How Russia Sanctions Are Perversely Helping Putin Achieve His Most Desired Goal

A recent flurry of Russian sanctions put in place by the United States are causing Russia’s oligarch billionaires to repatriate more of their offshore assets, perversely aiding a long-held ambition for Vladimir Putin, who has been trying to encourage such repatriations for the past two decades according to a new Bloomberg report.

While sanctions were first put into place during the Obama era as a result of the conflict in Ukraine, which however resulted in a muted financial response, as a result of the Trump administration‘s unpredictability and Trump’s desire to demonstrate his anti-Kremlin stance to Mueller, Russian billionaires – increasingly at risk from a hostile financial regime – have been forced to move some of their assets back to state-run banks and out of an offshore system that has been a popular tax haven since communism has collapsed.

And with new anti-Russia sanctions announced by the US and its allies at an increasingly rapid pace, the accelerating repatriations to Russia have been prompted by the desire to keep assets out of the reach of the United States Treasury, which with its implied near monopoly on the Swift financial transfer network, means that the only place “safe” is back in Russia, and under Putin’s watchful eye.

The reversal started back in April when oligarchs close to Putin such as Oleg Deripaska and Viktor Vekselberg, and their respective companies, wound up losing billions after being hit by penalties. With the threat of further sanctions looming, the pace at which money is being repatriated has accelerated: Russia now awaits possible new sanctions as a result of its involvement in the United States election and as a result of the potential nerve agent attack in England.

Vladimir Putin and Oleg Deripaska

Oleg Vyugin, a former senior central bank official who is now chairman of the Moscow Exchange, told Bloomberg: “It’s toxic to be Russian. And the richer you are, the more toxic you are.”

It’s not just the billionaires: numerous Russian exporters have moved their assets out of United States and European banks, as well.

While Russia’s central bank doesn’t publish statistics on repatriated funds, and so getting an exact number is difficult, Russia’s largest lender, Sberbank PJSC, reported a 17% rise in corporate holdings and all currencies in January through August of this year, equating to about $90 billion. Additionally, balance of payment data indicates that the private sector in Russia brought more financial assets home then it sent overseas in the second quarter – only the second time this has happened since 2014.

Here one can argue that raising sanctions on Russia, and the accelerated repatriation wave, is playing right into the Russian president’s hands: in June, Vladimir Putin said that he wanted wealthy Russians to move their capital back to “where it’s earned”, with the billions in offshore funds meant to reinforce the weakening Russian financial system. However, absent external interference, there simply weren’t enough economic opportunities in Russia to prompt repatriation at the level that Putin seeks during his final term, which ends in 2024.

Instead, net capital outflows are expected to be over $50 billion this year, which is double last year‘s total. This total includes foreigners selling Ruble bonds, corporate foreign currency debt payments and Rubles that have been converted to dollars, as well as Euros held inside Russia. One sanctioned shareholder of a Kremlin-linked company told Bloomberg that he was told by his asset manager that he had a good year because he hadn’t invested anything, resulting in him having nothing to lose.

Other steps taken by Russia haven’t had encouraging results on their own, either. For instance, in March, the sale of a new Eurobond raised just $200 million – just 5% of its amount targeted – and there has been limited interest in two newly created “offshore” zones inside of Russia that the government set up to encourage repatriation in exchange for tax-free dividends.

And since the Russian government has offered little help with the repatriation process companies have been left to fend for themselves.

As Bloomberg notes, the penalties on Deripaska led to an aftershock across the country, prompting boardrooms in Russia to take action. The billionaire’s aluminum supply giant, Rusal, was almost forced to halt production after international banks froze his accounts regardless of what currency they were in.  Slava Smolyaninov, a strategist at BCS Global Markets in Moscow, told Bloomberg: “It showed how any international business can be brought to its knees in a second. That was a real eye-opener for many tycoons.”

While one can argue whether Trump’s sanctions have led to a perverse benefit for Putin, there is another indirect consequences: accelerating de-dollarization.

While the US dollar is still the dominant currency in global trade, Russian exporters are taking steps to minimize their use of the world’s reserve currency which is becoming increasingly “weaponized” to pursue political goals. They hold the currency for commercial purposes, but they are also starting to stockpile rubles in case of an emergency. Another billionaire held commodity company, MMC Norilsk Nickel, had almost all of its cash deposits in foreign currencies just years ago. Now, it holds more than half in Rubles, equating to $1.5 billion. The company is also planning a record $1.8 billion interim dividend for the first half of this year.

While it is unlikely that Russian companies will abandon the dollar altogether, major exporters are increasingly asking lenders to allow them to repay dollar loans in other currencies. The aftershock has also started to affect counterparties of Russian companies, who have been asked about their interest in settlement using alternative currencies.

The result has been an emergence in local-currency funded bilateral trade: diamond company Alrosa has been selling gems to some Asian clients in rubles after also recently accepting Rupees from an Indian customer for the first time. According to Bloomberg, another major metals company has been selling its products for Euros while experimenting with the Chinese Yuan.

In addition to money coming back to Russia, corporate registrations are also being repatriated. Billionaires like Alexey Mordashov and Alisher Usmanov are transferring stakes in enterprises they own to Russia registered companies.

There is another clear winner from the crackdown on US offshore wealth: lawyers, as legal and consulting work related to adjusting for sanctions has flourished, growing to a $100 million per year industry in Russia right now, and the boom shows no signs of ebbing, according to Ilya Rybalkin, who started his own practice this month with a dozen other lawyers who left western firms to join him.

“Demand for high-end legal services and lawyers who can navigate their clients through the hostile environment of sanctions is only going to grow.”

For now, the forced dedollarization is largely confined to Russia, where it is helping Putin amass much of Russia’s wealth which fled the country in the past 20 years; however as the US pursues the use of a weaponized currency to hit back at more adversaries around the globe, it may serve two purposes: i) further weaken the role of the world’s reserve currency and ii) provide indirect financial support for those very regimes that the US is seeking to challenge.

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Kavanaugh Accuser Agrees To Testify Next Week

Christine Blasey Ford has accepted the Senate Judiciary Committee’s request to testify on Ford’s allegation that Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh sexually assaulted her in high school, Ford’s attorneys told Senate Republicans on Saturday. Her decision came just ahead of a looming 2:30pm deadline: Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley had given Ford’s lawyers until Saturday afternoon to decide whether she would proceed with testifying.

Still, her answer is nebulous because as on previous occasions, the exact terms and timing of her testimony remain unclear, as negotiations between Ford’s lawyers and staff for the Senate Judiciary Committee remain ongoing.

In the email Ford’s lawyers said she had accepted the panel’s “request to provide her first-hand knowledge of Brett Kavanaugh’s sexual misconduct next week” even though the legal team said it found that many of the “aspects of the [Committee’s] proposal… are fundamentally inconsistent with the Committee’s promise of a fair, impartial investigation.”

The email also didn’t specifically say that Ford was agreeing to a Wednesday hearing date, which is what the Judiciary Committee has proposed. And Debra Katz, Ford’s lawyer, explicitly said that “she is hopeful that we can reach an agreement on the details.”

For the past week, both sides had been wrangling over the exact day and conditions for Ford’s testimony.

The brief email is below.

 

 

 

 

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Economic Damage Wrought By Hurricane Florence Nearly 10 Times Worse Than Expected

Rivers in the Carolinas are still rising and North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper has warned that it still isn’t safe for displaced residents to return to their property. But that hasn’t stopped Moody’s from releasing the first estimate of the economic damage wrought by Hurricane Florence.

According to the Wall Street Journal, the ratings agency’s estimates put the total economic toll at somewhere between $38 billion and $50 billion – more than double an initial estimate of between $8 billion and $20 billion from Goldman Sachs and S&P. And nearly ten times CoreLogic’s initial estimate of between $3 billion and $5 billion.

If damages reach the upper end of that range, it would leave Florence in seventh place among the biggest storms, just after 1992’s Hurricane Andrew, according to Moody’s estimates.

Florence

Notably, the expected toll is lower than each of last year’s three major hurricanes:

Based on Moody’s estimates, last year’s three hurricanes each caused more damage than Florence: Harvey’s tally reached $133.5 billion; Maria’s $120 billion; and Irma’s $84.2 billion.

Still, the storm has continued to wreak havoc in the region as the death toll has risen to 41. Rivers in the Carolinas have continued to rise, and rescues are still being carried out by first responders. Meanwhile, water levels for the Cape Fear River are expected to peak on Saturday:

Florence, which made landfall Sept. 14 and has claimed 41 lives in the Carolinas and Virginia, is continuing to wreak havoc. Rivers in the Carolinas are continuing to rise, and more than 600 roads were still closed Friday in North Carolina. North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper warned it still isn’t safe for many people to return home including the 3,700 who remain in shelters.

Part of the Cape Fear River is forecast to crest Saturday while the Waccamaw River at Conway, S.C., isn’t expected to crest until Tuesday or Wednesday next week , according to the National Weather Service.

In a rescue Thursday night in the town of Kelly, N.C., more than 100 stranded people were plucked from harm by National Guard and Coast Guard helicopters, authorities said.

Private insurers (a group that excludes the federal government’s National Flood Insurance Program) are anticipating up to $5 billion in covered losses:

Private insurers are preparing for an estimated $1.7 billion to $5 billion in total costs from Florence. The estimates from catastrophe-risk modeling firms include damage to homes, cars and commercial property, and also include policy benefits like living expenses for homeowners and business interruption for companies, but typically exclude flood claims for individual homes.

One insurance analyst told WSJ that costs for insurers will be relatively low because only parts of coastal North Carolina absorbed the damage from hurricane-force winds, while the rest of the Carolina were subjected to less powerful tropical storm force winds.

Risk modeler Karen Clark & Co. said the cost to the insurance industry was held down because hurricane-force winds were experienced only along the North Carolina cost, with less powerful, tropical-storm-force winds elsewhere in the two states.

“This led to widespread low level damage,” the firm said.

In fact, costs should be less than $5 billion, down from potential loss estimates of $20 billion, largely due to the drop in wind speeds that brought Florence from a Category 4 storm while out at sea to a Category 1 storm upon impact

The current estimates for the insurance industry’s bill are dramatically lower than some of the figures discussed about when Florence was spinning offshore at Category 4 wind strength.

“Since the storm weakened from a Category 4 to a Category 1 at landfall, losses for the insurance industry were cut significantly—to under $5 billion from a potential loss of $20 billion,” Wells Fargo analyst Elyse Greenspan said.

Here’s a roundup of claims received by the largest insurers in the state, courtesy of WSJ:

“Coastal Property Insurance Pool, which is a state-created last resort option for insurance, has more than 32,700 claims in hand, Ms. Schwitzgebel said. The claims are largely for roof repairs, replacements of broken windows and some structural damage to homes from fallen trees.”

“USAA, one of the biggest insurers in the Carolinas, is up to 38,000 Florence claims. It had roughly 49,000 claims from Harvey.” This is largely due to the large number of military members living in the area both on and around the state’s Army and Marines bases.

“State Farm, the biggest home insurer by market share in North Carolina, said it had received about 12,400 homeowner claims and 1,900 automobile claims in North Carolina related to Hurricane Florence as of Sept. 20. Policyholders in South Carolina, where it also is a top insurer, had filed 1,610 home and 500 auto claims.”

Unfortunately for FEMA’s NFIP, which is already struggling with a $20 billion debt, most of the losses will be absorbed by the federal program, which provides subsidized policies to individuals with homes in designated flood plains. This could create more problems going forward, as the program is teetering on the brink of bankruptcy and may soon require a government bailout.

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Cornell Orientation Packet Tells Students If They Are ‘Privileged’ Or ‘Oppressed’

Submitted by Campus Reform

  • A Cornell University student says student ambassadors were given an “orientation packet” that told them if they were “privileged” or “oppressed.”
  • The packet categorized groups of people based on age, race, gender, gender identity, religion, and education level, to name a few.
  • A Cornell spokesman told Campus Reform that the university “will not be participating” in offering a comment on the issue.

Student ambassadors at Cornell University were given an “orientation packet” ahead of welcoming the incoming freshman class. The packet contains a sheet of categories labeling certain groups as having “privilege” or being “oppressed.”

Campus Reform obtained a copy of the document from a concerned student who felt the content was inappropriate. The sheet outlines social issues and designates certain demographics as privileged or oppressed in a “U.S. Context.” The 15 categories range from gender identity to martial/parental status, education level, and “use of English.”

If you speak “accented English” you are marginalized or oppressed compared to “‘proper’ English” speakers who are privileged. –Campus Reform

Over the course of three weeks, Campus Reform gave Cornell University multiple opportunities to confirm or deny the packet was distributed. University spokesman John Carberry eventually responded to Campus Reform on Wednesday but did not deny the student’s account, saying that Cornell “will not be participating” or commenting on the issue.

According to the document, if you speak “accented English” you are marginalized or oppressed compared to “‘proper’ English” speakers who are privileged.  If your parents are married or “in a heterosexual relationship” you are privileged while “divorced; LGBTQ parent; domestic partnership” and “single parent” individuals are oppressed.

If you are “temporarily able-bodied,” you must have privilege according to the sheet as “people with a physical, mental, emotional, or learning disability” are oppressed. The document also lists “age” as a category, ranking those in their “30s to early 50s” privileged compared to “younger and older” demographics.

Altogether, if an incoming female Cornell student is a racial minority, has an accent, is in their late teens or early 20s, and was raised by a single parent, they are “marginalized or oppressed” in at least five ways despite their background, socioeconomic status, or life experiences.

Follow the author of this article on Twitter: @Grace_Gotcha

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“A Lingering Stench…” – Trump Hints At Rosenstein Firing During Friday Night Rally

President Trump gave his clearest indication yet that he is preparing to fire Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein after the NYT reported that Rosentein during a rally in Sringfield, Missouri. During the rally, Trump said that while his administration had cleaned house at the DOJ, a “lingering stench” has remained. But that too would soon be taken care of.

Trump’s comments followed a revelation published by the New York Times about an attempted palace coup orchestrated by the Deputy Attorney General during the spring of 2017. After Trump cited a letter written by Rosenstein as justification for firing former FBI Director James Comey back in May 2017, Rosenstein reportedly felt embittered and “used” by the president. So he sought revenge by attempting to persuade members of the Trump cabinet to invoke the 25th amendment and remove Trump from office. Rosenstein’s plot quickly fizzled, but not before the deputy AG had suggested that the conspirators should attempt to surreptitiously record the president in the Oval Office.

News of the conspiracy, which was reportedly drawn from memos written by former Deputy FBI Director Andrew McCabe, who was fired earlier this year and may face criminal charges after purportedly lying to the DOJ inspector general, has provoked widespread calls for Rosenstein’s ouster.

During Friday’s rally, Trump emphasized that we have “great people” in the Department of Justice. And that, if his administration took a poll, “they’d probably be at 95%” support. “But there’s a lingering stench, and we’re going to get rid of that group.”

Trump has reportedly considered firing Rosenstein at least twice before, according to media reports, most recently after the FBI raided the home, hotel room and office of former Trump attorney Michael Cohen.

Rosenstein is in charge of the ongoing Russia probe. Attorney General Jeff Sessions recused himself last spring after Trump fired Comey, earning the enduring enmity of his boss.

Trump also continued to back his SCOTUS pick Brett Kavanaugh during the rally.

“Fantastic man. Fantastic man,” Trump said of the judge.

“And he was born – you talk about Central Casting – he was born, they were saying it 10 years ago about him, he was born for it. And it’s going to happen, it’s going to happen,” Trump said, referring to Kavanaugh’s confirmation.

The president made his appearance in the state to stump for Missouri Attorney General Josh Hawley, who is running against Democratic Sen. Claire McCaskill in the Nov. 6 midterm vote.

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What Really Makes A Bubble

Via DataTrekResearch.com,

If I could strike one word from Wall Street’s dictionary, it would be “Bubble”. It is too often used in place of actual research and now seems to simply denote any asset that rises quickly in value, gets broader attention, and then rises some more. Even worse, since the Financial Crisis the word only seems more popular. Calling bubbles has reached its own bubble…

But since the word’s usage in finance is too entrenched to wipe it away, we should at least differentiate between systemically harmful bubbles and simple curiosities. For example:

  • Harmful: the NASDAQ bubble in 1999/2000 caused $2 trillion of value destruction when it burst in late 2000 – 2002. It had a hand in slowing US growth and damaged a whole generation of investors’ confidence in equity markets.
  • Nearly deadly: the 2007 US housing bubble set up the Financial Crisis and Great Recession, with global effects running to the tens of trillions of dollars.
  • Curiosity: by contrast, this year’s bursting of the crypto currency bubble was much less meaningful both in terms of size ($620 billion lost from January 7th peak to now) and impact on the broader global economy (essentially zero).
  • Curiosity: legal marijuana stocks – the latest group stuck with the “bubble” moniker, are even smaller than crypto currencies. The largest one by market cap – Canopy Growth – has a market cap of $15 billion. Tilray’s market cap is $13.5 billion. Aurora Cannabis’ market cap is $9.0 billion, and Cronos Group is $2.4 billion. 

    If they all got cut in half tomorrow, it wouldn’t matter to anyone other than current holders.

To our thinking, the more interesting question about bubbles is “Why do they form in the first place and how can I be early in finding them?” As far as we can see, every investment mania of the modern era is the same and has varying degrees of these 5 features:

#1. A large current or sizable potential future market. Crypto currencies were supposed to replace government-sponsored money, a huge (multiple trillions of dollars) addressable market. Housing is the largest capital market in the US and until the Financial Crisis had never declined in value on a national basis since the Great Depression.

#2. An idea that resonates deeply with a core audience. Anything that becomes a bubble starts with a core group that passionately believes in a core principle. Home ownership as part of the “American dream” is one example. The early promise of the Internet and the 1990s dot com bubble is another. So is the thought – still popular in many circles – that crypto currencies can eventually replace sovereign-issued money.

#3. Compelling, if theoretical, economics. We recently hosted a panel on legal marijuana at the Dallas Securities Traders Association and were struck by how high returns on capital eventually might be in the space. Something like $1 billion of capital should, in theory, be able to generate $5 billion of sales at +20% pretax margins. Yes, a 100% ROI before tax… Who knows if the industry can manage that, but you can see why investors are excited by the opportunity.

#4. Limited pure-play investment opportunities. In a nutshell, this is why legal marijuana stocks are so hot right now. There are a handful of US listed names and a dozen or so listed on the OTC. It reminds us of when there were less than 100 crypto currencies in the wild and the only one most people knew was bitcoin. Large levels of interest and limited supply are hallmark signs of a potential bubble.

#5. A conscious avoidance of basic math and basic due diligence. The word “mania” comes from the ancient Greek word for “madness” or “frenzy”. That neatly summarizes the peak of any bubble, when caution goes out the window in favor of price momentum.

Last thoughts/summing up: as long as humans control capital there will be noticeable imbalances between rational price setting and herd-like behavior. We don’t view that as a flaw as much as an annoyance. Regulation is the only answer to avoiding bubbles that can cause systematic damage, and even that is not a foolproof answer. In the end financial bubbles, unlike their soapy namesakes, are a permanent feature of capital markets.

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China Summons US Ambassador Over Sanctions Scandal

China’s foreign ministry summoned the US ambassador on Saturday to lodge an official protest over the sanctions imposed by the United States against a Chinese military organization for buying Russian fighter jets and missiles, state media reported. The announcement came just hours after a Chinese defense ministry spokesman called on the US to “immediately revoke the sanctions or “bear the consequences.”

Vice Foreign Minister Zheng Zeguang, summoned US Ambassador Terry Branstad and “lodged solemn representations over US sanctions against (the) Chinese military”, the Foreign Ministry said in a brief online statement, and added the following:

Zheng Zeguang pointed out that the US action to impose sanctions on Chinese military agency and official on the ground of relevant military cooperation between China and Russia severely violates basic norms governing the international relations. Such mean behavior is a blatant hegemonic act. The China-Russia military cooperation is normal cooperation between two sovereign states, and the US side has no right to interfere. The US act has severely harmed the state-to-state and mil-to-mil relations and affected the cooperation in international and regional affairs between China and the US. The Chinese side will take every necessary measure to firmly safeguard its national interests. We strongly urge the US side to correct its mistake immediately and withdraw so-called sanctions. Otherwise, the US side will have to bear all the consequences.

China’s central military commission also summoned an acting military attache at the U.S. embassy on Saturday night over the sanctions. The Chinese side also decided to immediately recall commander Shen Jinlong, who is in the United States for an international maritime force meeting, CCTV reported.

US Ambassador Terry Branstad

Quoted by the Chinese state broadcaster, Zeguang also said that “China will take all necessary measures to firmly defend its national interests”, and added that the Chinese military reserves the right to take further countermeasures.

The last time China summoned the U.S. ambassador was in July 2016 over the deployment of the Thaad anti-missile system in South Korea according to Bloomberg. In 2015, the U.S. ambassador was summoned over U.S. warships entering Spratly islands.

As reported earlier, on Thursday, Washington placed financial sanctions on the Equipment Development Department of the Chinese Defence Ministry, and its top administrator, for its recent purchase of Russian Sukhoi Su-35 fighter jets and S-400 surface-to-air missile systems in the past two years. The Chinese military expressed “strong indignation and resolute opposition” to the sanctions, the defence ministry said Saturday, echoing a foreign ministry statement the previous day.

Ministry spokesman Wu Qian said the US move was a “a flagrant breach of basic rules of international relations” and “a stark show of hegemonism” that severely damages relations between the two countries and their militaries, according to the official Xinhua news agency.

This marks the first time a third country has been punished under the CAATSA sanctions legislation for dealing with Russia, and signaled the Trump administration’s willingness to risk relations with other countries in its campaign against Moscow. US officials said that the US could consider similar action against other countries taking delivery of Russian fighter jets and missiles, which could include such nations as Turkey, India, Saudi Arabia and Qatar.

However, a senior US administration official, speaking on condition of anonymity, insisted the ultimate target was Russia and not “the defense capabilities” of third countries.

CAATSA, or the Countering America’s Adversaries Through Sanctions Act, was passed in 2017 as a tool that gives Washington more ways to target Russia, Iran and North Korea with economic and political sanctions.

* * *

It wasn’t just China: Russia also lashed out at the US sanctions, accusing Washington of playing unfairly and using new measures to squeeze Moscow out of the global arms market. According to AFP, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Friday that “Washington’s continued sanctions hysterics” dealt a new blow to US-Russia ties but could not immediately say if Moscow would retaliate, or how.

United in their resentment of America’s global influence and “hegemony”, China and Russia have been tightening up their ties and this month conducted week-long joint military drills in Moscow’s largest ever war games.

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Internal Notes Show Divergence Between Obama, FBI On Whether Russia Helped Trump

Newly released FBI communications from January, 2017 confirm that the Obama administration ignored the FBI’s stance on whether Russia tried to help Donald Trump win the 2016 election, and that former FBI agent Peter Strzok was worried that the White House would misconstrue their conclusion, reports The Hill‘s John Solomon. 

On Dec. 10, 2016, the FBI received an inquiry from a reporter about whether the FBI was uncertain about the emerging conclusion that Russia was trying to help Trump win. The reporter intended to report that FBI counterintelligence was “much less emphatic than the CIA about Russia intent.”

Strzok weighed in to help the FBI press office address the reporter’s question, an email that has now captured congressional investigators’ fancy because it states clearly the FBI couldn’t distinguish that any one of three possible motives drove Russia’s meddling.

“The specific point I made was we did not have information to differentiate what their ultimate goal was,” Strzok emailed, adding that then-Director James Comey told Senate Intelligence something similar.

“In other words, the activity is one-sided and clear but we can’t say the sole and primary purpose was specifically intended to help someone, hurt someone else or undermine the process. The reality is all three,” he wrote. –The Hill

It’s also clear that the FBI’s upper echelon was concerned over sharing information with the White House and then-Director of National Intelligence, James Clapper, over fears that it might result in political abuse. 

“He, like us, is concerned with over sharing. Doesn’t want Clapper giving CR cuts to WH. All political, just shows our hand and potentially makes enemies,” Strzok wrote to FBI lawyer Lisa Page on Jan. 3, 2017, relating a conversation he apparently had with then-Assistant Director William Priestap, the top counterintelligence official in the bureau.

Investigators aren’t certain yet what “CR cuts” refers to. Some, though, think it could be a reference to “classified raw” intelligence, such as the unverified Steele dossier or possible intercepts. Others wonder whether it could refer to budget cuts in a “continuing resolution” though no such budget was pending at the time. Whatever the case, the political distrust of colleagues is clear. “WH,” of course, refers to the White House. 

“Yeah, but keep in mind we were going to put that in the doc on Friday, with potentially larger distribution than just the dni,” Page texted back. Strzok answered back, escalating his concerns: “The question is should we, particularly to the entirety of the lame duck usic with partisan axes to grind.” “USIC” is an acronym for the United States Intelligence Community. –The Hill

The FBI’s assessment is in stark contrast to the official intelligence assessment from the Obama administration released on January 6, 2017 which declared: “We also assess Putin and the Russian Government aspired to help President-elect Trump’s election chances when possible by discrediting Secretary Clinton and publicly contrasting her unfavorably to him.” 

What’s more, the National Security Agency (NSA) only had “moderate confidence” that Putin was trying to help Trump win, and the House Intelligence Committee concluded that they couldn’t validate Putin’s intentions either. 

In January, Sen. Ron Johnson (R-WI) revealed a “jaw-dropping” email written in May 19 of 2017 from Strzok to his mistress, FBI lawyer Lisa Page – which reads: “You and I both know the odds are nothing. If I thought it was likely, I’d be there no question. I hesitate in part because of my gut sense and concern that there’s no big there there.

When asked by the DOJ Inspector General what he meant by that, Strzok said that he couldn’t be certain that there was a “broad, coordinated effort” to hijack the election.

The Department of Justice (DOJ) inspector general asked Strzok shortly before he was fired from the FBI what he meant by that text, and he offered a most insightful answer.

Strzok said he wasn’t certain there was a “broad, coordinated effort” to hijack the election and that the evidence of Trump campaign aides talking about getting Hillary Clinton dirt from Russians might have been just a “bunch of opportunists” talking to heighten their importance.

Strzok added that, while he raised the idea of impeachment in some of his texts to Page, “I am, again, was not, am not convinced or certain that it will,” he told the IG. –The Hill

And as we reported last week, a newly reported comment made by Page during her May testimony revealed that the FBI had no clue whether there was any collusion between Trumpworld and Russia. What’s more, ex-FBI Director James Comey told the Senate shortly after he was fired that there was “not yet evidence to justify investigating Trump for colluding with Russia.” 

When I left, we did not have an investigation focused on President Trump,” said Comey. 

In short, James Comey, Peter Strzok and Lisa Page have all said or implied that the FBI had nothing linking Trump to Russia. Which, as John Solomon concluded last week, raises the question: If there was no concrete evidence of collusion, why did we need a special prosecutor?

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The Gathering Storm In The Treasury Market

Via Global Macro Monitor,

Summary

  • Our analysis provides kind of a Grand Unified Theory (GUT) of what is currently taking place in global financial markets

  • The massive borrowing by the U.S. Treasury is crowding out emerging markets capital flows

  • The structural factors that have kept long-term interest rates low and term premia repressed are fading

  • We expect a measured move in the 10-year Treasury yield to 4.25 to 4.40 percent, much sooner than the market anticipates

Reagan proved deficits don’t matter.” – Dick Cheney

Memo to Dick Cheney:

  • Deficits and the public debt are starting to matter. Really. 

  • It is now more strikingly true than ever given the U.S. public debt-to-GDP is more than 3.4x higher than when President Reagan took office.  

Emerging Market Debacle 

Go no further than the debacle currently taking place in the emerging markets (EM), which began in the second quarter of this year, to witness the consequences of the U.S. Treasury’s trillion-dollar-plus demand shock for global funding.

In a closed financial system and a non-QE world,  price (interest rates) would adjust to move the capital and debt markets back to a more sustainable equilibrium.   The rise in interest rates would force the government to borrow less as higher interest rates crowd out other spending.  Also, the supply of loanable funds to the government would rise as savings increase.

That is not the world we now inhabit, however,  where global financial repression by central banks has resulted in a “rent control” like shortage of dollar funding.   The shortfall is now being plugged, in part, by the residual capital flows, which had been chasing yield in the emerging markets over the past several years.

That is the sucking sound you have heard since late April.

Crowding Out Begins

Therefore, it is no surprise, at least to us,  global markets, beginning with the most vulnerable twin deficit EMs, are experiencing significant pressure from the crowding outcaused by the U.S. Treasury’s massive increase in market borrowing.

U.S. Government Hoovering Up Global Funding

The following table illustrates the Treasury borrowed close to $1 trillion from the public in the first eight months of 2018, more than a trillion dollar swing from the same period last year.

Almost 85 percent of the 2018 new debt issuance was in the form of marketable securities, that is borrowing from the public markets, of which more than half was T-Bill issuance,  explaining the pressure on short-end of the curve and a growing scarcity of dollars.

Debt Ceiling And Treasury Borrowing In 2017

Because of the constraints on raising the debt ceiling in 2017, total net Treasury issuance to the public from January and August 2017 was a net negative.  Marketable note and bond issuance did increase around $200 billion, however, probably over worries about disrupting the market and liquidity concerns.

The government was financed in January to September 2017, primarily by the Treasury reducing its cash balances at the Fed and “other means of financing,” such as deferring payments to federal retirement accounts, and a game of three-card monte by shifting funds around.

Means of Financing

Ways in which a budget deficit is financed or a budget surplus is used. A budget deficit may be financed by the Department of the Treasury (Treasury) (or agency) borrowing, by reducing Treasury cash balances, by the sale of gold, by seigniorage, by net cash flows resulting from transactions in credit financing accounts, by allowing  certain unpaid liabilities to increase, or by other similar transactions. It is customary to separate total means of financing into “change in debt held by the public” (the government’s debt, which is the primary means of financing) and “other means of financing” (seigniorage, change in cash balances, transactions of credit financing accounts, etc.).  – GAO

The spike in new debt issuance in 2018 is not only caused by the financing of a larger budget deficit due to the tax cuts and big ramp in spending, but also the rebuilding and maintaining of the Treasury’s cash balance at the Fed , and the likely reduction in obligations incurred through “other means of financing” in 2017.

Quantitative Tightening (QT) And Roll-Off Of Maturing Treasuries 

Furthermore, the Fed began quantitative tightening last October, starting its roll-off of the $4 trillion-plus maturing securities (SOMA) purchased during quantitative easing.

Thus far, the Fed’s SOMA portfolio consisting of both Treasury and Agency Mortgage-Backed securities has declined by around $231 billion, which is not insignificant, and equivalent to 6 percent of the U.S. monetary base.

The Fed’s roll-off of $145 billion in Treasury securities in the first eight months of 2018 is a hole that had to be plugged by the market, otherwise the Treasury’s cash balances held at the Fed would have declined.   The Treasury cash reduction at the Fed is the liability side of the Fed’s shrinking balance sheet , which was not the case during QE where asset purchases created a corresponding liability in the form an increase in bank reserves held at the Fed.

“Global Liquidity”

Global liquidity, in the form of base money is shrinking, but the monetary aggregates continue to grow, albeit slowly, which reflects credit is still expanding, and the continued creation of endogenous money.

The term “global liquidity” is not easily defined, it is an elusive and ambiguous concept, and almost impossible to measure.  We believe our analysis and framework provides a much clearer framework and more concise picture of the current global market dynamics.

Emerging Markets – The Indicator Species Of Changing Financial Ecosystem 

Nevertheless, we are always looking for indicator species of a changing global monetary ecosystem, and the emerging markets and commodities are the best we have discovered.

“Sleeping With An Elephant”

Justin‘s father, the former Canadian Prime Minister and, more important,  husband of Margaret Trudeau, once said of living in a world with the United States,

Living next to you is in some ways is like sleeping with an elephant. No matter how friendly and even-tempered is the beast if I can call it that, one is affected by every twitch and grunt. — Pierre Trudeau.

Due to the relatively large size of the U.S. economy, just a small change in its funding requirements have outsize effects on the global financial system.   The table below illustrates this point.  It’s relative size also makes the U.S. a price maker in the financial markets.

The issuance of marketable Treasury securities and the SOMA Treasury roll-off totaled $1.02 trillion in the first eight months of 2018.   That is almost four times the sum of the ten largest 2018 estimated current account deficits in the emerging markets;  2.4 times the combined current account deficits of all emerging markets;  3.7 percent of the emerging market 2018 GDP, and almost 5 percent of the GDP of all emerging markets x/ China.   Yuuge!

We cannot impress enough what a significant shock to the financial markets this has been in 2018.  The Treasury net take-out from the public was net-zero last year.  Compare this to the first eight months of 2018, in which the U.S. G  hoovered up over a trillion dollars from the markets.

In the world of full-blown quantitative easing,  where central banks were printing reserves to purchase government bonds (among other assets) the effects were trivial, null, nonexistent.

What about now, you ask?    The times they are a-changin’.

Source:  Zero Hedge

Countries caught running large deficits are now having their Wile E. Coyote moment.

Why Haven’t U.S. Long-Term Interest Rates Spiked?

Good question.

Real long-term interest rates continue to hover around zero percent, which seems absurd to us, given nominal GDP growth is running at over 6 percent.

Prior to the Great Financial Crisis (GFC) the effective real interest rate on the 10-year Treasury note, measured with CPI inflation, average 2.71 percent from 1962-2008 compared to 0.85 percent during the last ten years,  2008-2018.  We estimate the real rate at 0.16 percent at the end of August.

The Bond Vigilante Model suggests that the 10-year Treasury bond yield tends to trade around the growth rate in nominal GDP on a y/y basis. It has been trading consistently below nominal GDP growth since mid-2010. The current spread is among the widest since then, with nominal GDP growing 5.4% while the bond yield is around 3.00%.  – Ed Yardeni, August 2nd 

Several structural factors have been distorting a “more correct” equilibrium long-term risk-free interest rate — if one exists at all —  which are now beginning to fade.

We counsel patience.  The train has left the station.  Interest rates are on the move.

Fundamentals

Before moving to the fading structural factors, which have held down long-term interest rates, let’s briefly take a look at the fundamental arguments for the collapse of term premia, the flat yield curve, and the low long rates.

1, Lower inflation for longer and forever.  The recency bias of almost 30 years of disinflation is a hard habit to break.  Cleary, this is an example of adaptive expectations, contradicting how I was trained as an economist in the school of rational expectations, which I never fully bought into, by the way.   The disinflationary expectations ingrained in the market is the complete opposite of the problem of former Fed Chairman, Paul Volcker, inherited when he took over an economy in an inflationary spiral.   Mr. Volker had to break the back of inflationary expectations with protracted and extremely tight monetary policy, which took short-term interest rates over 20 percent.

The Fed also learned that to be effective, it must have the confidence of the markets and the public. During the 1960s and early 1970s, various Fed chairmen made rumblings about fighting inflation, but they always backed down when the complaints about the resulting higher cost of credit grew loud. Fed Chairman William McChesney Martin, for example, was no match for President Lyndon Johnson, who depended on cheap credit to finance the Vietnam War and his Great Society. Because the markets observed the Fed’s lack of fortitude, they had no expectations that the Fed would conquer inflation. It is extremely costly to bring inflation down if inflation expectations don’t come down. Not until Volcker showed that the Fed could take the heat did the markets believe that the Fed was serious this time.  –  William Poole, St. Louis Fed

2. The New Economy.  The new economy as we have described is more dependent on asset markets than almost anytime in the nation’s history.  The fear of a bear market or big market hiccup sends the deflationistas into a tizzy.   Even the term “deflation” seems to have morphed into a definition almost more closely associated with asset price declines than rising consumer prices.   Economic progress appears now to be driven by this deflation/inflation dialectic.  We concede this argument does deserve considerable merit.

.the whole inflation/deflation debate has morphed into a dialectic, which is path dependent on asset prices.   Stocks values move up to a critical level (which holders likely believe to be permanent) that stirs the animal spirits and kicks economic growth into gear.  Inflation eventually becomes an issue moving interest rates higher.  The asset bubble pops, stock values go down,  confidence declines, aggregate demand softens and deflation now becomes the headline issue.   Wash, rinse, repeat.  – GMM

3, Negative and near-zero rates in Japan and Europe.   10-year German bund yield of near 50 bps and a JGB yield of 13 bps are probably the strongest fundamental reason anchoring U.S. rates and holding back yields from spiking, in our opinion.  Labeling the interest rates differentials as “fundamental” make us feel uncomfortable as we believe it is more of a technical issue.   Nonetheless, even these rates are beginning to move higher.   By this time next year,  we fully expect that the European bond market bubble to have fully popped.

We reject the thesis global bond yields, including the U.S 10-year note, are driven by fundamentals.   Measuring inflationary expectations based on interest rates,  which are thoroughly distorted by the technicals of QE,  is a fundamentally flawed proposition.  The economic signals from the bond markets have been rendered null and void by the central banks.

That may be changing, however.

‘Nuff said.   Let’s move on.

Structural Factors

We now examine four changing structural factors that have created a favorable technical environment for the U.S. bond markets, which have kept long-term interest rates abnormally low and pancaked the yield curve:

  1. The ballooning of the budget deficit during economic expansion;

  2. QE and its diminishing legacy of reinvesting maturing notes and bonds;

  3. Borrowing from the social security trust funds,

  4. Globalization

Budget Deficits

All of Washington, including even Tea Party fiscal conservatives, appear to have abandoned any semblance of fiscal discipline.

The U.S. budget deficit widened to $898 billion in the 11 months through August, exceeding the Congressional Budget Office’s forecast for the first full fiscal year under the Trump presidency.

The budget deficit rose by a third in the October to August period from $674 billion in the same timeframe a year earlier, the Treasury Department said in a statement on Thursday.

The U.S. fiscal gap has continued to balloon under President Donald Trump, raising concerns the country’s debt load, now at $21.5 trillion, is growing out of control. A combination of Republican tax cuts enacted this year — that will add up to about $1.5 trillion over a decade — and increased government spending are adding to budget strains.  – Bloomberg, Sept 13th

The following table is an estimate of the Treasury’s financing needs over the next five years.   We don’t put much faith in the accuracy of long-term economic projections.  Politics can change, and policies will change.  The economic situation could go sideways causing a crisis.

They do, however, provide a framework, a basis for analysis, and usually get the direction and zip code correct.

What is clear, however, the Treasury will tap the markets for its trillion-dollar-plus funding needs for as far as the eye can see.

The deficit projections are taken from the CBO and OMB and have converted fiscal into calendar years.   A small portion of the deficit financing will come from borrowing from government trust and pension funds, taking a smidgen of pressure off the markets.

We are confident in our estimates of the SOMA Treasury roll-off.  The only uncertainty is the final size of the Fed’s post-GFC balance sheet and whether the Treasury maintains a consistent  cash balance at the Fed.   That is when the Fed will end quantitative tightening.

The combined annual financing needs of the Treasury over the next several years are large and will exceed the GDPs of even some of the largest emerging market economies.

When Fiscal Doves Cry 

It surprised us that. the traditional fiscal conservative Republicans, at least in rhetoric,  chose to implement a procyclical fiscal policy.   Speaker Paul Ryan used to warn the U.S. was the next Greece if it didn’t get its fiscal house in order.

Paul Ryan, Jeff Sessions Warn Obama Budget Could Spur Greek-Style Debt Crisis

“Next year, the United States could be like Greece,” Sessions continued, referring to the severe debt crisis faced by that country as a result of uncontrolled government spending.

Ryan similarly warns on the House Budget Committee website: “The President’s budget ignores the drivers of our debt, bringing America perilously close to a European-style crisis.”  –  Huffington Post, February 2012

The procyclical tax cuts and spending ramp goosed an already real trending economy, causing growth to accelerate, but it was rare, nonetheless,  for the U.S. or any developed economy.

If the larger deficits trigger an adverse market reaction, policymakers may be forced to implement procyclical policies during a downturn.   Just as the markets are forcing the EM countries that have been hard hit this year to do  — i.e., raising taxes and cutting spending during in an economic downturn.

Procyclical fiscal policy is puzzling: why would the fiscal authority want to amplify an already volatile business cycle by adding fuel to the fire during booms and aggravating recessions by cutting spending and increasing taxes? – FT

The net result of the higher deficits will be more crowding out in the global financial markets and pressure on long-term interest rates to move significantly higher.

The Diminishing Legacy Of QE

We constructed the following chart to illustrate the schedule of maturing Treasury securities by month, held in the Fed’s September 12th SOMA portfolio.

In the current month of September, for example, $19 billion of Treasury securities mature, but the total falls below the $24 billion monthly quantitative tightening cap (purple line) leaving zero SOMA cash available to reinvest and participate in the Treasury auctions.  The $19 billion will not be reinvested and is reflected in the red bar.  The Treasury will be forced to plug the gap with new market borrowings or rundown its cash balances at the Fed.

The same dynamics hold for the roll-off of the SOMA MBS portfolio, where the cash balances at the Fed of government-sponsored enterprises (GSEs) are reduced when mortgages run-off and not reinvested.

Asymmetric Effects Of QT

We need to think more about this but our first impression is the economic effects of quantitative easing, and quantitative tightening are not symmetric.  Because of the difference on the liability side, QT appears that it will be more direct, more onerous than expected, and quicker in its economic impact than QE.

Moreover, QE enabled the government to issue the debt it now has to pay back to the Fed or forced to issue more marketable debt.  QE has really blurred the lines between fiscal and monetary policy.

September To Remember

September will be the first month in several years where the SOMA will not participate in any of the notes, bond, FRN, or TIPs auctions.

The same holds for October, when the QT cap steps up to $30 billion per month, as $24 billion of Treasuries mature.

In November, $59 billion of SOMA Treasuries mature, of which $30 billion (the QT cap) will not be rolled over (red bar) and drained from the financial system, with the remaining $29 billion (green bar) in cash used as noncompetitive bids in the variety of notes, bonds, FRN, and TIP auctions.

Reduction In SOMA Treasury Portfolio 

The black line illustrates the decrease in the SOMA Treasury portfolio over time as securities roll-off.

Some argue that the stock of excess reserves are declining too fast, down 18 percent since QT began causing the Fed Funds rate to consistently trade at the top of the 25 bps target range.  Consequently, the Fed will be forced to end its balance sheet reduction sooner than the markets think.

A plausible scenario.   However, why not just stop paying or further reduce the interest rate on excess reserves (IOER), which will force reserves back into the Fed Funds market putting downward pressure on the rate?

If we had to guess,  QT ends in June 2022 when the SOMA Treasury portfolio hits $1.5 trillion and the MBS portfolio around $1 trillion.  We suspect, however, the glass will begin shattering long before then, forcing the Fed to reverse course.

History Of SOMA Participation In Treasury Auction

Our next chart illustrates the SOMA participation in every Treasury auction since September 2009, which was financed by the sum of its maturing securities during each particular month.

The green bars represent the SOMA percentage takedown of the total amount of securities issued during the auctions and the black line is the corresponding 10-year Treasury yield on the date of each auction.

Operation Twist

The Fed engaged in “Operation Twist” between September 2011 and December 2012 (two red bars) to bring down long-term rates.  It sold shorter-term securities in its portfolio to purchase long-term Treasuries.  It appears just anticipation of the program reduced yields as traders began front-running the Fed.

Interest rates began to spike as soon as the SOMA ran out of maturing securities and stopped participating in the auctions.   That is what concerns us now.

The SOMA’s participation in auctions going forward will be sporadic, at best, which will likely put upward pressure on rates and further crowding out borrowers as the Treasury is forced to issue more marketable securities.

The following is the Treasury press release of the results from the August 30-year bond auction.  Notice the SOMA took down almost 12 percent of the total outstanding bonds issued.

Declining SOMA Auction Participation 

Our next chart shows the recent past and future SOMA participation in the Treasury auctions through 2019.  The key takeaway here is that the SOMA will be active in the auctions in only five of the next 16 months.

We believe the bond market has not fully focused on the diminishing participation of the SOMA in the auctions going forward.   It now has the data and should be on traders’ radar, causing upward pressure on long-term interest rates.

To Be Continued…

*  *  *

We promised that we would get you the piece by the end of Friday.

As you’ve noticed,  the post is very long and comprehensive.  The final post is not yet finished but we will leave you with part one and the charts to the rest of piece.

We are traveling on Friday.  Check in with us on Monday for the GUT final product.

Outline for Part II

Social Security Now In Deficit 

No more free ride borrowing from the Social Security Trust Funds as the program is now running a structural deficit.  Social Security has been running a primary deficit since the GFC.

Marketable debt is increasing in proportion to the total debt.

Globalization

The U.S. has been highly dependent on foreign savings to finance its budget deficits.

Foreign purchase of Treasury securities declining

Trouble With The Curve

Outlook

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James Woods Suspended From Twitter Over Satirical Meme That Could “Impact An Election” 

Outspoken conservative actor James Woods has been suspended from Twitter over a two-month-old satirical meme which very clearly parodies a Democratic advertisement campaign. 

The offending tweet from July 20, features three millennial-aged men with “nu-male smiles” and text that reads “We’re making a Woman’s Vote Worth more by staying home.” Above it, Woods writes “Pretty scary that there is a distinct possibility this could be real. Not likely, but in this day and age of absolute liberal insanity, it is at least possible.”

According to screenshots provided by an associate of Woods’, Twitter directed the actor to delete the post on the grounds that it contained “text and imagery that has the potential to be misleading in a way that could impact an election.

In other words, James Woods, who has approximately 1.72 million followers, was suspended because liberals who don’t identify as women might actually take the meme seriously and not vote. 

In a statement released through associate Sara Miller, Woods said “You are a coward, @Jack,” referring to Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey. “There is no free speech for Conservatives on @Twitter.” 

Earlier this month, Woods opined on the mass-platform ban of Alex Jones, tweeting: ““I’ve never read Alex Jones nor watched any of his video presence on the internet. A friend told me he was an extremist. Believe me that I know nothing about him. That said, I think banning him from the internet is a slippery slope. This is the beginning of real fascism. Trust me.”

Nu-males everywhere non-threateningly smirk at Woods’ bad fortune…

 

(h/t Adan Salazar @ Infowars, Twitchy)

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