The Middle East Explained – In One Minute

With Islamic extremists raising their ominous-looking flags over Falluja and Ramadi again, it’s not looking too good in Iraq (or the rest of the Middle East). Sure, Mark Firoe notes, Iraqi government forces may take back some territory they lost, but it’s never a good sign when you have to shell your own country to maintain order. Confused at the proxy-wars, terrorists, statists, and just who the US is friends with? Have no fear, the following brief clip will explain it all…

 


    



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

Baltic Dry Continues Collapse – Worst Slide Since Financial Crisis

Despite 'blaming' the drop in the cost of dry bulk shipping on Colombian coal restrictions, it seems increasingly clear that the 40% collapse in the Baltic Dry Index since the start of the year is more than just that. While this is the worst start to a year in over 30 years, the scale of this meltdown is only matched by the total devastation that occurred in Q3 2008. Of course, the mainstream media will continue to ignore this dour index until it decides to rise once again, but for now, 9 days in a row of plunging prices is yet another canary in the global trade coalmine and suggests what inventory stacking that occurred in Q3/4 2013 is anything but sustained.

 

Baltic Dry costs are the lowest in 4 months, down 40% for the start of the year, and the worst start to a year in over 30 years…

 

As we noted yesterday…

Of course, we are sure the 'lead' that the Baltic Dry seems to have over global macro will be quickly ignored…

 

Charts: Bloomberg


    



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Unemployment Rate Set To Plunge As Bill To Restore Jobless Benefits Fails To Pass Senate

Following last week’s surprising passage of the preliminary approval to extend emergency unemployment claims, i.e. emergency jobless claims, for 3 months, when six republicans sided with democrats and gave approval to the original $6.4 billion legislation, there was an expectation that up to 1.4 million Americans would get their benefits extended once again (despite the so-called recovery in the economy, and the job market, instead of just all time high S&P500). Moments ago such hopes were dashed, when a Senate plan to restore long-term jobless benefits hit a wall Tuesday after Republicans withdrew their support amid complaints over cost and other issues.

The $18 billion bill, which would restore the benefits through the end of 2014, failed to clear a key test vote. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid needed to attract 60 senators to move the bill forward, but the bill stalled on a 52-48 vote.

 

No Republicans voted in favor.

What happened between then and now, and why did those republicans revert back to the party line?

Reid lost their support when he amended the bill and failed to come up with a plan to offset the cost within 10 years.

 

“It doesn’t look good,” Maine GOP Sen. Susan Collins said before the vote and after a meeting with Reid.

 

Collins and Nevada GOP Sen. Dean Heller unsuccessfully proposed that Reid go back to the three-month extension. “We’re back to ground zero,” Heller said.

 

The senators are expected to return to the negotiating table. The GOP-controlled House has yet to vote on extending the benefits.

 

Reid postponed a prior vote Monday night upon realizing he didn’t have enough support and said he needed time to talk with members of both parties.

It almost makes one wonder if Reid isn’t trying to sabotage his own legislation. Whatever the answer, it increasingly seems that no law, retroactive or otherwise, will pass before the end of the month, which also means that up to (a record) 1.4 million Americans will fall out of the labor force, in addition to the now traditional 200K-600K people who quietly exit the labor pool every month. Which also means that, as we explained previously, since the impact on the unemployment rate could be as high as 0.8% from just the EUC expiration alone, that the unemployment rate for January could crash to under 6% just as the economy is starting to really backslide, as shown by the recent horrendous data from retailers across the board.


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1dtTx9j Tyler Durden

Wanna Be Dictator Obama Claims “I’ve Got a Pen” as He Vows to Legislate via Executive Order

If this isn’t one of the creepier things you’ve seen in a while, then I don’t know what to tell you. Obama’s emotional expressions in this clip are one of a man who has been utterly defeated following several years of rampant cronyism and epic public failures. As such, it seems as if he is prepared to step up further to the “wanna be dictator” plate and just start doing whatever he wants via executive orders.

I mean, why even bother pretending to have a Congress at this point? Hasn’t this guy done enough harm…

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Wanna Be Dictator Obama Claims “I’ve Got a Pen” as He Vows to Legislate via Executive Order originally appeared on A Lightning War for Liberty on January 14, 2014.

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Bob Shiller Warns Fed ‘Fire-Fighting’ Is “Not A recipe For A Happy Ending”

Authored by Robert Shiller, originally posted at Project Syndicate,

If we have learned anything since the global financial crisis peaked in 2008, it is that preventing another one is a tougher job than most people anticipated. Not only does effective crisis prevention require overhauling our financial institutions through creative application of the principles of good finance; it also requires that politicians and their constituents have a shared understanding of these principles.

Today, unfortunately, such an understanding is missing. The solutions are too technical for most news reporting aimed at the general public. And, while people love to hear about “reining in” or “punishing” financial leaders, they are far less enthusiastic about asking these people to expand or improve financial-risk management. But, because special-interest groups have developed around existing institutions and practices, we are basically stuck with them, subject to minor tweaking.

The financial crisis, which is still ongoing, resulted largely from the boom and bust in home prices that preceded it for several years (home prices peaked in the United States in 2006). During the pre-crisis boom, homebuyers were encouraged to borrow heavily to finance undiversified investments in a single home, while governments provided guarantees to mortgage investors. In the US, this occurred through implicit guarantees of assets held by the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) and the mortgage agencies Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

At a session that I chaired at the American Economic Association’s recent meeting in Philadelphia, the participants discussed the difficulty of getting any sensible reform out of governments around the world. In a paper presented at the session, Andrew Caplin of New York University spoke of the public’s lack of interest or comprehension of the rising risks associated with the FHA, which has been guaranteeing privately-issued mortgages since its creation during the housing crisis of the 1930’s.

Caplin’s discussant, Joseph Gyourko of the Wharton School, concurred. Gyourko’s own 2013 study concludes that the FHA, now effectively leveraged 30 to one on guarantees of home mortgages that are themselves leveraged 30 to one, is underwater to the tune of tens of billions of dollars. He wants the FHA shut down and replaced with a subsidized saving program that does not attempt to compete with the private sector in evaluating mortgage risk.

Similarly, Caplin testified in 2010 before the US House Committee on Financial Services that the FHA was at serious risk, a year after FHA Commissioner David Stevens told the same committee that “We will not need a bailout.” Caplin’s research evidently did not sit well with FHA officials, who were hostile to Caplin and refused to give him the data he wanted. The FHA has underestimated its losses every year since, while proclaiming itself in good health. Finally, in September, it was forced to seek a government bailout.

At the session, I asked Caplin about his effort, starting with his co-authored 1997 book Housing Partnerships, which proposed allowing homebuyers to buy only a fraction of a house, thereby reducing their risk exposure without putting taxpayers at risk. If implemented, his innovative idea would reduce homeowners’ leverage. But, while it was a highly leveraged mortgage market that fueled the financial crisis 11 years later, the idea, he said, has not made headway anywhere in the world.

Why not, I asked? Why can’t creative people with their lawyers simply create such partnerships for themselves? The answer, he replied, is complicated; but, at least in the US, one serious problem looms large: the US Internal Revenue Service’s refusal to issue an advance ruling on how such risk-managing arrangements would be taxed. Given the resulting uncertainty, no one is in a mood to be creative.

Meanwhile, there is strong public demand – angry and urgent – for a government response aimed at preventing another crisis and ending the problem of “too big to fail” financial institutions. But the political reality is that government officials lack sufficient knowledge and incentive to impose reforms that are effective but highly technical.

For example, one reform adopted in the US to help prevent the “too big to fail” problem is the risk retention rule stipulated by the 2010 Dodd Frank Act. In order to ensure that mortgage securitizers have some “skin in the game,” they are required to retain an interest in 5% of the mortgage securities that they create (unless they qualify for an exemption).

But, in another paper presented at our session, Paul Willen of the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston argued that creating such a restriction is hardly the best way for a government to improve the functioning of financial markets. Investors already know that people have a stronger incentive to manage risks better if they retain some interest in the risk. But investors also know that other factors may offset the advantages of risk retention in specific cases. In trying to balance such considerations, the government is in over its head.

The most fundamental reform of housing markets remains something that reduces homeowners’ overleverage and lack of diversification. In my own paper for the session, I returned to the idea of the government encouraging privately-issued mortgages with preplanned workouts, thereby insuring them against the calamity of ending up underwater after home prices fall. Like housing partnerships, this would be a fundamental reform, for it would address the core problem that underlay the financial crisis. But there is no impetus for such a reform from existing interest groups or the news media.

One of our discussants, Joseph Tracy of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York (and co-author of Housing Partnerships), put the problem succinctly: “Firefighting is more glamorous than fire prevention.” Just as most people are more interested in stories about fires than they are in the chemistry of fire retardants, they are more interested in stories about financial crashes than they are in the measures needed to prevent them. That is not a recipe for a happy ending.


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1a4Z71y Tyler Durden

Bob Shiller Warns Fed 'Fire-Fighting' Is "Not A recipe For A Happy Ending"

Authored by Robert Shiller, originally posted at Project Syndicate,

If we have learned anything since the global financial crisis peaked in 2008, it is that preventing another one is a tougher job than most people anticipated. Not only does effective crisis prevention require overhauling our financial institutions through creative application of the principles of good finance; it also requires that politicians and their constituents have a shared understanding of these principles.

Today, unfortunately, such an understanding is missing. The solutions are too technical for most news reporting aimed at the general public. And, while people love to hear about “reining in” or “punishing” financial leaders, they are far less enthusiastic about asking these people to expand or improve financial-risk management. But, because special-interest groups have developed around existing institutions and practices, we are basically stuck with them, subject to minor tweaking.

The financial crisis, which is still ongoing, resulted largely from the boom and bust in home prices that preceded it for several years (home prices peaked in the United States in 2006). During the pre-crisis boom, homebuyers were encouraged to borrow heavily to finance undiversified investments in a single home, while governments provided guarantees to mortgage investors. In the US, this occurred through implicit guarantees of assets held by the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) and the mortgage agencies Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

At a session that I chaired at the American Economic Association’s recent meeting in Philadelphia, the participants discussed the difficulty of getting any sensible reform out of governments around the world. In a paper presented at the session, Andrew Caplin of New York University spoke of the public’s lack of interest or comprehension of the rising risks associated with the FHA, which has been guaranteeing privately-issued mortgages since its creation during the housing crisis of the 1930’s.

Caplin’s discussant, Joseph Gyourko of the Wharton School, concurred. Gyourko’s own 2013 study concludes that the FHA, now effectively leveraged 30 to one on guarantees of home mortgages that are themselves leveraged 30 to one, is underwater to the tune of tens of billions of dollars. He wants the FHA shut down and replaced with a subsidized saving program that does not attempt to compete with the private sector in evaluating mortgage risk.

Similarly, Caplin testified in 2010 before the US House Committee on Financial Services that the FHA was at serious risk, a year after FHA Commissioner David Stevens told the same committee that “We will not need a bailout.” Caplin’s research evidently did not sit well with FHA officials, who were hostile to Caplin and refused to give him the data he wanted. The FHA has underestimated its losses every year since, while proclaiming itself in good health. Finally, in September, it was forced to seek a government bailout.

At the session, I asked Caplin about his effort, starting with his co-authored 1997 book Housing Partnerships, which proposed allowing homebuyers to buy only a fraction of a house, thereby reducing their risk exposure without putting taxpayers at risk. If implemented, his innovative idea would reduce homeowners’ leverage. But, while it was a highly leveraged mortgage market that fueled the financial crisis 11 years later, the idea, he said, has not made headway anywhere in the world.

Why not, I asked? Why can’t creative people with their lawyers simply create such partnerships for themselves? The answer, he replied, is complicated; but, at least in the US, one serious problem looms large: the US Internal Revenue Service’s refusal to issue an advance ruling on how such risk-managing arrangements would be taxed. Given the resulting uncertainty, no one is in a mood to be creative.

Meanwhile, there is strong public demand – angry and urgent – for a government response aimed at preventing another crisis and ending the problem of “too big to fail” financial institutions. But the political reality is that government officials lack sufficient knowledge and incentive to impose reforms that are effective but highly technical.

For example, one reform adopted in the US to help prevent the “too big to fail” problem is the risk retention rule stipulated by the 2010 Dodd Frank Act. In order to ensure that mortgage securitizers have some “skin in the game,” they are required to retain an interest in 5% of the mortgage securities that they create (unless they qualify for an exemption).

But, in another paper presented at our session, Paul Willen of the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston argued that creating such a restriction is hardly the best way for a government to improve the functioning of financial markets. Investors already know that people have a stronger incentive to manage risks better if they retain some interest in the risk. But investors also know that other factors may offset the advantages of risk retention in specific cases. In trying to balance such considerations, the government is in over its head.

The most fundamental reform of housing markets remains something that reduces homeowners’ overleverage and lack of diversification. In my own paper for the session, I returned to the idea of the government encouraging privately-issued mortgages with preplanned workouts, thereby insuring them against the calamity of ending up underwater after home prices fall. Like housing partnerships, this would be a fundamental reform, for it would address the core problem that underlay the financial crisis. But there is no impetus for such a reform from existing interest groups or the news media.

One of our discussants, Joseph Tracy of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York (and co-author of Housing Partnerships), put the problem succinctly: “Firefighting is more glamorous than fire prevention.” Just as most people are more interested in stories about fires than they are in the chemistry of fire retardants, they are more interested in stories about financial crashes than they are in the measures needed to prevent them. That is not a recipe for a happy ending.


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1a4Z71y Tyler Durden

Gundlach's First Webcast Of 2014: "Let the Race Begin! 2014 Markets: Year of the Horse"

“Bond King” Bill Gross may not have had a good year following over $40 billion in redemptions from his $250 billion Total Return Fund, but another aspirational Bond King, DoubleLine’s Jeff Gundlach, had an even worse year on an relative basis, when his Total Return Bond Fund saw $6 billion in redemptions ending the year at $30.9 billion in AUM following seven consecutive months of withdrawals. So in his attempt to start the new year on better footing, here is his first webcast (as usual open to the public), titled “Let the Race Begin! 2014 Markets: Year of the Horse“, in which as usual Jeff will discuss the economy, the markets and his outlook for the best investment strategiest of 2014. Let’s hope that for bond fund manager, that 2014 is not just another “year of the donkey”, as was the case in the past year which everyone managing duration would rather forget.

The webcast begins at 4:15 pm Eastern and anyone willing to do so, can register at the following link.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/bjVYcpXm4vY/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Gundlach’s First Webcast Of 2014: “Let the Race Begin! 2014 Markets: Year of the Horse”

“Bond King” Bill Gross may not have had a good year following over $40 billion in redemptions from his $250 billion Total Return Fund, but another aspirational Bond King, DoubleLine’s Jeff Gundlach, had an even worse year on an relative basis, when his Total Return Bond Fund saw $6 billion in redemptions ending the year at $30.9 billion in AUM following seven consecutive months of withdrawals. So in his attempt to start the new year on better footing, here is his first webcast (as usual open to the public), titled “Let the Race Begin! 2014 Markets: Year of the Horse“, in which as usual Jeff will discuss the economy, the markets and his outlook for the best investment strategiest of 2014. Let’s hope that for bond fund manager, that 2014 is not just another “year of the donkey”, as was the case in the past year which everyone managing duration would rather forget.

The webcast begins at 4:15 pm Eastern and anyone willing to do so, can register at the following link.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/bjVYcpXm4vY/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Stocks Reverse Yesterday’s Losses On Low-Volume, Carry-Driven Melt Up

Following yesterday's worst day in stocks in 4 months, something had to be done. Starting at yesterday's US close JPY was sold after defending USDJPY 103 and that – along with a slamdown in gold, silver, and VIX provided the admittedly low volume melt-up in stocks today. Trannies and NASDAQ made it back into the green year-to-date. The small beat in retail sales this morning trumped the relative hawkish tones from Fed speakers today as the best day for USDJPY since the taper provided enough magical carry juice to lift stocks by their most since the taper (and the NKY up 400 points) with JPY-ES correlation over 0.92 today. Treasuries bled higher in yield with the belly underperforming (to unch on the week) and 5s30s flattening 3bps. The USD was bid against all the majors with JPY's move the largest as CAD retraced its gains from yesterday to its weakest in over 4 years. Gold and silver were quadruple-whammied today with 4 legs down after daring to show strength yesterday. VIX floored out at 12% once again and leaked higher all afternoon with a late-day press to try and ignite more buying in stocks. In summary, stocks mirror-imaged yesterday's dump with a half-volume pump, that is all.

 

"V" for Victory… as NASDAQ and Trannies go green year-to-date once again…

 

With the Yendex 500 (h/t @Not_Jim_Cramer) continuing its sublime path higher…

 

Today's closing S&P 500 futures VWAP perfectly in line with yesterday's closing VWAP… Interestingly, the moment it hit VWAP the rally stopped…

 

Healthcare is now the big winner since the Taper…as builders retreat

 

VIX was slammed lower out of the gate and lifted stocks… until the European close when it diverged notably…

 

The USD is back to unchanged on the week as USDJPY has its 2nd biggest surge in 4 months!!!

 

Gold and Silver suffered but retraced back in line with oil and copper on the week…

 

But the day saw 4 good efforts to smack down gold…

 

Treasuries sold off today (and flattened 5s30s) but remain notably positive post-jobs…

 

Charts: Bloomberg

Bonus Chart: The last 3 times the S&P 500 dropped significantly this happened. As dshort.com shows (via kimblechartingsolutions), when the 10Y Treasury yield finds resistance, the stock market seems to want to drop… almost as if someone knows that, given the US debt load, it can't withstand a higher cost of debt


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/sdyNgl2xfm8/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Stocks Reverse Yesterday's Losses On Low-Volume, Carry-Driven Melt Up

Following yesterday's worst day in stocks in 4 months, something had to be done. Starting at yesterday's US close JPY was sold after defending USDJPY 103 and that – along with a slamdown in gold, silver, and VIX provided the admittedly low volume melt-up in stocks today. Trannies and NASDAQ made it back into the green year-to-date. The small beat in retail sales this morning trumped the relative hawkish tones from Fed speakers today as the best day for USDJPY since the taper provided enough magical carry juice to lift stocks by their most since the taper (and the NKY up 400 points) with JPY-ES correlation over 0.92 today. Treasuries bled higher in yield with the belly underperforming (to unch on the week) and 5s30s flattening 3bps. The USD was bid against all the majors with JPY's move the largest as CAD retraced its gains from yesterday to its weakest in over 4 years. Gold and silver were quadruple-whammied today with 4 legs down after daring to show strength yesterday. VIX floored out at 12% once again and leaked higher all afternoon with a late-day press to try and ignite more buying in stocks. In summary, stocks mirror-imaged yesterday's dump with a half-volume pump, that is all.

 

"V" for Victory… as NASDAQ and Trannies go green year-to-date once again…

 

With the Yendex 500 (h/t @Not_Jim_Cramer) continuing its sublime path higher…

 

Today's closing S&P 500 futures VWAP perfectly in line with yesterday's closing VWAP… Interestingly, the moment it hit VWAP the rally stopped…

 

Healthcare is now the big winner since the Taper…as builders retreat

 

VIX was slammed lower out of the gate and lifted stocks… until the European close when it diverged notably…

 

The USD is back to unchanged on the week as USDJPY has its 2nd biggest surge in 4 months!!!

 

Gold and Silver suffered but retraced back in line with oil and copper on the week…

 

But the day saw 4 good efforts to smack down gold…

 

Treasuries sold off today (and flattened 5s30s) but remain notably positive post-jobs…

 

Charts: Bloomberg

Bonus Chart: The last 3 times the S&P 500 dropped significantly this happened. As dshort.com shows (via kimblechartingsolutions), when the 10Y Treasury yield finds resistance, the stock market seems to want to drop… almost as if someone knows that, given the US debt load, it can't withstand a higher cost of debt


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/sdyNgl2xfm8/story01.htm Tyler Durden