Swan Song Of The Central Bankers, Part 2: Yellen’s “My Girl”

Authored by David Stockman via Contra Corner blog,

If you wonder why things are going to get a lot worse before they get better—just consider the following tidbit from this week’s political gleanings. It essentially cements the case that Washington is heading straight into a bond market conflagration that will wreak havoc on the Wall Street end of the Acela Corridor.

It seems that the secret force inside the White House for Janet Yellen’s reappointment last year, and source of Trump’s favorable nods in her direction on several occasions, was none other than the scourge of the Yellen-loving Washington/Wall Street ruling class, Steve Bannon.

That’s right. In another new insider account of the Trump White House, we learn that:

…….the former White House chief strategist and nationalist standard-bearer revealed that he urged Trump to reappoint former Fed Chairwoman Janet Yellen….The former chief strategist had expressed concerns that a more hawkish Fed chairman could hinder economic growth.

“The Breitbart posse is in love with Janet Yellen. If we get behind her, that is the signal of signals — the realignment of American politics, ” Bannon told the book’s author, Bloomberg’s Joshua Green, in September, several months before he stepped down from the conservative media outlet. “Yellen’s my girl.”

As it happened, of course, Bannon got his walking papers. But Trump did end up with his “girl”, albeit attired in Jerome Powell’s trousers and tie.

Still, the implications are staggering: The cult of central banking has now thoroughly buffaloed politicians from one end of the ideological spectrum to the other. Apparently, even the most intellectualized voice of anti-establishment populism of recent times does not know that “low interest rates” are not a gift for the state to properly give; and most certainly not the key to sustainable long-term growth.

Indeed, if there were one single thing a Republican government could do to stop the nation’s slide toward economic stasis, it would be to liberate the delicate mainspring of capitalism—-the money and capital markets—-from the suffocating and deforming rule of central bankers. The latter have destroyed honest price discovery, yet free market pricing of credit, carry, capital and risk is the sine qua none of vibrant capitalism and broad societal prosperity.

To be sure, the mainstream GOP lost track of that cardinal truth decades ago during the reign of Richard Nixon. Tricky Dick famously slammed shut the US gold window at Camp David in August 1971, thereby defaulting on the US obligation to keep the dollar convertible at $35 per ounce and the world currency system anchored to the ultimate monetary asset.

But the subsequent drift to fiat currency, dirty floats and the massive, worldwide expansion of central bank credit wasn’t really Nixon’s doing—-even if it did, in the first instance, conveniently liberate the Fed to gun the US economy into Nixon’s short-lived landslide of 1972.

In truth, however, the evil genius behind the catastrophic error of Camp David was Milton Friedman, and his errand boy in Nixon’s cabinet, George Schultz. The two were apostles of the free market when it came to commodities, wages, rents, goods, services and most anything else including gambling, prostitution and drugs. But not money.

Friedman had been dead wrong about the Fed’s culpability for the Great Depression of 1930-1933, and from that error he erected a theory of state control of money that eventually evolved into today’s baleful regime of Keynesian central banking.

To be sure, Friedman had an austere view of the job of central bankers that was akin to the Maytag repairman commercial of the era. They were to mostly sit around the Eccles Building reading book reviews and playing scrabble, while occasionally nudging the monetary deals to keep M1 growing at precisely 3.00% per annum. Get that modest job done right and you would have ebullient capitalist prosperity forever, world without end.

The problem with this Friedmanite monetary postulate was two-fold: It was wrong in theory and impossible in practice!

Thus, there is no possible fixed rule of monetary growth. As demographics, technology, enterprise and social mores change, among others, only the market can discern their impact on the optimum quantity and velocity of money.

Likewise, in response to banking innovation the parameters of any given monetary aggregate can change substantially, making consistent measurement impossible. That happened, in fact, when overnight sweep accounts proliferated in the mid-1990s, thereby causing the level of “demand deposits” to drop by 50% or more and the growth rate of Friedman’s M1 to be thrown into a cocked hat.

Worse still, there was no chance that politicians on both end of Pennsylvania Avenue could possibly identify, nominate and confirm for service on the Federal Reserve Board the kind of monetary eunuchs Friedman’s theory implied. Inexorably, therefore, the Fed became populated not with 3.00% M1 purists, but with bankers, academics and lifetime government apparatchik with an ax to grind.

Arthur Burns was the first Fed chairman out of the gate after Camp David, and after obsequiously submitting to Nixon’s demands for a booming election year economy in 1972, he spent the rest of his term attempting to repair his reputation—-sending the US economy through violent cycles of boom and boost during the mid-1970s.

Then came William Miller, erstwhile manufacturer of gears, pumps, helicopters and golf carts, who thought inflation was caused by high oil prices, not the prodigious expansion of central bank credit over which he presided. Fortunately, however, Paul Volcker knew better, mercilessly crushed the roaring commodity and wage inflation with 20% interest rates and earned the undying enmity of GOP pols, who tricked the Gipper into getting rid of him at the first opportunity (August 1987).

Ironically, Ronald Reagan was a monetary antediluvian who really did believe in the gold standard. But, unfortunately, had neglected to read the fine print addendum to Alan Greenspan’s resume. That was the place where he claimed to be a life-long hard money man whose goldbug views had never waivered from the days of Ayn Rand’s salons, but had merely “evolved”.

As he told your editor at the time, he saw no reason why the FOMC couldn’t be a next best substitute for the gold standard itself. Incidentally, at this same time in the summer of 1987, he also offered to sell his well-known economic consulting firm, Townsend-Greenspan, to your editor.

As it happened, the due diligence didn’t pan out. It seems that Townsend-Greenspan persistently lost money selling macroeconomic forecasts to corporate America, which were generally wrong.

Alas, the money-making side of the firm was a prodigious flow of speech honorariums—a talent that didn’t attach to the business unit on offer, and which was destined to become the essence of the Maestro of central banking.

Needless to say, Greenspan’s talent for financial bloviation was every bit as efficacious in the Imperial City as it had been during his decades hustling the Fortune 100. At length, he transformed Friedman’s Maytag repairmen into a monetary politburo, and the Fed into an all-powerful vehicle of monetary central planning.

In truth, there had never really been a dimes worth of difference between “saltwater” Keynesians of the Samuelson-Heller-Tobin generation and the “freshwater” monetarists of the Friedman school. At the core, they both believed that capitalism tended toward business cycle instability, and that unchecked this instability would eventually plunge the economy into a deathly depressionary spiral.

In truth, capitalism makes errors and proficiently and timely corrects them. There is no cycling toward the drain or death wish toward depression. Moreover, as we demonstrated at length in The Great Deformation, the 1930’s was a consequence of the monetary policy aberrations of the Great War and the Roaring Twenties, not the alleged cyclical instability of capitalism.

In any event, the only original difference back in the day (1955-1987) was that first generation Keynesians thought activist counter-cyclical fiscal policy would cure this endemic maladay, while Friedman thought rule-bound monetary policy would do the trick.

In this context, Greenspan became the great synthesizer and evangelist, too.

He essentially tossed Friedman’s 3% rule on the scrap heap in a fog of technical mumbo jumbo about the immeasurability of the monetary aggregates—-even as took up the old fashioned mantle of Humphrey-Hawkins full employment as the essential mission of the Fed. And then he sold the whole package to the hapless GOP establishment.

Henceforth, rather than being narrowly focussed on relative price stability and financial discipline as had been the Fed under the post-war greats—-William McChesney Martin and Paul Volcker—the central bank’s remit became plenary. Even the level of the stock market and the paper net worth of  American society became fair game for its focus and intervention—–matters which were unthinkable even when Nixon’s posse struck down the old monetary order at Camp David.

The final inflection point came after the first Greenspan bubble crashed in the great dotcom meltdown of April 2000 and after. By all rights, the US economy should have taken its lumps after the unsustainable debt and financial asset fueled binges of the 1990’s.

But Greenspan was now in full-Humphrey-Hawkins modality, determined to use the crude tools of money market price-pegging and Fed balance sheet expansion to prevent a macroeconomic correction (aka recession). At length, he lowered the funds rate for 30 straight months, pushing it from 6.5% in November 2000 to an unheard of 1.0% by June 2003.

Thereafter, logically and inexorably, came the great mortgage bubble, rampant housing price inflation, the Wall Street securitization and derivatives orgy and the Great Financial Crisis that flowed therefrom. By the time the dust had settled on Greenspan’s exit in January 2006, the balance sheet of the Fed had grown from $200 billion to nearly $700 billion during his 19-year tenure.

By contrast, by the lights of Friedman’s fixed rule it should have been only $350 billion (3% per year); and under a regime of sound money it probably would not have grown at all.

As we will address further in Part 3, the rise of the Asian mercantile exporters after 1980 meant that the US needed to pursue secular deflation of costs, prices and wages in order to remain competitive with the newly mobilized labor forces from the rice paddies of East Asia, not inflate its general price level by nearly 50% as it did during Greenspan’s tenure. And the former is exactly what would have happened under a sound money regime, such as the classic gold standard.

More importantly, not only did Greenspan implant an out-and-out Keynesian policy regime in the Eccles Building, but he also transplanted it into the mainstream Republican party itself. After all, you can’t find a more by the books Keynesian than Ben Bernanke. Yet Greenspan ushered Bubbles Ben into the George W. Bush White House from his perch at the Fed to become the President’s chief economic advisor.

From there it was a short-leap to the Chairmanship of the Fed, and his hair-on-fire money-pumping campaign when the market again tried to correct the Fed’s rampant housing and credit bubbles in September 2008.

Fittingly, Bernanke’s PhD had been supervised at MIT by Stanley Fischer, the leading second generation Keynesian economist of the modern era; and the topic had been the Fed’s error, according to Milton Friedman, of not flooding the market with liquidity and buying up all the government bonds in sight during 1930-1932!

In that context, Janet Yellen, the 1970 PhD student of James Tobin, fit into the Fed’s top chair like a hand-in-glove. It was now a completely Keynesian/statist institution, and while she didn’t get a second term, she might as well have.

During his ceremonial swearing-in yesterday, here is what the Yellen in trousers and tie had to say:

When I joined the Board of Governors in 2012, unemployment was 8.2 percent. Many millions of Americans were still suffering from the ravages of the crisis. Since then, monetary policy has continued to support a full recovery in labor markets and a return to our inflation target; we have made great progress in moving much closer to those statutory objectives. In addition, the financial system is incomparably stronger and safer, with much higher capital and liquidity, better risk management, and other improvements.

Much credit for these results should go to Chairman Bernanke and Chair Yellen. I am grateful for their leadership and for their example and advice as colleagues. But there is more to the story than successful leadership. The success of our institution is really the result of the way all of us carry out our responsibilities. We approach every issue through a rigorous evaluation of the facts, theory, empirical analysis and relevant research.

Nothing could be farther from the truth. The foundation of the US economy has been battered and bruised by 30 years of central bank suffocation. And, as we will elaborate upon in Part 3, there is no better evidence than the utter collapse of the net national savings rate.

The latter measures it all: To wit, it’s the sum of household, corporate and government net savings or dissavings. Compared to an average of 11% of national income during the heyday of US economic prosperity between 1954 and 1970, it has been in steady decline—which accelerated sharply after the era of Bubble Finance incepted in 1987.

At present, the net national savings rate is barely 2%, but with the ill-timed explosion of Trumpian/GOP fiscal deficits, it is destined toward the zero bound and through to the negative side.

So there is this: An economy that does not generate net national savings can’t grow or even remain stable over the longer run. You can’t borrow from the rest of the world forever.

And that get’s us to the great stinking skunk in the woodpile. The same Keynesians at the Fed who presided over the fiasco depicted in the chart below, have now determined to embark on a crushing regime of QT (quantitative tightening) in order to reload their dry powder and insure their hold on plenary financial power when the US economy next hits the skids.

We think they are way too late. That’s why there will be financial mayhem in the years ahead.

However, by appointing Jerome Powell, Donald Trump, the bet noire of the ruling Keynesian-statist establishment, will end up bringing down the financial house of cards Washington has built over the last three decades.

At least that much the Donald will surely accomplish before he is finally shown the way to his one-way trip on the Dick Nixon Memorial Helicopter.

If we are lucky, both eventualities will materialize some time soon.

 

 

 

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No, Trump Did Not Make It Easier for Mentally Ill People to Buy Guns

In the wake of yesterday’s deadly school shooting in Florida, President Donald Trump tweeted that there were signs that alleged shooter Nikolas Cruz was “mentally disturbed.” Trump encouraged people to report bad behavior to authorities.

In response, a Twitter and media parade of people spouted misleading claims about an Obama-era regulation that Trump and Congress rolled back:

None of this is a remotely accurate description of what happened. A year ago, Congress and Trump eliminated a proposed rule that would have included in the federal government gun background database people who received disability payments from Social Security and received assistance to manage their benefits due to mental impairments.

This is a regulation that potentially deprived between 75,000 to 80,000 people of a right based not on what they had done but on the basis of being classified by the government in a certain way. The fact that these people may have these impairments did not inherently mean that they were dangerous to themselves or others and needed to be kept away from guns.

As I noted when the regulation was repealed last March, this rule violated not just the Second Amendment but the Fourth, because it deprived the affected people of a right without due process. The government does have the power to restrict and even deny gun ownership to people, but it has to show that these people have engaged in behavior that makes weapons dangerous in their hands.

That’s why the regulation was opposed not just by National Rifle Association (NRA) but by several mental health and disability groups and by the American Civil Liberties Union. Pundits largely ignored the latter groups’ opposition to the rule, preferring to play up the power of the NRA and their influence on Republicans to turn the issue into a partisan fight.

It was hackery then, and it is still hackery today. It’s shameful to ignore the serious constitutional problems of this poorly conceived rule just to sow panic and implicate one’s political opponents.

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Lawmakers Should Avoid Rush to Ramp Up Gun Confiscations: New at Reason

As the gun control discussion heats up in the wake of the Florida school shooting, California’s efforts provide a cautionary lesson for the rest of the country.

Steven Greenhut writes:

An Associated Press report last week sounded rather shocking. State authorities conducted a raid in Los Angeles, where they “seized more than two dozen guns and thousands of rounds of ammunition” from a man who had reportedly been barred from owning firearms. Predictably, California Attorney General Xavier Becerra (D) bemoaned a lack of funding and a long backlog in the state’s ability to collect such weapons.

“The thousands of weapons we’ve confiscated over the years essentially represent the low-hanging fruit,” Becerra said. Expect a push for more power and resources for the state Department of Justice, even though its gun-confiscation system may be fraught with error. Gun-rights groups say 35 percent to 60 percent of the people on the Armed Prohibited Persons System shouldn’t be on the list.

The latest news says much about the perils of gun registration (or our system that is not called registration, but is awfully close to it), about the failure of agencies to maintain updated lists and protect our liberties, and about the counterproductive approach from the people we most expect to protect our gun rights. On the last point, I’m referring to California Republicans.

View this article.

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Average American Paycheck Rises $131 After Trump Tax Cut

Americans’ monthly paychecks increased by an average of $130.76 in February thanks to the new 2018 tax plan changes, according to a new LendEDU survey, with a majority of respondents saying they will use the extra income to pay down credit card debt.

As a result of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017, the federal tax withholding tables changed on Jan. 11, 2018. The Treasury estimated that 90% of Americans who get a paycheck are likely to see more in take-home pay as a result. Sure enough, most Americans started to see the impact of the new tax plan in their paychecks starting on Feb. 1.

To quantify the financial impact of these changes, LendEdu conducted an 11-question survey of 1,000 Americans who reported that their take-home paychecks have increased as a result of the tax plan changes.

Here are the survey highlights:

  • Respondent reported a $130.76 increase in their average monthly paycheck after tax cuts
    • Take-home pay after taxes increased by 3.5% on average
  • 35.7% of respondents are using the tax savings to pay down debt, 9.9% of respondents are increasing luxury spending
    • 62% of respondents will pay down credit card debt
  • 12.8% of respondents are increasing retirement savings, of those 47.66% believe that they will be able to retire sooner.
  • 55.3% of respondents are more confident in their financial futures as a result of the tax plan changes
  • 60.7% of respondents believe that the 2018 tax plan will strengthen economy
  • 50.3% of respondents reported a more positive sentiment towards President Trump

The most interesting finding in the survey is “How Are Americans Using Tax Savings.”

LendEdu asked respondents to best describe how they are going to spend their additional take-home pay. As the most common answer, 35.7% of respondents said they are going to use their extra take-home to pay down debt faster. 19% of respondents are going to be spending as usual and will be letting the additional money collect in their bank accounts. Additionally, 12.8% of respondents are going to use the additional money to save more for retirement while 9.9% of respondents are going to use the additional money on life’s day-to-day luxuries.

As a follow up, LendEdu wanted to find out what types of debt Americans will be paying down. Respondents were asked to select all that apply. The survey found that 62.18% of respondents will be paying down credit card debt. Another priority for 28.57% of respondents will be paying down auto loan debt. With the additional take-home pay, 25.77% of respondents will be paying down student loan debt. And 21.57% of respondents will be paying down personal loans with the additional money.

In light of the deplorable public pension picture, it was good to learn that saving for retirement is on the minds of many Americans. Many of the Americans surveyed will be using the tax savings to save more for retirement. According to one survey question, 47.66% of those respondents believe that they will be able to retire sooner as a result of the additional take-home pay, and 13.28 percent of those respondents are unsure.  Good luck with that.

Another question asked respondents to best describe their financial confidence as a result of the 2018 tax plan changes. 55.3% said they are more confident in their financial futures as a result of the 2018 tax plan changes. Meanwhile, 60.7% said that they believe the 2018 tax plan changes will strengthen the economy.

It is also worth noting that the fastest way to shape America’s ideological beliefs is through their wallets: the survey found that the slight majority (50.3 percent) of respondents view President Trump in a more positive light as a result of the tax plan changes. Meanwhile, 43.4% of our respondents reported that their sentiment has not changed and 6.3 percent of respondents reported that their sentiment has become more negative as a result of the tax plan changes.

Lastly, in Question 11, respondents were asked to best describe their feelings about the 2018 tax plan changes. Here, 70% of the respondents described their feeling as happy, reporting either “very happy” or “somewhat happy” about the changes. Meanwhile, 23.5% of the respondents – whether their income had gone up or not – said they are indifferent and 6.5% could be categorized as unhappy about the tax plan changes despite additional take-home pay in their paychecks.

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Insanity Fatigue

Oligarchs, though they speak of deconstructing the administrative state, actually increase deficits and the size and power of law enforcement and the military to protect their global business interests and ensure domestic social control. The parts of the state that serve the common good wither in the name of deregulation and austerity. The parts that promote the oligarchs’ power expand in the name of national security, economic growth and law and order.

– Chris Hedges, The Deadly Rule of the Oligarchs

If you’ve been checking in with this site in recent days, you may have wondered if I was on vacation. I’m not. Rather, I’ve been suffering from a bit of sluggishness and writers block, and it wasn’t until I took some time to think about why earlier this morning that I was able to determine the cause of my affliction. The best way to describe what I’ve been dealing with in recent days is insanity fatigue.

It’s not as if there’s been a lack of news or things to talk about. There’s plenty. The problem is I’ve once again become exhausted and overwhelmed by the superficial stupidity and narcissism of our national political dialogue. I first expressed this sentiment about a year ago in the piece, Lost in the Political Wilderness, and the feeling came back in spades in recent days.

It’s been a year since I wrote that post and not much has changed. The political conversation, if you can call it that, remains largely polarized between two groups primarily focused on whether they support Trump or swear he’s Putin’s devilish puppet. One side insists he’s going to Make America Great Again, while the other thinks everything was perfectly fine before his election, and all will be well as long as we can rid ourselves of his presence. Meanwhile, the oligarch class continues to loot and pillage at will.

continue reading

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White House Threatens Veto Of ‘Bipartisan’ Immigration Deal

The Trump administration has threatened to veto a so-called ‘bipartisan’ immigration bill – offered from Chuck Schumer and Susan Collins – that was being primed for a vote as soon as this afternoon.

The bill reportedly does not meet President Trump’s demands and White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said in a statement that:

“If the president were presented with an enrolled bill that includes the amendment, his advisors would recommend that he veto it.”

As The Hill reports, the bipartisan plan would shield 1.8 million young immigrants living illegally in the U.S., known as “Dreamers,” from deportation and provide $25 billion for border security measures – both elements of the White House’s immigration plan.

But the proposal does not go as far as the White House would like in curbing family-based immigration.

It would block Dreamers from sponsoring parents who knowingly brought them illegally into the country, but would not make broader changes to the family visa system demanded by Trump and his GOP allies in the House.

The White House said it “would undermine the safety and security of American families and impede economic growth for American workers” and result in “a flood of new illegal immigration in the coming months.”

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer of New York called President Donald Trump “obstinate” and said the president “has stood in the way of every single proposal that has had a chance of becoming law.” A group of Democratic and Republican senators agreed on the proposal Wednesday after weeks of negotiations.

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Commodity Traders Blame “Data Overload” For Rash Of Fund Closures

Longtime commodity investors are growing increasingly perplexed by movements in contemporary commodity markets, which just don’t seem to follow the same trading patterns they once did. This attitude was perhaps best expressed recently by Hugh Hendry, who decried “wrong” markets when he shuttered his Eclectica hedge fund in September after 15 years…

And just last month, when the latest victim of this disturbing trend, Jamison Capital founder Stephen Jamison, decided to throw in the towel and shutter his nearly $1.5 billion macro commodity fund and convert his assets to a family office…joining a group that includes Texas tycoon T. Boone Pickens, one of the most famous commodity traders to ever do it.

It won’t be the first commodity/macro fund to admit defeat in a market in which nothing makes sense. The closure of Jamison, one of the largest commodity-focused hedge funds, comes after several other big names have closed shop in recent months. They include hedge fund manager Andy Hall, who closed his Astenbeck Capital Management last summer, and Texas tycoon T. Boone Pickens, who said this month that he was closing his fund, in part due to declining health.

The irony is, many of these closures happened before the recent spurt higher in global commodities, which recently clocked their longest win streak in history, might do something to help results this quarter.
 

Global

As we’ve explained before, traders operating in the Information Age of commodity trading insist that the old strategies don’t work anymore because – as one trader put it – “everything is transparent, everybody knows everything and has access to information.”

That is, there’s so much data available from various services – and so many sophisticated algorithmic traders who can parse these massive data sets – that many of the arbitrage opportunities that commodity trading shops relied on simply no longer exist, leaving middlemen like Nobel Group in a difficult position because the tiny margins upon which they rely for profits has essentially vanished, having been front-run out of existence.

Today, Reuters returned to the theme of commodity hedge funds throwing in the towel – and coincidentally – managers who have operated in the space for decades blame these same factors for forcing them to reluctantly throw in the towel: Namely, algorithmic trading.

Just ask veteran commodity fund manager Anthony Ward. Ward was once so highly regarded for his cocoa trading prowess that he earned the nickname “chocfinger”. But after four decades, Ward has found that computer-driven trading is distorting prices to such a degree that the fundamental analysis he once relied on to predict how prices would react to massive harvests, or droughts, or declining demand aren’t as reliable as they once were.

Ward said he first realized that “the days of traditional commodity investors doing well from taking positions based on fundamentals such as supply and demand may be numbered” in January 2016, when his firm ended up badly wrongfooted when cocoa prices slid based off weak factory data out of China triggered algos that were programmed to respond to signs of weakening demand…

…The problem with this, from a fundamental standpoint, is that China’s cocoa consumption is relatively inconsequential for the global market. Algorithms just sold cocoa along with a basket of commodities. As we repeatedly noted around that time, cross-asset correlations had climbed to unprecedented levels as algorithms left their imprimatur on the broader market…

Meanwhile, the algorithms ignored obscure weather patterns that indicated there would be a “hot, harmattan wind from the Sahara desert” bolstering the crop yields in Ghana and the Ivory Coast,” Reuters said.

Commodities

After all, reading a headline about Chinese factory production is easy for an algorithm. But try explaining to an algorithm what a “harmattan wind” is and…well…we imagine you get the idea…

Commodity markets fell across the board that month after weak factory data in China raised fears of lower demand from the world’s top consumer of raw materials.

Ward blamed the slide in cocoa on what he regarded as misplaced selling by computer-driven funds reacting to the Chinese data, given China has scant impact on the cocoa market.

“The actual fundamentals in cocoa were extraordinarily bullish in January 2016. We were forecasting the largest harmattan in history, which is exactly what happened,” he said.

His prediction that a hot, harmattan wind from the Sahara desert would hit harvests in Ivory Coast and Ghana and drive cocoa prices higher did come to pass – but not before the fund had been forced to cut its losses when the market slumped.

At the end of 2017, Ward closed the CC+ hedge fund that had invested in cocoa and coffee markets for years.

Also in 2016, Michael Farmer, founding partner of the Red Kite fund, which specializes in copper, also blamed HFT and algorithms for creating an “unfair advantage” for themselves and their ilk. CME Group found during a recent study that algorithmic trading is responsible for about half of trading volume in agricultural products, and some 58% in energy contracts.

At the same time, data from industry tracker Hedge Fund Research shows the average hedge fund returned 8.64% in 2017 but commodity funds barely broke even with an average return of a paltry 0.43%.

In the past, Ward estimated that automated trading would distort the market by 10% to 15% from prices justified by fundamentals – which he said was irritating but often manageable – it can now reach 25% to 30%.

CME

Traders like Farmer have also blamed exchanges’ decision to offer HFT shops special co-location services for giving super-computers a distinct advantage, essentially allowing them to see a picture of the market that is milliseconds removed from what even less-powerful, or less advantageously placed, computers might see.

Unsurprisingly, the fund managers at some of these systematic funds are unapologetic about the impact on the market that their funds are having.

“I don’t feel too sorry (for traditional fund managers),” said Anthony Lawler, co-head of GAM Systematic, the quantitative part of Swiss money manager GAM Holding, which had assets under management (AUM) of 148.4 billion Swiss francs ($158 billion) at the end of September.

“Information, which used to be expensive, difficult to get, not easily shared, is now ubiquitous. It’s truly mind-boggling the depth of data available,” Lawler said.

“That means it’s much more difficult to have an information edge and advantage to the player who can digest and analyze the data the quickest.”

GAM Systematic, which had $4.3 billion of assets at the end of September, regards commodities as one of many markets it monitors for opportunities by crunching data such as weather forecasts and shipping data that shows how full a vessel is.

They added that great human traders can still win by capitalizing on machines’ shortsightedness…

“If you’re a great discretionary trader, then sit on the sidelines and wait for those missteps … I would be super happy if that trader is successfully picking off some of these missteps,” said Lawler.

But in today’s world of super-fast computers, these traders dismiss fundamental analysis as essentially “the work of a historian”.

“The truth is fundamental analysis is effectively the work of a historian, seeking to provide explanation for what has already occurred,” he said.

Meanwhile, traders also blamed banks like once-legendary commodity broker Goldman Sachs for withdrawing from the market, allowing machines to play a larger role.

Total global commodity assets under management more than halved from 2012 to 2015 to under $200 billion, though the total has since recovered to just over $300 billion, according to Barclays.

Some claim this has created a feedback loop of sorts, making markets less liquid and more prone to choppy moves that algorithms can more easily capitalize on. Other traders have learned to survive by essentially pivoting from trading commodities for speculative purposes to running their own mines.

“Seven years ago we started diversifying our business operations,” said Eibl. He now operates a merchant business in metals with a turnover of more than $1 billion a year, runs tungsten and tin mines in Africa and Asia and is soon to launch a metals-backed crypto-currency.

But as last week’s “volocaust” demonstrated, that long-awaited opportunity to capitalize on the failures of their machine rivals might just be upon us, as traders largely blamed machines for exacerbating the selloff.

As one trader who called the selloff put it, this is just an appetizer…

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Baltimore Mulls Law to Banish Soda From Kids Menus

Kids drinking sodaThe City of Baltimore is concerned that you’re ordering too many sodas for your children while out on the town. To remedy this problem, the city council is considering a bill that would take sodas off the kids menu, and fine restaurant operators who don’t comply.

On Tuesday, the imaginatively titled “Healthy Beverages for Children’s Meals” bill received unanimous approval from a Baltimore city council committee. The bill would require that any single-priced meal item “primarily intended for consumption by children” be offered only with water, milk, or 100 percent fruit juice. As an added precaution, the fruit juice could only be offered in 8 oz. servings.

“This bill would make the healthy choice the easy choice. It is a powerful tool to help our residents get healthy and stay healthy,” said Baltimore City Health Commissioner Dr. Leana Wen in a statement supporting the legislation.

The bill is the brainchild of advocacy group Sugar Free Kids Maryland, which has sponsored such hard-hitting reforms as establishing healthy snack quotas in various county-owned vending machines, and reducing the amount of non-educational screen time children have in childcare centers.

Violators of the healthy drinks legislation would receive an environmental citation, and would be subject to civil penalties laid out in Baltimore’s health code.

The bill is part of a growing trend of petty restrictions and mandates intended to nudge diners into making healthier, environmentally friendly choices, and threatening to penalize the businesses that would make it too easy for them to do otherwise.

This includes straw-on-request laws—passed by several cities in California, and being actively considered by the state legislature—where restaurant patrons would have to ask for a straw before they could legally be given one. Something similar can be said for mandated calorie counts on menus for chain restaurants. Six states have passed this “nutritional transparency” measure so far, along with a number of cities and counties.

Proponents of this healthy drinks legislation are quick to stress that parents would still be able to order a soda for their children should they wish.

“This bill will help make the healthier choice—water, milk, or 100 percent juice—easier for parents to make, while protecting their freedom to choose what they prefer for their children,” said Hillary Caron of the Center for Science in the Public Interest.

What the bill doesn’t protect is the freedom of businesses to offer goods and services in combinations their customers appreciate. As laws like these multiply, restaruants will have to spend more time servicing the government’s preferences and not those of their patrons.

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Dollar Jumps On Reports Of Uber-Dove Heading To BoJ

The Dollar Index is kneejerking higher in the last few minutes following headlines from Nikkei that The Bank of Japan is considering nominating uber-dove Masazumi Wakatabe to a key leadership position.

JPY immediately jerked lower as Wakatabe is seen as advocating bolder monetary easing. As Nikkei reports,

The potential choice of Wakatabe, a longtime proponent of aggressive easing, as deputy governor comes amid speculation that the central bank is looking to start normalizing policy.

Wakatabe has argued for raising the BOJ’s annual pace of Japanese government bond purchases from the current 80 trillion yen ($750 billion) to 90 trillion yen and broadening the range of assets the bank buys.

“There needs to be easing strong enough to absorb the negative impact of the consumption tax hike [planned for October 2019] and lift inflation to 2%,” he told The Nikkei in December.

via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/2obqsbU Tyler Durden