Greek Stocks Soar To Longest Winning Streak Since ’99 (Despite Unconstitutional Bailout Demands)

The Greek stock market is up 12 days in a row – the longest streak since 1999 – with its 25% gains amon the world's best in 2017 following the bailout decision.

 

The last time Greek stocks were this overbought was September 1999 – which was followed by a 77% decline…

 

Furthermore, Greek bond yields have collapsed to post-crisis lows in the last weeks as everyone and their pet rabbit is sure the bailout is a done deal..

 

There's just one thing… Greece's highest court just decided that the pension cuts demanded by the creditors to secure the bailout are unconstitutional! As KeepTalkingGreece reports,

The Plenary of the State Audit Council has ruled that the cuts to main and supplementary pensions to be implemented in 2019 are against the Constitution and contravene the European Convention of Human Rights. Pension cuts are creditors’ top favorite austerity measure.

 

The pension cuts the government and its creditors have agreed on in the Supplementary Memorandum of Understanding on May 2 2017 will affect more than one million Greek pensioners who will see further cuts up to 18% in their main and the supplementary pensions respectively. The pensioners will suffer losses from 45 to 350 euros per month.The total annual loss could reach 3,000 euros, that is a loss of up to 2.5 to 3 monthly pensions per year.

 

Exempted from the cuts are neither low-pensions nor widow or invalidity pensions.

 

It will be the fourth or fifth cut in pensions since 2010 when the International Monetary Fund arrived in the country together with the first bailout.

 

The State Audit Council council also decided that the fiscal bill containing the pension cuts contravenes the Greek legislation as it has been tabled to the audit council without a relevant actuarial study.

 

Government sources told media that the decision of the State Audit Council is not binding and they refereed to a decision that the Council of State should take on the issue.

The Supplementary Memorandum of Understanding, a mixture of outstanding prior actions the government signed in the third bailout of 2015 and additional austerity measures for 2019-2020 is due to be voted in the Parliament on May 18.

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Is Canada The Next Hot Money Victim?

Authored by John Rubino via DollarCollapse.com,

One of the interesting things about the Great Recession was how Canada’s financial system sailed through it largely unscathed. Its banks were regulated wisely and behaved prudently, its citizens avoided the extreme stupidity of their credit-addicted neighbors to the south, and its government refrained from doubling its debt every eight years. It certainly looked like Canadians were smarter – or at least more emotionally mature – than we were.

But instead of Americans learning from Canada, Canadians appear to have concluded that we had it right after all. In the decade since the global financial system’s last near-death experience, Canadians have started to behave like turbo-charged Americans. A few recent examples:

Canadians Are Buying A Record Number Of New Cars, With A Record Amount Of Financing

(Better Dwelling) – Sales of new motor vehicles across Canada rose to an all-time record for February.

 

 

Average Sale Price For New Vehicles Rises

 

Consumers are purchasing more expensive vehicles too. Over $5 billion was spent on new vehicles for the month, bringing the average to $40,100 – up 3.4% from the same time last year.

 

 

Consumers Are Buying “More Car Than They Can Afford”

 

The uptick in average sale price is due to longer financing terms for buyers. According to the Financial Consumer Agency of Canada (FCAC), Canadians are “increasingly purchasing more car that they can afford,” due to longer financing becoming fashionable. The agency notes that average leases have crept up 2 months, every year since 2010. According to the Bank of Canada (BoC), the average loan was 74 months as of 2015. Longer terms bring down monthly payments, but increases the total cost of the loan.

 

The Rise Of Non-Prime Lending In The Auto Industry

 

The right to debt seems to be a topic all Canadians are embracing, and the auto sector is no different. The BoC has estimated that 25% of borrowers are non-prime, which in case you didn’t know is Canadian-English for “sub-prime.” These buyers generally have a FICO score below 670, and face predatory loans with up to 25% interest. This makes it difficult to build positive equity on car loans.

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Over half of Canadians are $200 or less away from not being able to pay bills

(Global News) – More than half of Canadians are living within $200 per month of not being able to pay all their bills or meet their debt obligations, according to a recent Ipsos survey conducted on behalf of accounting firm MNP.

“With such a small amount of wiggle room, any kind of unanticipated hardship, such as a job loss or even a car repair, could send an already struggling family into financial despair,” said Grant Bazian, president of MNP’s personal insolvency practice, which is one of the largest in Canada.

 

For 10 per cent of Canadians, the margin of error when it comes to household finances is even thinner, at $100 or less.

 

But those with anything at all left at the end of the month were in better shape than many: A whopping 31 per cent of respondents said they already don’t make enough to meet all their financial obligations.

Many Canadians don’t understand how interest rates work

 

Another hair-raising finding from the survey: Roughly 60 per cent said they don’t have a firm grasp of how interest rates affect debt repayments.

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Toronto Real Estate Speed-Dating Event Helps Strangers Buy Houses Together

(Huffington Post) – The Toronto real estate scene is nothing short of nuts, as prospective homebuyers with jobs and tens of thousands of dollars in the bank are still getting shut out the red-hot market.

 

Many buyers are pooling their financial resources to enter the market, and co-ownership is becoming increasingly popular.

 

Toronto realtor Lesli Gaynor, who has a background in social work, has launched GoCo, a service dedicated to helping people find homes they can afford in Toronto through co-ownership.

 

“I sort of came to it through watching people be shut out of this market for all kinds of reasons — but mostly financial,” she told HuffPost Canada in an interview.

 

She primarily works on helping people find others to purchase property they actually want to share and live in, though not necessarily as roommates (i.e., not sharing a bathroom and kitchen).

 

To connect potential co-homebuyers, Gaynor held a “speed-dating” event called “C-Harmony: Creating Co-operative Connections” at a Toronto pub on Thursday. About two dozen people attended, according to the Toronto Star.

 

Matt Michaels, who attended the event, told Global News he would love to own a home in the High Park or Roncesvalles areas, and is “open to the idea of owning a home with like-minded people.”

 

“As a 35 year-old who doesn’t have $400,000 for a down payment right now, it’s increasingly unlikely I would be able to do that on my own,” he said.

 

Buying with strangers is a feasible idea, but it just “needs to be normalized,” says Gaynor. She pointed to Meridian Credit Union’s recent creation of a friends and family mortgage, and said many lawyers are adapting to write covenants that protect both parties.

 

“It’s going to catch on, it’s just a matter of normalizing it.”

Some thoughts

Yep, this is both crazy and familiar.

In one sense Canada is just the latest victim of global hot money flows. Rich people in unstable countries like China or Russia are always looking for safe places to stash what they’ve earned or stolen. And their wealth in the aggregate dwarfs the capacity of a Brazil or a Switzerland to absorb it. So when it really starts flowing it distorts the target market in ways that seem like fun for the recipients at first but eventually turn into a nightmare.

Now it’s Canada’s turn, as the fortunes created during China’s post-2008 credit binge flee in anticipation of the inevitable bust. Much of that cash is flowing into Vancouver and Toronto real estate, leading to the insanity chronicled above and much, much more.

Canadian homeowners find themselves becoming rich beyond their wildest dreams and spend accordingly while renters find themselves priced out of the market for shelter, devoting an ever-larger share of their income to rent and sinking deeper into financial insecurity. Those are the people who are one emergency away from bankruptcy.

This divergence between the haves and have-nots begets all kinds of societal ills, from financial speculation to political upheaval. And – so far at least – the targets of hot money flows have yet to figure out a solution. The money pours in, screws everything up, then pours out, causing a crisis.

If anyone deserves better, it’s our likable northern neighbors. But hot money, like the rest of life, is not fair.

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White House Faces The Post-Comey Fallout (With No Sean Spicer) – Live Press Conference

This should be fun. With Sean Spicer hiding (at the Pentagon through Friday to fulfill his obligations as a member of the U.S. Navy reserve), Principal Deputy Press Secretary Sarah Sanders will stand in to face the music…

 

Live Feed…

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Deplorable 10Y Auction: Gaping Tail, Sliding Bid-To-Cover, Dropping Indirects; Sellers Pounce

Yesterday’s 3 Year auction was mediocre at best. Today’s sale of $23 billion in 10Y paper was terrible.

Today’s auction, unlike last month’s super-strong sale of 10Y paper, was one of the worst auctions in recent history, first printing at a 2.40% yield, tailing the When Issued 2.32% by 1.8 bps, the biggest tail since February’s 1.9bps. The yield was higher than April’s 2.332% but lower than the 2.68% from March.

The Bid to cover was ugly too, sliding to 2.33 from 2.48 in April, and below the 2.43 6 Month average. It was also the lowest since February. Total bids of $61.2b for $30.6b in notes sold vs $49.7b in bids for $20.2b in notes sold at last auction.

Completing the trifecta of ugliness, Indirect Bidder took down just 60.7%, below last auction’s 65.2 and also below the 62.8 6 month average. Directs were in line with April at 5.1%, which left 34.2% to Dealers, the highest Dealer take down of 2017.

Moments after the ugly auction, TSY futs were knocked to 124-27 session lows; 10Y yields higher by ~0.5bp on the day. And while today’s trading session has been rather quiet, futures volumes rose following auction results with ~14k trading over 1-minute period, largest volume spike of the session, onto 124-27 lows

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After Comey Firing, Congress Gives Up on Checks and Balances

The Constitution calls for three separate and coequal branches of government, each operating independently of each other, and each with their own powers—and limitations. But in recent years, under both Republicans and Democrats, the federal government has acted more like an entity made of just two branches, or possibly two and a half. Congress has abdicated much of its responsibility for legislating, descending into petty dysfunction when power is divided and acting more like a subservient arm of the executive when one party controls both the White House and the Capitol.

One result is that the executive branch has grown stronger, ruling by regulations and executive orders rather than laws debated and passed by those elected to do so. Another is that the system of checks and balances designed to provide oversight and accountability to all three branches has effectively lost one of its checks, leaving the entire system in a precarious state of imbalance. That imbalance is on display today in the wake of President Trump’s highly suspicious firing of FBI Director James Comey.

Under Trump, Republicans have resisted providing meaningful oversight of the executive branch. Consider Rep. Jason Chaffetz, the Republican head of the House Oversight Committee.

A month before last year’s presidential election, when most observers expected Hillary Clinton to win the presidency, he announced that he had two years of investigations already in the pipeline.

Yet once Trump was elected, Chaffetz’s desire to investigate the White House mysteriously vanished. At the end of January, Chaffetz released a 43-point list of issues he planned to investigate, not one of which related to Trump. The following month, Chaffetz said that his committee would not investigate Trump adviser Michael Flynn, who resigned as Trump’s national security adviser amid questions about contacts with Russian officials. In April, he rather unexpectedly announced that he would not run for reelection in 2018, and would be taking immediate medical leave.

Chaffetz, a rising star in the Republican party who looked forward to years of oversight of a Hillary Clinton administration, had lost his appetite for the job. He did, however, seem to regain that appetite briefly last week when he announced that he would investigate presidential pension payments—made to President Barack Obama.

So it is hardly surprising that following the firing of FBI Director James Comey, which Trump justified with reasoning that is contradictory and difficult to believe, Mitch McConnell, the top Republican in the Senate, responded by dismissing calls for a special prosecutor to investigate the president. A few Republicans, including Rep. Justin Amash and Sen. John McCain, had expressed support for an outside investigation, but McConnell rejected the idea. “Today we’ll no doubt hear calls for a new investigation,” he said in a speech this morning, “which can only serve to impede the current work being done.”

McConnell’s statement is not only cynical. It is detrimental to his own institution, the Senate, and to the American system of government. It does not portend a constitutional crisis, yet. But it does suggest a willingness to continue to slouch into constitutional weakness and dysfunction.

McConnell is effectively arguing that an independent investigation should not be pursued because it would bog down the legislative agenda of President Trump and the Republican party. It is an argument that Congress should not play its constitutional role, but should instead function as a partisan lackey operation for the executive branch. That is a worrying view under any president. Under a self-dealing president with sketchy affiliations such as Trump, it is even more dangerous.

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Improved Health Bill: New at Reason

John Stossel has his own plan to reform healthcare.

He writes:

The House repealed Obamacare!

OK, they didn’t really—but they passed a bill that repeals some bad parts of it, like the individual mandate tax, medicine cabinet tax, flexible spending account tax and health savings account withdrawal tax. Good.

Now the Senate will create its own bill and ask the Congressional Budget Office if the House bill will save money.

But Obamacare was so bad, I fear these changes are just Band-Aids on a collapsing system. Instead, the Senate should pass my seven-point plan.

1. Repeal Obamacare, all of it.

View this article.

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Frustration with Political Correctness Was a Huge Predictor of Whether You Voted for Trump

TrumpWas Donald Trump elected to the presidency in part because of a backlash against political-correctness-run-amok? Survey says yes.

I have previously suggested that anger about P.C.-sensitivity and perceived liberal overreach was a strong motivating factor among Trump voters—many of them have told me so, in fact. And survey data from ClearThinking.org clearly supports this conclusion.

According to the website—the project of mathematician Spencer Greenberg—believing “there is too much political correctness in this country” was the second most reliable predictor of whether a given person intended to vote for Trump. The only better predictor was party affiliation: despite an abnormal campaign featuring an abnormal candidate, it remained the case that the overwhelming majority of Republicans voted for the Republican candidate, and the overwhelming majority of Democrats voted for the Democratic candidate.

But being anti-P.C. correlated more strongly with being pro-Trump than just about anything else: it beat out social conservatism, protectionism, and anti-immigration as predictive tendencies.

“Nowadays, as the right sees it, the left has won the culture war and controls the media, the universities, Hollywood and the education of everyone’s children,” Jonathan Haidt, a psychologist at New York University, told Politico in the recent article that made me aware of Greenberg’s survey data. “Many of them think that they are the victims, they are fighting back against powerful and oppressive forces, and their animosities are related to that worldview.”

It’s always tempting to make too much of this information, and the truth remains that the election was so close—just 100,000 votes across three states made the difference—a number of factors could all share some responsibility for the outcome. Whenever anyone says this is why Trump won, they are often telling only part of the story. That’s as true for P.C.-backlash as it is for the James Comey letter.

Nor does this data validate the claim that political correctness is a huge problem, or a problem unique to the left. Just because Trump voters feel like they are being suffocated by liberal political correctness does not make it true.

But it does suggest that playing directly into white, working class America’s persecution complex is a terrible strategy for the #Resistance. When progressives shout down conservative speakers and attack their defenders, when they launch social media witch hunts against dissenters, and when their advocacy organizations compromise basic liberal principles in order to punish members of the out-group, they give ammunition to people who believe—quite wrongly—that Trump is a brave truth-teller whose tell-it-like-it-is attitude maintains a sort of safe space for the un-woke.

For more on this subject, read my response to Jacob T. Levy, who is criical of the notion that anti-P.C. sentiments mattered a great deal in the 2016 election.

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Caught On Video: Hockey-Playing Putin Reacts To Comey Termination

In a rare appearance of the Russian president in his natural sporting habitat, CBS’ caught up with Russian President Putin rink side and asked him about the firing of former Director Comey.  Here is a transcript of the conversation:

Palmer: How will the firing of James Comey affect US-Russia relations?

Putin: There will no effect. Your question, please don’t get mad, is silly. We have nothing to do with that. President Trump is acting in according with his competence, and in acordance with his law and constitution. And what about us? Why us? You see I am going to play hockey with the hockey fans. And I invite you to do the same.”

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Regaled in Hockey Attire, Vladimir Putin Comments on the Firing of James Comey

Accosted by a CBS reporter in a tunnel on his way to play a friendly game of hockey, Vladimir Putin commented on the James Comey firing, saying Trump ‘acting in accordance with his competence, in accordance with his law and Constitution.’

He then invited the elderly female reporter from CBS to a game of hockey.

“You see, I am going to play hockey with the hockey fans. And I invite you to do the same,” Putin said.

There you have it. Our expert on American law has spoken on the matter. Consider this case closed.
Content originally published at iBankCoin.com

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Who Will Replace Comey: Here Are Seven Possible Names

While Democrats are demanding a non-political appointee (like asking for a virgin in a whorehouse), speculation has already begun over who will replace Comey as FBI Director…

As Axios reports, here are a few possible replacements…

Rudy Giuliani

The former New York mayor and U.S. attorney is reportedly on Trump's shortlist to replace Comey. A source close to Trump confirmed to NY Mag's Olivia Nuzzi that Giuliani is being considered for FBI director. However, before that tip, Giuliani told Nuzzi and The Atlantic's Rosie Gray: "I am not. I'm not a candidate for FBI director. The president's not gonna ask me, and I'm not gonna be FBI director."

Giuliani was in D.C. last night, having drinks at Trump International Hotel. When asked if he'll be meeting with the president today, he said, "If I am, I wouldn't say."

Chris Christie

The New Jersey governor is not without controversies of his own, but he was one of the first Republicans to endorse Trump in 2016. Earlier this year, Trump appointed Christie to lead his opioid and drug abuse commission.

Andrew McCabe

McCabe is currently serving as the acting FBI director in Comey's absence. He has been Comey's deputy since Feb. 2016 and has worked on various issues like interrogation, counterterrorism, and national security. His biggest setback: His close ties to Comey and his participation in the Russia investigation and Clinton email investigation, which was cited as the reason for Comey's termination.

Mike Rogers

He's a former FBI agent and the former Republican House Intelligence Committee chairman. Before Comey's confirmation in 2013, Rogers was the FBI Agents Association's top recommendation to serve as FBI director. His name could resurface in discussions about Comey's replacement.

Ken Wainstein

Another favorite was Wainstein, who's got a lot of credentials:

  • Former head of the Justice Department's National Security Division
  • Former general counsel of the FBI
  • Once served as the chief federal prosecutor in D.C. when he served in the Justice Department
  • Also served as the director of the Executive Office of U.S. Attorneys
  • Served as former FBI director Robert Mueller's chief of staff
  • During the May 6 Senate hearing on the Russia investigation, he acted as counsel to former Director of National Intelligence James Clapper.

Ray Kelly

Another New Yorker, he's the former commissioner of the NYPD and he was considered for the FBI Director role under Bill Clinton in 1993. Although he didn't get the job, Kelly was selected as Under Secretary for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence at Treasury and commissioner of the U.S. Customs Service for the Clinton administration.

Trey Gowdy

The South Carolina Republican served on the Trump transition team's executive committee. One thing Trump will surely find appealing: Gowdy led House committee investigation of Clinton's actions surrounding the deaths of four Americans in Benghazi when she was Secretary of State. He openly criticized Comey for his decision not to prosecute Clinton over the emails.

*  *  *

Meanwhile, as The Hil reports, potential candidates to serve as interim FBI director are reportedly being interviewed Wednesday by Attorney General Jeff Sessions and Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein. CNN reported Wednesday that Deputy FBI Director Andrew McCabe is one of those being interviewed, according to a Justice Department official, following the shocking firing of James Comey on Tuesday evening. McCabe is currently serving as acting FBI director.

 According to a White House Official, there are four candidates for interim head of the FBI…

  • ACTING DIRECTOR ANDREW MCCABE,
  • ASSISTANT DIRECTOR PAUL ABBATE,
  • CHICAGO AGENT MICHAEL J. ANDERSON,
  • RICHMOND VA AGENT ADAM LEE

An announcement about who will serve as interim FBI director is expected to come later Wednesday or Thursday.

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