter compared with the three months to December which was better than expected, although surprisingly average weekly earnings ex bonuses did slow to 2.1% yoy from 2.2% after consensus had been for modest growth.

Looking over today’s calendar, this morning we’re kicking off in Europe where shortly after this goes to print the Q1 employment figures from France are released. Following that later this morning will be April retail sales data out of the UK which is expected to rebound. That comes before the ECB minutes which are due to be released around lunchtime. Over in the US this afternoon the Philly Fed’s manufacturing survey will be closely watched especially considering the weakness in the NY Fed survey earlier this week. We’ll also get the latest initial jobless claims numbers which are expected to come back down again following the big spike higher in the last reading, while the Conference Board’s leading index for April rounds off the data. As mentioned earlier, Fedspeak wise we will hear from Vice-President Fischer who is due to speak at 2.15pm BST, while Dudley (at 3.30pm BST) is also scheduled for comments today.

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EgyptAir Flight From Paris To Cairo With 66 On Board Has Crashed Above Mediterranean

Six months after an Airbis A321 operated by Russia’s Metrojet exploded shortly after takeoff from Egypt’s Sinai peninsula on route to St. Petersburg, killing all 224 people on board in what was likely an ISIS-inspired terrorist attack, overnight there has been another aircraft-related tragedy when overnight an EgyptAir flight carrying 66 passengers and crew on a flight from Paris to Cairo disappeared from radar over the Mediterranean, Egypt’s national airline said. Officials said they believed the jet has come down in the Mediterranean sea. A search and rescue operation is currently underway and authorities have said that no scenario can be ruled out, including terrorism.

Flight MS804 left Charles de Gaulle Airport at 11:09pm local time (21:09 GMT) on Wednesday Paris time and was expected to arrive in Cairo by 3am on Thursday. A direct flight usually takes just over four hours.

EgyptAir said on its Twitter account that Flight MS804 had departed Paris at 23:09 (CEST). It disappeared at 02:30 a.m. at an altitude of 37,000 feet (11,280 meters) in Egyptian air space, about 280 km (165 miles) from the Egyptian coast before it was due to land at 03:15 a.m..

 

The weather was clear at the time the plane disappeared, according to Eurocontrol, the European air traffic network. “Our daily weather assessment does not indicate any issues in that area at that time,” it said.  Speed and altitude data from aviation website FlightRadar24.com indicated the plane was cruising at the time it disappeared.

Egyptian Prime Minister Sherif Ismail said the search was underway to find the missing Airbus A320 and it was too early to rule out any explanation, including terrorism. Cited by Reuters, officials with the airline and the Egyptian civil aviation department told Reuters they believed the jet had crashed into the Mediterranean between Greece and Egypt.

It is as of this moment unclear whether the disappearance was due to technical failure or any other reason such as sabotage by ultra-hardline Islamists, who have targeted airports, airliners and tourist sites in Europe, Egypt, Tunisia and other Middle Eastern countries over the past few years.

“There was nothing unusual,” EgyptAir vice chairman Ahmed Adel told Reuters. “The search and rescue aircraft from the Egyptian air force are at the position where we lost contact. They are still looking and so far there is nothing found.”

According to Reuters, the aircraft was carrying 56 passengers – with one child and two infants among them – and 10 crew, EgyptAir said. They included 30 Egyptian and 15 French nationals, along with citizens of 10 other countries. “The theory that the plane crashed and fell is now confirmed after the preliminary search and after it did not arrive at any of the nearby airports,” said a senior aviation source, who declined to be identified. The airplane pilot had clocked up 6,275 hours of flying experience, including 2,101 hours on the A320, while the first officer had 2,766 hours, the airline said.

Airbus said the missing A320 had been delivered to EgyptAir in November 2003 and had operated about 48,000 flight hours.

Egypt Air said the plane sent an emergency signal – possibly from an emergency beacon attached to the plane – at 04:26 a.m., two hours after it disappeared from radar screens.  In water crashes, an underwater beacon attached to the aircraft’s flight recorders starts to emit a signal or ping. This helps search and rescue teams to locate the crash and find the boxes.

Asked if he could rule out that terrorists were behind the incident, Prime Minister Ismail said: “We cannot exclude anything at this time or confirm anything. All the search operations must be concluded so we can know the cause. Search operations are ongoing at this time for the airplane in the area where it is believed to have lost contact,” he told reporters at Cairo airport.

Reuters adds that Greek air traffic controllers spoke to the pilot as the jet flew over the island of Kea, in what was thought to be the last broadcast from the aircraft, and no problems were reported. But just ahead of the handover to Cairo airspace, calls to the plane went unanswered, before it dropped off radars shortly after exiting Greek airspace, Kostas Litzerakis, the head of Greece’s civil aviation department, told Reuters.

“During the transfer procedure to Cairo airspace, about seven miles before the aircraft entered the Cairo airspace, Greek controllers tried to contact the pilot but he was not responding,” he said. Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi will chair a national security council meeting on Thursday morning, a statement from his office said. It did not say if the meeting would discuss the plane.

At Cairo airport, authorities ushered families of the passengers and crew into a closed-off waiting area. However, two women and a man, who said they were related to a crew member, were seen leaving the VIP hall where families were being kept. Asked for details, the man said: “We don’t know anything, they don’t know anything. No one knows anything.”

In Paris, a police source said investigators were now interviewing officers who were on duty at Roissy airport on Wednesday evening to find out whether they heard or saw anything suspicious. “We are in the early stage here,” the source said.

Greece said it had deployed aircraft and a frigate to the area to help with the search. A Greek defense ministry source said authorities were also investigating an account from the captain of a merchant ship who reported a ‘flame in the sky’ about 130 nautical miles south of the island of Karpathos.

A terrorist link

An Airbus A321 operated by Russia’s Metrojet crashed in the Sinai on Oct. 31, 2015, killing all 224 people on board. Russia and Western governments have said the plane was probably brought down by a bomb, and the Islamic State militant group said it had smuggled an explosive device on board.

The crash called into question Egypt’s campaign to eradicate Islamist militancy and has damaged its tourism industry, a cornerstone of the economy.

Islamist militants have stepped up attacks on Egyptian soldiers and police since Sisi, as army chief, toppled freely elected Islamist President Mohamed Mursi in 2013 after mass protests against his rule.

In March, an EgyptAir plane flying from Alexandria to Cairo was hijacked and forced to land in Cyprus by a man with what authorities said was a fake suicide belt. He was arrested after giving himself up.

In the same month, Islamic State suicide bombers hit Brussels airport and a metro train in the worst such attacks in Belgian history, killing 32 people. Investigators believed they were carried out by the same cell that was behind November’s gun and bomb attacks in Paris which claimed the lives of 130 people.

If indeed this is another terrorist attack, we expect that shortly one of the extremeist Muslim organizations will step up to claim credit for this latest tragedy.

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The Epic Battle Continues

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Epic Battle Continues

Posted with permission and written by Craig Hemke, TF Metals Report (CLICK HERE FOR ORIGINAL)

 

 


 

 

On one side, we have The Specs. These “investors” seek an exposure to gold through ownership of the paper derivative offered by The Comex. On the other side, we have The Banks. These “criminals” fraudulently create unlimited amounts of unbacked paper gold and sell them to The Specs in an attempt to cap price and, ultimately, profit by covering at lower prices. Which side will win? With open interest near record levels in both gold and silver, we’re likely not going to have to wait much longer to find out.

 

If you somehow managed to sleep through yesterday, here’s a recap. It was typical of the new, post-April 19 norm. Prices rose on the Sunday evening Globex. They rose further in Asia and they even extended through the London session. However, after hitting highs above $1290 in early Comex trading, prices were slammed for $15 in 15 minutes in a move that left many “analysts” searching for explanations: http://ift.tt/1rVV9lJ

 

Perhaps your sweet, loving and harmless local analyst can help these “puzzled” folks out a bit?

 

The action on The Comex yesterday was simply another act of desperation on the part of The Banks. They issued and dumped an inordinate amount of paper gold, calculated by ZeroHedge to be in excess of $2.3B notional: http://ift.tt/255TUCn

 

Were these Banks suddenly in a rush to sell an accumulated long position? Was immediate liquidation so important that an entire position needed to be blown out in minutes? Or we’re The Banks simply dumping a whole bundle of new paper contract supply onto the “market”? In doing so, The Banks would clearly be attempting to manipulate prices lower, either to simply cap the days gains or to protect against the incredible losses that would be incurred if/when price surges through $1300. Recall that as of the most recent Bank Participation Report, The Banks were NET short nearly 200,000 Comex contracts. This means that every $10 move in price equates to a $200M paper loss. Accordingly, a gold price that surges from $1300 to $1400 would force another $2B+ in losses upon The Banks. Do you think they’d like to avoid this fate?

 

Thus we have days like yesterday. And how do we know this to be true? The answers can be found in the CME’s own open interest numbers which are updated daily. If yesterday’s massive contract dump had emanated from a Spec long, Comex history and paper market dynamics would have suggested a significant decrease in total open interest. The Specs would have sold longs. The Banks would have taken the other side of the trade and bought to cover shorts. Open interest would have been retired and the total number of contracts outstanding would have declined. On the flip side, if the massive dump emanated from a Bank issuing a whole bundle of new paper shorts, we would expect to see a significant increase in total open interest.

 

Well, the open interest numbers for yesterday are out and what do we have??? An increase of 16,767 contracts to a new, multi-year high of 596,513 paper contracts.

 

So now that we know just which parties were responsible for the raid and selling yesterday, it’s time to once again discuss WHY The Banks operate this way. Aside from their BIS and Central Bank mandate to manage price, The Banks manage and manipulate the precious metals because they profit from it! Having the unlimited ability to create an endless supply of anything gives you direct control over whatever market you “make”. And, for the past three years, this has provided a stream of easy profits for these Bank trading desks. They would simply issue as many new contracts as necessary to wait out The Specs. Eventually, price would top out and momentum would stall. All it would take was usually one good shove from The Banks and down would go price. The Specs would all rush for the exits and The Banks would use the ensuing selling to buy back and cover nearly all of their recently issued shorts.

 

The most recent and egregious example of this was last October and we documented the entire process as it unfolded, hopefully saving all of you some fiat and undue anxiety in the process. Here are two charts from the archives that effectively describe the process. These are dated 11/18/15 and labeled in such a way as to make it all quite clear:

 

 

The Banks are attempting the same maneuver now, writ large. Writ very, very large! Check the chart below and notice the same style of open interest flooding and price capping, only on a much larger scale and
with much higher stakes:

 

 

Let’s have some fun with math. Shall we?

 

As noted above, on January 28 of this year, total Comex gold open interest was 373,252 contracts representing 37,325,200 ounces of paper gold. That night price was $1116 and the CME Gold Stocks report showed a total vaulting of 6,427,038 ounces.

 

By March 11, price had risen to $1261 and total open interest was 506,363 contracts representing 50,636,300 ounces of paper gold with the CME Gold Stocks showing a total Comex vault of 6,815,280 ounces.

 

As of last night, price was $1274 and total open interest was 596,513 contracts representing 59,651,300 ounces of paper gold with the CME Gold Stocks showing a total Comex vault of 7,595,687 ounces.

 

So, over the period January 28 to May 16:

 

  • Paper price has risen by $158 or 14.16%
  • Total Comex open interest has risen by 223,261 contracts representing 22,326,100 ounces of paper gold or an increase of 59.82%.
  • Total Comex vault stocks have risen by 1,168,649 ounces of gold or an increase of 17.15%
  • Leverage of paper ounces to total Comex stocks has increased from 5.81:1 to 7.84:1 or an increase of 34.94%.

 

If The Comex Banks had just been forced to maintain the already-fraudulent 5.81:1 ratio of paper to vault stocks from January 28, then total open interest allowed as of yesterday would only have been 441,309 contracts. And if total open interest was 155,000 contracts LESS than what it currently is, do you suppose that price would be a bit higher than $1272?


So, what’s the point of all this? Once again, we’re simply attempting to draw attention to the hopelessly corrupt and fraudulent, paper derivative pricing scheme. In the absence of any meaningful physical delivery, the “price” discovered on the Comex is not a price for gold (or silver) at all. Instead, the only price being discovered is the price of the derivative, itself. Nothing more.

 

However, there is a secondary point worth noting. Go back up and check that chart from November 18. Note the size of the “Commercial” NET short positions. Back then, the Gold Commercials saw their NET position reach 166,000 contracts and the 24 Banks included in the Bank Participation Report saw their NET position reach to 99,119 contracts short. As of last week, the Gold Commercial NET short position hit 285,000 contracts and this month’s BPR revealed a 24 Bank NET short position of 195,262 contracts.

 

Are The Banks beginning to get squeezed? Is there a limit to the amount of unbacked, naked short positions that they are willing to create and maintain. Is it possible that they are blindly putting good money after bad in a desperate attempt to save their accumulated positions? Could The Banks actually lose and be forced to cover, all the while sustaining massive losses? These are good questions. Perhaps we should consult “The London Whale” for answers: http://ift.tt/1TBFpiX

 

At the end of the day, be patient, yet remain firm. Recognize the forces aligned against you, however, and know that they are conspiring against you. Will they lose control? Only time will tell.

 

In the meantime, simply remain alert and prepare accordingly for all possible outcomes.

 

 

Please email with any questions about this article or precious metals HERE

 

 

 

 

The Epic Battle Continues

Posted with permission and written by Craig Hemke, TF Metals Report (CLICK HERE FOR ORIGINAL)

via http://ift.tt/1qvTxhj Sprott Money

Tim Price: Why I’m Voting To Leave The European Union

Submitted by Tim Price via SovereignMan.com,

On 23 June 2016, this British citizen will be voting to leave the European Union.

To me it’s clear: the EU has not only become too big for its own good, it’s too big to do hardly anything good.

Back in 1975 when the UK first confirmed membership in the EU (when it was called the European Economic Community), it made sense.

Britain has always thrived on international trade, and the EU promised more trade.

But that’s not what happened. The EU didn’t turn into a peaceful, efficient, multi-national trading bloc that enables commerce and prosperity.

Rather it has become an ever-expanding, unaccountable bureaucracy ruling over vastly disparate nations who are increasingly at odds with one another.

And it is precisely the size of this Leviathan that’s the problem… something that was first identified several decades ago by economist Leopold Kohr.

Kohr was an Austrian Jew who only narrowly escaped Hitler’s Germany just before the outbreak of the Second World War.

He had been born in Oberndorf in central Austria, a village of just 2,000 or so.

And Oberndorf’s tiny size came to play a crucial role in Kohr’s thinking about the wealth of nations.

Kohr’s premise was simple: when you get too big, you start having serious problems.

This applies to political unions, from the Roman Empire to the EU, as well as to companies.

Even Warren Buffett has warned that large companies will eventually find it difficult to grow.

Kohr graduated in 1928 and went off to study at the London School of Economics with the likes of fellow Austrian Friedrich von Hayek.

In September 1941, Kohr began writing what would become his masterwork, ‘The Breakdown of Nations’.

He wrote that instead of expanding, Europe should be shrinking back into small political regions (like Switzerland) with a commitment to private property rights and local democracy.

“We have ridiculed the many little states,” wrote Kohr sadly, “now we are terrorised by their few successors.”

Simply put, size creates unavoidable limits… and problems.

And as the European Union has grown ever larger, it smashes horribly into Kohr’s thesis.

We can see this with the spate of problems in Europe ranging from horrific youth unemployment to major border crises to negative interest rates across the continent.

Of all the world’s population centers, Europe is the slowest growing (i.e. most rapidly shrinking) in the world.

The promises of growth and prosperity proved hollow. Yet the Eurocrats want to give Europeans even more: more regulation, more negative interest rates, more size.

Perhaps ECB Governing Council member Vitas Vasiliauskas sums this up the best from his comments last week:

“Markets say the ECB is done, their box is empty. But we are magic people. Each time we take something and give to the markets – a rabbit out of the hat.”

Vasiliauskas is the perfect embodiment of the EU bureaucracy: they believe they are special people capable of performing miracles.

The arrogance and hubris in this statement are overwhelming and tell you everything you need to know about the unelected, unaccountable people who control our lives.

*  *  *

If you want to understand this issue even more, I highly recommend the documentary Brexit: The Movie.

It’s a well-presented masterpiece of government overreach that would likely win an award for Best Comedy if it weren’t sadly true.

If you’re pressed for time, here’s a 60-second snippet detailing the tens of thousand of regulations that crowd our daily lives:

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British General Says A Nuclear War With Russia In 2017 Is “Entirely Plausible”

With tensions between Russia and the West at post-cold war highs, a former NATO deputy military chief is now saying that a nuclear war with Russia over the Baltic nations in 2017 is "entirely plausible" according to RT.

General Sir Richard Shirreff, from Britain, served at the second highest NATO military office in Europe between 2011 and 2014, has written a fictional book about a nuclear war with Russia in 2017 triggered by a dispute of the Baltic nations. While the story is indeed fictional, Shirreff said the story is based on an "entirely plausible" scenario.

The scenario in which Shirreff lays out is that Russia would first occupy Ukraine to secure a land route to Crimea and then invade the three Baltic nations, all of which are members of NATO. Shirreff claims Russia will do this because it feels that NATO is perceived as weak, and Russia will be oppositional about what it sees as the alliance's attempt to encircle it.

"We need to judge President Putin by his deeds not his words. He has invaded Georgia, he has invaded the Crimea, he has invaded Ukraine. He has used force and got away with it" the retired General told BBC.

The general's thesis is hard to disagree with of course. As NATO has recently moved 4,000 troops to Russia's border, followed by the US turning on the missile defense system and immediately wargaming in Romania, the scene has already been set for such an occurrence. Russia has responded to NATO's troop positioning by creating new military divisions of their own, and deploying them to the borders

Even more to Shirreff's point, as we noted a few days ago, Russia has already hinted at nuclear war in response to the US activation of the missile defense system in Romania. Last fall, as Russia grew concerned that the defense system would take away its first mover advantage of being able to strike in the event of a war, Russian security officials hinted that one miltary response would be to use a nuclear-armed drone submarine that would be detonated in coastal waters, causing a radioactive tsunami to flood and contaminate seaside cities. The purpose would be to "defeat important economic objects of an enemy in coastal zones, bringing guaranteed and unacceptable losses on the country's territory by forming a wide area of radioactive contamination incompatible with conducting military, economic or any other activities there for a long period of time." In fact, Russian commentator Konstantin Bogdanov wrote that the antimissile sites in Eastern Europe might even accelerate the slippery slope to nuclear war in a crisis.

All that's left is a catalyst, something the US is apparently trying desperately to deliver as it continues to fly spy planes over Russia's border, and encircles Russia with troops. If ever either side were to make one small mistake in how they choose to interact with each other, it could very well lead to nuclear war.

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EU-Turkey Migrant Deal Unravels Turning Greece Into Massive Refugee Camp

Submitted by Soeren Kern via The Gatestone Institute,

  • "It can be expected that, as soon as Turkish citizens will obtain visa-free entry to the EU, foreign nationals will start trying to obtain Turkish passports … or use the identities of Turkish citizens, or to obtain by fraud the Turkish citizenship. This possibility may attract not only irregular migrants, but also criminals or terrorists." — Leaked European Commission report, quoted in the Telegraph, May 17, 2016.

  • According to the Telegraph, the EU report adds that as a result of the deal, the Turkish mafia, which traffics vast volumes of drugs, sex slaves, illegal firearms and refugees into Europe, may undergo "direct territorial expansion towards the EU."

  • "If they make the wrong decision, we will send the refugees." — Burhan Kuzu, senior adviser to Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

  • Erdogan is now demanding that the EU immediately hand over three billion euros ($3.4 billion) so that Turkish authorities can spend it as they see fit. The EU insists that the funds be transferred through international aid agencies in accordance with strict rules on how the aid can be spent. This prompted Erdogan to accuse the EU of "mocking the dignity" of the Turkish nation.

The EU-Turkey migrant deal, designed to halt the flow of migrants from Turkey to Greece, is falling apart just two months after it was reached. European officials are now looking for a back-up plan.

The March 18 deal was negotiated in great haste by European leaders desperate to gain control over a migration crisis in which more than one million migrants from Africa, Asia and the Middle East poured into Europe in 2015.

European officials, who appear to have promised Turkey more than they can deliver, are increasingly divided over a crucial part of their end of the bargain: granting visa-free travel to Europe for Turkey's 78 million citizens by the end of June.

At the same time, Turkey is digging in its heels, refusing to implement a key part of its end of the deal: bringing its anti-terrorism laws into line with EU standards so that they cannot be used to detain journalists and academics critical of the government.

A central turning point in the EU-Turkey deal was the May 5 resignation of Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu, who lost a long-running power struggle with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. Davutoglu was a key architect of the EU-Turkey deal and was also considered its guarantor.

On May 6, just one day after Davutoglu's resignation, Erdogan warned European leaders that Turkey would not be narrowing its definition of terrorism: "When Turkey is under attack from terrorist organizations and the powers that support them directly, or indirectly, the EU is telling us to change the law on terrorism," Erdogan said in Istanbul. "They say 'I am going to abolish visas and this is the condition.' I am sorry, we are going our way and you go yours."

Erdogan insists that Turkey's anti-terrorism laws are needed to fight Kurdish militants at home and Islamic State jihadists in neighboring Syria and Iraq. Human rights groups counter that Erdogan is becoming increasingly authoritarian and is using the legislation indiscriminately to silence dissent of him and his government.

European officials say that, according to the original deal, visa liberalization for Turkish citizens is conditioned on Turkey amending its anti-terror laws. Erdogan warns that if there is no visa-free travel by the end of June, he will reopen the migration floodgates on July 1. Such a move would allow potentially millions more migrants to pour into Greece.

European officials are now discussing a Plan B. On May 8, the German newspaper Bild reported on a confidential plan to house all migrants arriving from Turkey on Greek islands in the Aegean Sea. Public transportation to and from those islands to the Greek mainland would be cut off in order to prevent migrants from moving into other parts of the European Union.

Migrants would remain on the islands permanently while their asylum applications are being processed. Those whose asylum requests are denied would be deported back to their countries of origin or third countries deemed as "safe."

The plan, which Bild reports is being discussed at the highest echelons of European power, would effectively turn parts of Greece into massive refugee camps for many years to come. It remains unclear whether Greek leaders will have any say in the matter. It is also unclear how Plan B would reduce the number of migrants flowing into Europe.

Thousands of newly arrived migrants, the vast majority of whom are men, crowd the platforms at Vienna West Railway Station on August 15, 2015 — a common scene in the summer and fall of 2015. (Image source: Bwag/Wikimedia Commons)

Speaking to the BBC News program, "World on the Move," on May 16, Sir Richard Dearlove, the former head of the British intelligence service MI6, warned that the number of migrants coming to Europe during the next five years could run into millions. This, he said, would reshape the continent's geopolitical landscape: "If Europe cannot act together to persuade a significant majority of its citizens that it can gain control of its migratory crisis then the EU will find itself at the mercy of a populist uprising, which is already stirring."

Dearlove also warned against allowing millions of Turks visa-free access to the EU, describing the EU plan as "perverse, like storing gasoline next to the fire we're trying to extinguish."

On May 17, the Telegraph published the details of a leaked report from the European Commission, the powerful administrative arm of the European Union. The report warns that opening Europe's borders to 78 million Turks would increase the risk of terrorist attacks in the European Union. The report states:

"It can be expected that, as soon as Turkish citizens will obtain visa-free entry to the EU, foreign nationals will start trying to obtain Turkish passports in order to pretend to be Turkish citizens and enter the EU visa free, or use the identities of Turkish citizens, or to obtain by fraud the Turkish citizenship. This possibility may attract not only irregular migrants, but also criminals or terrorists."

According to the Telegraph, the report adds that as a result of the deal, the Turkish mafia, which traffics vast volumes of drugs, sex slaves, illegal firearms and refugees into Europe, may undergo "direct territorial expansion towards the EU." The report warns: "Suspect individuals being allowed to travel to the Schengen territory without the need to go through a visa request procedure would have a greater ability to enter the EU without being noticed."

While the EU privately admits that the visa waiver would increase the risk to European security, in public the EU has recommended that the deal be approved.

On May 4, the European Commission announced that Turkey has met most of the 72 "benchmarks of the roadmap" needed to qualify for the visa waiver. The remaining five conditions concern the fight against corruption, judicial cooperation with EU member states, deeper ties with the European law-enforcement agency Europol, data protection and anti-terrorism legislation.

European Commission Vice President Frans Timmermans said:

"Turkey has made impressive progress, particularly in recent weeks, on meeting the benchmarks of its visa liberalization roadmap…. This is why we are putting a proposal on the table which opens the way for the European Parliament and the Member States to decide to lift visa requirements, once the benchmarks have been met."

In order for the visa waiver to take effect, it must be approved by the national parliaments of the EU member states, as well as the European Parliament.

Ahead of a May 18 debate at the European Parliament in Strasbourg over Turkey's progress in fulfilling requirements for visa liberalization, Burhan Kuzu, a senior adviser to Erdogan, warned the European Parliament that it had an "important choice" to make.

In a Twitter message, Kuzu wrote: "If they make the wrong decision, we will send the refugees." In a subsequent telephone interview with Bloomberg, he added: "If Turkey's doors are opened, Europe would be miserable."

Meanwhile, Erdogan has placed yet another obstacle in the way of EU-Turkey deal. He is now demanding that the EU immediately hand over three billion euros ($3.4 billion) promised under the deal so that Turkish authorities can spend it as they see fit.

The EU insists that the funds be transferred through the United Nations and other international aid agencies in accordance with strict rules on how the aid can be spent. That stance has prompted Erdogan to accuse the EU of "mocking the dignity" of the Turkish nation.

On May 10, Erdogan expressed anger at the glacial pace of the EU bureaucracy:

"This country [Turkey] is looking after three million refugees. What did they [the EU] say? We'll give you €3 billion. Well, have they given us any of that money until now? No. They're still stroking the ball around midfield. If you're going to give it, just give it.

 

"These [EU] administrators come here, tour our [refugee] camps, then ask at the same time for more projects. Are you kidding us? What projects? We have 25 camps running. You've seen them. There is no such thing as a project. We've implemented them."

In an interview with the Financial Times, Fuat Oktay, head of Turkey's Disaster and Emergency Management Authority (AFAD), the agency responsible for coordinating the country's refugee response, accused European officials of being fixated on "bureaucracies, rules and procedures" and urged the European Commission to find a way around them.

The European Commission insists that it was made clear from the outset that most of the money must go to aid organizations: "Funding under the Facility for Refugees in Turkey supports refugees in the country. It is funding for refugees and not funding for Turkey."

The migration crisis appears to be having political repercussions for German Chancellor Angela Merkel, a leading proponent of the EU-Turkey deal. According to a new poll published by the German newsmagazine Cicero on May 10, two-thirds (64%) of Germans oppose a fourth term for Merkel, whose term ends in the fall of 2017.

In an interview with Welt am Sonntag, Horst Seehofer, the leader of the Christian Social Union (CSU), the Bavarian sister-party to Merkel's Christian Democrats (CDU), blamed Merkel for enabling Erdogan's blackmail: "I am not against talks with Turkey. But I think it is dangerous to be dependent upon Ankara."

Sahra Wagenknecht of the Left Party accused Merkel of negotiating the EU-Turkey deal without involving her European partners: "The chancellor is responsible for Europe having become vulnerable to blackmail by the authoritarian Turkish regime."

Cem Özdemir, leader of the Greens Party and the son of Turkish immigrants said: "The EU-Turkey deal has made Europe subject to Turkish blackmail. The chancellor bears significant responsibility for this state of affairs."

via http://ift.tt/1XBnXw6 Tyler Durden

Suicide Blonde

From the Slope of Hope: I was amused this evening to read about the implosion at Theranos, which is located right here in my beloved Palo Alto. Elizabeth Holmes has been the darling of the business press for years, what with her flowing blonde hair, big blue eyes, and slender neck peeking out of the Steve Jobsian black top. Like Holden Caulfield, I have no fondness for “phonies”, and she seemed like one to me.

The thing is, the phenomenon of attractive women leading high-tech companies is a relatively recent one. On the surface, we as a society will pat each other on the back about how progressive we are, now that we have unvarnished gender equality, even at the highest echelons of corporate power. But let me just spoil your little party and tell you something. The reason men gawk at photos like this……….

……..and this……….

isn’t because they are contemplating the strategic vision, administrative excellence, and vigorous business acumen of these long-legged, slender, blonde women. They’re thinking of other things.

And I think it stinks of hypocrisy that we as a society applaud ourselves for elevating these women so high, when I can assure you 50% of the society is doing so mostly to look up their skirts.

The more successful women in business don’t get fawned over to this degree, and in those circumstances, you can probably assume that the woman in question actually knows what the hell she is doing. Take Meg Whitman (please!), who looks like something you might buy in a live bait shop:

And, as long as we’re being gender-blind, let’s remember that the successful businessmen in our society are likewise not required to be handsome (or even generally resembling the species):

My point is this – – when you are presented with a woman at the top of the business world, and she just happens to be very attractive, you might want to take a harder look. And by “look”, I’m talking about with your head, not your eyes, because as experience has shown, that can be a fatal misdirection.

BONUS TIP: Using our same examples above, you can also use the “creepy voice” rule as an important marker. I present to you, once again, Marissa Mayer and Elizabeth Holmes. Enjoy.

via http://ift.tt/1OAMB8w Tim Knight from Slope of Hope