Cop Fired After Being Caught on Camera Choking Student

Having finished their finals, students of the University of
Tennessee on Saturday engaged in the time-honored tradition of
throwing huge, drunken parties. One block party that had an
estimated 800 attendees spilling into the street would have
probably gone down in student lore as particularly awesome, except
the cops showed up. Knox County sheriff’s deputy Frank Phillips
stole the show by getting particularly gung-ho about protecting and
serving the community: He choked out a student who was already
handcuffed. The act was caught by a photographer and Phillips was

promptly fired
on Sunday for “gross incompetence, inefficiency
and negligence on duty.”

Jarod Dotson, a 21-year-old student, was being arrested for
public intoxication and resisting arrest when John Messner, a
freelance photographer with the Knoxville News Sentinel
pulled out his camera. He claims that Dotson did not actually
resist arrest at any point.

“There is a … picture of the victim being walked up the
block…. He’s compliant. When they get to the paddy wagon they
swap cuffs. The arresting officer takes his personal cuffs off and
they put on ‘paddy wagon’ cuffs to take him to jail,” Messner

told
the New York Daily News. While two officers
handcuffed Dotson, Phillips “choked him till he went unconscious”
and then “smacked him once on the back of his head or shoulder
area.”

His photographs were incentive enough for Sheriff Jimmy Jones to
launch an investigation the morning after the incident. By the end
of the day, he determined
that Phillips, a 22-year veteran, had to be removed from the
force:

In my 34 years of law enforcement experience, excessive force
has never been tolerated. After an investigation by the Office of
Professional Standards, I believe excessive force was used in this
incident. Therefore, Officer Phillips’ employment with the Knox
County Sheriff’s Office is terminated immediately. The
investigation will now be turned over to the Knox County Attorney
General’s Office to determine any further action.

He also noted that the department is taking steps to make sure
similar incidents don’t occur.

This incident provides a perfect example of why we are in the
process of purchasing officer worn body cameras (video and audio
recordings) so incidents like this will be fully documented.

The two other officers photographed, Brandon Gilliam and Ronald
Chaperon, were put on
paid leave
.

Law enforcement officials, who arrived at the party with dogs
and apparently shotguns,
said
that students were throwing beer bottles at them. There
are no reports that Dotson paticipated in the bottle throwing.

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3 Policies That Are More Racist Than Donald Sterling and Cliven Bundy

“3 Policies That Are More Racist Than Donald Sterling and Cliven
Bundy” is the latest from Reason TV. Watch above or click the link
below for full text, links, downloadable versions, and more.

View this article.

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Stocks Are Up – Just Don’t Tell Volume, Bonds, Credit, Or JPY

It appears the only thing holding stocks up this afternoon (as volume dries up entirely) is the fact that it’s Tuesday…

 

Volume is disappearing…

 

Treasuries are not loving it…

 

Nor is JPY carry…

 

And credit markets don’t seem too excited…

 

 

Charts: Bloomberg




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In Latest European “Stress Test” Farce, ECB Assumes No Deflation Even Under Severe Systemic Shock

In what is now an annual attempt by regional central banks to shore up confidence in their insolvent banking systems (because if they were solvent, there would be no need for such optical gimmicks as “stress tests”), yet which end up nothing shy of an all out, humorous farce, earlier today the EBA published its methodology for the 2014 EU-wide bank stress test. Before we go into the details, a quick refresher on why instead of boosting confidence in banks, these periodic wastes of taxpayer funds achieve anything but. After all, who can forget that back in 2011 it was none other than Dexia that was supposedly the best performing bank in Europe.

Of course, Dexia was promptly nationalized shortly thereafter after it was Lehmaned.

But it is not just Europe: America’s own Fed cleared the 2014 US stress test-participating banks to issue more capital to shareholders just one month before Bank of America revealed that it had botched its calculation of its regulatory capital, and as a result was scrapping its capital return plan.

Some supervision; some confidence building…

But back to Europe where as noted above, earlier today the EBA published its common methodology and scenario for the 2014 EUwide bank stress test. The adverse scenario covers the period 2014 to 2016 and at least on the surface is generally tougher than the adverse scenarios in previous similar exercises, resulting in a severe negative deviation of EU GDP growth of 7% from its baseline level by 2016.

So far so good. But where the whole thing disintegrates into yet another sham spectacle confirming just how insolvent European banking truly is, is one simple observation: not even under the adverse scenario does the ECB contemplate the possibility of deflation!

That’s right – so atavistic is Europe’s fear of deflation, that even in what is supposed to be a purely hypothetical scenario which by definition should cover all unpleasant possible outcomes, did it not cross the mind of the test arranger to speculate that Europe, which already is struggling with deflation and will fudge each and every inflation print to make inflation appear higher than it really is, could enter outright deflation.

Needless to say, the glaring omission of this most probable path for European asset prices, makes the latest Stress Test immediately null and void. What is worse, the fact that the ECB made it a point of excluding this possibility, shows just how terrified Europe is of declining prices (for which Draghi can thank his colleague Kuroda who has been engaging in a historic episode of deflation export for the past year), and that should deflation indeed flare up in Europe even more, then all bets are off.

Here is SocGen’s take:

On inflation the adverse scenario lowers inflation by 1.3pp in 2016 compared with the baseline, resulting in still positive inflation of 0.3% in the euro area. Noteworthy is that among the larger euro area countries, France would be the only country to enter deflation in 2016, while both Italy and Spain would have higher inflation than Germany. While these scenarios are static, assuming no change in commodity prices and monetary policy, they suggest that it would require a rather big shock in the euro area to see a clear deflationary scenario developing for the area as a whole. This is somewhat surprising given the recent vivid debate on whether the euro area is already close to deflation or not.

As we said, superficially at least, the stress test is said to be tougher than any previous one. What “tougher” means however in the context of a world where banks (as Bank of America did) can and will openly fudge and make up whatever numbers they wish, is debatable. Here are the details:

Stress tests tougher than in the past, but banks may also be better prepared Compared with previous stress tests, the new adverse scenario is both more demanding and long-lasting (3 years). As regards, GDP growth, the negative deviation now stretches over three years, implying a decline of 7% for the EU, compared with a deviation of around -2% per year in the last Stress Test. Also the decline in house and stock prices in now more pronounced while the rise in bond yields is significantly higher. The rise in short-term interbank interest rates is however more muted this time, while the change in the labour market is broadly similar. While this all suggests a tougher test for banks, banks are likely also in a better position in terms of capital and earnings than they were in the past which should mitigate the impact.

 

 

On top of the common shock to short-term interbank rates, the ESRB also includes a more generic shock to EU banks’ funding access, capturing both cyclical and structural forces. Interestingly, the cyclical factors are said to be “rooted in concerns about insufficient balance sheet repair due to doubts about the public backstops available for the Comprehensive Assessment”, which is in line with the ECB’s previous criticism on the progress with Banking Union. This shows an encouraging willingness by the ESRB to acknowledge that the slow progress with Banking Union can have tangible costs.

Here we will reserve our right to laugh: after all it was the IMF itself which said in August of 2013 that the “Eurozone Funding Shortfall Rises To Over $4 Trillion, Increases By More Than $500 Billion In A Year.” In other words, all Europe can hope is to kick the can indefinitely and pray nobody asks to look under the cover of what is really happening, and certainly not force the ECB to use its magical, and still completely non-existent OMT program.

But what is the straw that breaks the camel’s back is the following blurb:

No deflation expected in the euro area even in the adverse scenario (!)

This scenario analysis naturally represents a relatively static view, providing a snapshot of shocks and bank’s balance sheets at a particular point in time (Q42013). For instance, no changes are assumed on oil, non-oil commodity prices or monetary policy. Interestingly, even if the magnitude of the shocks is larger in this exercise, the effect on inflation appears to be more muted and delayed. With a larger drop in GDP growth than in 2011, inflation is still only expected to decline by 0.1 and 0.6pp compared with baseline in the first two years, whereas in 2011, the decline was 0.5 and 1.1pp in the first two years. This may relate to the fact that inflation now is much lower, and possibly stickier, but it also suggests a surprising resilience to a negative growth and financial market scenario. Interestingly, only France (along with five other euro area countries) is expected to see negative inflation in 2016, whereas both Italy and Spain would have higher inflation than Germany. A relatively large shock would thus be necessary to tip the euro area into deflation, possibly larger than what is currently commonly assumed given the already vivid debate on whether the euro area is already close to entering a deflationary scenario.

 

This points to the difficulties in designing realistic scenarios (without affecting expectations), with success only possible to establish ex post. Still, progress has been made from previous Stress Test exercises in terms of stringency, length and transparency of the adverse scenario, which should ultimately benefit the robustness of the upcoming Stress Test.

Yes, progress, from one fabricated and completely worthless “test” to another, neither of why has any utility whatsoever. But at least someone, somewhere is expected to feel more “confident” about European banks (of which Deutsche Bank as we observed yesterday, has a total notional derivative position of $75 trillion, or 20 times more than the GDP of Germany).

And since our running commentary on this particular farce from the central bank toolkit has been well-known since our running commentary on the first 2010 European stress test, we will leave it to SocGen instead:

One could question the pass-through into  inflation or whether the (ECB’s) baseline inflation outlook in fact constitutes a relatively optimistic scenario.

Translation: even SocGen, with its own share of balance sheet issues and happy recipient of ECB generosity for years, thinks the latest and greatest stress test is a joke. In that case what is everyone else supposed to think?




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Peter Suderman on How Boycott Research Explains Donald Sterling’s NBA Ban

The outrage over L.A. Clippers owner Donald
Sterling’s racist remarks, caught on tape and published by TMZ
over the weekend, has basically consumed the Internet over the last
few days. People are angry and offended, and they’re saying so.
They’re also calling for action. It looks like they just got it:
This afternoon, the National Basketball Association (NBA) hit
Sterling with a multimillion-dollar fine as well as a lifetime
ban. 

It wasn’t the only action that people have talked about.
Yesterday, before news broke of the suspension, Warriors coach Mark
Jackson had strongly suggesting that basketball fans should stay
away. “If it was me, I wouldn’t come to the game. I believe as
fans, the loudest statement they could make as far as fans is to
not show up to the game,” he said.

He’s not the only who has talked about a fan boycott. Former
Lakers player, and co-owner of baseball’s L.A. Dodgers, Magic
Johnson has called for a boycott, and the idea
has come up on ESPN radio shows. There’s a twitter hashtag
making the rounds: #BoycottClippers.

How loud a statement can fans really make with a boycott? To
some extent, writes Peter Suderman, it depends on how you define
success. Judged by their economic effects, they typically don’t
have much of an impact. But as Donald Sterling’s harsh punishment
shows, a corporation’s concern for its reputation means that even
the threat of a boycott can still have a big impact. 

View this article.

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India Central Bank Chief Warns QE “Has Been More Cause Than Cure” For Economic Weakness

Speaking at The Brooking Institution on April 12, Reserve Bank Of India Governor Raghuram Rajan  – no stranger to controversial truthiness (as we have noted here and here) – made clear his views on the rest of the world's central bankers as he concluded, "the first step to prescribing the right medicine is to recognize the cause of the illness. And, when it comes to what is ailing the global economy, extreme monetary easing has been more cause than cure. The sooner we recognize that, the stronger and more sustainable the global economic recovery will be."

 

Authored by Raghuram Rajan via The Gulf Times,

As the world struggles to recover from the global economic crisis, the unconventional monetary policies that many advanced countries adopted in its wake seem to have gained widespread acceptance. In those economies, however, where debt overhangs, policy is uncertain, or the need for structural reform constrains domestic demand, there is a legitimate question as to whether these policies’ domestic benefits have offset their damaging spillovers to other economies.

More problematic, the disregard for spillovers could put the global economy on a dangerous path of unconventional monetary tit for tat. To ensure stable and sustainable economic growth, world leaders must re-examine the international rules of the monetary game, with advanced and emerging economies alike adopting more mutually beneficial monetary policies.

To be sure, there is a role for unconventional policies like quantitative easing (QE); when markets are broken or grossly dysfunctional, central bankers need to think innovatively. Indeed, much of what was done immediately after the collapse of US investment bank Lehman Brothers in 2008 was exactly right, though central bankers had no guidebook.

But problems arise when these policies are extended beyond repairing markets; the domestic benefits are at best unclear when economies are deeply damaged or need serious reform, while the spillovers from such policies fuel currency and asset-price volatility in both the home economy and emerging countries.

Greater coordination among central banks would contribute substantially to ensuring that monetary policy does its job at home, without excessive adverse side effects elsewhere. Of course, this does not mean that central bankers should be hosting meetings or conference calls to discuss collective strategies. Rather, the mandates of systemically influential central banks should be expanded to account for spillovers, forcing policymakers to avoid unconventional measures with substantial adverse effects on other economies, particularly if the domestic benefits are questionable.

For a long time, economists had converged on the view that if central banks optimized policies for their domestic situation, coordination could offer little benefit. But central banks today are not necessarily following optimal policies – a variety of domestic constraints, including dysfunctional domestic politics, may prompt more aggressive policies than are strictly warranted or useful.

In addition, cross-border capital flows, which increase economies’ exposure to the effects of one another’s policies much more than in the past, are not necessarily guided by economic conditions in recipient countries. Central banks, in an effort to keep capital away and hold down the exchange rate, risk becoming locked into a cycle of competitive easing aimed at maximizing their countries’ share of scarce existing world demand.

With a few rare but laudable exceptions, officials at multilateral institutions have not questioned these unconventional monetary policies, and have largely been enthusiastic about them. This approach carries two fundamental risks.

The first hazard is a breakdown of the rules of the game. Endorsing unconventional monetary policies unquestioningly is tantamount to saying that it is acceptable to distort asset prices if there are other domestic constraints on growth.

By the same token, it would become legitimate for countries to practice what they might call “quantitative external easing” (QEE), with central banks intervening to hold down their exchange rates, while building huge reserves. If net spillovers do not determine internationally acceptable policy, multilateral institutions cannot claim that QEE contravenes the rules of the game, regardless of how much instability it engenders.

In fact, this is no mere hypothetical. Quantitative easing and its cousins are implemented primarily in situations in which banks are willing to hold enormous quantities of reserves unquestioningly – typically when credit channels are blocked and other sources of interest-sensitive demand are weak. In such situations, QE “works,” if at all, primarily by altering exchange rates and shifting demand between countries. In other words, it is different from QEE in degree, not in kind.

The second danger is that source countries’ unwillingness to take spillovers into account causes unintended collateral damage in recipient countries, prompting self-interested action on their part. Even as source-country central banks have painstakingly communicated how domestic conditions will guide their exit path from unconventional policies, they have remained silent about how they would respond to foreign turmoil.

The obvious conclusion – reinforced by the recent financial-market turbulence that followed America’s move to exit from more than five years of QE – is that recipient countries are on their own. As a result, emerging economies are increasingly wary of running large deficits, and are placing a higher priority on maintaining a competitive exchange rate and accumulating large reserves to serve as insurance against shocks. At a time when aggregate demand is sorely lacking, is this the response that source countries want to provoke?

Despite the evident benefits of expanding central banks’ mandates to incorporate spillovers, such a change would be difficult to implement at a time when domestic economic worries are politically paramount. A more practicable solution, at least for now, would be for source-country central banks to reinterpret their mandates to consider the medium-term effects of recipient countries’ policy responses, such as sustained exchange-rate intervention.

Central banks could thus recognize adverse spillovers explicitly and minimize them, without overstepping their existing mandates. This weaker form of “coordination” could be supplemented by a re-examination of global safety nets.

The risks generated by the current non-system are neither an advanced-country problem nor an emerging-economy problem. The threat posed by competitive monetary easing matters to everyone. In a world with weak aggregate demand, countries are engaging in a futile competition for a greater share of it. In the process, they are creating financial-sector and cross-border risks that will become increasingly apparent as countries exit their unconventional policies.

The first step to prescribing the right medicine is to recognize the cause of the illness. And, when it comes to what is ailing the global economy, extreme monetary easing has been more cause than cure. The sooner we recognize that, the stronger and more sustainable the global economic recovery will be.




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“It’s Not The Economy, Stupid; It’s Tuesday”

Housing data weaker than expected? Check. Consumer confidence weaker than expected? Check. New cycle highs in stocks – check, check, and check. Why not – after all, as we noted this morning, what really matters is JPY and the fact that it’s Tuesday. The Dow is now practically unchanged year-to-date… but ex-Tuesdays is down over 7%. Despite stocks hitting new highs, treasury yields continue to slide, gold is up, and credit markets are not making new tights. Just remember, when it comes to investing, “it’s not the economy, stupid! It’s Tuesday.. oh and tomorrow is FOMC.”

 

Year-to-date – it’s all Tuesday…

 

It’s Tuesday and the Dow is up 0.6% – almost 50% more than a normnal Tuesday

 

And you always buy before FOMC…

We document large average excess returns on U.S. equities in anticipation of monetary policy decisions made at scheduled meetings of the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) in the past few decades. These pre-FOMC returns have increased over time and account for sizable fractions of total annual realized stock returns.

 

While other major international equity indices experienced similar pre-FOMC returns, we find no such effect in U.S. Treasury securities and money market futures.

 

Other major U.S. macroeconomic new announcements also do not give rise to pre-announcement excess equity returns.

 

Pre-FOMC returns are higher in periods when the slope of the Treasury yield curve is low, implied equity market volatility is high, and when past pre-FOMC returns have been high.

Credit ain’t buying it…

 

and nor are Treasuries…

 

Charts: Bloomberg




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Apple Launches $12 Billion Debt Offering: 30% Smaller Than Last Year’s Bond Bonanza

Despite explaining that the Apple debt offering would be of similar size as last year’s epic $17 billion bond issue, the seven-part offering only managed to issue $12 billion. While still considerable in the world of corporate bond issuance, this is a notable drop for a firm that was so adamant about releveraging to turnover its cash to shareholders…

  • *APPLE TOTAL DEBT OFFERING SIZE $12B

The deal’s longer-dated bonds came a little cheaper than last year’s also at 10Y +77bps and 30Y +100bps and only 29% of the issue was long-dated (as opposed to 50% last year). We remind readers that following last year’s huge deal, equity markets weakened notably in the weeks after (and it seems the rate-locks on today’s issue are already being lifted in Treasury markets as rates fall).

 

Full 7-part-offering:

  • *APPLE $1.5B 3Y FIXED NOTES LAUNCH AT +18
    *APPLE $1B 3Y FRN LAUNCH AT 3ML+7
    *APPLE $2B 5Y FIXED NOTES LAUNCH AT +37.5
    *APPLE $1B 5Y FRN LAUNCH AT 3ML+30
    *APPLE $3B 7Y FIXED NOTES LAUNCH AT +60
    *APPLE $2.5B 10Y NOTES LAUNCH AT +77
    *APPLE $1B 30Y BONDS LAUNCH AT +100

Cheap – but not as cheap as last year’s deal. Also of note is the fact that half of last year’s issuance ($8.5bn of $17bn) was in 10 year bonds or longer maturity and only 29% this time ($3.5bn of $12bn).




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58 Percent Oppose Minimum Wage Increase if it Costs Jobs, but 51 Percent Would Accept Higher Prices

Two-thirds of Americans favor
raising the minimum wage from $7.25 to $10.10 an hour, while 32
percent oppose according to the latest
Reason-Rupe poll
. However, support slips when possible costs
are considered.

A slim majority of Americans (51 percent) would continue to
favor even if raising the minimum wage caused businesses to raise
prices and 46 percent would oppose. However, support flips and 58
percent oppose if raising the minimum wage caused some employers to
lay off workers or hire fewer workers, while 39 percent would
favor. While a price increase would shave off 16 points of support,
jobs loses would reduce support by 28 points.

Willingness to pay higher prices or sacrifice jobs to raise
incomes among some low-income Americans varies across partisans.
Two-thirds of Democrats would pay higher prices, as would 50
percent of independents and 31 percent of Republicans. Fifty-four
percent of Democrats would also be willing to increase
unemployment, compared to 38 percent of independents and 20 percent
of Republicans. Instead a majority of Republicans (77 percent) and
independents (59 percent) would oppose a minimum wage increase if
it harmed jobs.

Nevertheless, 59 percent do not believe raising the minimum wage
will harm jobs, including 20 percent who think it will increase the
number of jobs and 39 percent who estimate no impact. Thirty-eight
percent think it will harm employment. When it comes to who
believes jobs will be harmed, Republicans (56 percent) and
independents (43 percent) are far more likely than Democrats (18
percent) to believe this.

When Americans were asked how they thought most companies would
primarily pay for a higher minimum wage, a plurality, 38 percent,
said companies would primarily charge higher prices, 32 percent
said they would primarily lay off workers, and 24 percent said
companies would reduce executive salaries and enjoy lower
profits.

Republicans were more than 20 points more likely than Democrats
to believe raising the minimum wage would cost consumers or
employees, 83 percent to 60 percent. While Republicans were 8
points more likely to think it would result in higher prices (44 to
36 percent), they were signficanlty more likely to believe it would
harm employment (39 to 24 percent) than Democrats.

These data help explain the high support for a minimum wage
increase:  a majority of Americans are not yet convinced that
raising the minimum wage could cost jobs. And they would be willing
to pay higher prices if that were required.

Another reason public support remains high is that some people
who already believe a minimum wage hike would harm jobs appear to
forget when first asked if they would support a wage increase. For
instance, among those who reveal they believe raising the minimum
wage would reduce jobs, 38% initially support a minimum wage hike
if job losses are not mentioned in the question wording.
 However, when jobs costs were mentioned in the follow-up
question, support plummets to 17 percent among this group. These
data emphasize the importance of “top of mind” considerations when
the public is making policy trade-offs. The more the media
emphasizes possible costs, the more salient these cost
considerations become.

Assuming no cost to jobs, majorities of Democrats (86 percent)
and independents (66 percent) favor raising the minimum wage.
Republicans are the only political group that opposes it 58 to 41
percent. However, just a few months ago a majority of Republicans
favored raising the minimum wage.

Support for Minimum Wage Increase Declines Among Republicans and
Millennials

Despite Republican opposition today, a majority of Republicans
recently supported a minimum wage increase. In December
2013, Reason-Rupe
found
that a majority of Republicans supported raising the
minimum wage 55 to 40 percent.  However, in April 2014 support
declined to 41 percent and opposition rose to 58 percent.

Republicans aren’t the only ones who have begun to sour on the
minimum wage increase. Support among young Americans (under 35
years old) has also declined 12 points from from 79 percent in
December 2013 to 67 percent in April 2014, but support has remained
consistent among older Americans.

Back in December a solid majority, 64 percent, of young
Republicans supported raising the minimum wage, compared to 49
percent in April 2014. However, among Republicans over 55, support
has remained roughly consistent with 43 percent in support in
December and 42 percent in April. While margins of error are larger
for these smaller subgroups, these data suggest that the Republican
shift occurred particularly among younger partisans.

Overall support for raising the wage has slightly declined from
72 percent in December 2013 to 67 percent in April 2014, but still
within the poll’s margin of error.

It is possible that the CBO
report finding
 that raising the minimum wage would lift
about 900,000 out of poverty but also cost about half a million
jobs has reduced support, particularly among young people.
Moreover, President
Obama’s promotion of the wage increase
 has likely also
driven up opposition among Republicans.

Nationwide telephone poll conducted March 26-30 2014
interviewed 1003 adults on both mobile (503) and landline (500)
phones, with a margin of error +/- 3.6%. Princeton Survey Research
Associates International executed the nationwide Reason-Rupe
survey. Columns may not add up to 100% due to rounding. Full
poll results, detailed tables, and methodology found here. Sign
up for notifications of new releases of the
Reason-Rupe poll here.

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Isolated Russia Makes Friends: To Hold Military Drill With China; Strikes Multi-Billion Deals Qatar And Iran

The G-8 may be no more as the G-7 throws every possible case of harsh language known to man at the Kremlin, which obstinately refuses to back down, while re-escalating sanctions against a Russia which merely has done what the US does every single time its national interest abroad is threatened, but one thing is becoming ever clearer: while the west isolates Russia with ever stricter measures, Russia has decided to make some new friends.

Such as China:

China and Russia will hold a “maritime cooperation-2014” drill in East China Sea at end-May, Voice of Russia reports on its Chinese-language website yesterday.

 

China and Russia will conduct reconnaissance in the area within 3 days to prepare for the drill, the report says, citing an unidentified representative from Russian navy.

 

Earlier, the Russian military delegation of the Russian Navy, led by Viktor Karamazov Couchepi, arrived in Shanghai. Naval officials and representatives of the General Command of the Pacific Fleet met the Russian military delegation.

Such as Iran:

Iran and Russia are negotiating a power deal worth up to $10 billion in the face of increasing US financial alienation. The construction of new thermal and hydroelectric plants and a transmission network are in the works. Iran’s Energy Minister Hamid Chitchian met his Russian counterpart Aleksandr Novak in Tehran on Sunday in order to discuss the potential power deals, according to Iran’s Mehr news agency.

 

“[Expansion of] Iran-Russia relations are not only to the benefit of the two nations, but also are beneficial to entire region,” Iranian President, Hassan Rouhani, stated in a meeting with Novak in Tehran on Sunday, reported Iran’s FARS news agency.

 

Plans include the construction of hydroelectric and thermal generating plants and a new transmission network. The possibility of Russia exporting 500 megawatts of electricity to Iran is also on the cards, said Mehr.

 

The strengthening of economic ties between the two countries is of heightened significance given both economic sanctions on Iran, imposed with the aim of encouraging Iran to cut its uranium stockpiles, and new economic sanctions on Russian officials imposed on Monday.

 

On Sunday, Chitchian reportedly stressed “the need for further expansion of economic ties between Tehran and Moscow, particularly in the energy and commerce spheres,” stated Mehr.

 

Moscow has additionally been discussing the trade of 500,000 barrels a day of Iranian oil for Russian goods with Tehran. The protracted deal, first reported at the beginning of April could be worth as much as $20 billion, and has rattled Washington because it could bring Iran’s crude exports above one million barrels a day – the threshold agreed upon in the nuclear deal between the P5+1 powers – US, Britain, France, China, Russia and Germany – and Iran.

And such as Bahrain:

The governments of Bahrain and Russia have signed a deal to cooperate on investments, at a time when U.S. and European governments are imposing economic sanctions on Russia over the crisis in Ukraine.

 

Bahrain is a U.S. diplomatic ally in the Gulf, and its decision suggests Western sanctions may not deter other countries from continuing to expand business ties with Russia.

 

In a statement on Tuesday, the Russian Direct Investment Fund (RDIF) said it had signed a memorandum of understanding with Bahraini sovereign wealth fund Mumtalakat to identify and work together on investment opportunities in their countries. Mumtalakat chief executive Mahmood al-Kooheji will join the RDIF’s international advisory board, helping to formulate its strategic direction, the statement added.

 

The Bahraini fund is one of the smaller sovereign funds in the Gulf, with $7.1 billion of assets as of last September. The RDIF is a $10 billion fund created by Russia’s government to make equity investments, mainly in the Russian economy.

If nothing else, at least it shows just how seriously the rest of the world (away from those G-7 members who are as insolvent as the US of course) is taking US sanctions and threats of retaliation. Meanwhile, back in the US, rigged stocks hit intraday highs on what we would otherwise call BTFWWWIIID… if only there was a D.




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