Two US And One British Soldiers Killed In Rocket Attack On Tajj Military Base In Iraq

Two US And One British Soldiers Killed In Rocket Attack On Tajj Military Base In Iraq

Just in case a global viral pandemic and an oil price war weren’t enough, we could once again be on the precipice of another conflict in the middle east: two Americans and one British national have been killed in a rocket attack on the Taji military base in Iraq, according to U.S. Defense Officials. According to U.S. military officials, the attack took place on March 11 at 7:35pm local time in Iraq. 

Additionally, at least 12 people were wounded in the attack at Camp Taji, about 17 miles north of Baghdad, according to the spokesman, Navy Capt. Bill Urban. About 18 Katyusha rockets hit the base, and five of the wounded were evacuated in serious condition, Urban said.

The rockets were launched from the Rashediya area of northeast Baghdad, Iraqi military officials said in a statement. U.S. officials have attributed the use of such rockets in attacks to Iranian-backed militias in Iraq.

It wasn’t immediately clear whether or not those killed in the Katuysha rocket attack were military or civilians, who may have been contractors working on the base, according to CNN.  Col. Myles Caggins tweeted that “more than 15 small rockets” impacted Camp Taji. 

The US military said that the Iraqi military found a pickup truck with a rocket launcher mounted in the back and three rockets still loaded. 

Tensions have been elevated in the middle east since the U.S. killed Qasem Soleimani, a top Iranian commander, in January. Hours after Solemani was killed, Iran retaliated by firing missiles toward two U.S. bases in Iraq. Earlier this year, Iraqi’s Parliament voted to end the presence of foreign troops in Iraq. 

In January, hundreds of thousands of protesters marched through Baghdad demanding U.S. troops leave the country. The legal status of the U.S. troops that remain in Iraq is unclear. 

Iraqi President Barham Salih tweeted an image of the protest at the time, adding: “Iraqis insist on a state with complete sovereignty that will not be breached.”


Tyler Durden

Wed, 03/11/2020 – 19:06

via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/39I4S5r Tyler Durden

The IRS’s History Of Attacking Political Dissenters and Opponents

The IRS’s History Of Attacking Political Dissenters and Opponents

Authored by José Niño via The Mises Institute,

The US purports to be the land of free speech, but you can always expect politicians to carve out exceptions. Just look at how government agencies such as the Internal Revenue Service can slither their way into the political affairs of individuals and organizations.

Americans generally associate the Internal Revenue Service with the hassle of filing income taxes every April. Of course, this is an annual ritual that Americans have been accustomed to for over a century, and it represents one of the numerous ways the federal government violates Americans’ economic freedoms. Income taxation is also one of the main enablers of government growth thanks to its ability to extract hundreds of billions of dollars from hardworking taxpayers annually. In 2019 alone, the IRS collected nearly $3.5 trillion in tax revenue.

The IRS’s misdeeds aren’t just limited to economic activity, though. Most would be surprised to find that the IRS is a violator of free speech rights. When IRS agents aren’t finding ways to squeeze as much revenue as humanly possible from taxpayers, they try to make the lives of America’s most civically engaged miserable.

The IRS as a Political Tool

Former congressman Ron Paul shed light on the IRS’s anti–free speech activity last year in a piece voicing concerns about income tax privacy. In 2019, House Democrats tried to pull every legislative stunt possible to get President Trump to hand over his tax returns. Although these efforts did not materialize into anything substantial, the New York Times published some of Trump’s tax returns from the 1980s and 1990s. The Times’s publication of the returns raised speculation about a potential leaker in the IRS handing this information over to the news outlet.

Right off the bat, Paul understood the bigger picture. As the history of government expansion has shown, government agencies such as the IRS have a nasty way of sneaking into other parts of our lives. What originally started out as an agency solely focused on taxes has morphed into an omnipresent government body that can control political behavior. Paul cited several examples of IRS politicization, including Franklin Roosevelt’s auditing of New Deal opponents, John F. Kennedy’s use of audits against political opponents, and the agency’s investigation of a church hosting an antiwar sermon during the Bush era. One of the more recent cases of IRS harassment of political opponents occurred when it placed Tea Party groups under increased scrutiny when they applied for tax-exempt status.

The IRS’s history shows that its abuses go beyond partisan politics, seeing how the agency has been used as a cudgel to smash opponents from across the political continuum. From a big-picture perspective, political advocacy in America is excessively regulated. Thanks to so-called campaign finance reform, now political organizations have to worry about complying with a whole set of new regulations—as if the IRS breathing down their necks wasn’t enough.

Just a minor slipup could have IRS or other regulatory agents storming an organization’s office. This is typical of the administrative state era we live in, in which filing the wrong paperwork could land someone behind bars. Because we all know that those dastardly political rabble-rousers not hitting the right bureaucratic checkboxes present a clear and present danger to the rest of society.

State Governments Have Followed the Federal Government’s Lead on Political Harassment

Even after the Supreme Court case Citizens United v. FECwhich ruled that the First Amendment prohibits the government from restricting the ability of political organizations to use independent expenditures for political communications—government entities still find creative ways to stifle political speech. At the state level, governments have taken advantage of regulatory functions to poke and prod organizations that cause too much trouble. Politicians launch “ethics reform” campaigns, where they use ethics commissions and similar bodies to muzzle speech. Politicians will construct narratives saying that they’re fighting against corruption, when all they’re really doing is curtailing the efforts of dissident groups to expose the political class’s dirty laundry.

In 2014, a grassroots gun rights organization, Palmetto Gun Rights, faced harassment from the most unlikely place—the office of then Republican governor Nikki Haley. The South Carolina governor was supporting an ethics reform bill (H 3945) that would have forced an organization or an individual making an “an electioneering communication” to report the “top five donors to the reporting person” to the State Ethics Commission. “Electioneering communication” in this case meant “any broadcast, cable, or satellite communication or mass postal mailing or telephone bank” referring to “a clearly identified candidate for elected office” and that is publicly “aired or distributed within sixty days prior to a general election or within thirty days prior to a primary for that office.” So, if a political organization in South Carolina had some mean things to say about a politician in the finals days of election season, their biggest donors could potentially be fair game for political harassment.

On the other side of the spectrum, groups such as the National Rifle Association have recently witnessed government agencies launch politically motivated investigations against them. Despite what the media says about the NRA, they’re no extremists on the gun issue. However, that has not kept states such as New York from trying to snoop around their private affairs. Twenty nineteen was a rough year for the NRA due to various episodes of internal drama and leadership disruption. Things got even more heated when the New York attorney general decided to investigate the group for “financial improprieties” and threatened to strip the organization of its nonprofit status. None of the investigations have resulted in concrete actions, but the NRA’s interaction with the New York State government illustrates that even the most milquetoast of advocacy groups isn’t safe from the clutches of regulators.

The regulation of economic activity in this stage of American history has undeniably evolved into a mechanism of behavioral control. It’s no longer about whether an individual will have X amount of dollars left after the government takes its share of the loot. Now, people’s political activities, such as their speech, can be subject to political micromanagement.

It’s not enough to just talk about the numbers when making the case against economic regulations. These regulations are ultimately enforced by massive government agencies, which politicians can manipulate in clever ways to suit their own ends. Add in the round-the-clock growth of government agencies, and you’re now dealing with institutions that have the power to branch out into other activities.

By limiting themselves to ho-hum discussions about tax policy, advocates of government restraint ignore some of the biggest threats coming from bureaucratic mammoths. A crusade against bureaucracy is long overdue in America.


Tyler Durden

Wed, 03/11/2020 – 19:05

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Did Some Macro Fund Get Carried Out Today?

Did Some Macro Fund Get Carried Out Today?

While we were digging into the details of today’s apparent risk-parity fund puke (with bonds and stocks both clubbed like baby seals), something odd jumped out at us.

From the open of the cash markets today, bonds and stocks were both sold hard – something we have not seen in recent weeks, and certainly not at the size and consistency of today…

Source: Bloomberg

While there is some reason to believe that pure technicals could have driven the move in bond yields – as machines pushed to run stops above the pre-plunge levels from Friday – the move was still shocking amid a 5%-plus collapse in stocks…

Source: Bloomberg

However, what really stood out was that while bond yields were surging, Bond ETF TLT’s collapse was accelerating far beyond its underlying. This decoupling between ETF and underlying has happened at the end of every day this week, but today’s was extremely noticeable with TLT crashing into the close so much that it would have implied 25bps more decompression in the 30Y yield…

Source: Bloomberg

A little more digging shows a high volume almost constant selling pressure in TLT that began each day around 1430ET – exactly when margin calls tend to hit. As you can see Monday was really ugly (stocks were down hard), Tuesday was ugly but a little more controlled (Tuesday was big stock market up day), and then today was a bloodbath (with stocks also crashing)…

So the question is – how would a fun get forced to liquidate its long-bond ETF, given that if it had been long to start with it would have had a massive profit cushion as TLT has been unstoppable this year…

Source: Bloomberg

So what happened? It would appear some macro fund was perhaps ‘barbelled’ as they like say – long high growth stocks, long bonds as a hedge – and while the gains in bonds had been considerable, they were nothing relative to the (likely levered) losses that any higher growth exposure has suffered in such a high velocity manner

Source: Bloomberg

Leaving us to suspect that the unusual surge in yields of the last three days, and consequent crash in TLT, was driven by the forced liquidation of an entire fund (or at the least an entire strategy) as the margin calls on the equity side losses forced the sale of bonds in order to come up with some liquidity to meet broker limits.

Is it over? Hard to say – but judging by the selling-climax and decoupling in TLT today, we suggest yes and now bonds will return to their ‘normal’ correlation pattern with stocks.


Tyler Durden

Wed, 03/11/2020 – 18:45

via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/2vilOAK Tyler Durden

Attention Broke Millennials: This Lab Will Pay You To Get Infected With Covid-19 

Attention Broke Millennials: This Lab Will Pay You To Get Infected With Covid-19 

Millions of Americans (mainly millennials) trapped in the gig-economy with insurmountable debts are soon going to experience further financial hardships as a result of a Covid-19 breakout across the country, grinding their local economies to a standstill.

With job losses expected as the gig-economy implodes, and many metro areas across the country are transforming into ghost towns, millennials will need to figure out new ways to make money, that is because they need to service their auto debt, credit cards, and student loans.  

One such opportunity, at the moment, is to be a guinea pig for biotechnology companies developing coronavirus vaccines. Now, remember, you will be handsomely rewarded, but also, you’re going to save the human race for extinction. 

As GreatGameIndia.com details, in a $2 billion race to find a vaccine various companies are infecting humans with Coronavirus for clinical trials. A medical research firm based in the U.K. is offering more than $4,500 to individuals willing to serve as guinea pigs and be injected with two strains of Coronavirus similar to COVID-19 in a bid to find a vaccine for the new deadly virus. In the U.S., another firm is seeking participants for a COVID-19 vaccine study, but the pay is not as high, nor as quick, nor as risky.

Human Lab Rats Needed

The offer comes from London-based company Hvivo, which is seeking 24 healthy individuals at a time to receive the weaker shots of Coronavirus before being administered vaccines in what the Times of London described as “a $2 billion race to find a vaccine” for COVID-19.

According to the New York Post, participants would make around $4,588 to participate in Hvivo’s “flu camp,” which entails a two-week quarantine where they must “eat a restricted diet and avoid human contact and exercise.”

“Volunteers are vital to the work we do at FluCamp. Thousands of people have already taken part in our ethically and regulatory approved clinical studies, with trials designed for those with and without asthma. These volunteers help us to achieve great steps forward in understanding the common cold and flu viruses, and how they can be treated,” FluCamp’s website read.

The firm is still awaiting approval from the U.K.’s Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency before trials can begin — but even if it gets clearance quickly, a cure is not expected until next winter, despite more than 20 firms participating in the race to find a shot to prevent the virus that has already taken nearly 4,000 lives globally.

In the U.S., another firm is seeking participants for a COVID-19 vaccine study, but the pay is not as high, nor as quick, nor as risky.

Business Insider reported that Seattle’s Kaiser Permanente Washington research clinic plans to enroll 45 healthy folks to participate in a 14-month trial to test three doses of a potential vaccine against the novel Coronavirus for safety.

However, in the Seattle study, participants would not be injected with the Coronavirus. The researchers are offering $100 per visit for volunteers to show up in person 11 times, offering a total payout of $1,100 for those willing to serve as guinea pigs to test out the safety of what could be a life-saving vaccine.

Making Millions from Coronavirus

While the outbreak has claimed more than 3000 lives officially, this small elite group made millions from Coronavirus, courtesy of their association with the biotechs working on Coronavirus vaccine development programs.

The $35 billion vaccine market is dominated by GlaxoSmithKline, Sanofi Adventis, Merck and Pfizer. These 4 players represent 85% of the vaccine market. These are the primary players but are by no means alone because there is a global rush out there.

Three biotech stocks are surging on the possibility of coronavirus drugs and minting millions of dollars for their biggest shareholders. GileadModerna, and Novavax have all outperformed the falling stock market in recent days as the three drug developers rush to introduce preventative vaccines and treatments.

So millennials, if you’re in a pinch for cash and think coronavirus “is just the flu” – head on over to London and let scientists inject you with a variant of the virus.


Tyler Durden

Wed, 03/11/2020 – 18:25

via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/2Q736mB Tyler Durden

China Issues Warning To Tesla After Customers Complain Of Hardware Bait-And-Switch

China Issues Warning To Tesla After Customers Complain Of Hardware Bait-And-Switch

The good old fashioned boondoggle continues, this time with the age old “bait and switch”.

Recall, it was just days ago that we reported on Tesla putting old computer chips into new cars and using the coronavirus outbreak in China as a scapegoat. 

Last week we found out Tesla was “downgrading” hardware on its Chinese made Model 3s due to “supply chain status amid the epidemic” and it then promising free upgrades to its customers. Instead of just doing the right thing, which would be suspending production until you can make the product properly, Tesla chose to do what it does best: half-ass it. 

The report last week pointed out that some Chinese consumers were noticing that the hardware in their newly delivered Tesla vehicles was inconsistent with their orders.

And now, the Chinese government has taken notice. And they’re not amused. 

The country’s industry minister said on Tuesday that it was urging Tesla to keep its China-made vehicles consistent after some customers complained about the bait and switch. 

The Ministry of Industry and Information Technology urged Tesla to ensure not only consistency, but quality and safety, according to ReutersGood luck with that.

Customers continue to state on social media that the control units in their cars are running on Hardware 2.5 chips, which are less advanced than Tesla’s Hardware 3.0 chips – which happen to be the chips listed on the car’s spec sheet. The Hardware 3.0 chips are necessary for the Full-Self Driving mode in Tesla’s Autopilot.

You know, the one that keeps ramming Teslas into inanimate objects on various roads across the world.

Tesla issued a perfunctory statement last week and admitted Hardware 2.5 had been installed in some vehicles that were promised Hardware 3.0.

As usual, we’re sure regulators will do nothing about the problem and Musk will escape from this unscathed and dancing on stage at his next “carrot on a string” style Tesla live event. 


Tyler Durden

Wed, 03/11/2020 – 18:05

via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/2U0pizU Tyler Durden

March Madness: Having A Process For A Winning Outcome

March Madness: Having A Process For A Winning Outcome

Authored by Michael Lebowitz via RealInvestmentAdvice.com,

We are coming upon that time of year when the markets play second fiddle to debates about which twelve seed could be this year’s Cinderella in the NCAA basketball tournament. For college basketball fans, this particular time of year is dubbed March Madness. The widespread popularity of the NCAA tournament is not just about the games, the schools, and the players, but just as importantly, it is about the brackets. Brackets refer to the office pools based upon correctly predicting the 67 tournament games. Having the most points in a pool garners bragging rights and, in many cases, your colleague’s cash.

Interestingly the art, science, and guessing involved in filling out a tournament bracket provides insight into how investors select assets, structure portfolios, and react during volatile market periods. Before we explain answer the following question:

When filling out a tournament bracket, do you:

A) Start by picking the expected national champion and then go backwards and fill out the individual games and rounds to meet that expectation?

B) Analyze each opening round matchup, picking winners, and then repeat the process with your second round matchups until you make your best guess at who the champion will be?

If you chose answer A, you fill out your pool based on a fixed notion for which team is the best in the country. In doing so, you disregard the potential path, no matter how hard, that team must take to become champions.

If you went with the second answer, B, you compare each potential matchup, analyze each team’s respective records, strengths of schedule, demonstrated strengths and weaknesses, record against common opponents and even how travel and geography might affect performance. While we may have exaggerated the amount of research you conduct, such a methodical game by game evaluation is repeated over and over again until a conclusion is reached about which team can win six consecutive games and become the national champion.

Outcome-Based Strategies

Outcome-based investment strategies start with an expected result, typically based on recent trends or historical averages. Investors following this strategy presume that such trends or averages, be they economic, earnings, prices, or a host of other factors, will continue to occur as they have in the past. How many times have you heard Wall Street “gurus” preach that stocks historically return 7%, and therefore a well-diversified portfolio should expect the same return this year? Rarely do they mention corporate and economic fundamentals or valuations. Many investors blindly take the bait and fail to question the assumptions that drive the investment selection process.

Buy and hold and constant dollar cost averaging along with a host of passive strategies, all of which are largely agnostic to valuation, are outcome based strategies. These strategies can appear full proof for years on end as we have been witnessing. However, as seen twice in the last 20 years, when these strategies are followed blindly without appreciating a portfolio’s risk/return profile, dramatic losses will eventually occur. Outcome-based strategies break a cardinal rule of building wealth; avoid as much of the downside as possible in bear markets.

“The past is no guarantee of future results” is a typical investment disclaimer. However, it is this same outcome-based methodology and logic that many investors rely upon to allocate their assets.

Process-Based Strategies

Process-based investment strategies, on the other hand, have methods that establish expectations for the factors that drive asset prices in the future. Such analysis normally includes economic forecasts, technical analysis, and a bottom-up assessment of an asset’s ability to generate cash flow. Process-based investors do not just assume that yesterday’s winners will be tomorrow’s winners, nor do they diversify just for the sake of diversification. These investors have a method that helps them forecast the assets that are likely to provide the best risk/reward prospects and they deploy capital opportunistically.

Well managed process-based strategies, at times, hold significant amounts of cash. To wit, Warren Buffett is currently sitting on $128 billion in cash. This may have cost him over the last few years, but he has a reason for being so risk averse and is sticking to his process.

Buffett and others are certainly not enamored with historically low cash yields on their cash per se, but they have done significant research and cannot find enough assets offering a suitable value/risk proposition in their opinion. These managers are not compelled to buy an asset because it “promises” a historical return.

What Are We?

At RIA Advisors, we follow a process. We use a combination of technical and fundamental analysis, along with a strong assessment of macroeconomic factors to develop an investing framework and investment guidelines. This process allows us to:

  • Properly choose assets for the short term as well as the longer term (trading vs. investing).
  • Determine the proper allocations to various asset classes and sub-asset classes.
  • Measure and monitor risk which helps limit downside by forcing us to exit positions when we are wrong, and take profits to rebalance asset weightings when we are right.

Investing can be easy at times as it was for most of 2019. It can also be very difficult as we are currently witnessing. Having a process and adhering to it does not eliminate risk, but it helps manage risks and limit mistakes. It also helps us sleep at night and avoids letting our emotions dictate our trading activity.

A or B?

Most NCAA basketball pool participants fill out tournament brackets, starting with the opening round games and progress towards the championship match. Sure, they have biases and opinions that favor teams throughout the bracket, but at the end of the day, they have done some analysis to consider each potential matchup.  So, why do many investors use a less rigorous process in investing than they do in filling out their NCAA tournament brackets?

Starting at the final game and selecting a national champion is similar to identifying a return goal of 10%, for example, and buying assets that are forecast to achieve that return. How that goal is achieved is subordinated to the pleasant but speculative idea that one will achieve it. In such an outcome-based approach, decision-making is predicated on an expected result.

Considering each matchup in the NCAA tournament to ultimately determine the winner applies a process-oriented approach. Each of the 67 selections is based on the evaluation of the comparative strengths and weaknesses of teams. The expected outcome is a result of the analysis of the many factors required to achieve the outcome.

Summary

Winning a bracket has its benefits, while the costs are minimal. Managing wealth, however, can provide great rewards but is fraught with severe risks at times. Accordingly, wealth management deserves considerably more thoughtfulness than filling out a bracket.

Over the long run, those that follow a well-thought out, time-tested, process-oriented approach will raise the odds of success in compounding wealth by limiting damaging losses during major market setbacks and by being afforded generational opportunities when others are fearfully selling.


Tyler Durden

Wed, 03/11/2020 – 17:45

via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/2TFt1UO Tyler Durden

Hunter Biden Settles With Baby-Mama After Judge Rejects Coronavirus Excuse

Hunter Biden Settles With Baby-Mama After Judge Rejects Coronavirus Excuse

Hunter Biden has reached a settlement in his paternity case after an Arkansas judge shut down his latest attempt to delay the case, after the former Ukrainian energy company board member, crack aficionado, and strip club patron (turned artist) argued that he would be unable to attend scheduled hearings this week – citing his wife’s pregnancy, “intense media scrutiny” surrounding his father’s presidential bid, and travel restrictions caused by the coronavirus.

According to the Washington Free Beacon, Arkansas circuit judge Holly Meyer admonished Biden for his repeated attempts at delaying the inevitable.

“For context in ruling on this Motion the Court has reviewed the history of this litigation and finds that the Defendant has been given considerable leniency regarding continuances and delay,” she wrote in her order. “The defendant’s attempts to delay this case are mounting such that one begins to see a pattern of delay.

On Wednesday morning, lawyers for plaintiff Lunden Alexis Roberts alerted the judge that they had reached a final settlement with Biden that, pending court approval, will end the nearly 10-month-long legal battle.

“Late last night, after the court entered the order, we reached a global, final settlement of all issues,” Roberts’s lawyer wrote in an email to Judge Meyer.

The agreement comes after months of delays from Biden, who is now on his second legal team for the child support case. Lawyers for Roberts last Friday called for Biden to be held in contempt for his continued failure to submit financial documents, which would likely shed light on just how much he earned through connections to foreign companies, including his lucrative position on the board of Ukrainian gas company Burisma. –Washington Free Beacon

Judge Meyer added that Biden was aware his wife’s due date was approaching when he originally agreed to this week’s deposition, and made clear that her presence “is not required nor even suggested.”

As to the “intense media scrutiny,” the judge noted that he will continue to be a public figure.

“The defense second cites ongoing publicity surrounding the 2020 primary and presidential elections, as well as media attention as good cause to continue this case,” her order states. “The Court cannot foresee this subsiding as Mr. Biden is a public figure and interest in his person will continue.”

And as for the coronavirus excuse, Meyer said “The defendant can come by plane, train, or automobile but life and work will and should continue in our communities and courts. No health threat specific to the defendant has been identified, reasonable precautions are appropriate.”

The settlement is expected to be submitted by attorneys for plaintiff and baby-mama Lunden Roberts “later today or tomorrow.” The terms have not been stated.

What’s more, Biden will still have to appear if the court does not approve the settlement.


Tyler Durden

Wed, 03/11/2020 – 17:25

via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/2IEPBqi Tyler Durden

The CDC’s Budget Is Larger Now than Under Obama

The CDC’s Budget Is Larger Now than Under Obama

Authored by Ryan McMaken via The Mises Institute,

This is how the budget process in Washington begins.

Step one: the president submits his budget to Congress.

Step two: Congress puts the President’s budget in a drawer somewhere and forgets about it.

Step three: Congress passes a budget it likes instead.

This reality, however, has been conveniently ignored in recent weeks as some pundits and politicians have claimed Donald Trump “gutted the CDC.”

Trump has been busy “slashing the government agencies” that combat disease control, one headline reads. Another claims”the Trump administration has spent the last two years gutting critical positions and programs that ….weakened the federal government’s ability to manage a health crisis.”

Well, it’s possible there is a federal program out there somewhere that Donald Trump “gutted,” but the CDC isn’t one of them.

This is largely because Congress ignored the administration’s budget request and increased the CDC’s budget from 2017 to 2018, and again from 2019 to 2020. Trump didn’t object. As ABC news reports:

All of Trump’s budget proposals have called for cuts to CDC funding, but Congress has intervened each time by passing spending bills with year-over-year increases for the CDC that Trump then signed into law.”

Nevertheless, leftists of all stripes that used the imaginary “gutting” to claim both that Trump is a fool, and that the reason the CDC hasn’t handled the COVI-19 outbreak with flying colors is because its budget has been “gutted,” “slashed,” and “depleted.”

But here’s the reality: the CDC’s budget is now more than seven percent larger than it was under President Obama’s last two budgets.

That is, the actual enacted program budget for the CDC in 2016 and 2017 were both under $7.2 billion. But for 2020, the budget Congress actually adopted — i.e., not the recommendation from the White House — is nearly $7.7 billion.

Here’s the analysis from Factcheck.org:

I attempted to re-create this, and came up with a lower number for 2018:

This, of course, is why it’s so important to use budget numbers that reflect actual enacted budgets and and the year-end sums of various budget resolutions. The “proposed budgets” coming out of the White House are next to useless when it comes to actual budget numbers.

Specifically, I used 2020and 2019 enacted numbers from this source . I used the 2018 numbers from this source . This numbers appear to match up with the earlier 2018, 2017, and 2016 budget data from this source and this source .

These facts matter, largely because government interventionists so often seek to create a narrative in which every problem can be solved by a large centralized government with the ability to enact grandiose plans. And if these government agencies don’t seem to know what they’re doing? then it must be because the government has been “gutted” or simply hasn’t been taxing the people enough.


Tyler Durden

Wed, 03/11/2020 – 17:05

via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/3aPtdX4 Tyler Durden

Late Day Treasury Futs Crash, Sparks Speculation Of Risk Parity Liquidation

Late Day Treasury Futs Crash, Sparks Speculation Of Risk Parity Liquidation

Until today, the selloff was painful, violent, unrelenting… but it was mostly order and made complete sense: stocks were getting liquidated with the bathwater by formerly euphoric investors, with the resulting proceeds shoveled into safe-havens such as Treasurys which helped send the 10Y yield as low as 0.31% on Monday morning as countless Treasury shorts – all those who had listened to JPMorgan – got crushed. However, today something changed.

After initially bonds were strongly bid for much of the Asian, European and morning US session, there was a sharp reversal before Europe closed for the day, with 10Y yields blowing out from a low of 0.65% around the time Europe opened, to a high of 0.85% by the European close, then following a modest dip, the selling resumed, sending the 10Y just shy of 0.90%.

Immediately, unfounded theories emerged: a risk parity fund was deleveraging and blowing out of both bonds and stocks; oil exporters were dumping TSYs to obtain cash amid the price plunge in crude, bond vigilantes fuming at the upcoming coronavirus-driven budget deficit explosion, a fund was margin called and liquidated all of its best performing assets. The truth is nobody knows what caused it, but the puke in both stocks and bonds raised quite a few eyebrows, while hammering 60/40 balanced fund returns, generating the biggest weekly total return drop in a combined stock & bond portfolio since Lehman.

What is perhaps just as notable, is that whoever was puking duration did so until the very close with an accelerating liquidation and erratic futures price action observed in the late U.S. afternoon and peaking by 4pm, when the ultra-long bond futures plunged nearly 6 points in less than an hour – an unprecedented move – and the Ultra contract closed well in the red even as stocks crashed into a bear market.

Was today’s bizarre balanced portfolio unwind a one-time event, or have forced liquidations finally made it to risk parity funds? We’ll know tomorrow, if not overnight, but if for whatever reason US Treasurys are no longer a safe haven if one or more forced sellers are set to drag prices lower, then watch as the real safe haven – gold – jumps above its all time high on very short notice.


Tyler Durden

Wed, 03/11/2020 – 16:58

via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/38LISFA Tyler Durden

“March Madness” Tournament Will Be Played In Front Of No Fans, NCAA Says

“March Madness” Tournament Will Be Played In Front Of No Fans, NCAA Says

As NBA mulls playing in front of empty stands, NCAA has confirmed that ‘March Madness’ will drastically limit attendance at its games.

NCAA President Mark Emmert statement on limiting attendance at NCAA events:

The NCAA continues to assess the impact of COVID-19 in consultation with public health officials and our COVID-19 advisory panel. Based on their advice and my discussions with the NCAA Board of Governors, I have made the decision to conduct our upcoming championship events, including the Division I men’s and women’s basketball tournaments, with only essential staff and limited family attendance.

While I understand how disappointing this is for all fans of our sports, my decision is based on the current understanding of how COVID-19 is progressing in the United States.

This decision is in the best interest of public health, including that of coaches, administrators, fans and, most importantly, our student-athletes. We recognize the opportunity to compete in an NCAA national championship is an experience of a lifetime for the students and their families. Today, we will move forward and conduct championships consistent with the current information and will continue to monitor and make adjustments as needed.

This is just the latest sporting event to be impacted:

  • Chinese Grand Prix slated for April has been postponed.
  • Bahrain Grand Prix suspends ticket sales for March 22 event. 
  • Ladies Professional Golf Association (LPGA) canceled three upcoming tournaments across Asia.
  • FIFA postponed the Asian qualifiers for the 2022 World Cup.
  • 2020 BNP Paribas Open in Coachella Valley, California, was canceled after virus cases surge in the region.
  •  New York City Half-Marathon planned for March 15 has been canceled. 
  • Formula E’s Sanya E-Prix on March 21 in China has been canceled.
  • Formula E’s Rome E-Prix on April 4 in Rome, Italy, has been postponed.
  • The Olympic qualifying tournament in Taiwan has been postponed.
  • BMX European Cup rounds March 19-28 in Verona, Italy, has been postponed.
  • Hong Kong Rugby Sevens for April 3-5 has been postponed until October 16-18. 
  • Singapore Rugby Sevens for April 11-12 has been postponed until October 10-11. 
  • Asia women’s rugby championship in Hong Kong for March 14-22 has been rescheduled to May 8-16.
  • Asia Sevens Rugby Invitational, doubling as an Olympic Sevens test event for April 25-26, is now canceled.
  • Barcelona Marathon on March 15 postponed to October 25.
  • Seoul Marathon on March 22 canceled.
  • Rome Marathon on March 29 canceled.
  • Paris Marathon on April 5 postponed to October 18.
  • Milan Marathon in Italy on April 5 postponed.
  • Wuhan Marathon in China on April 12 canceled.
  • Arsenal v. Manchester soccer match on March 11 postponed.

As we detailed earlier, Covid-19 truly is an event-killer.


Tyler Durden

Wed, 03/11/2020 – 16:49

via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/2IGyTqq Tyler Durden