The “Harsh Weather” Verdict: 19% Spent Less, 27% Spent More, 55% Spent The Same

With Goldman proclaiming that half the recent downturn in US macro data is due to “weather” and the rest of the hockey-sticking sell-side extrapolators fully entrenched on the Spring-will-save-us-all bandwagon (despite the manifold examples of the worst macro data misses being from regions that simply were unaffected by the winter storms), we thought the following chart would be of interest.

 

RBC finds only a mere 19% of those surveyed “spent less” due to the weather – and 27% spent more!

But never mind that reality – we need another ‘meme’ to keep the dream alive…

 

What goes down in real-time as reality hits… must be hockey-sticked up in the future to provide a top-down foundation for BTFATH idiocy…

Charts: Bloomberg

h/t @GreekFire12


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1iy2AJA Tyler Durden

Dot-Com 2.0 Visualized (Or Peak Greater Fool)

While central bankers, asset-gatherers, and TV ‘personalities’ remain nonchalant of stocks being in a bubble, some are positively vociferous over the manipulated mania US investors are currently re-experiencing. Until the last few months, the new dot-com bubble had been quietly hidden behind the walls of the private equity world (as we noted here), but as the following chart shows, the bankers have found a willing audience for ‘stories’ and ‘spin’ as the percentage of firms IPOing with negative earnings soars to its highest since Feb 2000… that didn’t end well and we suspect “peak-greater-fool” won’t this time either.

 

 

h/t Bloomberg and Sentiment Trader


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1g6idjL Tyler Durden

How Long Does This Go On Before There’s A Currency Crisis?

Submitted by Simon Black of Sovereign Man blog,

How’s this for irony –

In our modern monetary system, the term ‘fiat currency’ refers to this absurd notion of paper currency that is conjured out of thin air by central bankers and backed by nothing but hollow promises.

‘Fiat’ is a subjunctive conjugation of the Latin verb ‘fi?’; literally translated, it means “let it be” as in “Let there be light.”

Or in this case… ‘let there be paper money,’ which pretty much crystalized the absurdity of our monetary system.

Former Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke summed this up nicely in a 60 Minutes interview he gave a few years ago in which he said, “We can raise interest rates in 15 minutes. . .”

And he was right. Central bankers can change interest rates whenever they want.

If you think about it, interest rates are nothing more than the ‘price’ of money. It’s the rate that people pay when they ‘demand’ money in the form of loans based on the supply of money available.

But this price of money is incredibly influential around the world. Interest rates affect the prices of shares in the stock market. Oil. Agricultural commodities. Real estate. Automobiles.

Almost everything we touch is affected by interest rates.

So in setting the price of money, we have given central bankers the power to effectively set the price of… everything.

Make no mistake, this is a form of price controls. And there’s not a doubt in my mind that one day (probably soon), future historians are going to look back and wonder how so many people could be bamboozled.

We have somehow been conned into believing that the path to prosperity is for the grand wizards of the financial system to conjure paper currency out of thin air.

Yet this notion of ‘money backed by nothing’ is an absurd fantasy that has failed every single time it has ever been tried before in history.

I bring this up because I want to share a chart with you that I presented yesterday to a savvy group of investors.

Bear in mind first that a central bank, like any bank or business, has both assets and liabilities.

Central bank assets are things like gold and government bonds (e.g. US government Treasuries).

Central bank liabilities are the ‘notes’ that they issue. And if you’re wondering what a central bank ‘note’ is, just look in your wallet.

If you’re in the US, those aren’t dollars. The dollar was defined by the Coinage Act of 1792 as 416 grains of standard silver.

Rather, you’ll see the paper in your pocket says “Federal Reserve Note”– a liability of the US central bank.

The difference between assets and liabilities is called equity, or the bank’s capital. And well-capitalized banks maintain substantial capital as a percentage of their assets.

You could think about this as a margin of safety. The less ‘capital cushion’ a bank has as a percentage of its assets, the less it will be able to withstand shocks to the system.

I tracked this data for the US Federal Reserve. And as the chart below shows, there has been an astounding decline in the Fed’s ‘margin of safety’ over the last few years.

1 3 How low does this go before theres a currency crisis?

The lower this line goes, the more the Fed gets pushed into insolvency.

Note that the trend levels out in early 2012, only to start another steep decline a few months later just as they told us the economy had ‘recovered’. This is apparently what recovery looks like.

The question I ask is: how low does this go before there’s a currency crisis?


    



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Jeff Gundlach’s “What Hath QE Wrought” Webcast

It’s that time in the quarter, when Jeff Gundlach takes the mic to walk everyone though his latest thoughts on the market, as well as the most recent capital allocation of his fund, DoubleLine, which like PIMCO, had a less than memorable 2013, although 2014 is certainly starting off on a far better foot for bond funds everywhere. Also who knows: with MBS guru, “convexity maven” Harley Bassman announcing today he is leaving Credit Suisse and joining Pimco, maybe Gundlach will shock everyone with an announcement that El-Erian is moving from Newport Beach and making Doubleline, and West LA, his new home?


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/NXRDDu Tyler Durden

Stocks Retrace Putin Gains As Copper And Yen-Carry Crash

Just before the European close, copper prices on the LME (and US futures) began to crack on rumors that another China corporate had defaulted. This plunge was accompanied by a collapsed in AUD and rumors across desks were a levered fund unwind (which appears some China-commodity play) was responsible. While many would like to believe that fundamentals matter, today made it clear they don't as AUDJPY weakness dragged stocks lower tick-for-tick. A brief moment of hope in the early-afternoon – where VIX was slammed lower as momentum away from carry was sparked  failed and stocks continued to slide, retracing a considerable amount of post-Putin gains. Bonds and gold were bid (after the latter suffered early) as WTI crude slipped back under $100 and copper was crushed.

 

AUDJPY led the S&P lower… (note the brief hope in blue) where stocks disconnected higher…

 

Which was driven by a slamdown effort in VIX (blue)

 

With AUD's collapse starting as Europe closed along with Copper's dive…

 

All major indices fell today – retracing much of the post-Putin gains…

 

Bonds remain discnncted from stocks thanks to the squeeze on Friday with payrolls – we suspect the bearish bias is being sustained thanks to the massive size of corporate issuance recently and need for rate-lock hedging by dealers…

 

Gold outperformed and caught back up to Putin levels but overall commodities suffered on the day…

 

FX markets have been domianted by AUD strength and JPY weakness since Putin but that is unwinding rapidly – note that the USD Index is now unchanged since Putin's speech!

 

"Most Shorted" stocks are getting hammered relative to the market (which is thi new normal is worrisome as it provides more ammo for the next ramping leg.. until it doesn't)…

 

Credit markets remain very skeptical…

 

Charts: Bloomberg

Bonus Chart: The heage-fund hotel GSEs took it on the chin…


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1oJWpj4 Tyler Durden

Today Is the 3rd Anniversary of Fukushima

An ECONOMIC Expert – Rather than a NUCLEAR Expert – Briefed Japanese Prime Minister on Condition of Fukushima Reactors

 

The Japanese Prime Minister at the time of the Fukushima disaster – Naoto Kan – told Democracy Now:

NAOTO KAN: Even at the night of that first day of March 11, what I was being told, being reported, was that the water levels were safely above the level of where the fuel rods were located within the container. And, however, now we know that actually the measuring equipment to measure the water level was broken at that time. And only four hours after the earthquake occurred, actually, was when it experienced meltdown in the reactor one. And even through the container of thickness 20 centimeters, there was actually a hole being burned through, and melted fuel had been actually leaking through to the outside of the container. And now we know this information, that this was happening at 7:00 p.m. approximately on that day. But at the time, none of this information was accurately conveyed to me.

***

 

It was a situation very close to what we call perhaps the “China syndrome.”

 

***

 

And it was very difficult to obtain accurate information and to know what was really happening. And so, the next morning at around 6:00 a.m., very early, I decided that the best thing to do would be to speak directly with the person responsible at the site. So I departed at 6:00 a.m. by helicopter to go to the Fukushima Daiichi site. And there, I met with Mr. Yoshida, who was the person responsible at the plant, and he explained to me about the situation, from his perspective, which was occurring on the site. And he was a very clearly spoken man, which meant that it was very much a plus in terms of considering how to deal with the situation.

AMY GOODMAN: Wasn’t TEPCO management saying the same thing to you as this man you spoke to, the head of the actual plant, when you flew there?

NAOTO KAN: From what I was hearing from the headquarters of TEPCO, and in particular from Mr. Takeguro, who was the former vice president, was—had almost no accurate information being conveyed about what was actually the situation on site.

And one other important and serious issue at the time also was, in the case of a nuclear disaster, the system which was in place, well, the prime minister and the prime minister’s office would be in the head of, you know, the measures to be taken, the office, of what to be done from there. But the bureaucratic organization which was established to support that function was within the NISA, which is actually located within the Ministry of the Economy. And so, the person who was seconded to explain to me from the NISA about what was happening was actually not an expert on nuclear issues or nuclear power, but an economic expert. And so, through his explanation, it was impossible to know the actual situation of what was happening in the reactor.

This is not the first time Tepco has been less than honest:

  • Tepco admitted that it’s known for 2 years that massive amounts of radioactive water are leaking into the groundwater and Pacific Ocean, but covered it up
  • Tepco falsely claimed that all of the radiation was somehow contained in the harbor right outside the nuclear plants

Nuclear Regulatory Commission Blatantly Covered Up Significance of Fukushima

The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) is owned, captured and controlled by the nuclear industry.

It uses faulty models which put us all at risk, and pushes propaganda for the nuclear industry.

While the NRC was extremely worried about the U.S. West Coast  getting hit by Fukushima radiation, it publicly said that everything was safe and under control.

NBC News reports (in some excellent investigive journalism):

In the tense days after a powerful earthquake and tsunami crippled the Fukushima Daiichi power plant in Japan on March 11, 2011, staff at the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission made a concerted effort to play down the risk of earthquakes and tsunamis to America’s aging nuclear plants ….

 

The emails, obtained via the Freedom of Information Act, show that the campaign to reassure the public about America’s nuclear industry came as the agency’s own experts were questioning U.S. safety standards and scrambling to determine whether new rules were needed to ensure that the meltdown occurring at the Japanese plant could not occur here.

 

At the end of that long first weekend of the crisis three years ago, NRC Public Affairs Director Eliot Brenner thanked his staff for sticking to the talking points that the team had been distributing to senior officials and the public.

 

“While we know more than these say,” Brenner wrote, “we’re sticking to this story for now.”

 

***

 

The NRC staff recognized immediately the public-relations nightmare that Fukushima presented for nuclear power in the United States. More than 30 of America’s 100 nuclear power reactors have the same brand of General Electric reactors or containment system used in Fukushima.

In fact, NRC whistleblowers say that the risk of a meltdown in the U.S. is even higher than it was at Fukushima.

Yet the NRC has actually weakened safety standards for U.S. nuclear reactors after the Fukushima disaster.

NBC continues:

There are numerous examples in the emails of apparent misdirection or concealment in the initial weeks after the Japanese plant was devastated … :

  • Trying to distance the U.S. agency from the Japanese crisis, an NRC manager told staff to hide from reporters the presence of Japanese engineers in the NRC’s operations center in Maryland.
  • If asked whether the Diablo Canyon Power Plant on the California coast could withstand the same size tsunami that had hit Japan, spokespeople were told not to reveal that NRC scientists were still studying that question. As for whether Diablo could survive an earthquake of the same magnitude, “We’re not so sure about, but again we are not talking about that,” said one email.
  • When skeptical news articles appeared, the NRC dissuaded news organizations from using the NRC’s own data on earthquake risks at U.S. nuclear plants, including the Indian Point Energy Center near New York City.
  • And when asked to help reporters explain what would happen during the worst-case scenario — a nuclear meltdown — the agency declined to address the questions.

Some of the nuclear industry bias can bee seen in the following quotes from NBC:

When Steven Dolley, former research director of the NCI and a reporter for McGraw Hill Financial’s newsletter Inside NRC, asked McIntyre for a nuclear containment expert to speak to a reporter, the spokesman asked if the reporter had contacted the industry’s lobbying group, the Nuclear Energy Institute.

 

Dolley asked, “So, should I say NRC is deferring inquiries to NEI?” suggesting that the NRC was deferring to the industry it is supposed to regulate.

 

McIntyre shared this exchange with his bosses, adding the comment, “F—ing a-hole.”

And some of the rampant hypocrisy is seen in the difference between public and private NRC talking points:

“Q. What happens when/if a plant ‘melts down’?

 

“Public Answer: In short, nuclear power plants in the United States are designed to be safe. To prevent the release of radioactive material, there are multiple barriers between the radioactive material and the environment, including the fuel cladding, the heavy steel reactor vessel itself and the containment building, usually a heavily reinforced structure of concrete and steel several feet thick.

 

“Additional, non-technical, non-public information: The melted core may melt through the bottom of the vessel and flow onto the concrete containment floor. The core may melt through the containment liner and release radioactive material to the environment.”

 

***

 

When reporters asked if the Japanese emergency could affect licensing of new reactors in the U.S., the public answer was “It is not appropriate to hypothesize on such a future scenario at this point.”

 

The non-public information was more direct: This event could potentially call into question the NRC’s seismic requirements, which could require the staff to re-evaluate the staff’s approval of the AP1000 and ESBWR (the newest reactor designs from Westinghouse and General Electric) design and certifications.”

Moreover, the U.S. has long controlled Japanese nuclear policy.  And yet, NBC reports that the U.S. covered up U.S. involvement in the Fukushima crisis:

Brenner, the public affairs director, sent a “great work so far” memo to his staff at HQ and around the U.S. His third bullet point highlighted he NRC’s role in helping Japanese engineers deal with the problems at Fukushima — a fact not mentioned in the NRC’s press releases that day. The emails indicate that the Obama administration and the NRC were keen to keep up the appearance that they were merely observing the Japanese nuclear crisis and had no responsibility for helping resolve it.


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1i3Urcv George Washington

AND NoW FoR A MeSSaGE FRoM BiG SiS’

 

 

NYT–The chairwoman of the Senate intelligence committee on Tuesday accused the Central Intelligence Agency of improperly removing documents from computers that committee staff members had been using to complete a report on the agency’s detention program, saying the move was part of an effort to intimidate the committee.

 

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Feinstein is showing her stripes

She’s one of those tyranny types

With swastika crotch

Big Sis likes to watch

And ALL information she swipes

The Limerick King


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1g62nWp williambanzai7

North Korean Tanker Burning In Libya After Navy Opens Fire

The Libyan defense minister took over duties as prime minister this morning as the Libyan parliament voted “no confidence” in the current prime minister after a North-Korea-flagged tanker broke the “blockade” from a rebel-held port. The ouster of the PM appears to have bolstered confidence in the anti-rebel oil-stealing that we discussed yesterday, and resulted in

  • *LIBYA NAVY FIRE HIT TANKER AS IT FLED TO INTL WATERS: SKYNEWS

The oil tanker – The Morning Glory – had at least 234,000 barrels of oil aboard but is now “under complete control” of Libyan government authorities. However, as Bloomberg reports, the North Korean tanker is said to be on fire after being hit by a missile.

It’s been a busy morning for Libya:

The rebels started it..

  • *EAST LIBYA REBELS ANNOUNCE START OF OIL EXPORTS, NABAA TV SAYS
  • *LIBYA REBELS SEEK TO SELL OIL FROM ALL PORTS THEY CONTROL: TV

And for a while they were right…

  • *OIL TANKER ESCAPES LIBYA NAVY INTO INTERNATIONAL WATERS:JAZEERA
  • *LIBYAN MP HUWAILI SAYS TANKER ESCAPED TO INTL WATERS: NABAA TV
  • *LIBYA’S HUWAILI SAYS GOVT TO ASK INTERPOL TO TRACK TANKER

Which led to:

  • *LIBYAN PARLIAMENT OUSTS PRIME MINISTER, AP SAYS
  • *LIBYAN DEFENSE MINISTER WILL ASSUME ROLE OF PM FOR 15 DAYS

 

Via BBC,

Libya’s parliament has dismissed PM Ali Zeidan after a tanker laden with oil from a rebel-held port reportedly broke through a naval blockade.

 

MPs called a vote of confidence in Mr Zeidan amid reports that the North Korean-flagged ship had escaped to sea.

 

Defence Minister Abdullah al-Thinni was named interim prime minister.

 

Earlier, Libyan officials had said they had “complete control” of the tanker as it tried to leave Sidra port. However, rebel fighters rejected the assertion.

 

Separatist militants have occupied three major eastern ports since August.

 

They are seeking a greater share of the country’s oil revenues, as well as autonomy for eastern Libya.

 

The oil tanker – named Morning Glory – was reported to have taken on at least 234,000 barrels of crude oil at the Sidra terminal.

 

It was the first vessel to have loaded oil from a rebel-held port since the separatist revolt against the authorities in Tripoli erupted in July.

which resulted in:

  • *LIBYA NAVY FIRE HIT TANKER AS IT FLED TO INTL WATERS: SKYNEWS

And, as the Libya Herald reports,

The North Korean-flagged oil tanker that left Libya this morning after loading an illegal shipment of oil is said to be on fire after being hit by a missile.

 

Part of the ship is burning because it was shot at,” General National Congress (GNC) member Abdullah El-Kabier told the Libya Herald. He was unable to give more details or identify who had fired on the tanker.

We suspect Mr. Kim will be displeased (or is this a way to distract from Ukraine and get the North Koreans to rattle some sabres?)


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/PpD3FP Tyler Durden

Russia: Economic Vulnerabilities

There is a common perception that Russia’s move on Crimea shows its strength.  A closer examination suggests it is more complicated that it may seem.   Like the bully at the school yard, the aggressiveness conceals weaknesses. 

 

Simply put, Russia felt threatened and for good reason.  The democratic coup in the Ukraine threatened a potentially strategic loss for Russia.  For months, it had been using both carrot and stick to pressure Ukraine, Moldova and Georgia from shifting more to the EU.  Reports indicate that Putin had drawn his own line on Ukraine and made it clear to the EU and US that Russia would not accept a Ukraine in unfriendly hands.  

 

Yanukovych was brought to heel and at the last minute embarrassed and frustrated the EU (and by extension, the US) and struck a deal with Russia.   A democratic coup toppled Yanukovych, and there are reasons to suspect that Europe and/or the US may have help facilitate the political uprising.  Among the first acts, the new government abolished Russian as the second official language.  

 

There was a realistic fear (on the part of Russia) that the new government would more to retract the  2010 agreement that arguably was struck under duress, to renew and extend the Russia’s lease on the Sevastopol naval base.  The lease, first struck by Yeltsin was to expire in 2017.   Fisticuffs broke out in the Ukrainian parliament over the issue that eventually led to a 25-year extension of the lease. 

 

The annexation of Crimea will make this issue moot, though at a cost.  Prior to the annexation, Putin claims the mantel of the status quo power and forces the US and Europe to be the revisionists.  Annexation puts the shoe on the other foot.  It is a less defendable position in legal and diplomatic terms.   

 

Leaving aside potential Western military options, such as resuming the ballistic missile defense programs, moving NATO troops to Ukraine’s western border,  and even sending new weapons to Ukraine, there will likely be economic consequences. 

 

The consequences we have in mind are not sanctions by government, but punishment by impersonal market forces.  Ironically, despite some claims that the US military buildup under Reagan led to the bankruptcy of the Soviet Union, arguably more robust analysis would give a more decisive role to the collapse in oil prices in the mid-1980s (e.g., WTI fell below $10 a barrel). 

 

With the exception of Singapore and Hungary, Russia has the highest amount of foreign currency debt at about 12% of GDP.   Ruble depreciation boosts the cost of servicing the debt, some of which is in corporate, not government hands.  The dollar rose 8.25% against the  from rouble the start of the year through early February.  It has gained another 7% since then.  It is the second worse performing currency against the dollar this year, behind the Argentine peso. 

 

The currency depreciation, in the context of political and economic uncertainty, has seen Russian yields soar.  The rouble denominated 10-year yield has risen more than 100 bp, thus far this year, to 8.85%, eclipsing the yield of South Africa.   The dollar denominated bond yield has risen 55 bp to 5.11%. 

 

The cost of insuring  Russian (rouble) exposure via the credit default swap market has risen about 50% this year to more than 230 basis points.  This puts it within spitting distance of Turkey (233 bp), Hungary (242 bp) and Croatia (318 bp). 

 

Russian equities are among the worst performing equity markets in the world so far this year.  MICEX is off 13% so far this year, with a 17% slide since February 18.  

 

Even before the recent developments, capital outflows frustrated Russian officials.  Outflows have typically exceeded forecasts by the central bank and government.  Last year, central bank forecast $10 bln of outflows.  Figures released in mid-January showed that the capital outflows were six times greater.  At the same time, the current account surplus was more than halved to $33 bln. 

 

Putin, who claims to be a student of history, may be repeating some of the same mistakes of the Soviet Union with  an apparent disregard of market forces; poor domestic investment opportunities, high inflation and high cost of capital weigh on growth.  Last year, Russia recorded growth of a 1.3%, the lowest since 2009 and well below the government’s target of 5%. 

 

Russia has accumulated a stockpile of foreign currency reserves.  However, after peaking in 2011, near $544 bln, they have been trending lower, especially since the end of 2012.  They stood just below $495 bln at the end of February.  Reports of recent intervention warn of a further drawdown in reserves.    At the same time, its current account surplus is trending lower, with last year’s the smallest in a decade.   

 

Russia is more integrated into the world economy that the Soviet Union ever was.  This is a source of non-statist pressure on Russia.  A decline in oil prices would be particularly helpful in this regard.  There are calls for the US to relax export restrictions on crude oil and natural gas.   Such efforts may prove more important symbolically than substantively as it would take a few years to deliver LNG.  Despite the increase in US output, the world’s largest economy is still importing some 5.5 mln barrel of oil a day. 


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1g5WVCU Marc To Market

Fannie, Freddie Crash After Bill Unwinding GSEs Passes Hurdle

David Stockman blasted the GSE-profiteers just last week but the manic run-up in the stocks of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac has abruptly come to an end as the FT reports, the US Senate banking committee on Tuesday released a highly anticipated plan that would maintain government backing of mortgages but wind down the GSEs. Not a great day for Mr. Ackman – who owned 10% at last filing.

The bill will call for replacing Fannie and Freddie with a new system of federally insured mortgage securities in which private insurers would be required to take initial losses before any government guarantee would be triggered.

 

WSJ has more:

The top Democrat and Republican on the Senate Banking Committee said they had reached agreement on the broad outlines of a bill to overhaul Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and the nation’s $9.9 trillion mortgage market, drawing a strong statement of support from the White House. The bill will call for replacing Fannie and Freddie with a new system of federally insured mortgage securities in which private insurers would be required to take initial losses before any government guarantee would be triggered.

 

The agreement announced Tuesday between Sens. Tim Johnson (D., S.D.) and Mike Crapo (R., Idaho) follows closely on the work of a proposal released last year by Sens. Bob Corker (R., Tenn.) and Mark Warner (D., Va.).

 

“There is near unanimous agreement that our current housing-finance system is not sustainable in the long term,” Mr. Johnson said in a statement. The current arrangement, in which Fannie and Freddie are backing nearly three in five new loans while under government control, is “unacceptable,” Mr. Crapo said. Their proposal “provides a balance between providing broad access to mortgages while protecting taxpayers from losses.”

As a reminder from Bloomberg:

Activist fund manager Bill Ackman described his investment in mortgage giants Fannie (FNMA) Mae and Freddie Mac as the most interesting since he acquired a stake in General Growth Properties Inc. in 2008.

 

Ackman’s Pershing Square Capital Management LP said on Nov. 15 that it had bought a 9.98 percent stake in the common shares of Fannie Mae that aren’t owned by the government, as well as a 9.77 percent stake in the Freddie Mac shares available to the public. The firm may seek talks with shareholders, management and the government, which owns almost 80 percent of the agencies since bailing them out.

 

“Fannie Freddie is a little more dynamic situation where the opportunity for profit is to make multiples of your money, if you can come up with a solution to a problem that has vexed Congress and the Treasury I think since the crisis,” Ackman said in an interview today with Bloomberg Television’s Stephanie Ruhle. “This is the most interesting investment I’ve seen since my investment in General Growth. (GGP)”

At this rate it may also be the worst investment since Herbalife:

But the tell? Certainly octo(or nona)genarian cartoon analyst Dick Bove telling Fox Biz last week it is going to $18.


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1g5WVCR Tyler Durden