Gold, Silver, And JPY Surge Sends Stocks Reeling

The late-day exuberance from New Year’s Eve has been dismissed as JPY strength has dragged stocks to one-week lows this morning. Gold ($1225) and Silver ($20) are notably higher this morning as WTI crude is significantly lower (back under $97). Treasuries are modestly bid from earlier levels with 10Y holding 3.00%.

 

USDJPY’s collapse has sent stocks stumbling…

 

As the S&P catches down to VIX’s warning from last week…

 

with bullion surging and crude dumping…


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/0o6l6pG1AuI/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Sorry, De Blasio, You’re No Lenin: Jim Epstein in The Daily Beast

I have a new piece up at The Daily Beast on yesterday’s
inauguration ceremony for New York City’s new mayor. Here’s an
excerpt:

Bill de Blasio, Gotham’s 109th mayor, was sworn in at an event
that left pundits of all political New York City's 109th Mayor |||stripes aghast at the strident rhetoric of rich
versus poor—not to mention one speaker’s headline-grabbing
comparison of modern New York City to a slave plantation. The tone
and message were familiar to anyone who has frequented New York
City Council meetings over the past twelve years, where
cringe-worthy grandstanding and wildly inappropriate comparisons to
the country’s history of enforced servitude are commonplace. But
this sort of talk has rarely gotten a mainstream airing—which is
what happens when a time-server from the city’s political
establishment finds his way into Gracie Mansion.

In his inaugural speech, de Blasio promised to make good on his
campaign promise of solving New York’s “inequality crisis.” Twice
he name-checked Fiorello La Guardia, New York’s celebrated 99th
mayor, who, though de Blasio didn’t mention it, famously quipped
that there’s “no Democratic or Republican way of cleaning the
streets.” This often-quoted line encapsulates the sound wisdom that
the job of a mayor is to manage the complex workings of urban life:
pick up the garbage, fix the potholes, and guard the coffers. In
his speech,
de Blasio affirmed that his main interest is in re-engineering New
York’s social order.


Read the whole thing
.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2014/01/02/sorry-de-blasio-youre-no-lenin-jim-epste
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So How Is France’s De Blasio Doing, Anyway? (Hint: Like Merde)

Progressivism standing tall. |||It’s clear that Planet Progressive has a lot
riding on new New York Mayor Bill De Blasio, who took control of
Gotham yesterday. The Nation magazine has a dedicated blog
to De Blasio’s first 100 days,
and is filled with excitable headlines like “How
the rise of Occupy and decline of the neoliberal narrative helped
shape the ‘de Blasio moment.
‘” (Sample line: “It’s far too
soon, of course, to begin drawing comparisons between de Blasio’s
election and the epochal achievements of Rosa Parks and the
Montgomery campaign….”) 

De Blasio’s ascension is already being touted as a victory for

income-inequality politics
; now his administration will be the
nation’s leading laboratory for progressive economic policy ideas,
such as jacking up taxes on the rich, expanding paid sick leave,
universalizing public pre-K education, and giving a hearty middle
finger to the politics of austerity. If all that sounds vaguely
familiar, it’s because the same song was being sung (and greeted
with the same hallelujah choruses from the same lefty pundits) when
French Socialist Francois Hollande swept into power in May
2012. 

Here’s how New York Times columnist Paul Krugman

greeted the Hollande era
:

What chaRAZma! |||The
French are revolting….And it’s about time. […]

It’s far from clear how soon the votes will lead to changes in
actual policy, but time is clearly running out for the strategy of
recovery through austerity — and that’s a good thing. […]

Europe’s voters, it turns out, are wiser than the Continent’s
best and brightest.

What’s wrong with the prescription of spending cuts as the
remedy for Europe’s ills? One answer is that the confidence fairy
doesn’t exist — that is, claims that slashing government spending
would somehow encourage consumers and businesses to spend more have
been overwhelmingly refuted by the experience of the past two
years. So spending cuts in a depressed economy just make the
depression deeper.

This is perfect in so many ways. ||| classwarfareexists.comFinally, we had an
old-fashioned macroeconomic laboratory experiment on our hands. On
one side, the misguided “austerians” in London and Berlin; on the
other, a Paris-led campaign of growth through government spending
and equality through taxing the rich. The New York Times

understood
the stakes:

“Austerity need not be Europe’s fate,” Mr. Hollande declared
after his victory was announced. 

“You are much more than a people who want change,” Mr. Hollande
told a huge crowd in Paris gathered to celebrate his victory at the
Place de la Bastille. “You are already a movement that is rising
across all of Europe and maybe the world.”

It’s been 19 months since then. How’s the experiment going? In
honor of De Blasio’s fondness for the
tale-of-two-cities metaphor
, here’s a tale of two
headlines:

* “French
Unemployment Rises to 16-Year High

* “UK
unemployment rate at lowest since 2009

Hollande’s approval rating is lower than that of any president

in the history of the Fifth Republic
. Moody’s has downgraded
France’s credit rating for the second time in
two years
. A “lost
generation
” of young French people have migrated to countries
that actually provide opportunities for work. So ineffective has
been Hollande’s recipe of taxes and spending that he announced in
his New Year’s address a new program of tax and spending

cuts
.

So how will New York City’s very own Hollande fare? Check back
in 19 months. If history is any guide, the progressive commentariat
will have moved on by then to the next shiny new
populist. 

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2014/01/02/so-how-is-frances-de-blasio-doing-anyway
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Could The Fed Lose Control Of The Frankenstein Economy It Has Created?

Submitted by Charles Hugh-Smith of OfTwoMinds blog,

What if there are tail risks present in the Fed's Frankenstein Economy of the same sort that Greenspan et al. failed to identify in 2008?

A longtime correspondent emailed me last week about the apparent contradiction between a Federal Reserve that has had the power for five years to counteract any decline and my call for a market decline in 2014: why would the Fed allow a market it has pushed higher for five years to ever fall?

It's an excellent question, as it summarizes the key question: is there any limit on "don't fight the Fed?" Can the Fed push assets higher essentially forever? And if so, why did it fail to do so in 2008?

Former Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan's recent bleatings in Foreign Affairs,Why I Didn't See the Crisis Coming, offered one primary reason: the Fed's models failed to accurately account for "tail risk," (otherwise known as things that supposedly happen only rarely but when they do happen, they're a doozy), because guess what–they happen more often than statistical models predict.

I would add that tail risk is a fancy name for unintended consequences of central planning. Thus Greenspan had more in common with failed Soviet planners than he would ever admit.

Greenspan also confessed that the Fed overcame the meltdown by creating and lending unlimited sums of money–yes, unlimited. Various accountings after the fact identified $16 trillion in direct Fed backstops and loans to global banks, but implied or indirect subsidies, backstops and lines of credit added tens of trillions of dollars to the total bailout of the privately held banking cartel.

This money spigot has remained open for five years, and a tiny reduction ($10 billion a month) is all the Fed dares to do lest the global markets melt down again.

So are there no "tail risks" or unintended consequences to leaving the money spigot fully open for five years running? Those who believe the Fed's record of five years of rising asset prices proves its ability to drive prices higher for another five years. In other words, having created a Frankenstein economy that depends on unlimited credit pumping, the Fed can control its monster with uncanny finesse.

The Fed's extraordinary success in suppressing risk, tail and every other variety, has given punters and strategists alike a supreme confidence in the Fed's ability to suppress risk for another five years, and another five years after that. (The similarity to Soviet-era five-year plans is ironic coincidence.)

What if there are tail risks present in the Fed's Frankenstein Economy of the same sort that Greenspan et al. failed to identify (or grossly under-estimated) in 2008?

If the limitless hubris of the Frankenstein story doesn't resonate for you, consider the unseen risks of monoculture agriculture as an apt analogy. In this view, the financial markets are a Fed-farmed monoculture that is sustained solely by massive quantities of financial fertilizers and carefully engineered "crops." The Fed claims its engineered monoculture is as resilient as a market-based ecosystem, but this is simply not true: monocultures are exquisitely vulnerable to tail risks that are impervious to the policies intended to kill all threats.

Indeed, in the monoculture analogy, central planning engineering perfects the power of threats to bypass the system's defenses.

Despite the supremacy of Fed hubris and punter confidence in the Fed's Frankenstein Economy, the likelihood of some tail risk emerging out of nowhere is rising. Indeed, the very confidence in central planners, i.e. that the Fed is now the ultimate power in the Universe, is a prerequisite for collapse.

Debt = Serfdom (April 2, 2013)
 


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/lua4E63Yxts/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Walmart's Latest Chinese Food Scandal: Diluting Ass With Fox

“We are deeply sorry for this whole affair,” said Wal-Mart’s China president after the world’s largest retailer recalled donkey meat sold at some outlets in China after tests showed the product contained the DNA of other animals – including fox. “It is a deep lesson (for us) that we need to continue to increase investment in supplier management,” repeat-offender Wal-Mart added as Reuters reports the tainted “five-spice” donkey meat may mean “wealthy shoppers will start to lose the trust [in Wal-Mart’s brand] they had before.” Donkey meat is a popular snack in some areas of China, but as one bemused customer noted, oddly, “Isn’t fox meat more expensive than donkey meat anyway?

 

Via Reuters,

Wal-Mart Stores Inc, the world’s largest retailer, has recalled donkey meat sold at some outlets in China after tests showed the product contained the DNA of other animals, the U.S. company said.

 

Wal-Mart will reimburse customers who bought the tainted “Five Spice” donkey meat and is helping local food and industry agencies in eastern Shandong province investigate its Chinese supplier, it said late on Wednesday in official posts on China’s Twitter-like Weibo. The Shandong Food and Drug Administration earlier said the product contained fox meat.

 

The scandal could dent Wal-Mart’s reputation for quality in China’s $1 trillion food and grocery market where it plans to open 110 new stores in the next few years.

 

 

This is another hit on Wal-Mart’s brand, meaning wealthy shoppers will start to lose the trust they had before,” said Shaun Rein, Shanghai-based managing director of China Market Research (CMR) Group. CMR estimates Wal-Mart’s market share fell from 7.5 percent to 5.2 percent over the last three years.

 

Donkey meat is a popular snack in some areas of China

 

 

“We are deeply sorry for this whole affair,” said Wal-Mart’s China president and CEO, Greg Foran. “It is a deep lesson (for us) that we need to continue to increase investment in supplier management.”

 

The U.S. retailer has had a troubled past in China. In 2011, China fined Wal-Mart, along with Carrefour, a combined 9.5 million yuan ($1.57 million) for manipulating product prices. Wal-Mart was also fined that year in China for selling duck meat past its expiry date.

 

 

“Isn’t fox meat more expensive than donkey meat anyway?” asked one bemused user.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/pgL3yzeksys/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Walmart’s Latest Chinese Food Scandal: Diluting Ass With Fox

“We are deeply sorry for this whole affair,” said Wal-Mart’s China president after the world’s largest retailer recalled donkey meat sold at some outlets in China after tests showed the product contained the DNA of other animals – including fox. “It is a deep lesson (for us) that we need to continue to increase investment in supplier management,” repeat-offender Wal-Mart added as Reuters reports the tainted “five-spice” donkey meat may mean “wealthy shoppers will start to lose the trust [in Wal-Mart’s brand] they had before.” Donkey meat is a popular snack in some areas of China, but as one bemused customer noted, oddly, “Isn’t fox meat more expensive than donkey meat anyway?

 

Via Reuters,

Wal-Mart Stores Inc, the world’s largest retailer, has recalled donkey meat sold at some outlets in China after tests showed the product contained the DNA of other animals, the U.S. company said.

 

Wal-Mart will reimburse customers who bought the tainted “Five Spice” donkey meat and is helping local food and industry agencies in eastern Shandong province investigate its Chinese supplier, it said late on Wednesday in official posts on China’s Twitter-like Weibo. The Shandong Food and Drug Administration earlier said the product contained fox meat.

 

The scandal could dent Wal-Mart’s reputation for quality in China’s $1 trillion food and grocery market where it plans to open 110 new stores in the next few years.

 

 

This is another hit on Wal-Mart’s brand, meaning wealthy shoppers will start to lose the trust they had before,” said Shaun Rein, Shanghai-based managing director of China Market Research (CMR) Group. CMR estimates Wal-Mart’s market share fell from 7.5 percent to 5.2 percent over the last three years.

 

Donkey meat is a popular snack in some areas of China

 

 

“We are deeply sorry for this whole affair,” said Wal-Mart’s China president and CEO, Greg Foran. “It is a deep lesson (for us) that we need to continue to increase investment in supplier management.”

 

The U.S. retailer has had a troubled past in China. In 2011, China fined Wal-Mart, along with Carrefour, a combined 9.5 million yuan ($1.57 million) for manipulating product prices. Wal-Mart was also fined that year in China for selling duck meat past its expiry date.

 

 

“Isn’t fox meat more expensive than donkey meat anyway?” asked one bemused user.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/pgL3yzeksys/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Initial Claims Limp Lower Courtesy Of Upward Prior Revision

The now ubiquitous prior upward revision helped headlines crow of ‘another’ decline in initial jobless claims this week. Initial claims beat expectation of 344k with a 339k print, whis is now a drop from a previously reported 338k that is now revised up to 341k… all makes sense, right? It seems claims have stabilized somewhat after the few weeks of glitches and shutdown SNAFUs and the downtrend appears to have stalled as these levels of claims are at the same level as 5 months ago. Bear in mind this is the last print for 2013 (not first print of 2014 data) and with 1,391,297 people on Emergency benefits due to start ‘tapering’ this week, we can only imagine the ‘glitches’ that will occur going forward.

With governtment shutdown and software glitches, this may be the “cleanest” print we have had in months…


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/6RY7YsRuDRc/story01.htm Tyler Durden

A.M. Links: Judge Rules Arbitrary Searches of Gadgets at Border Legal, Government Official in Charge of Botched Obamacare Website to Retire, Dolphins Caught on Tape Getting High

  • don't blame global weirdingA federal judge
    ruled
    government agents near the border can search electronic
    devices such as laptops or smartphones for any reason they
    wish.
  • Justice Sonia Sotomayor has
    ordered
    two Catholic charities to be temporarily exempt from
    the Obamacare contraception mandate.  The exemption will last
    at least until Friday, by which time the government is required to
    make a legal response.
  • The chief operating officer of the Center for Medicare and
    Medicaid Services, the government official who was tasked with the
    botched Obamacare website roll out, will be
    retiring
    . Heckuva job!
  • Legal marijuana sales
    began
    in Colorado yesterday.
  • The US Ambassador to India says she
    regrets
    the way the arrest of an Indian diplomat in New York
    City was handled, but that the charges against her won’t be
    dropped.
  • Former Egyptian president Mohammed Morsi will
    face
    trial later this month for allegedly breaking out of jail
    with other leaders of the Muslim Brotherhood in 2011, the first of
    three cases against him.
  • Former Israeli prime minister Ariel Sharon, who has been in a
    coma since 2006, is in
    critical
    condition.
  • Global warming activists on a boat trapped in Antarctic ice
    have been
    rescued
    by helicopter; the crew is expected to remain until the
    ship is freed.

Follow Reason and Reason 24/7 on
Twitter, and like us on Facebook.
  You
can also get the top stories mailed to
you—
sign
up here.
 

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2014/01/02/am-links-judge-rules-arbitrary-searches
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Is The "First Of The Year" Market Surge Pattern About To Break?

A few days ago Goldman pointed out an interesting observation: “if you were an index investor and weren’t long Jan 1st, you underperformed this year.” To be sure, index investors have been well aware of this self-fulfilling prophecy. As it turns out, one can extend this pattern not only to 2013 but virtually every year in the Fed’s centrally-planned “abnormal”, as can be seen on the chart below: adding up the performance of just the first trading day of the year in the S&P shows a total outperformance of 10% across the past five years.

So with the EURUSD futures, at least for now, indicating a very unfamiliar shade of green it may be that for the first time under the Fed’s reign this most familiar self-fulfilling prophecy may be about to predict an unhappy ending. And if so, what other pattern-busting surprises are in store in the new year?

Then again, in a record illiquid market where an oddlot of E-minis can push the S&P higher by 5 points, it may be prudent to wait until the closing print before counting one’s chickens.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/Tn9oX8g0VTY/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Is The “First Of The Year” Market Surge Pattern About To Break?

A few days ago Goldman pointed out an interesting observation: “if you were an index investor and weren’t long Jan 1st, you underperformed this year.” To be sure, index investors have been well aware of this self-fulfilling prophecy. As it turns out, one can extend this pattern not only to 2013 but virtually every year in the Fed’s centrally-planned “abnormal”, as can be seen on the chart below: adding up the performance of just the first trading day of the year in the S&P shows a total outperformance of 10% across the past five years.

So with the EURUSD futures, at least for now, indicating a very unfamiliar shade of green it may be that for the first time under the Fed’s reign this most familiar self-fulfilling prophecy may be about to predict an unhappy ending. And if so, what other pattern-busting surprises are in store in the new year?

Then again, in a record illiquid market where an oddlot of E-minis can push the S&P higher by 5 points, it may be prudent to wait until the closing print before counting one’s chickens.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/Tn9oX8g0VTY/story01.htm Tyler Durden