Oil Spikes After Report Russia Accepts Need For Oil Cuts

As reported previously, oil prices started the day off sharply lower with WTI and Brent sliding, with the former sliding below $50 for the first time in more than a year amid traders fear OPEC won’t act decisively next week to clear a resurgent surplus in the global crude market.  Despite headlines that both Saudi Arabia and Nigeria were confident about OPEC succeeding in stabilizing prices, on Wednesday Russian President Putin poured cold water on the prospects for a deal. He said that Brent prices around $60 per barrel are “absolutely fine” for his country, suggesting limited motivation to make an output cap deal at December 6’s OPEC meeting. Later in the session, US crude oil inventories jumped more than expected, increasing by 3.6 million barrels. That was the 10th consecutive weekly inventory build, the longest such streak in three years.

However, shortly after 7am ET oil spiked sharply, rising briefly above $51 on a Reuters report that Russia may be willing to relent after all, as it was “becoming increasingly convinced it needs to reduce oil output in tandem with OPEC” but does not want to reduce output “by much” and was still bargaining with Saudi Arabia over the timing and volume of any reduction.

According to the Report, the Russian Energy Ministry held a meeting with the heads of domestic oil producers on Tuesday, ahead of a gathering in Vienna of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies on Dec. 6-7.

“The idea at the meeting was that Russia needs to reduce. The key question is how quickly and by how much,” said one source familiar with the talks between Russian oil firms and the ministry.

The Reuters source added that “most people agreed that we cannot reduce immediately, it needs to be a gradual process like last time.”

As a reminder, back in 2016 Moscow agreed to curb output by 300,000 barrels per day, or one sixth of the overall cut of 1.8 million bpd, but Russian companies took several months to reach that level of reduction.

According to Reuters, if Russia bore the same proportion of such cuts as it did under the existing agreement, its share of the reduction would amount to 166,000 bpd. “It was also said that reducing by one sixth this time is a big ask,” the source said.

A second source briefed on the discussions said: “We need to reduce but would not want to reduce by much.”

Russia and Saudi Arabia are expected to hammer out an agreement with Russian President Vladimir Putin meets Prince Mohammed in Argentina at this weekend’s G20 summit, which Trump is also to attend. Complicating any decision at next week’s talks is the crisis around the killing of journalist Jamal Khashoggi at the Saudi consulate in Istanbul last month. Trump has backed Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman despite calls from many U.S. politicians to impose stiff sanctions on Riyadh.

Further complicating matters is that both Saudi Arabia and Russia are now pumping a record amount of oil, with neither side willing to concede market share, although should WTI dip below $50 again it is likely that one or both sides will blink.

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Trump Blasts Mueller Probe As “An Investigation In Search Of A Crime”

Senate Republicans have offered President Trump a degree of relief from his Mueller-related anxieties by blocking a bill that would have protected the Mueller probe from being disbanded by the president, but with the special counsel continuing his pursuit of Roger Stone and Jerome Corsi, and Congressional Democrats sharpening their knives in anticipation of taking back the House in January, President Trump is once again lashing out at Mueller and the FBI, declaring that the probe is an “investigation in search of a crime” and once again highlighting the hypocrisy in the FBI’s decision to give the Clintons a pass for their “atrocious, and perhaps subversive” crimes.

Reiterating his claims that the Mueller probe bears many similarities to Sen. Joseph McCarthy’s infamous anti-Communist witch hunt, Trump also blasted the DOJ for “shattering so many innocent lives” and “wasting more than $40,000,000.”

“Did you ever see an investigation more in search of a crime? At the same time Mueller and the Angry Democrats aren’t even looking at the atrocious, and perhaps subversive, crimes that were committed by Crooked Hillary Clinton and the Democrats. A total disgrace!”

“When will this illegal Joseph McCarthy style Witch Hunt, one that has shattered so many innocent lives, ever end-or will it just go on forever? After wasting more than $40,000,000 (is that possible?), it has proven only one thing-there was NO Collusion with Russia. So Ridiculous!”

Trump quickly shifted gears to defending his trade war, claiming that “billions of dollars” are flowing into the US thanks to the tariffs, which have been subjected to a renewed round of criticism this week, inspired by GM’s massive layoffs and production cutbacks, which it blamed on the tariffs. 

 

 

Last night, President Trump threatened to release a trove of “devastating” classified documents about the Mueller probe if Democrats follow through with their threatened investigations. He also declared that a pardon for soon-to-be-sentenced former Trump Campaign executive Paul Manafort was still “on the table.

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Will a Lame-Duck Congress Once Again Overextend Itself? New at Reason

Last year’s tax reform represented a first step toward improving the tax code by making it simpler, fairer, and slightly less distortive. As Congress considers taking up a so-called tax-extenders bill before the new Democratic-controlled House is seated, writes Veronique de Rugy, any hope of continuing a reformation requires vigilance against returning to those old ways through a ritualistic revival of expired special-interest tax breaks.

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S&P Futures Slide, 10Y Yield Hits 3%, Oil Tumbles Under $50

After yesterday’s furious Powell-inspired rally, the overnight kneejerk reaction has been muted, with US equity futures giving up some of yesterday’s gains while Europe’s Stoxx 600 Index faded earlier gains following a mostly upbeat Asia session.

After 10Y Treasuries surprisingly barely moved following yesterday’s Powell speech, the benchmark yield finally saw a more pronounced move on Thursday morning, extending its decline after the Fed Chairman fueled speculation the central bank may pause interest rate increases next year…

… while the greenback drifted in a tight range following Wednesday’s drop, it rebounded from session lows and was roughly unchanged.

In the wake of Powell’s “dovish” comments that Fed Funds are  “just below” estimates of the neutral rate (vs. “a long way” in October), hinting at a potential slowdown in the hiking cycle, the DXY gave up the 97.000 level and witnessed its steepest one-day percentage decline this month so far, to 96.622 at one stage. However, the USD has pared some losses with month-end and SOMA demand still in play, while some rival currencies also suffer further weakness. Looking ahead, FOMC Minutes are due to be published later today although with the market now pricing in just one rate hike in 2019 (from more than less than two months ago), it is unlikely that any further dovish news is possible. 

At the same time, European bonds rose, and even though demand for five-year Italian debt at an auction fell to the lowest since June. Italy’s five-year bond yield dipped 4 bps to 2.36 percent and the closely-watched spread over Germany was at 294 bps. Italian debt has rallied this week as the government said it was ready to compromise with the European Union on its budget deficit target. German bonds extended gains after inflation data from the German state of Saxony and Treasury.

European shares gave up early gains of as much as 0.7%, with the Stoxx 600 Europe Index trading up just 0.2% as of 1:02pm CET, dragged lower by the real estate shares which remains the worst performer sector in the index, while tech shares trim gains of as much as 2%. Deutsche Bank dropped more than 3% after prosecutors said its headquarters were being searched in a money laundering probe.

Material names are also seeing support this morning, in-fitting with price action in the metals scope with gains seen in Antofagasta (+4.9%), Glencore (+1.8%), Rio Tinto (+1.1%); upside in mining names and a softer GBP has pushed the FTSE 100 (+0.8%) towards the top of the leaderboard.

Earlier in the session Asian stocks were broadly higher, with MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan rose 0.6 percent, although the Shanghai Composite Index dropped 1 percent. Gains were tempered by investor jitters before trade talks between U.S. President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping on Saturday, during the G20 summit in Argentina.

The euro erased an earlier advance after a raft of weak economic data, while emerging-market equities rose to the highest level since early October and developing-nation currencies strengthened. The dollar held steady even as the U.S. 10-year note yield fell below 3% for the first time in two months. The euro failed to sustain early gains amid mixed regional German inflation prints, while the pound led losses in G-10 as PM Theresa May said the U.K. should be ready for no deal if Dec. 11 Parliament vote rejects her Brexit plan. Fed’s hike path stays in focus with several speeches by policy makers and minutes from latest meeting due Thursday.

With Powell now out of the way, the market is looking for any signals on trade from a meeting between the U.S. and Chinese presidents that will take place at the Group of 20 summit in Buenos Aires this weekend.

“The next catalyst will be the G-20 meeting between Trump and Xi; we believe risk assets will tactically trade in the green following a tariff cease-fire,” said Eleanor Creagh, a strategist at Saxo Capital Markets in Sydney. “A tradable risk bounce on a paper deal at G-20 will be unlikely to reverse sentiment structurally as the underlying U.S.-China relationship is still deteriorating.”

Elsewhere, West Texas oil tumbled below $50 a barrel for the first time in more than a year as Russia signaled little urgency to commit to supply cuts and traders fretted that OPEC won’t act decisively to clear a resurgent surplus in the global crude market while U.S. crude stockpiles continue to grow.

Oil futures tumbled as much as 1.8% in New York to $49.41 a barrel, the lowest since early October 2017. Brent for January settlement, which expires Friday, fell as much as 2.1% to $57.50 a barrel on London’s ICE Futures Europe exchange. The global benchmark traded at an $8.23 premium to WTI. The more-active February contract lost as much as 2.2 percent. 

While Putin praised Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman and said Moscow is ready to cooperate further, he said crude around $60 a barrel is “balanced and fair” and well above the level needed to to keep his government’s budget in surplus. “Putin is fine with $60, but this time next week we will be well below that if there is no deal,” said Warren Patterson, commodity strategist at ING. “I think we are going to have to see the Saudis actively reduce flows to the U.S.”

As noted yesterday, US crude stockpiles rose by 3.58 million barrels last week in the longest run of gains since November 2015, according to the Energy information Administration. The build was higher than the 1-million-barrel gain predicted in a Bloomberg survey, overshadowing a surprise draw in gasoline inventories.

“Oil has moved into our bear case scenario,” Norbert Ruecker, head of macro and commodity research at Julius Baer Group told Bloomberg. “Today’s price levels imply that the petro-nations will maintain their output hikes or that the world economy is about to slow down significantly.”

Gold has rebounded from two-week lows, as the dollar fell following comments from Fed Chairman Powell saying that the policy rate is just below the estimated neutral range. China’s steel prices have dropped following a two day gain largely due to ample supply and lean demand in markets, with iron ore now rising following Monday’s sell off. Additionally, spot Palladium has hit a record high of USD 1186.30/oz.

In geopolitical news, US Secretary of State Pompeo said he is very hopeful for a new meeting with North Korean officials to discuss denuclearization, while there were separate reports that US requested that North Korea change its chief negotiator. The US Senate voted 63-37 to advance a bill that would end US participation in Saudi Arabia-backed war in Yemen which paves way for additional vote next week, although White House has previously noted it would veto the bill if passed. Russia are to construct a missile early-warning radar station in Crimea in 2019, according to Interfax.

Expected data include personal income and jobless claims. Dollar Tree, TD Bank, HP Inc., VMware, and Workday are among companies reporting earnings.

Market Snapshot

  • S&P 500 futures down 0.3% to 2,732.00
  • STOXX Europe 600 up 0.7% to 359.89
  • MXAP up 0.7% to 153.87
  • MXAPJ up 0.6% to 493.83
  • Nikkei up 0.4% to 22,262.60
  • Topix up 0.4% to 1,659.47
  • Hang Seng Index down 0.9% to 26,451.03
  • Shanghai Composite down 1.3% to 2,567.44
  • Sensex up 1.3% to 36,186.13
  • Australia S&P/ASX 200 up 0.6% to 5,758.42
  • Kospi up 0.3% to 2,114.10
  • German 10Y yield fell 2.4 bps to 0.325%
  • Euro up 0.07% to $1.1374
  • Italian 10Y yield fell 3.2 bps to 2.888%
  • Spanish 10Y yield fell 2.4 bps to 1.519%
  • Brent futures down 1.3% to $58/bbl
  • Gold spot up 0.4% to $1,226.36
  • U.S. Dollar Index up 0.1% to 96.86

Top Overnight News

  • Deutsche Bank AG’s premises including its headquarters in Frankfurt were being searched by prosecutors on Thursday in a money laundering probe, prosecutors said in a statement. In an emailed statement, Deutsche Bank confirmed that police are investigating at several German locations in relation to Panama Papers, and said it is fully cooperating with authorities.
  • President Vladimir Putin said crude around $60 a barrel is “absolutely fine” just days before talks on oil policy with Saudi Arabia
  • The Swiss economy unexpectedly shrank in the third quarter by 0.2%, blighted by a drop in exports and weak domestic demand.
  • Benchmark Treasury yields fell below 3% for the first time since September and stocks climbed in Europe and Asia after a dovish tone from the Federal Reserve chairman boosted markets ahead of this weekend’s G-20 gathering.
  • U.K. Prime Minister warned the country to prepare for a no-deal Brexit if her deal fails to be approved by the House of Commons on Dec. 11. Sterling fell sharply following the comment, down as much as 0.5% to day’s low of 1.2758.
  • Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell opened the door for a potential pullback in projected interest-rate hikes for 2019 following a widely expected increase in December. In what was seen as a shift in tone from remarks last month, Powell said Wednesday that the Fed’s series of rate increases had brought policy to “just below” the range of estimates of neutral
  • U.K. consumer confidence slumped to the lowest in a year as the country copes with the economic uncertainty of Brexit. The index compiled by YouGov and the Centre for Economics and Business Research fell in November and remains “notably below” where it was before the 2016 referendum to leave the European Union
  • Chinese President Xi Jinping said the global economy is at a turning point as he prepares for a critical meeting with Donald Trump this weekend. Xi said the world has to decide whether to continue working to support the global trading system. Failure to do so will lead to new barriers emerging between nations
  • President Donald Trump raised the prospect of slapping a 25 percent tariff on imported cars and ordered a review of China’s retaliatory auto tariffs against the U.S

Asian stocks traded mostly positive after risk appetite was ignited by Fed Chair Powell’s dovish comments which spurred hopes the Fed may begin to slow down on its hiking cycle and helped US stocks notch their biggest daily gain since March. ASX 200 (+0.6%) and Nikkei 225 (+0.4%) were underpinned from the open but with gains capped amid lingering trade uncertainty and inconclusive capex data for Australia, as well as mixed Japanese retail sales and a decline in USD/JPY. Hang Seng (-0.8%) and Shanghai Comp. (-1.3%) both initially conformed to the positive tone but then stalled amid tariff threats with Chinese President Xi’s offer of an olive branch to the US somewhat falling on deaf ears, as USTR Lighthizer said China has yet to offer meaningful proposals and suggested that the US are seeking to match China’s tariffs on autos. Finally, 10yr JGBs were marginally higher as they nursed the prior day’s losses after having found support around the 151.00 level and although today’s mixed 2yr auction results failed to spur a reaction, prices continued to gain as the strength in the regional stock markets moderated.

Top Asian News

  • China Is Said to Plan Major Purge of $176 Billion Loan Market
  • HNA Is Said to Widen Sales Push, Marketing More Than 90 Assets
  • Singaporean Regulators Widen Noble Group Probe to Auditor EY
  • South Korea-Japan Spat Deepens Over Mitsubishi Forced Labor Case
  • China Bond Defaults Surpass 100 Billion Yuan for 1st Time

European equities (Eurostoxx 50 +0.3%) piggybacked on the optimism seen on Wall St and during the Asia-Pac session as perceived dovish rhetoric by Fed Chair Powell continues to guide markets. Initial reports via WiWo that European Commissioner Oettinger expected US auto tariffs before Christmas resulted in downside to European equities, especially German autos, though DAX (+0.2%) saw a rebound after these comments were denied by the European Commission. Sectors are mixed with IT names the outperformer following gains seen yesterday during US hours which has prompted upside in chip-makers such as Wirecard (+3.3%), STMicrolectronics (+2.5%) and Infineon (+2.2%). Material names are also seeing support this morning, in-fitting with price action in the metals scope with gains seen in Antofagasta (+4.9%), Glencore (+1.8%), Rio Tinto (+1.1%); upside in mining names and a softer GBP has pushed the FTSE 100 (+0.8%) towards the top of the leaderboard. To the downside, energy names lag their peers with WTI and Brent crude unable to halt recent declines. In terms of stock specifics, once again, Deutsche Bank (-3.3%) have found themselves in the centre of further controversy with their offices raided earlier this morning in a money laundering probe involving two members of staff. Elsewhere, Intu Properties’ (-35%) shares have slumped to a record low this morning after reports that a consortium led by their Deputy Chairman has abandoned their plans to buy the Co.

Top European News

  • Euro-Area Economic Confidence Falls, Complicating ECB’s Mission
  • Swiss, Swedish Economies Shrink as Trade Slump Hits Europe
  • Mother and Son Lose $16 Billion in 2018 as Continental Sinks
  • Eurofins Finance Chief Says Company Has No Liquidity Problem

In FX, in the wake of Powell’s “dovish” comments that Fed Funds are “just below” estimates of the neutral rate (vs. “a long way” in October), hinting at a potential slowdown in the hiking cycle, the DXY gave up the 97.000 level and witnessed its steepest one-day percentage decline this month so far, to 96.622 at one stage. However, the USD has pared some losses with month-end  and SOMA demand still in play, while some rival currencies also suffer further weakness. Looking aheadd, FOMC Minutes are due to be published later today. GBP,EUR – Major G10 underperformer with ongoing Brexit bickering and meaningful vote concerns driving Cable below 1.2800 with a low print of 1.2759 (vs. highs of 1.2850, with offers seen between 1.2855-65) , while Sterling also fell victim to cross positioning for month end as EUR/GBP climbed above the key psychological 0.8900 level, before the single currency came under renewed pressure on latest auto tariff headlines as  press reported that EU Commissioner Oettinger expects US auto tariffs before Christmas. This pushed EUR/USD to fresh session lows of 1.1350 and bringing into play options around 1.1340-50 (3.2bln) and 1.1360-65 (1.35bln). Note, the EUR did not really react to mixed German state CPIs but did respect a key fib just ahead of 1.1400 (1.1394). Looking ahead German national CPIs are due at 13.00GMT. AUD – In contrast the AUD has showed some resilience despite lower than expected capital expenditures with the antipodean staying afloat above 0.7300. JPY – The major beneficiary of the post-Powell Dollar weakness as USD/JPY fell through 114.00, 113.50 and currently rests around 113.40. In terms of technicals, the next level to the downside is at 113.17 (tenkan line), looking ahead, Tokyo CPIs are due to be released later today. TRY – The clear EM outperformer with the currency breaching 5.1500 (and temporarily rallying through a key fib at 5.1562) vs. the buck as the move was exacerbated by the drop below 5.2000 in the wake of a significan improvement in Turkish economic confidence index and falling oil prices (as Turkey is a large net importer).

In commodities, Brent (-1.3%) and WTI (-1.0%) have moved lower recently, which may have been exacerbated by reports that 7k WTI contracts were dropped at the same time. Overnight oil prices had moved higher, despite a greater than expected build shown in EIA weekly crude stocks of 3.577mln vs. Exp. 0.769mln, with prices boosted by a stronger dollar in addition markets are looking optimistically to this weeks G20 meeting to improve global demand. Gold has rebounded from two-week lows, as the dollar fell following comments from Fed Chairman Powell saying that the policy rate is just below the estimated neutral range. China’s steel prices have dropped following a two day gain largely due to ample supply and lean demand in markets, with iron ore now rising following Monday’s sell off. Additionally, spot Palladium has hit a record high of USD 1186.30/oz.

US Event Calendar

  • 8:30am: Powell Greets Students at 15th Annual College Fed Challenge
  • 8:30am: Personal Income, est. 0.4%, prior 0.2%
  • 8:30am: Personal Spending, est. 0.4%, prior 0.4%; Real Personal Spending, est. 0.2%, prior 0.3%
  • 8:30am: PCE Deflator MoM, est. 0.2%, prior 0.1%; PCE Deflator YoY, est. 2.07%, prior 2.0%
  • 8:30am: PCE Core MoM, est. 0.2%, prior 0.2%; PCE Core YoY, est. 1.9%, prior 2.0%
  • 8:30am: Initial Jobless Claims, est. 220,000, prior 224,000; Continuing Claims, est. 1.66m, prior 1.67m
  • 9:45am: Bloomberg Consumer Comfort, prior 61.3
  • 10am: Pending Home Sales MoM, est. 0.5%, prior 0.5%; NSA YoY, est. -2.8%, prior -3.4%
  • 2pm: FOMC Meeting Minutes
  • 2pm: Five Fed Presidents Participate in Conference at Boston Fed
  • 3:05pm: Fed’s Kaplan Speaks at Boston Fed Conference

 

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Why Are We Still in Afghanistan? New at Reason

The old peacenik slogan was, “What if they gave a war and nobody came?” Today, writes Steve Chapman, the question is, “What if they gave a war and nobody noticed?” The American mission in Afghanistan has borrowed a page from Harry Potter, draping itself in a cloak of invisibility.

Our war has lasted 17 years and cost upward of $1 trillion, including $45 billion this year. It has killed more than 2,300 Americans and wounded more than 20,000. And our options, meanwhile, have fallen into two categories: bad and worse. The bad is withdrawing and letting the Afghans settle the war themselves, which could easily lead to a collapse of the government and a Taliban return to power. The worse is staying indefinitely, sacrificing American lives to preserve a stalemate.

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Germany Doubles Payout To Migrants Who Agree To Leave The Country

As unbelievable as it might sound, as it struggled to reduce the destabilizing influx of refugees and migrants flooding into Germany, the coalition government led by Angela Merkel launched a campaign last year offering rejected asylum seekers financial aid if they and their families opt to return to their home countries. The money, as we reported at the time, would go toward paying their rent for their first year back, with some left over for general expenses.

But what’s perhaps maybe more unbelievable, the numbers of asylum seekers applying for the program have fallen precipitously over the past year. In 2017, 29,000 people opted for the “voluntary repatriation” program – which bears the catchy title “Your Country, Your Future Now!” But that number has fallen dramatically to just 14,000 through the end of October, according to RT. To qualify, applicants must revoke their initial asylum applications and drop any appeals or further proceedings in Germany’s backlogged asylum courts.

Germany

So, in a bid to entice more migrants into taking advantage of the program, Germany’s Interior Ministry has launched an advertising campaign, hoping to boost the numbers of voluntary repatriations. However, the ads, which have been placed on the billboards in major German cities over the past few weeks, have become controversial, as those who haven’t already rejected Merkel’s “Open Doors” policy have taken to defacing the advertisements, decrying them as “anti-refugee”.

In addition to the thousands of euros that qualifying migrants would receive should they choose to take part in the program, the ads also promised those who took advantage of the program an additional monetary gift: In addition to paying their rent, Germany will also pay for their family’s return trip to their country of origin.

Rival lawmakers blasted the plan as  a”cynical” attempt to mask the ministry’s failures.

“The latest campaign of the interior ministry looks like a sort of a winter sales and that is cynical,” Konstantin von Notz, the deputy head of the Greens faction in the Bundestag, told Berliner Morgenpost daily. “It is apparently aimed at concealing [the ministry’s] own failures and improving the figures related to people, who voluntarily left the country, before the end of the year.”

Ordinary German also didn’t appreciate the new push, but for a different reason: They saw it as “anti immigrant” and as sending the message to asylum seekers that “Germany is not your land and your future is not here.”

As a result, graffiti has appeared on many of the signs.

Germany initially offered €1,200 ($1,360) to refugees who wouldn’t fight deportation. But under the new initiative, that sum has been increased to  €3,000 ($3,400). That’s more than double the original payout.

It’s surprising that more migrants aren’t seeking to take advantage of the program, because one would imagine that, by offering such a hefty financial incentive, some migrants might calculate that it would be worth it to travel to Germany solely with the intention of dropping their asylum proceedings and taking the money.

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Immigration Won’t Spark a Civil War: New at Reason

Reihan Salam is not a grim guy. In fact, he comes across as preternaturally ebullient in person. Yet his book Melting Pot or Civil War?: A Son of Immigrants Makes the Case Against Open Borders predicts a dark future for this nation of nations if it doesn’t rethink its immigration policies to keep out the wretched and huddled masses.

Salam admits no costs or unintended consequences to his program—only benefits that, in his telling, include making the country more socially cohesive, as conservatives want, while paving the way for a new egalitarianism, as liberals want. The cost of ignoring his advice, meanwhile, would allegedly be nothing short of a racial civil war, writes Shikha Dalmia.

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Deutsche Bank Shares Slide As Police Raid Frankfurt Headquarters

Already a melting ice cube struggling with an overbearing derivatives exposure and myriad legal risks, Deutsche Bank has seemingly bounced from one criminal scandal to the next since the crisis, incurring billions of dollars in fines along the way. So it’s hardly surprising that the bank’s shareholders let out a collective groan Thursday morning when the BBC reported that German police had raided the bank’s Frankfurt headquarters, sending the bank’s shares lower by 2% to fresh all-time lows and renewing fears that DB could face a devastating, potentially bankruptcy-inducing, fine.

DB

Roughly 170 police officers, tax inspector and prosecutors fanned out across Frankfurt to search several DB buildings, according to the BBC. Germany’s public prosecutor has said the raid is connected with the role of two employees in money laundering.

The Frankfurt headquarters of Deutsche Bank have been raided by prosecutors in a money laundering investigation.

Germany’s public prosecutor alleged that two staff members have helped clients launder money from criminal activities.

Police cars were seen outside the tower blocks that house the headquarters of Germany’s biggest bank.

Other Deutsche offices in the city were searched in an operation involving about 170 police and officials.

The raid comes as DB is facing inquiries pertaining to the role its correspondent bank played in facilitating the historic money laundering fraud at Danske bank’s tiny Estonian branch. Earlier this month, a whistle blower implicated DB in the scandal and claimed that it helped clear $150 billion of the ‘suspicious’ $234 billion reportedly filtered through the bank by criminals in the former Soviet Union (and possibly even the family of President Vladimir Putin).

Anonymously sourced reports claimed that the raid was connected with the revelations in the ‘Panama Papers’ Mossack Fonseca document dump, which exposed the bank’s role in helping wealthy individuals hide money from their respective countries. Back in August, German banking regulator BaFin demanded that DB improve its regulatory controls. These demands came nearly one year after the bank was fined $700 million for helping wealthy Russians move $700 million out of the country in the now-infamous ‘mirror trading’ scandal.

In 2016 alone, more than 900 clients doing a combined 311 billion euros in business with the bank dealt with an opaque British Virgin Islands based unit of the bank.

In total, the bank has racked up some $18 billion in fines since the crisis:

DB’s new CEO Christian Sewing has only been running the bank for a few months. But as we noted earlier this week, he’s already making moves to change up the senior management, as we reported earlier this week. Among a raft of executives expected to depart the bank was Deutsche’s Chief Regulatory Officer Sylvie Matherat, who reportedly had expressed concerns about the bank’s inadequate controls against financial crime.

Matherat has told associates she might need to prepare to leave the bank, and has expressed unhappiness with what she described to some associates as constraints to improving financial-crime controls and mending Deutsche Bank’s relationships with regulators, some of the people say.

Matherat, who joined the bank three years ago, was reportedly facing pressure from Sewing over her ability to improve processes for detecting and preventing money laundering and other violations through the division she supervises. But the reality is that DB’s criminal problems started long before her tenure, and expecting the bank’s deeply ingrained “ethical” problems to be fixed in one generation of management is simply ridiculous (meanwhile, investment-bank head Garth Ritchie is reportedly on his way out over “performance concerns”.)

Investors are clearly not happy. After all, if the bank becomes weighed down with toxic legal risks, it will be much more difficult for Sewing to sell it.

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Anglo-American Psy-Op Agency Exposed

Authored by Paul Craig Roberts,

In 2015 an organization called the Integrity Initiative was created “to counter disinformation and other forms of malign influence being conducted by states and sub-state actors seeking to interfere in democratic processes and to undermine public confidence in national political institutions.”

As the only government that interferes in the internal affairs of other countries is in Washington DC, Integrity Initiative sounds like an Anglo-American intelligence operation to interfere in the internal affairs of other countries while pretending to counter Russian propaganda operations to discredit Western democracy.

Under the guise of “safeguarding democracy,” Integrity Initiative is more likely involved in overthrowing democracy, as in Venezuela.

Documents were hacked or leaked that show Integrity Initiative to be funded by the UK Foreign and Commonwealth Office.

The online hacker group Anonymous said on Friday that the British government has created a “large-scale information secret service” across Europe, the US and Canada to meddle into the domestic affairs of European nations.

Citing a “large number” of leaked documents, Anonymous claimed that Integrity Initiative, a network of clusters across Europe and North America launched in autumn 2015 to “reveal and combat propaganda and disinformation”, was in reality a project funded and operated by London through “concealed contacts in British embassies.”

Integrity Initiative has admitted this funding, but explains it as the British government’s recognition of the Russian threat to social harmony and democratic values in the West.

“The Integrity Initiative is a partnership of several independent institutions led by The Institute for Statecraft. This international public programme was set up in 2015 to counter disinformation and other forms of malign influence being conducted by states and sub-state actors seeking to interfere in democratic processes and to undermine public confidence in national political institutions. You will find details on the website (https://www.integrityinitiative.net/), and you can follow the programme on its Twitter account or on Facebook (both @InitIntegrity).

The Institute for Statecraft is a not-for-profit charity dedicated to education in good governance and to enabling societies to adapt to a rapidly changing world. It conducts research, promotes models of best practice, runs programmes for societal development, and actively challenges threats to social harmony and democratic values. The Institute is financed primarily by grant support to its programmes.

For its first two years, the Integrity Initiative was funded by private individuals. Funding for 2017 and 2018 was provided by a grant from the UK Foreign & Commonwealth Office (FCO). This reflects their appreciation of the importance of the threat, and a wish to support civil society programmes seeking to rebuild the ability of democratic societies to resist large scale, malicious disinformation and influence campaigns.

Think about this for a minute.

The only allegation of Russian interference is the unsubstantiated “Russiagate” claim that Russia influenced the 2016 presidential election, but the Integrity Initiative was created in 2015 prior to any claims of Russian interference in Western elections.

Many have concluded that the Integrity Initiative is a Western intelligence psy-op agency whose purpose is to maintain, and even worsen, the bad relations between the West and Russia.

This conclusion is probably a safe one.

via RSS https://ift.tt/2Qsfpvf Tyler Durden

First Human Images Revealed From World’s Only Full-Body 3D Scanner 

The EXPLORER consortium is a multi-institutional group that has developed the world’s first total body medical imaging system that can capture 3D models of the entire human body simultaneously.

The scanner, called EXPLORER, produces images 40-fold higher resolution than current commercial scanners and is expected to open up entirely new ways in which PET/CT can be used in biomedical research and clinical practice.

The University of California, Davis researchers Simon Cherry and Ramsey Badawi are the brainchildren behind this revolutionary scanner.

EXPLORER produces a whole-body diagnostic scan in as little as 20 seconds. It can also generate 3D movies that track radiotracers in drugs as they circulate the body. The machine can scan up to 40 times faster, or use up to 40 times less radiation dose, than traditional scanners, making it better for cancer detection; studies of trafficking patterns in cell-based therapies; toxicological research; studies of metabolic disorders; autoimmune disease and other chronic conditions; and research in overall systems medicine.

“The trade-off between image quality, acquisition time and injected radiation dose will vary for different applications, but in all cases, we can scan better, faster or with less radiation dose, or some combination of these,” Cherry explained.

The first human images were developed in collaboration with Shanghai-based United Imaging Healthcare, which built the prototype system and will be the manufacture for series production. 

“While I had imagined what the images would look like for years, nothing prepared me for the incredible detail we could see on that first scan,” said Cherry. “While there is still a lot of careful analysis to do, I think we already know that EXPLORER is delivering roughly what we had promised.”

In the first video, the researchers used the scanner to surveil the delivery and distribution of glucose in real time. 

“The level of detail was astonishing, especially once we got the reconstruction method a bit more optimized,” said Badawi. “We could see features that you just don’t see on regular PET scans. And the dynamic sequence showing the radiotracer moving around the body in three dimensions over time was, frankly, mind-blowing. There is no other device that can obtain data like this in humans, so this is truly novel.”

“I don’t think it will be long before we see a number of EXPLORER systems around the world,” said Cherry. “But that depends on demonstrating the benefits of the system, both clinically and for research. Now, our focus turns to planning the studies that will demonstrate how EXPLORER will benefit our patients and contribute to our knowledge of the whole human body in health and disease.”

A second video shows in less than 30 seconds, EXPLORER can develop a 3D model of a human body. 

The first Explorer scanner will be installed in Sacramento, California, for use in research projects in 2019.

It would not be surprising at all if the federal government took interest in the scanner for the use in airports. 

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