Gold “Speculation” Drops To Record Low

While the last two days of relative excitement in the precious metals are noteworthy in their bucking-the-trend of recent months, there is perhaps a much more critical ‘trend’ that may finally allow the demand for physical gold to peer through the veneer of synthetic paper pricing. As JPMorgan notes, speculative positions (defined CFTC net longs minus shorts) have dropped to record lows in the last few weeks. With ETF gold holdings back below ‘Lehman’ levels and gold coin sales elevated, perhaps the Indian government’s (and most of the Western world’s Feds) hope for the death of the precious metals market is greatly exaggerated…

 

Gold Spec positions at record lows…

 

“Paper” Gold ETF Holdings at pre-Lehman crisis levels…

 

As “physical” Gold coin sales are on the rise again…

 

Charts: JPMorgan


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/o8lQe_C-ZAo/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Been in bed sick for nearly five days, BUT… today, I finally feel well enough to hit the gym again. Bring on 2014!

@hooper_fit

Been in bed sick for nearly five days, BUT… today, I finally feel well enough to hit the gym again. Bring on 2014!

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Top 10 Global Risks for 2014

By EconMatters

 

With another new year upon us mortals, we thought it is time again to check out the top 10 global risks ranked by Oxford Analytica.  Not surprisingly, from a geographical perspective, a majority of the top global risks come from the Middle East region (at 40%) and the Asia-Pacific region, specifically China, and North Korea (at 30%).  U.S., Europe, and Russia round out the rest.

 

 

Source: Oxford Analytica

 

The ranking is mostly based on the potential size of global impact.  However, putting them under the lens of probability, a difference picture emerges (see graph below)

 

Chart Source: Oxford Analytica

While the economic related risks such as a sharp slowdown in China, EU disintegration, and deflation in the U.S may rein supreme in terms of global impact, the probability of them materializing is actually less likely than the geopolitical risk in the Middle East (Syria, Iran, Pakistan and Afghanistan), and Asia (China, North Korea).

 

In terms of the type of risk, seven out of the top 10 risks are geopolitical, while only three are financial or economic.  So if we look at probability from this perspective, we are more likely to see a war or regime topple before another financial crisis rippling through the world again.

 

Regarding the ‘U.S. Deflationary Trap’, the Fed said last month it would reduce its monthly asset purchases by $10 billion to $75 billion, while also expressed worries about inflation.  Meanwhile, Fed’s balance sheet has ballooned to $4 trillion, we seriously doubt the U.S. deflationary scenario after Fed’s helicoptered five years worth of QEs.

 

 

At this point, we at EconMatters believe that the Federal Reserve removing the Liquidity Punchbowl not because everything is fixed with the US economy, and we have fully recovered from the financial crisis of 2007, but because they have no other choice in the matter given the obvious asset bubbles they have created in the credit, bond and equity markets.

 

For now, the inflationary effect from QEs is mostly trapped in the stock and commodity markets (i.e. enriching the 1%), but inevitably it will manifest and spill over to the consumer side of things hitting hard on the 99%.  The removal of this liquidity, the resultant implications for financial markets, and potential future inflationary consequence of Fed’s QEs remain an under appreciated risk to the global economy in our humble opinion.

 

© EconMatters All Rights Reserved | Facebook | Twitter | Post Alert | Kindle


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/Y2_Lsy45bMw/story01.htm EconMatters

Vid: What Mexican Wrestling Tells Us About the Immigration Debate

 

“What Mexican Wrestling Tells Us About the Immigration
Debate,” produced by Paul Feine and Alex Manning. Original release
date was December 10, 2013 and original writeup is below.
Go here
for links, resources, and downloadable versions of this
video.

The professional wrestlers squaring off in Watsonville,
California are unlike any you’d find on a World Wrestling
Entertainment (WWE) bill. In one corner, there’s “el Patron de la
Migra” – a border patrol agent – symbolizing America in all its
brash, trash-talking swagger. And in the other corner there’s
Anibal Jr., a masked Mexican luchador who is a hero to the Latino
community.

“It’s Batman and the Joker. It’s Superman and kryptonite. You
have the ultimate good vs. the ultimate bad. And, for the most
part, our shows are targeted to the Latino community, so the
luchadores are the good guys,” says promoter Gabriel Ramirez.

Ramirez founded Pro Wrestling
Revolution
 (PWR), which sponsors lucha libre events for
Latino audiences all over California, five years ago.

Even though the border patrol agents are cast as villains, an
odd thing happens after the match. “After the cameras are turned
off, the lights turned off, and the show’s over, you’d be surprised
at that small little line by the locker room of Latinos who want
the autographs of la Migra,” Ramirez says.

Approximately 4 minutes. Produced by Paul Feine and Alex
Manning.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2014/01/04/vid-what-mexican-wrestling-tells-us-abou
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The NSA Responds To Bernie Sanders Whether It Spies on Congress

Yesterday, in what we characterized as an episode of a “real life magic-mushroom, banana dictatorship envisioned by George Orwell” gone full retard, Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders asked the NSA point blank whether it has “spied, or is the NSA currently spying, on members of Congress or other American elected officials?” Today, via the Bezos Post, we got the answer: “Members of Congress have the same privacy protections as all U.S. persons,” the spokesman said, which thanks to Edward Snowden, we now know for a factor are precisely none (for those still unconvinced, please see: “The Complete Guide To How The NSA Hacked Everything“). “We are reviewing Sen. Sanders’s letter now, and we will continue to work to ensure that all members of Congress, including Sen. Sanders, have information about NSA’s mission, authorities, and programs to fully inform the discharge of their duties.” In other words, of course.

More from WaPo:

The answer is telling. We already know that the NSA collects records on virtually every phone call made in the United States. That program was renewed for the 36th time on Friday. If members of Congress are treated no differently than other Americans, then the NSA likely keeps tabs on every call they make as well.

 

It’s a relief to know that Congress doesn’t get a special carve-out (they’re just like us!). But the egalitarianism of it all will likely be of little comfort to Sanders.”

Of course, it is no surprise that the US superspies spy on Congress. After all they spy on everyone. But the bigger question is if the NSA is itself, by implication, above the checks and balances of the US legislative apparatus, just who is in charge of determining the targets of the most powerful spying agency in the history of the world? In other words, who watches the watchmen? And just how is any of this even remotely legal?


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/Xbr0SUMdhoI/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Competence, Creativity, Mastery, Genius: The Essential Role Of Risk

Submitted by Charles Hugh-Smith of OfTwoMinds blog,

When risk vanishes, so does creativity.

Which characteristics lead to success? Which lead to greatness? Let's start by pondering companies that were once dominant in their respective fields: Microsoft and Nokia. Microsoft recently bought Nokia's mobile phone business, once valued at $240 billion, for $7.2 billion. Nokia's share of the global smart-phone business is around 4%. Microsoft's share of the global smart-phone software market is less than 1%, despite spending billions of dollars developing and promoting its mobile software.

Bill Gates created a powerhouse based on two principles–monopoly (getting a lock on the PC market as the default operating system) and copying and/or buying successful competitors. MSFT would then slowly increase their market share with two strategies: integrate the new software into their Windows/Office monopoly and keep adding features. In the case of web browsers, this was a successful strategy, as Microsoft's IE (Internet Explorer) overcame Netscape Navigator and its offspring, Mozilla, to dominate the browser market.

In the gaming space, Microsoft took on the established leaders with XBox, using its cash flow to develop the platform during the initial money-losing years–losses that would have doomed less well-funded companies.
Under CEO Steve Ballmer, these strategies have failed spectacularly. Microsoft has continued buying companies left and right, and spent a reported $10 billion trying to compete with Google in search. Its search engine, Bing, remains an also-ran. MSFT also spent billions attempting to dominate the mobile software space, but the results have been catastrophic: MSFT's share of mobile software has declined from around 10% to 1%.

Microsoft's tablet is also an also-ran. Its plan to leverage the XBox platform into the convergence-TV space has also come up short of expectations.

Microsoft's core monopoly continues to generate billions in profits because it is the tech equivalent of a utility: anyone who buys a PC has to pay MSFT $100 for the operating system, and if they are in any sort of business or job that requires computers, then they also have to pony up $300-$500 for Office.

But MSFT's core monopoly is under threat as Google's free operating system Chrome expands from mobile phones to tablets. As PCs lose their dominance, so too does MSFT. If Chrome is good enough to power tablets, why not PCs? Google already offers Google Docs as an alternative to Office. If someone comes up with Word-Lite and Excel-Lite which can open Office docs, MSFT's last bastion of monopoly will face real competition.

Here is an interesting quote on the tone-deaf corporate culture that leads to systemic failure: (Nokia Deal Marks a New Chapter for Microsoft)
 

"It is hard to stress the importance of culture for a technology company; after all it is a transit system for creativity. In an industry that was moving fast, Microsoft became fat and slow. Its products suffered. This brings us to Windows 8. I installed a preview version of Windows 8 on my computer a few months before it was officially released and was shocked at how horrible the product was. I am a computer geek, but I could not figure out how to use that product. Windows 8 was not just buggy, it was thoroughly terrible. 

To be effective and well compensated (within Microsoft), employees don’t need to be good at their jobs, they need to be good politicians. This turned Microsoft from a technology company into the U.S. Congress and therefore its software products started to resemble legislature by Washington’s finest — bulky and full of pork."

Tech darlings Samsung, Google and Apple are also huge companies with plenty of political jockeying and wasted resources–it goes with bureaucratic bloat. Even back in 1983, a few years after Apple went public, Steve Jobs had to physically and managerially sequester the Macintosh development team from the bureaucracy of Apple.

Nokia and Blackberry both squandered dominance and have shrunk to irrelevance. Microsoft is heading down the same path. On the surface, the management of all three firms was competent; but competence doesn't spawn Creativity, Mastery and Genius; competence in a no-risk environment leads to failure.

I think we can draw several conclusions from the MSFT/Nokia story.

1. Doing what worked spectacularly in the past is not guaranteed to keep working.
2. When risk vanishes, so does creativity.

When management and employees alike feel the security of dominance and near-monopoly, they are free to indulge in bureaucratic infighting and loss of focus.When risk has been vanquished, there is no compelling need to keep in touch with the market and customers: dominance/monopoly means they have to take whatever we provide and like it.

Without an awareness of risk, even competence disappears. Creativity, mastery and genius either fall on parched, dead soil or are ruthlessly suppressed as political threats.

I think the same is true of individuals and nations: competence can be reached with practice, but Creativity, Mastery and Genius all require space for spontaneity and risk.

I came across the 1982 obituary of Arthur Rubinstein, one of the 20th century's most famous pianists. I think his story illustrates the limits of practice and competence.

Rubinstein was a bon vivant, and this persona masked the type of practice he undertook in his 20s to acheive mastery. The cliche is that 10,000 hours of practice yields mastery, but this turns out to be false: only practice with the express purpose of getting better has any effect. For Rubinstein, getting better meant being technically good enough to become expressive and spontaneous. 

What Mr. Rubinstein offered, above all others, was the ability to transmit the joy of music.
In a recording session for RCA Victor Records, in Webster Hall here, he would play and replay a piece until he was satisfied that it was his best; and before a concert he would practice, particularly passages that he thought he might have difficulty with. Nothing less than perfection was tolerated.

Practice for its own sake, however, was not Rubinstein's notion of how to extract music from the printed notes. "I was born very, very lazy and I don't always practice very long," he said once. "But I must say, in my defense, that it is not so good, in a musical way, to overpractice. When you do, the music seems to come out of your pocket. If you play with a feeling of 'Oh, I know this,' you play without that little drop of fresh blood that is necessary -and the audience feels it." 

On another occasion he explained in his tumbling English his philosophy this way: "At every concert I leave a lot to the moment. I must have the unexpected, the unforeseen. I want to risk, to dare. I want to be surprised by what comes out. I want to enjoy it more than the audience. That way the music can bloom anew." 

Another ingredient of Rubinstein was an unusually fine ear that, among other things, permitted him to spin music through his mind. "At breakfast, I might pass a Brahms symphony in my head," he said. "Then I am called to the phone, and half an hour later I find it's been going on all the time and I'm in the third movement." 

In his late 20s, he began to take stock of himself as an artist. The result was the end of his days as a playboy and intensive study and practice – six, eight, nine hours a day. In the process he brought discipline to his abundant temperament and intelligence to his grand manner."

Perhaps Competence, Creativity, Mastery and Genius form a sort of matrix. Creativity is limited without basic competence, but competence alone is not fertile ground for creativity. Technical mastery does not lead to genius unless the creativity born of risk and spontaneity is allowed to bloom.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/EHJbHSOMyPQ/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Reason TV: The 5th Annual Nanny of the Year Awards: Jailing Photogs, Banning Chipotle, and Halle Berry!

For the past 60 months, Reason TV has named a “Nanny of the
Month” calling out a range of busybodies who are way too busy
minding your business (for the full playlist, go
here
).

We also crown a Nanny of the Year. Here’s this year’s awards
ceremony, hosted by the inimitable Ted Balaker, who also produces
our Nanny features. Original release date was December 26, 2013 and
the original writeup is below the fold.

At Reason TV’s 5th Annual Nanny of
the Year Awards, we recognize those who devote their lives to
telling us how to run ours! The nominees for 2013 are trailblazers
who insist on breaking barriers that would have been politically
impossible to confront just a short time ago.

Why stop at banning smoking in public places? Let’s criminalize
the dirty deed and throw smokers behind bars, says Oregon State
Rep. Mitch
Greenlick
. (Greenlick also champions prison reform, declaring
that we need a “more rational way to decide who gets
imprisoned.”)

Why stop at cracking down on traditional fast food joints like
McDonald’s? Let’s kick it up a notch and outlaw “fast casual”
restaurants like Chipotle, says Eastchester, New York
Supervisor Anthony
Colavita
. (Eastchester is “a very upscale community,”
Colavitaexplains.
“You can go get your sandwich in Larchmont. We aren’t going to
cheapen the town with fast food or these formula fast-quick casual
places.”)

While we’re at it, let’s make photography a crime! After all,
celebrities deserve to be protected from the annoying aspects of
their life choices, like dealing with the paparazzi, and anyhow
we’d really be doing it (all together
now!) for the children (well, for the children
of celebrities and politicians, at least), says our first bonafide
A-list nominee–actor, humanitarian, and lobbyist Halle
Berry
.

All our nominees recognize that they stand on the shoulders of
giants, giants like the recently termed out New York City
Mayor Michael
Bloomberg
, whom we salute with a (sort of) lifetime achievement
award.

Kick off awards season with the awards show that’s 99 percent
shorter than all the rest!

3 minutes, 13 seconds.

Follow Nanny of the Month on Twitter (@NannyoftheMonth) and
submit your nominees for next month!

Nanny of the Year is written and produced by Ted Balaker
(@tedbalaker). Motion
graphics and research by Matt Edwards (@MattChrisEd). Camera by Zach
Weissmueller. Opening graphics by Austin Bragg.

To watch previous episodes, go here.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2014/01/04/reason-tv-the-5th-annual-nanny-of-the-ye
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Party Like Its 1914

Forget the last two day's decline.  The consensus opinion for 2014 is pretty uniform: stocks will go up modestly, bond will decline in similar fashion.  Job growth will grind higher, as will inflation.  The Fed will taper its bond-buying program, slowly.  And so it may all come to pass…  But ConvergEx's Nick Colas ponders what could go wrong, or at least different.  Top of his list: fixed income volatility, in conjunction with stock market valuations that are, at best, average. Colas reflects ominously on 1914, where if you read the papers of the day you would have seen much of the same "Yeah, we got this" tone that prevails today

Seven months later, and the New York Stock Exchange had to shut for +4 months due to the start of World War I.  No, we aren’t calling for Armageddon.  After all, the Dow started 1914 at 57.7 and ended at 54.6, even with the European war.  But one thing we know for sure – the time to worry is when no one else seems concerned.

Via ConvergeEx's Nick Colas,

Consider the following quote from the New York Times: “Whatever may be said of the stock market there can be no doubt that the investment situation afforded grounds for a most hopeful view of the outlook.”  Aside from the archaic-sounding wordiness, it is a good summary of the current outlook for U.S. stocks.  Economic conditions are improving, as is investor confidence.  Last year’s 30% return for the S&P 500 means even retail investors are returning to stocks, much as swallows portend the arrival of Spring after a chilly Winter.  Things look good for 2014, both in the domestic economy and stock markets.

The date of the quote, however, is not January 2014, but rather a hundred years ago: January 31st 1914.  The Dow Jones Industrial Average stood at 60.6, up 5.0% from the start of the year.  The first few days of 1914 had been choppy, to be sure, but the good returns of January were enough to give investors some hope that things were solidly on the mend.  The Times did feature some stories about the political situation in Europe, but there was more ink spilled about the fabulous parties given by New York’s 1% of the day.  Fifty person sit down dinners seemed common, with a separate guest list for those who merely attended the coffee and entertainment afterwards.  Not quite as spicy as Bethenny Frankel’s lastest boyfriend – today’s hot news – but close enough.

Just six months after that quote, the New York Stock Exchange closed for over four months.  The start of World War I meant that foreigners – mostly British subjects – wanted their money out of U.S. stocks and repatriated back to their local currency.  The Treasury Secretary at the time felt that suspending the gold standard – the method of exchange between different currencies at the time – was too costly to America’s reputation.  The only alternative was to freeze the U.S. capital markets, and the NYSE did not reopen until December 12th.

Despite the opening salvos of the Great War, U.S. stocks fared pretty well in 1914.  The Dow ended the year 54.5, down only 5.5% for the year.  America’s entry into the conflict would come in 1917, and at the end of the war in 1918 the Dow closed at 87.2  – 38% higher than the beginning of 1914.

Fast-forward a century, and the lessons of 1914 ring true: be careful when the market thinks it has everything under control.  And such is the case as I write this note.  Despite today’s 16 point drop in the S&P 500, the narrative of the U.S. equity market is resoundingly bullish.  A few of the more optimistic sound bites:

Stocks have just finished a very strong year – up 30% for the S&P 500 – and that will draw further money flows.  If you exclude the last 5 years of data from mutual fund money flows, that is generally what happens.  Up markets do tend to pull in more capital from retail investors. Strength begets strength, as the old market aphorism reminds us.

 

The Federal Reserve has set up market psychology to welcome a tapering of its bond-buying program.  Chairman Bernanke first raised the issue at the June FOMC press conference.  Then economic data started to improve modestly, and at the December Fed meeting it followed through with a $10 billion reduction in the program.  If the Federal Reserve follows through with further reductions in 2014, markets will see it as further sign of economic strength.

 

Interest rates are still low enough that they offer little competition to equities. With the 10 year U.S. Treasury yielding 2.99%, bonds are still bringing a knife to a gunfight with stocks.  The common wisdom has it that bonds will gradually decline in value of the course of 2014 as interest rates rise with a stronger domestic economy.

 

Europe and Japan will turn their corners in 2014, albeit in slow motion.  The Yen will weaken, and the euro will hold steady.  The “Smart money” trade to own Japanese stocks (hedged against the currency) and European equities should work in 2014, as it did in 2013.

 

U.S. equity valuations have room to grow as revenue growth accelerates due to better economic fundamentals.  Right now, the S&P 500 trades for 15.3x this year’s expected $120/share expected earnings.  The bulls would say 17-18x earnings is fair for a recovery year, so stocks can rally another 18% in 2014.

All this sounds so neat and compact, and the rally last year seems to confirm the basic outlines of the case.  Yet that quote from the Times shows that the easy case may ignore a lot of important factors.  It wasn’t a surprise that Europe was a tinderbox in 1914.  It was the how, the when, the who, and the why that no one knew.

Happily, there is no World War in the offing in 2014, but let’s take a moment to consider some less-than-perfect outcomes that might make the consensus wrong.

The U.S. economy speeds up more than expected.  Right now, economists peg GDP growth here at 3% for 2014.  What if they are too conservative, anchored in the recent past rather than more typical economic recoveries?

 

The problem with this scenario is that it takes a predictable Federal Reserve and makes it harder to understand their future policies.  No one thinks 3% is the “Right” yield on the 10 year Treasury, given the Fed’s aggressive buying over the last three years.  And with a gradual reduction in this program, we will find out – slowly – what the market rate actually is.  A quicker pace of economic expansion will drive inflation and force the Fed to cut the program more quickly than expected.  Fast rising rates will also make car purchases and mortgages more expensive, taking two legs off the stool of a typical economic recovery.  It is bond market volatility which challenges the bull case for stocks most profoundly.

 

Stock valuations begin to feel too full.  Stocks multiples tend to grow like teenaged children – growth spurts followed by periods of consolidation.  Last year’s rally was essentially all valuation expansion – earnings expectations actually came down as the year progressed.  Yes, the bullish call for further multiple expansion has some limited history on its side.  We did get to 18x earnings in the 1990s and we could again now.

 

In the historical spirit of this note, however, lets look at the Shiller P/E – a 10 year look back at earnings as compared to current prices.  The average for this measure is 16.5x, going back to 1880.  We are now at 26.2 times.  Now, U.S. stocks can still grow into these numbers if earnings continue to climb.  But the Shiller P/E illustrates an important point: we HAVE to grow into this number, for there is little margin of safety otherwise.

 

The butterfly of chaos theory flaps its wings.  We start 2014 with U.S. stocks at all time highs, expectations of improvement to come, and a high degree of confidence that the future will be predictable.  That initial condition leaves very little gas in the tank if something goes awry.  It doesn’t have to be a policy mistake from the Fed or a twitchy bond market.  The disruptive event may be nothing more than a January swoon for stocks that pulls back the indices 7-10% and gives investors pause about the year ahead.

As the great market sage Yogi Berra once opined, “It’s tough to make predictions, especially about the future.”  Our historical case study about 1914 comes neatly on the 100-year anniversary of the start of World War I, but you needn’t expect a cataclysm to take its cautionary tale to heart.  The U.S. economy and capital markets have much to commend them, but the current optimism seems to run ahead of fundamentals for the moment.  Perhaps today’s pullback is the start of a correction, and that would be both healthy and positive for 2014.  Either way, a cautious outlook is the better part of valor so early in the year.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/CcMCudqLe0E/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Bitcoin For Brownstones: You Can Now Use Digital Currency To Buy New York Real Estate

Having doubled off the post-PBOC-ban-and-Fed-Taper lows, Bitcoin, trading at USD910 currently is becoming increasingly ubiquitous as a payment method for many businesses. The latest, as NY Post reports, is Manhattan-based real-estate broker Bond New York, is "using Bitcoins to help facilitate transactions." With overseas money-laundering as a key support, and Manhattan apartment sales setting a record in Q4 for volume of transactions (+27% YoY), we suspect the acceptance of Bitcoin will merely ease the Chinese (or Russian) ability to transfer funds directly into NYC housing – blowing an even bigger bubble.

 

 

 

Via NY Post,

The bitcoin has gained a foothold in one of the hottest business sectors in the country: Manhattan real estate.

 

Bond New York, a Manhattan-based real estate broker, has started accepting the digital currency for real estate transactions, The Post has learned.

 

Bond New York believes it is the first real estate brokerage firm to accept bitcoin.

 

“Real estate brokerage is a service industry,” said Noah Freedman, a co-founder of Bond New York. “Our job is to make real estate transactions easy for our customers. Bitcoins are just another mechanism to help people facilitate transactions.”

 

Several larger real estate brokers are not sold on the idea and have no plans to set up bitcoin accounts any time soon.

 

“We don’t accept them, and we have no plans to accept them,” Pam Liebman, CEO of the Corcoran Group, said Friday. “We prefer the American dollar.”

 

“Bitcoins could be here today and gone tomorrow,”

But it is that perspective that could indeed be lost on the burgeoning foreign interest in moving money overseas (into US real estate)… (as we noted in September)

In August 2012, when isolating one of the various reasons for the latest housing bubble, we suggested that a primary catalyst for the price surge in the ultra-luxury housing segment and the seemingly endless supply of "all cash" buyers (standing at an unprecedented 60% of all buyers lately as reported by Goldman) is a very simple one: crime. Or rather, the use of US real estate as a means to launder illegal offshore-procured money. We also identified the one key permissive feature which allowed this: the National Association of Realtors' exemption from Anti-Money Laundering provisions. In other words, all a foreign oligarch – who may or may not have used chemical weapons in their past: all depends on how recently they took their picture with the Secretary of State – had to do to buy a $47 million Florida house, was to get the actual cash to the US. Well good thing there are private jets whose cargo is never checked.

But now, with the acceptance of Bitcoin, we would imagine the "funds" transfer process is even easier… blowing what is already a bubble… (via Bloomberg)

Manhattan apartment sales surged in 4Q, setting a record for yr-end transactions, as prospect of rising interest rates and prices pushed buyers to make deals before purchases became costlier.

 

Sales of condos and co-ops jumped 27% from yr earlier to 3,297, highest 4Q total in 25 yrs of record-keeping, according to report from Miller Samuel Inc. and Douglas Elliman Real Estate

 

There’s a concern that homeownership will be more expensive and therefore the time to act apparently is now,” said Jonathan Miller, president of Miller Samuel

 

 

Median price of Manhattan transactions that closed in 4Q climbed 2.1% to $855,000

Into an even bigger one…

 

 


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/gdbi2JBQ3Mg/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Rolling Stone's Sad "5 Economic Reforms Millennials Should Be Fighting For"

All of Twitter is
a-buzzing like hummingbird’s wings about a new, incredibly stupid
article in Rolling Stone by Jesse A. Myerson.

Titled “Five
Economic Reforms Millennials Should be Fighting For
,” here’s
the list for those of you in hurry (the explanatory chatter
accompanying each entry doesn’t make them any more convincing).

1. Guaranteed Work for Everybody

2. Social Security for All

3. Take Back The Land

4. Make Everything Owned by Everybody

5. A Public Bank in Every State


Read the whole piece here
 but as I noted, the real
drama with Myerson is happening on Twitter, where’s he’s been
mocked and supported relentlessly since the article, which went
live on January 3, was tweeted around by National Review’s

Charles
Cooke
. Like a character in a bad Tom Petty song,
Myerson’s not backing down and is in fact reveling in the
attention,
tweeting things such
as:

“Drinking scotch. Blocking trolls. It’s a merry life.”

“What they don’t seem to understand is: I really am very nice
and don’t want gulags.”

“Poor me. Writing for Rolling Stone and getting hated on by
dunces. Man, I’ve really let myself go.”

“What they don’t seem to understand is: I really am very nice
and don’t want gulags.”

“If I have to answer for Soviet gulags, these market/capital
twits have to answer for climate collapse, the greatest genocide in
history.”

That last tweet gives you a sense of Myerson’s quality of
thought (the “#FULLCOMMUNISM” in his Twitter bio gives you a sense
of his political commitments). There’s even a
#StandWithJesse
hashtag, which seems to be equal parts attaboys and flames
(e.g. “
#StandWithJesse
is an ableist hashtag born out of able bodied privilege and
contempt for those who can’t stand!”).

But to me, this episode is not about an ahistorical and
already-been-tried-and-failed-countless-times policy agenda. It’s
about the long decline of Rolling Stone.

Rolling Stone was borne
out of Jann Wenner’s love of music in a time (late 1960s) when
music was simply more important in the nation’s cultural life.
Youth music – encompassing everything from nostalgic pop (think
Mamas and Papas, Sha Na Na) to alt-country (Byrds, Flying Burrito
Brothers), to proto-punk (Stooges, MC5) – was never apolitical per
se but even the most tendentious protest songs were less about any
specific greivance and more about a generational shift.

The gap between Americans raised before World War II and after
was huge in a way that’s difficult to recall for those of us who
came of age after the ’60s. Greatest Generation parents who might
have grown up without on-demand indoor plumbing and survived the
Depression and fighting in Europe, the Pacific, North Africa, and
Korea came from a different planet than the one on which they
raised their kids. To their credit, they bequeathed to the baby
boomers a world that was still full of major problems but one that
was much richer and full of opportunites. And to their credit, the
boomers (of which I’m a very late example, having been born
in 1963) readily went about using new opportunities and freedoms
(expressive, sexual, educational, economic) to build the world they
wanted to live in.

In the late ’60s and a good chunk of the ’70s, youth-oriented
pop music was central to that project. Whatever you might think of
the Beatles’ music, their very existence – and their constant
self-recreations – made everything seem possible. They were far
from alone as pop music maguses, too.

Simply by talking with major pop figures, Rolling Stone could be
a vital and compelling magazine because it served as something like
a boomer conversation pit. Over time, however, music stopped
playing the same sort of vital role in generational conversations –
don’t get me wrong, it’s still a part of it all. But as the
mainstream in every area of life splintered and recombined into a
million different subspecies, no single form of cultural expression
matters so much to so many people anymore.

That’s a good thing for the culture and the country (and the
planet, really), but Rolling Stone has been looking for a
replacement core identity for decades now. The magazine that once
published New Journalism masterpieces about David Cassidy and
stardom, Patty Hearst’s rescuers, and “Charlie
Simpson’s Apocalypse
” had trouble figuring out how to deal with
a world in which pop and movie stars were less interesting than
ever (and more disciplined in terms of talking with the press) and
in which men and women of good faith might actually disagree over
complicated aesthetic and ideological matters. There has been a lot
of good writing and reporting over the years, but there’s no
question, I think, that the magazine is chasing trends and insights
rather than creating them.

A big part of the reason is this: Rather than represent a
wide-ranging set of viewpoints, Rolling Stone increasingly has
opted for a sort of standard Democratic liberalism, with a heavy
dose of guilt that comes from becoming rich and thus feeling
inauthentically committed to ’60s ideals of radical chic. When it
comes to things like drugs, the magazine is far more likely to
write uncritical, hysterical “new drug of choice” fables (such as
this
2003 gem
about meth as a “Plague in the Heartland”) than it is
to push back against the anti-drug animus that is every bit as much
a part of the Democratic Party ethos as it is of the Republican
one. The mag is more likely to publish mushy articles about
environmentalism and autism by
Robert Kennedy Jr
. than stage a debate that might shed actually
light on a given topic. For years now, its political coverage has
been dominated by writers such as Matt Taibbi, who operates as a
sort of cleaned-up version of his former eXile self. That is, he’s
a lefty’s lefty who drops enough f-bombs to add a cool quotient to
a magazine whose politics are, like a Capt. Beefheart record, safe
as milk. Someone like the self-consciously right-wing P.J.
O’Rourke, whose pieces from hellholes around the world were filled
with great reporting and anti-hippie jibes, need not apply. As
Brian Doherty has noted here, the magazine never seems to miss an
opportunity
to badger Bob Dylan
 into expressing total agreement
with some sort of liberal mainstream. Bob, don’t you think
Obama is the best? Bob, don’t you agree that global warming is the
worst thing around?

Is it really so hard for Rolling Stone to realize that Dylan –
the mag’s ultimate hero – is a far more interesting character
precisely because he’s heterodox (if not stark raving mad)? God,
the mag should have built an entire special issue around this
bizarre admission in Dylan’s memoir, Chronicles,
Vol. 1
:

There was no point in arguing with Dave [Van Ronk], not
intellectually anyway. I had a primitive way of looking at things
and I liked country fair politics. My favorite politician was
Arizona Senator Barry Goldwater, who reminded me of Tom Mix, and
there wasn’t any way to explain that to anybody.

Instead you get bullshit bits
about what’s on Barack Obama’s
iPod
 and a 2012 Douglas Brinkley Q&A with Obama

that takes butt-kissing
into a whole new dimension not yet
mappable by science. And a sad-sack story about “Five
Economic Reforms Millennials Should Be Fighting For
” that even
Raul Castro would have been embarrassed to publish.

In a world in which pop culture – especially
youth-oriented pop culture – allows a thousand flowers to bloom in
a way that was unimaginable even 40 years ago, Rolling Stone can no
longer get by simply by talking with Patti Smith or John Lennon or
Bob Dylan for 25,000 words at a time. It might have reinvented
itself as a clubhouse where people who love music or movies or
whatever could get together to argue over politics, economics, and
policy. That could indeed be interesting, especially in a world
where large chunks of young Americans are going right, left, and

especially libertarian
. Just as there is no longer one dominant
mode of music, there is no longer one dominant mode of
politics.

But the people at the helm of Rolling Stone cannot
seemingly even acknowledge that anyone who might disagree with them
on, say, the effects of minimum wage laws on the poor, is worth a
second thought. All they can do, out of a sense of liberal guilt,
is publish radical calls to arm that they must know are ridiculous.
Sadly, a magazine that was once required reading for anyone who
wanted to know what the younger generation cared about is now a
pedantic, insecure, and ultimately ineffective tool of Democratic
Party groupthink.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2014/01/04/rolling-stones-5-economic-reforms-millen
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