Russia Proposes Confiscating US, European Assets If Sanctions Adopted

Following warnings from US and European nations over economic (and travel) sanctions against Russia, the upper house of Russia’s parliament has struck back. As RIA reports, Russia is mulling measures allowing property and assets of European and US companies to be confiscated in the event of sanctions being adopted. Layers are studying the costitutionality of the ‘confiscation’ but cite Europe’s standards (i.e. Cyprus) as precedent. This is further to the threat to “dump US goverment bonds” issued earlier in the week.

 

Via RIA,

The upper house of Russia’s parliament is mulling measures allowing property and assets of European and US companies to be confiscated in the event of sanctions being adopted against Russia over its threatened military intervention in Ukraine.

 

The bill’s author, Federation Council constitutional legislation committee head Andrei Klishas, said Wednesday that lawyers are currently studying whether the proposed confiscations would be constitutional.

 

“But we have no doubts that it clearly corresponds to European standards,” Klishas told RIA Novosti. “The recent events in Cyprus spring to mind, where the confiscation of assets was the main demand made by the European Union in return for economic aid.”

 

An adviser to President Vladimir Putin said Tuesday that authorities would issue general advice to dump US government bonds if Russian companies and individuals were targeted by sanctions over events in Ukraine.

Perhaps that is why the UK backed away from sanctions so quickly?


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/Nw84qs Tyler Durden

Gay Marriage Opponents Think Most Americans Dislike Equality As Much As They Do

Opponents of marriage equality may think they
have God on their side, but it seems what they’ve really got
working for them is delusion. A new survey from the Public Religion
Research Institute finds that
despite their now-minority status, most U.S. opponents of same-sex
marriage
 think that the bulk of their fellow Americans
stand with them.

These days, only 41 percent of Americans oppose same-sex
marriage. Yet two-thirds of this vocal minority erroneously believe
that most Americans oppose same-sex marriage. And only 20
percent realize that the majority of Americans now support it.

Wait—aren’t opponents of marriage equality (and gay rights in
general) always crowing about how they’re being oppressed? Are
religious conservatives a beleaguered minority (war on Christmas,

SB 1062
, etc.) or the stalwart voice of a silent majority? I
guess it depends on which persona is politically convenient at the
time. 

Of course, public opinion in general tends to skew inaccurate.
Heck, one
in ten Americans think HTML
 is a sexually-transmitted
disease. And 35 percent think
that at least a quarter of people are homosexual
.
Interestingly, even same-sex marriage supporters seem to perceive
less support for it than actually exists. Only 34 percent of
Americans overall said that the majority of their peers support gay
marriage.

As
Wonkblog’s Christopher Ingraham notes
, “this is at least partly
a function of how rapidly public opinion has shifted. Ten years
ago, only 32 percent of Americans supported same-sex marriage,
compared to 53 percent in favor today—a 21-point shift.” But
there’s also probably some epistemic closure at work. Though
Ingraham cites it as the prerogative of religious conservatives and
Mitt Romney 2012 supporters, epistemic closure (or “confirmation
bias,” or the “false consensus effect,” or whatever you want to
call it) infects people of all ideological stripes.

In the case of same-sex marriage, however, religious folks were
especially likely to fall victim. Regular churchgoers tended to
overestimate fellow congregants’ opposition to marriage equality by
20 percentage points or more. About 59 percent of white mainline
Protestants said most of their fellow churchgoers oppose gays
marrying, though a majority (57 percent) actually support it. And
nearly three-quarters of Catholics think most people at their
church oppose marriage equality, while about half are actually in
favor.

from Hit & Run http://ift.tt/1hL4Nys
via IFTTT

ISM Services Collapse To Lowest In 4 Years; Employment Worst Since Lehman

ISM Services headline index collapsed to 51.6 (missing expectations of 53.5) to its lowest since February of 2010. We are sure many will proclaim this as “weather-related” but remember the strong performance of the Manufacturing print. Respondents worried about weather, Obamacare, and oil prices… as the employment sub-index crashed from 56.4 (highest since Nov 2010) to 47.5 (lowest since Mar 2010) – the biggest drop since Lehman!

 

Big miss and lowest print in 4 years…

 

ISM Services Employment craters…

 

And before you blame the weather, the Manufacturing and Services data do not converge on that opinion…

 

 

Respondents worried about weather, Obamacare, and oil prices…

  • “Steady — trending slightly lower.” (Finance & Insurance)
  • “Economy still plugging along, but at a very slow rate of growth.” (Professional, Scientific & Technical Services)
  • “The Affordable Care Act is creating significant financial uncertainty to healthcare organizations. With little warning, the negative impact on revenue has been unprecedented.” (Health Care & Social Assistance)
  • “Passage of the federal budget and subsequent funding appropriations are allowing government agencies to start spending funds on planned new projects.” (Public Administration)
  • “Oil prices continue creeping upwards along with chemicals.” (Utilities)
  • “Cold winter weather has had a major affect on us when compared to year-over-year.” (Wholesale Trade)
  • “Winter weather is slowing down our projects; it should only be until April.” (Construction)


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1eWug7y Tyler Durden

“Behind The Kiev Snipers It Was Somebody From The New Coalition” – A Stunning New Leak Released

The last time a leaked phone call out of Ukraine was released about a month ago ostensibly by the Russian NSA equivalent, one between US assistant sec state Victoria Nuland and the US envoy to the Ukraine, Geoffrey Pyatt, it was revealed that the real puppet masters behind the Maidan movement, and the true instigators of the Ukraine “revolution” were none other than the “developed” world superpowers, lead by the US. Also revealed were tensions between the US and EU strategies on how to overthrow the current government, culminating with the infamous “Fuck the EU.” Needless to say the US, which implicitly confirmed the recording, was angry at Russia and accused it of using dirty tricks.

That’s ironic, because when it comes to “dirty tricks” what is about to be presented, blows the top off anything Russia may or has done to date.

Earlier today an even more shocking recording has been “leaked” this time one between the always concerned about human rights EU foreign affairs chief Catherine Ashton and Estonian foreign minister Urmas Paet, in which it is revealed on tape that all those photos of horrifying deaths of Ukrainians by snipers during the last days of the Median stand off, were in fact caused not by Snipers controlled by Yanukovich, but that the snipers shot at both protesters and police in Kiev were allegedly hired by Maidan leaders!


Here is the key exchange, just after 8 minutes into the conversation :

Paet: “All the evidence shows that people who were killed by snipers from both sides, policemen and people from the streets, that they were the same snipers killing people from both sides. … Some photos that showed it is the same handwriting, the same type of bullets, and it is really disturbing that now the new coalition they don’t want to investigate what exactly happened. So there is now stronger and stronger understanding that behind the snipers, it was not Yanukovych, but it was somebody from the new coalition.”

Ashton: “I think we do want to investigate. I mean, I didn’t pick that up, that’s interesting. Gosh.”

Paet: “It already discreditates (sic) this new coalition.”

So first US orchestrates the Kiev overthrow, and now the new “leaders” of Ukraine are allegedly found to have fired against their own people – the same provocation they subsequently used to run Yanukovich out of the country and install a pro-Western puppet government. Of course, said pro-Western coalition has not been discreditated (sic) because Ms. Ashton has sternly refused to investigate, knowing quite well how horribly this would reflect on the new Ukraine “leadership” –  a government which shot its own people to fabricate the pretext under which it rose to power.

Is it any wonder then that Russia has responded the way it has?

As for at least one of the affected parties, Estonia, it has just confirmed the authenticity of the recording, and the ministry of foreign affairs has organized a press conference to answer media questions today at 5 pm. From the Valisministeerium:

No. 84-E Foreign Minister Urmas Paet and EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton uploaded to the Internet today, a phone call is authentic.

 

Paet and Ashton conversation took place on 26 February, following Estonia’s Foreign Minister’s visit to Ukraine, and immediately after the end of the street violence.

 

Foreign Minister Paet communicate what he had said about the meetings held in Kiev last day and expressed concern about the situation.

 

It is extremely regrettable that such an interception is occurring at all”“said Paet., Including its call for today’s photos are not random,” he added.

Yes, it is truly regrettable that the people know the truth.

Full leaked recording below:


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1e1uJkD Tyler Durden

5 Things to Know About President Obama’s Budget Proposal

The most important thing to know about President
Obama’s budget proposal is that it won’t go anywhere. It’s not
intended to, and the White House isn’t even bothering to pretend
otherwise.

Instead, it’s an election-year wish list—or, if you prefer the
White House’s gentler spin, a statement of values. “Our budget is
about choices, it’s about values,” President Obama
said
earlier this week. Here are a few of the choices his
budget would have the nation make.

Annual spending would rise. Outlays would
grow
from $3.9 trillion in 2015 to $5.91 trillion in 2024. In theory,
the growth would be roughly commensurate with growth in the
economy, ticking up just slightly from 21.4 percent of GDP to 21.5
percent over the course of a decade. But the White House has been

coy with details about its assumptions
regarding the projected
growth rate of the economy, so it’s hard to assess this beyond face
value.

Tax revenues would rise as a percentage of the
economy.
Obama’s budget would raise revenue levels closer
to spending levels in order to sustain the spending while reducing
annual deficits. Revenues would rise from $3.34 trillion, or 18.3
percent of the economy, in 2015 up to $5.48 trillion, or 19.9
percent of the economy, in 2024. That would be one of the highest

annual levels
in the nation’s history. 

The national debt would become even bigger.
Annual deficits would decrease, according to administration
projections, dropping down to 1.6 percent of the economy, thanks in
large part to increased tax revenue levels that partially close the
gap between collections and spending. But even smaller annual
deficits still add to the federal tab. Over the next decade, the
president’s budget plan would leave us with a debt that’s $8.3
trillion higher than it is now.

Growing debt would lead to bigger interest
payments.
This year, we’d spend $223 billion on debt
service. By 2024, the president’s proposal projects interest
payments of about $812 billion.

The budget would never, ever balance. The White
House even seems to have given up its old
line
about getting the budget into “primary balance”—a
technical annual balance that ignores the cost of carrying a heavy
debt load. (According to the Congressional Budget Office, the old
budgets
never reached primary balance either
.) 

from Hit & Run http://ift.tt/1hL3TC4
via IFTTT

A. Barton Hinkle on Loving v. Virginia and Gay Marriage

The arguments for laws banning gay
marriage and the arguments for laws banning interracial marriage
are nearly identical: Tradition. States’ rights. Government’s
presumed interest in the ordering of private relationships for the
sake of an ostensible public good. But as A. Barton Hinkle
observes, those arguments did not hold up in 1967, when the Supreme
Court struck down bans on interracial marriage in Loving v.
Virginia
, and they don’t hold up now in the expanding legal
battle over same-sex unions.

View this article.

from Hit & Run http://ift.tt/1hL3TC3
via IFTTT

Bernanke Admits More Of His Mistakes

On the heels of yesterday’s confessions (as we detailed here), ex-Fed chair Ben Bernanke continues his contrition:

  • *BERNANKE SAYS HE UNDERESTIMATED IMPACT OF SUBPRIME PROBLEM
  • *BERNANKE SAYS HE THOUGHT SLOWDOWN WOULD BE ‘MODERATE’

But apart from that, “nailed it.” What a great way to earn $250,000 per appearance (a year’s Fed salary): by admitting your mistakes destroyed the middle class.


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1hKQdam Tyler Durden

Bank Of England Finds No Evidence Of FX Market Collusion (But Suspends Employee)

“This extensive review of documents, e-mails and other records has to date found no evidence that Bank of England staff colluded in any way in manipulating the foreign exchange market or in sharing confidential client information,” the Bank of England said today in a statement. Yet, as Bloomberg reports, a staff member was suspended amid the probe of a widening rigging scandal though “no decision has been taken on disciplinary action.” As far back as 2006, they show concerns over the FX “fixings” that are at the core of this collusion but are careful not to condone any form of market manipulation. Well that’s that then – until the next whistleblower exposes them.

 

As we noted in the past (via WSJ),

As previously reported by The Wall Street Journal, several of the fired and suspended traders, including Citigroup’s former chief European trader Rohan Ramchandani, have at times served on a committee hosted by the BOE that serves as a forum for discussing industry issues. Mr. Ramchandani couldn’t be reached for comment.

 

The presence of several of these traders on committees related to the central bank has raised questions over whether BOE officials were aware of how bank traders have operated, particularly regarding how they trade and what information they share in the run-up to benchmark snapshots of rates that are captured at 4 p.m. London time on each working day.

 

As The Wall Street Journal reported in December, the examination of banks’ records do appear to show some efforts at collusion, people familiar with the matter say.

But nothing to worry about – the BoE has investigated and it’s all clear (Via Bloomberg),

The BOE is probing allegations officials condoned practices at the heart of a widening rigging scandal involving traders at the world’s largest banks. It said today the investigation has found no evidence to date its employees were involved in collusion.

 

 

The suspended individual, who wasn’t named, is being investigated and “no decision has been taken on disciplinary action.”

 

 

At a July 4, 2006, meeting led by BOE chief dealer Martin Mallett, attendees discussed “evidence of attempts to move the market around popular fixing times by players that had no particular interest in that fix,” according to the minutes. “It was noted that ‘fixing business’ generally was becoming increasingly fraught due to this behavior.”

 

In a May 2008 meeting of the subgroup, a “large majority” of those present expressed “concern about the lack of transparency among some methodologies and the impacts in managing order flow and pricing liquidity at times of concentrated benchmarked interest such as the 4 p.m. London fix.

 

 

At that discussion “it was suggested that using a snapshot of the market may be problematic” and “could be subject to manipulation,” according to the minutes.

 

 

“This extensive review of documents, e-mails and other records has to date found no evidence that Bank of England staff colluded in any way in manipulating the foreign exchange market or in sharing confidential client information,” the central bank said in today’s statement. “The Bank of England does not condone any form of market manipulation in any context whatsoever.”

It appears, however, that the BoE, once it began tto feel the pressure of investigation, ended its regular “meetings” with FX dealers (via Reuters),

Regular meetings between Bank of England officials and top foreign exchange dealers in London were discontinued in February last year, the BoE told Reuters on Wednesday.

 

This last meeting of the Foreign Exchange Joint Standing Committee’s chief dealers subgroup (CDSG) took place four months before media reports of allegations of currency market manipulation.

 

The CDSG, held under the auspices of the BoE to discuss industry issues and usually chaired by the Bank’s chief dealer Martin Mallett, last met at the Bank of England’s offices in Threadneedle Street in London.

So arm’s length now and back to business as usual, nothing to see here… we are sure the suspension of the staff member is for stealing too many paper clips or too much personal phone use…


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1f79v4w Tyler Durden

What Needs To Happen Before We See A Big Recovery?

Submitted by F.F.Wiley of Cyniconomics blog,

In a Bloomberg article last May, Caroline Baum summed up the economy nicely in a single question:

Four-and-a-half years of an overnight rate near zero and aggressive securities purchases by the Fed have succeeded in raising asset prices. The question is whether higher asset prices will deliver jobs and economic growth before they become destabilizing.

In other words, will the real economy mend before excessive financial risk-taking kills the patient?

Baum called it a “horse race.”

With 2013′s economic data mostly complete, let’s have a look at where the race stands.

We’ll start by asking what needs to happen before we get the robust recovery that many economists have predicted for the past four years. Our answer is that one or both of two things need to occur:

  1. Households need to borrow at the pace we normally see in economic expansions.
  2. Household income needs to grow strongly.

Of these choices, the best result would be number 2 with as little as possible of number 1. The worst would be another credit-fueled expansion (more 1 than 2) that feels good for awhile but ends badly further down the road.

But isn’t capital spending the key ingredient?

You may argue we’re missing a third possibility – a capital spending boom. Many claim this is the best way to get things going again. We would say it puts the cart before the horse, at least as far as what’s prudent and realistic.

In America’s consumer-led economy, businesses have no reason to ramp up capital spending unless they expect strong gains in consumption. That seems unlikely. We’ll discuss capital spending in more detail in the future; for now, we’ll point to the economy’s ample unused capacity, tepid overseas growth, growing financial risks and President Obama’s bumbling incursions into private markets. Is this really the best environment for entrepreneurs to launch a capital spending spree? We doubt it.

Okay then, how about credit growth and household income?

We can’t rule out the possibility that the Fed gets the credit boom it’s looking for. But we don’t expect it in the near term for the same reasons that capital spending won’t take off, nor is it predicted by survey data.

Which leaves household income. According to the personal income report released Monday, annual growth in real disposable income jumped to 2.8% in January. Based on this alone, you might conclude that households are flush with cash. However, it’s not unusual for this indicator to bounce around between the end of one year and the beginning of the next due to tax law distortions. We screen out the noise by averaging all December figures with the subsequent January figures and using the average for both months:

what needs to happen 1

As indicated on the chart, real disposable income has been slowing for three years and currently shows no growth at all. We’ll see at least a small bounce next month, since the latest figures are held down somewhat by the 2013 increase in Social Security withholding and small increase in tax rates. There’s also a small effect from the expiration of extended unemployment benefits in January. But these considerations don’t fully explain the downwards trend.

A more important factor is that new jobs are paying poorly compared to the average existing job. Employers are picking up part-timers and low-paid service workers and creating very few “breadwinner jobs.” Therefore, disposable income is much weaker than you would think if you just focus on employment growth.

And not only does the personal income report give us another perspective on the quality of newly created jobs, but it seems to explain the overall economy pretty well. We see the same declining three-year trend in consumption:

what needs to happen 2

And in capital spending:

what needs to happen 3

The remaining components of private domestic demand – housing and commercial construction – are related to supply factors and credit growth as much as household income. Nonetheless, total residential and nonresidential (structures) investment shows a similar pattern to the other charts:

what needs to happen 4

What’s more, demand would be even weaker if households hadn’t compensated for poor income growth by reducing savings:

what needs to happen 5

Conclusions

For all the chest-thumping from policymakers about the declining unemployment rate and increase in GDP growth in the second half of last year, these statistics are easily misread. More telling indicators, such as private domestic demand, haven’t picked up at all. Nor would you expect a robust recovery as long as employers create mostly lousy jobs.

Getting back to Baum’s horse race between the real economy and the risk of financial instability, the real economy seems to be falling behind. Financial risks are growing steadily, as we discussed in “Tracking ‘Bubble Finance’ Risks in a Single Chart.” The real economy, on the other hand, is held back by weak income growth.

Looking forward, it’s worth keeping an eye on the personal income reports and other indicators of employee compensation. We’ll surely see some improvement as temporary effects wash out. But as long as the declining trend remains intact, don’t expect the big recovery that policymakers continue to predict.

Bonus link

For more on why employment growth isn’t as simple as Keynesian economists touting full employment targets would like you to believe, we refer readers once again to Arnold Kling’s PSST theory. Kling builds out an up-to-date variation of Joseph Schumpeter’s theory of creative destruction. He explains why creating sustainable jobs after a bust can be a very slow process.


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1kxUW24 Tyler Durden